#<- just for my own tags but if fandom sees that's cool too šŸ‘
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rowan-ashtree Ā· 2 months ago
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sorry boss i can't come into work I'm thinking about machine intelligence. no yeah just about how robots are coded to perform certain tasks, so how would you be able to tell if a bot actually enjoyed a task, since it's programmed to enjoy it? and you could say that humans are coded to enjoy certain things too, in a way, but that's from evolution and socialization shaping our brains' neural connections, not lines of code put in place deliberately. but really, what does it matter? what difference does it make to a bot? to a human? to a person?
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risingsunresistance Ā· 2 years ago
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if we're mutuals and i unfollow suddenly and you happen to take notice of it, please do not take it personally i still love my friends n whatnot i am just. getting very tired and need to cut down the mcyt content on my dash
and if i unfollow and refollow a couple times that is just me testing the waters jdhfj idk what i wanna do man i just have to do something for my mental health
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19catsncounting Ā· 4 months ago
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I Got Really Into Anti/Proship Discourse And Read +30 Academic Studies - My Findings
(Itā€™s a Yapfest but the whole post is a very long essay and study on morality and fiction and childrenā€™s safety and rape culture with a fuckton of freely accessible academic articles and resources on the subject, and I want to talk to other people about it. For a shorter abstract with all the articles and more easily ignored yapping, see my shiny new Carrd:)
Itā€™s been a little shocking lately to have certain discussions with some parts of fandom. I spoke about shipping/harassment and how that contributes to the death of fandom on TikTok assuming that younger folks are just really, really intense about preventing sexual violence, but the more I saw the words ā€œmorally wrongā€ and ā€œdisgustingā€ and ā€œaddiction,ā€ the more I thought about this guy-
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Thatā€™s Jerry Falwell, and I fucking hate this dead guy. You see, Jerry Falwell was a preacher who hated porn, feminism, and homosexuality. And I'm seeing his rhetoric and reworked quotes a lot.
Jerry would say stuff like:
ā€œPornography hurts anyone who reads it - garbage in, garbage out.ā€
ā€œSomeone must not be afraid to say ā€˜moral perversion is wrong.ā€™ If we do not act now, homosexuals will ā€˜ownā€™ America!ā€
Jerry wanted people to believe that itā€™s possible to see so much sexual content that it warps your sexuality, because he was gay and wanted to think that was due to thinking about gay sex too much. Jerry did not have a lot of evidence to prove that homosexuality was harmful, so he relied heavily on how ā€œmorally distastefulā€ it seemed to be to suburban Americans.
I spent the majority of my teen years arguing against Jerryā€™s rhetoric for the right to live as a lesbian online, and I never thought Iā€™d see morality rhetoric in people Iā€™m otherwise very politically aligned with. And I definitely never thought fandom of all things, in all its beautiful subversive glory, would seriously start advocating for censorship, anti-porn, and to consume fanwork with moral purity.
So, Iā€™d like to have a deeper discussion on it, both here on Tumblr and on TikTok, but that does mean checking a few things at the door:
Personal feelings decide your personal life. What you feel is valid for you, not anyone else.
In general, things that do not cause direct and undeniable harm should not be broadly prohibited just because theyā€™re weird or distasteful to the majority of folks. Ex. Loitering does not cause harm and is a tool of systemic oppression.
The discussion of ā€œfictional CSEMā€ is the most inflammatory fork of this and it is often used to derail these kinds of conversations. This is all I will say on it - the legal status of explicit visual depictions of minors is muddy. In the US, there is just one dude in Utah who pled guilty for possessing explicit lolicon he bought by mail order without also possessing CSEM with real children, and explicit writing about fictional minors has been settled as protected free speech. Dedicated organizations from the NCMEC to Chris Hansen have asked that fictional content is not reported as CSAM as it is not actionable and clogs up finite resources. 90% of NCMEC reports were not actionable last year. There are studies suggesting that virtual CSEM or other non-victim alternatives could reduce actual child harm, but there is need for further research.
Weā€™re all in agreement that untagged NSFW is not cool, and kids deserve kid-only sections of the internet. People who are triggered by or dislike problematic content deserve to be able to not see it. šŸ‘
Ā (Iā€™ve seen the argument that blocking tags/people should not be required - sorry, PTSD still requires that you manage your triggers, up to and including swearing off platforms just as I have sworn off bars/soap brands/etc to avoid my triggers.)
I have found a lot of accessible and free articles and studies that I will link throughout so that we can discuss the fact-based reasoning, in an effort to have a civil conversation.
(Also because we are not flat earthers, we are Fandom, and if weā€™re going to be annoying little shitheels in an ā€œUm Actuallyā€ contest, weā€™re going to have the sources to back it up.)
Minors and Explicit Material
Iā€™m not supporting minors engaging with explicit material. I have such little interest in the subject that Iā€™m not even going to bring in articles, but you can feel free to. I personally engaged with explicit material as a preteen of my own free will and did not find it to be harmful, and the majority of people throughout human history have been exposed to explicit material at an early age with varying degrees of harm. There are undeniable legal and harm-driven differences between a 12 year old girl looking at Hustler on her own, a 14 year old boy being sent nudes from a grown woman, and a 6 year old viewing PornHub. (And I think the guardians of that 6 year old should be charged with grooming just like the woman, tbh.)
Personal Disclaimer
Iā€™m an adult survivor of CSA and incest. Iā€™m a happily married adult. I donā€™t personally like lolicon/shotacon/kodocon. I donā€™t like kids. I donā€™t like teens. Iā€™m personally not attracted to underage fictional characters. I have family, the idea of fucking any of them makes me want to throw up and die, so I donā€™t write or read RPF of my family.
I am really, really fucking intense about preventing sexual violence, supporting survivors, and fandom, which is where this all comes from.
I read and love problematic fiction - my favorites are ASOIAF, Lolita, and VC Andrews. The most ā€œproblematicā€ thing Iā€™ve personally written are Lucifer/Michael fics from Supernatural back in 2012. They are ā€œbrothersā€ in CW Christ, not blood. They do not have any blood.
Gen Z and Online Grooming
In 2002, a survey of 1500 minors from 10-17 found that 4% had been solicited for sexual purposes by an adult online.
In 2023, that number increased to 20%.
While the linked 2023 Thorn report suggests that the vast majority of these inappropriate interactions happened on platforms that allow for interpersonal communication, which by and large minors were greatly discouraged from and had less access to in the early 2000ā€™s, a trauma-informed approach does not allow for blame to fall on the children. The guardians of those children have monumentally failed to restrict and educate before giving children the means to access those platforms.
It is my uncited but personal opinion that the increased rate of grooming, as well as an increased interest in combating rape culture, has led to well-intentioned individuals to become digital vigilantes attacking those who they hold responsible for their traumatic experiences in a search for catharsis and justice denied for themselves as well as a desire to make the internet safer for other children, whom they are increasingly aware are entering online spaces unsupervised at distressingly young ages.
Is harassment and bullying bad for perpetrators of it?
Before we get into how ship-related hate campaigns do not affect predation or combat rape culture, we should acknowledge that itā€™s actually pretty harmful for the people who cyberbully. Not just in the legal/social consequences, but people who participate in cyberbullying and cyberhate campaigns have higher rates of depression, estrangement from their parents, self-effacing habits, social anxiety, lower empathy, and so forth.
One study suggests that the treatment and prohibitive for cyberbullying, which contributes to a culture of cyberhate and a lower likelihood to report or confront other incidents of harassment or toxicity online, can be combatted with media competency to increase empathy along with other important life skills.
Some Common Pro-Censorship Myths
ā€œPornography is Addictive/Consumption of Pornography Leads to Increasingly Hardcore Imagery And Ultimately Real-World Violenceā€ - The American Psychological Association does not recognize Porn Addiction as real and the DSM-5 does not classify it as an addiction. Additionally, many methods used in articles claiming that porn is addictive or causes users to seek out more hardcore material were flawed or biased. There is actually some evidence that compulsive porn use, the closest you can get to a porn addiction diagnosis, is associated with shame and the userā€™s belief that pornography is morally wrong, which sex-negative attitudes encourage.
ā€œJaws caused shark cullingā€ - That's unfortunately a simplification that ignores a LOT of surrounding context. WW2ā€™s modern naval battles with an increase of ship sinkings and thus contact with sharks prompted the invention and use of shark repellant by aviators and sailors in the 1940ā€™s. The most deadly and famous shark attack of all time was the USS Indianapolis sinking in 1945, which led to 12-150 deaths. The 1974 book Jaws by Peter Benchley, which was the entire basis of the movie, was inspired by One Fucking Dude who started shark hunting tours and overall seemed to have a really immaculate vibe. The interstate highways that finished in the 1950ā€™s increased beach tourism in the 60ā€™s and onwards, inspiring the American surf culture, further increasing the cultural desire to purge sharks for the new swath of beachgoers and their fondness for using surfboards which make them look like seals to sharks. Additionally, 1975ā€™s Jaws inspired a huge desire for education about sharks, and the relationship between problematic media and education will be the core of this yapperoni pizza.
ā€œThe Slendermen Killings/Other Fiction Inspired Crimesā€ - The ACLU states that ā€œThere is no evidence that fiction has ever driven a sane person to violence.ā€ Inspired crimes are indeed no less tragic, and thankfully rare, but people who suffer from inability to discern reality and fiction do not necessarily need fiction to commit violence. The ā€œSon of Samā€ murder spree was not inspired by a book or movie, but instead Berkowitzā€™ auditory hallucinations.
ā€œViolent videogames DO cause violenceā€ - After a great deal of funding and study, the American Psychological Association has concluded that teens and younger may have increased feelings of aggression and not necessarily physically violent outbursts as a direct effect, but older teens and young adults do not encounter statistically meaningful rates of aggression.
ā€œYour brain canā€™t tell the difference between fiction and realityā€ - Factually incorrect. Children as young as 5 years old can tell the difference, and they can even be more suspicious about ā€œfactsā€ that come from sources they know also host fiction, such as TV shows.
ā€œThis stuff shouldnā€™t be online because it can be used to groom a childā€ - While I could not find specific statistics on how often pornography is used to desensitize child victims, nor how often that is specifically used in online grooming, and especially not how much of that pornography is made from fictional characters - out of a mixed group of convicted offenders with adult and child victims, 55% of offenders used pornography to manipulate their victim. I would never refute that explicit fanart or fanfic could be used to desensitize a child, but that is by far not the only tool (asking about sexual experiences/identity, making jokes, etc is extremely common grooming behavior), and there is no evidence to suggest that it is used to a statistically significant degree. In my own anecdotal experience, normal vanilla legal pornography is used with far greater prevalence, and there isnā€™t a similar movement to shame its production for that possibility. Nor should the creators of any material, pornographic or otherwise, share blame in the actions of a predator.
The Fiction Affects Reality Carrd
(No hate to the person who made it, in fact I give props to them for trying to find unbiased sources, I just want to point out that their interpretations of their articles are kinda flawed and one of their studies is a kind of a perfect example on small and culturally biased samples.)
Reading Fiction Impacts Aggressive Behavior - (I cannot access the full study but this article is the primary source used in the Carrd and it goes into detail) - A study showed that 67 university students were more annoyed with a loud buzzer after reading a short story about a physical fight between roommates compared to a story with nonviolent revenge. However, this study was conducted at Brigham Young University, the same campus where we got a whole video series of hot ethical takes like ā€œIā€™d rather shoot a kitten than drink coffee,ā€ so uh. Yeah. Kind of a prime example on why itā€™s important to have large and culturally varied sampling. (Another BYU study with 137 BYU students being odd about moral ambiguity in fiction, just because Iā€™m starting to add Dr. Sarah M. Coyne to my list of ā€œSarahā€™s That I Dislike.ā€)
Your Brain on Fiction - a NYT article that describes Theory of the Mind and how fMRIs captured how readersā€™ minds would light up centers of muscle control when reading sentences like ā€œPeter kicked.ā€ The quote ā€œThe brain, it seems, does not make much of a distinction between reading about an experience and encountering it in real life; in each case, the same neurological regions are stimulatedā€ is speaking of motor functions. Emotional centers of the brain were not included in the study.
How Fiction Changes Your World - a Boston Globe article that actually describes how people who read more fiction are more empathetic and tend to believe in a just world. It does not state that the empathy a reader feels for fictional characters extends to corrupting their moral compass. In fact, thereā€™s such a thing as a ā€œfictive licenseā€ to explore taboo themes more thoroughly because it is not real - 123 participants were interviewed after watching two actors play the part of detective and murderer being interviewed, and participants who were told it was fake had more varied and inquisitive responses.
The Social Impact of Books - Actually reuses the previous study about the just world, so point remains. Empathy is understanding, not mirroring.
Is Problematic Fiction Good for Survivors of Trauma?
It absolutely depends on the individual.
Writing expressively about traumatic experiences has been shown to be effective to reduce depression, or more effective in reducing dysphoria and anxiety than talking to fellow survivors, and Written Exposure Therapy is broadly prescribed to survivors of trauma, with one study centering on car crash survivors finding that WET resolved their PTSD symptoms and continued to be effective after a year.
In this study, which sadly is not available online but it is too important to leave out completely, survivors of CSA were given fictional novels about CSA and in closely reading and analyzing those stories, were able to understand their own experiences and were indeed drawn to write about their own experiences as well.
Engaging in problematic fiction, like all fiction, allows for consent as well as control. If at any point a survivor does not feel in control or wishes to stop, they can at that instant. They can even rewrite their narratives and take control of their story in fictionalizing and changing the account. They can even try to understand what their abuser felt through fiction, which is helpful considering that the vast majority of survivors had a relationship that had been positive and even loving with their abusers at times.
Is Problematic Fiction Good for Everyone Else?
It again depends on the individual.
Antis might be a little right that most people don't want to read problematic stories. In a study exploring whether fiction can corrode morals, 83% of study participants stated that they would prefer not to read a short story justifying baby murder if they had the choice, even if that exploration isnā€™t inherently harmful.
This very small sample study of 13 participants discussed how young women interpreted sexual themes in writing, including explicit fanfiction, and how that was beneficial and informative to explore sexual desire and examine healthy and unhealthy relationships in a safe and controlled environment.
This meta-analysis further discusses how problematic and sexual themes in YA literature are useful to illustrate what sexual violence looks like, and begin educational conversations through those depictions to break down harmful myths such as ā€œif she didnā€™t scream, she wanted it.ā€
Empowered by the ā€œFictive Licenseā€ previously cited, problematic fiction can be beneficial for anyone who desires and is capable of consuming and analyzing it.
This study analyzing abusive aspects of three films - Beauty and the Beast, Twilight, and 50 Shades of Gray - concluded that these abusive themes should be discussed to increase recognition and awareness, not censored based on those problematic themes.
This study of 53 women were asked to read different versions of fictional intimate partner violence flags, or ā€œtoxic behaviorā€ like surveillance, control, etc. In every version of the story, whether the female or male had those behaviors either courting or committed, the women recognized the behavior as wrong.
Another study that reading allows for the moral laboratory to explore morality in fiction without decisive impact to corroding moral permissibility.
Is There Ever Any Point Where Fictional Interests Definitively Speak On Someoneā€™s Morality?
In short - not really. Loving Jason Vorhees does not put you at risk of murdering campers as long as you know heā€™s not real. Writing Wincest does not mean you look forward to family reunions, as long as you know incest isnā€™t okay in the real world. The real world, where real people are harmed, is where you find the measure of someoneā€™s character.
This Psychology Today article is the best source I could find for quotes from a fantastic book ā€˜Who's Been Sleeping in Your Head? The Secret World of Sexual Fantasiesā€™ by Brett Kahr regarding taboo sexual fantasies and how they are not only common, but not inherently harmful.
There are people who enjoy problematic media in an entirely nonsexual sense, of course. I myself donā€™t get off on problematic media - I think itā€™s just interesting to explore different experiences, and I think that can be revolutionary.
Additionally, fantasies in general have almost always been in the vein of ā€œthings you donā€™t want to really happen in reality.ā€ In a study of 351 asexuals, more than half reported that they fantasize about having sex, but that doesnā€™t mean that they actually want to. You can fantasize about dating Billie Eilish - it doesnā€™t mean that youā€™d be happy dealing with celebrity culture.
(I personally fantasize about the internet being just for adults, but in practice I think that would be incredibly harmful and isolating for at-risk youth and LGBTQ teens) Fantasies always pluck out only the bits of reality that you want to engage with.
If You Get Off On Fictional Kids, Youā€™re Attracted to Something About Them Being Kids
Not inherently, surprisingly. Wearing a schoolgirl uniform is a pretty common roleplay, and itā€™s not meant to ā€œfoolā€ the participants into thinking theyā€™re indulging in pedophilia. Thereā€™s a wealth of emotional and sexual nuance in that specific kink - innocence and virginity play, tilted power dynamics in ā€˜scoldingā€™ the uniform wearer for dress code violations, even the concept of a sexually provocative ā€œteenagerā€ can be played with without shame, because the world of fetish and fantasy is separated from condonable actions for the vast, vast majority of adults. (The only study I could find on this is this small study of 100 white guys found on Facebook, which itself states it is not definitive, found that while there might be correlation between attraction to children and interest in schoolgirl uniforms, there is no proof of causation. AKA, the rectangular pedophile might indeed like square schoolgirl uniforms, but not everyone - in fact, the majority at nearly 60% in this very survey - that likes square schoolgirl uniforms is a rectangular pedophile.)
Even sexual age play between adults is not indicative of pedophilia because it exists in a setting between two adults who fully understand that the mechanics are completely fake, allowing the power dynamics that would be abusive between an adult and child to be ethically explored.
I donā€™t have an official-looking study to cite, but I have asked people who like content about underage fictional characters why they do so. Overwhelmingly, a lot of the ones who like underage age gaps like the fantasy of an older and more experienced character taking a younger one under their wing, to have the opportunity to commit violent and blatantly objectifying harm and yet try to create what inevitably does not truly pass as consent, but seems near enough to the characters. Some think that the characters themselves have an interesting chemistry. Some read underage fic and still imagine the characters as adults. Some like to explore the feelings of shame that the older character must feel and how they mentally compartmentalize to go forward with the relationship, and how the younger character found themself in that vulnerable position - which is exploring a harmful situation through fiction to understand how it could play out in real life.
People who like fictional incest like exploring the shameful components of that taboo relationship - and I have seen a lot of works that compare how bad incest could be to other harms, like the Gravecest route in a game with parental cannibalism. And then there are folks who like analyzing the codependency of having one person fulfill every social need - family, friend, lover, AKA Wincest.
What makes a predator if itā€™s not just sexual attraction?
90% of CSA survivors know their abuser, discrediting the still-entirely-too-popular Stranger Danger myth. And shockingly, only 50% of abusers are pedophiles.
That means 50% of child molesters do not have sexual interest in children because they are children, but they victimized children because they are more accessible in lieu of adult partners, with increased rates of incest.
While I could not find a specific study on the relation between dehumanization/objectification of child victims and child molesters (and if you find one, please send it to me!), this study speaks on dehumanization as a precursor to adult sexual violence.
This study, conducted on convicted child molesters in prison, showed that child molesters tend to fantasize about children while in a negative mood, further contributing to the theory that child victims are dehumanized prior to abuse.
This very small sample study found that in a mixed sample of internet only/contact crime/mixed offenders, offenders who had contact with children had lower rates of fantasizing about children.
In short, half the time a child predator is someone who wants to offend against a child regardless of attraction to the fact they are a child.
Resources To Recognize Grooming/Abuse Victims/Predators
I would absolutely be remiss to not share my collection of resources to help detect signs of abuse/grooming as well as warning signs of a predator who may be targeting elders/women/teens/children:
Darkness 2 Light is a fantastic resource overall, this page details stages and signs of grooming.
RAINN personally helped me through my PTSD journey, and this article detailing the signs of sexual trauma in teenagers is thorough and non-judgemental
Signs of abuse as well as warning signs of predation that does not use gendered language nor play into the Stranger Danger myth.
Education, not Censorship
I think a lot of the energy against taboo content among young people still has a lot to do with the desire to end rape culture. The tools that we Millennial Tumblrinas gave you Gen Z kids were snatches of leftist theory, deplatforming, and voting with your dollar, so itā€™s reasonable to think that removing taboo content like pedophilia, incest, rape fights rape culture.
It doesnā€™t.
Rape culture is fought by education. Comprehensive sex education, education about consent. Talking about what consent looks like, what sex can look like, what rape can look like.
There should be more taboo content to talk about these things, to show all the shades it can look like. From a violent noncon to fics that arenā€™t even tagged as dubcon yet still are in shades that are hard to suss out, we should talk about it.
A Non-Empirical Example Of Good Media Analysis and Education to Combat Rape Culture
Letā€™s use the example of Daemon and Rhaenyra Targaryenā€™s relationship in House of the Dragon. Canonically, in both the book and the show, they have a romantic relationship that appears for the most part to be positive (the show being more contentious but I dedicated an aside to Sarah Hess and our beef at the bottom of my Carrd, but feel free to ask how I feel about writing producers with any variation of the name ā€˜Sarahā€™) despite an age gap, a sexual relationship that began while Rhaenyra was a minor, and incest - the problematic hat trick if you will.
I have seen anti-Daemyra shippers condemn Daemyra shippers for ā€œCondoning grooming, age gaps, pedophilia, and incest.ā€ Which is not just a broad, inaccurate, and harmful statement, itā€™s not at all constructive or educational analysis.
It would actually be beneficial to say ā€œDaemon is grooming Rhaenyra as a teenager with gifts, devoted attention that takes advantage of her isolation and vulnerability, frequent nonsexual touches, the extreme desensitization to sexuality in the brothel visit,ā€ etc etc. And even so, it is not useful to say that people cannot still ship the relationship and acknowledge those aspects. They might want to further explore the issues of consent in their dynamic in fiction, they may want to strip away some of them with narrative reimagining. Some might want to ignore the taboos completely and indulge in the fantasy entirely, and some might find the actors hot as hell - AKA, anyone who watches the show.
Itā€™s honestly a little similar to me in how Jerry Falwell would tell his followers not to watch or read or take in any media that dealt with homosexuality unless it was condemning it - even Will & Grace was on Jerryā€™s shitlist. And so, Jerryā€™s followers missed out on a lot of media that could have educated them about queerness, could have humanized queer people for them - and that did not make queers go away. Just like ignoring or shutting out media about incest, rape, and other forms of sexual violence doesnā€™t make those things go away - it just tends to make you less informed, and little less capable of empathy towards people affected by those subjects.
So letā€™s stop shaming those that ship a complicated dynamic - you get less fanworks exploring those taboos, and less of a discussion overall. You shut down the morality lab of fiction, and to be honest, itā€™s wet sock behavior.
Some FanFiction Specific Studies
How dubcon fanfiction can flesh out the intricacies and messiness of realistic consent
A review of darkfic written about Harry Potter in 2005 (which, I will personally attest has never been outdone in how profoundly taboo those works were)
Interviews with 11 Self Insert writers who wrote on themes of rape, abuse, control, yandere, etc, and how that was beneficial to some who had experienced sexual violence themselves
Conclusion:
Hā€¦holy shit, you actually read all of that?? Congrats dude! That is a lot of time and brain power to dedicate to any one thing!
By the way, I am not really gifted at writing articles or any of that junk, and I tried to make my hyperlexic ass a little more accessible instead of bringing out all the $5 words. I am literally just an autistic who took a couple technical writing classes over a decade ago and really wanted to sort out my thoughts and try to have a platform for discussion. Also, I am really fucking bad at math. I failed two different college level statistics classes twice each. Gun to my head, I could not tell you what a standard deviation is, which is why I worked entirely with the percentages.
And I do want to have a discussion! I would in fact like to not report anyone for sending me gore or death threats or any of that stuff! I donā€™t think everyone will agree with me, in fact Iā€™m certain that you could find studies that contradict some of mine, and Iā€™d love to discuss them!
Iā€™m sure it will still be tempting to throw around accusations of pedophilia because sometimes, confronting your previously held beliefs is incredibly uncomfortable. If you could not do that, that would be great? I donā€™t like being compared to someone who profoundly abused me just because I have a different opinion on how to combat rape culture and empower survivors. If you can do that, Iā€™ll do my absolute best to be cheerful and welcoming and respectful as well. šŸ˜
PS - Iā€™m also not really going to be phased if you call me weird or cringe - I am. Always have been. Cringe, weirdness, and autism have made me do and capable of doing some fantastically neat and impressive stuff. But if you try to say something like ā€œproshippers are too yucky and weird to be in fandomā€ - Iā€™m going to have to refer you to your similarity to Kate Sanders of Lizzy McGuire fame, you ā€œprEpz >:(ā€œ - [My Immortal, legendary author unknown]
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raayllum Ā· 1 year ago
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Since there's a new sock playbook happening and it's slightly different than the old one, thought I'd nip this one in the bud. In the past week three (3) different blogs have been made to rebuttal my and other's posts about the theory that Callum will free Aaravos. Which, fair enough - people can disagree and if I don't like what someone is adding to my posts, I can block 'em on both my side AND my main.
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But, granted, that only works if the person respects the blocking boundary.
So here are some of the new signs:
Blog has left the old 'three words mashed together' schtick and is implementing a usually 2 word TDP themed mashup
Blogs are all mostly TDP with another fandom worked in
Blog is randomly made, reblogs posts in the other fandom, and then makes their foray onto one of my or other's posts to rebuttal
Known potential socks (in order of apparent appearance):
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Virenhunter. Seemingly made on August 17th, reblogged my posts and others. Lied about wanting to not clog up my notifications since I was OP of the post they were arguing on and I had blocked them (simply because, so they had to make a new post - which is fair - but then offered up a false excuse.) Dragonrecap. The similar naming structure, quick appearance, and reblogging one of my posts to be contrarian in such close order is what initially made me suspicious this was a sock / burgeoning harassment situation.
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Moonabovemoon. Same previous tells, also recently made, reblogged one of my clearly theorizing but also very much joking posts (note my own tags of "tone gets increasingly unhinged" and hordika asking a question of how I have also answered many many times re: Callum doing it to save a loved one).
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As always, I don't really care if people disagree, but it's obtuse to 1) shove it onto multiple posts, 2) ignore blocking boundaries by making socks to get around it, and 3) specifically, repeatedly target things I've made or posted (mocking my "predictions achieved" tag when it's existed since 2019 and has had nothing to do with these theories until they started happening, mocking a post I made where I mentioned s5 being like a victory lap for my characterization of Callum not really caring about being Lied To when 5x01 proved that too, etc). when I tag everything accordingly in multiple ways for tag blocking purposes, I encourage people to block me, and you can use tumblr saviour to ensure you don't see any of my posts unfiltered on your dash.
Either way: PSA for the fandom, the usual old tells of "isn't Rayla so cute and small and Callum is so strong and principled," has a new front. He cannot / refuses to be reasoned with, cannot manage to have a respectful disagreement without either losing his cool or playing the victim when he's called out for it, and has a habit of targeting marginalized creators in particular (which given the sexism towards Rayla makes perfect sense). Best thing to do is just block and not engage as much as you can, and keep on enjoying the various theories and interpretations you like in peace. šŸ‘
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theladyofshalott1989 Ā· 5 months ago
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20 questions for fic writers
Thank you for the tag @heyitszev, @thetotomoo, and @infernalrusalka! It was so fun reading all of your answers, too <3333
1. How many works do you have on AO3? Eleven!
2. What's your total AO3 word count? 220,491 posted currently (about 60k more written but not posted yet).
3. What fandoms do you write for? Hogwarts: Legacy (10 works) and Bridgerton (1 work).
4. Top five fics by kudos? "Like Moths to a Flame", "Burning Bright", "The Reynolds Dilemma", "Heart's Pleasure First", "Love's Not Time's Fool".
5. Do you respond to comments? In the words of Severus Snape, "Always." <3
6. What is the fic you wrote with the angstiest ending? My Sebastian Sallow/You one-shot "What Was I Made For?"
7. What is the fic you wrote with the happiest ending? Nearly all of my fics end happily, but I think from a "wow, the characters went through hell and back and yet they somehow got a happy ending" perspective, I would probably say "Burning Bright."
8. Do you get hate on fics? Not directly on them yet (thankfully), but I have definitely received anonymous hate here on Tumblr and Reddit. Those people can suck it. Affectionately. šŸ™ƒ
9. Do you write smut? Yup.šŸ‘
10. Craziest crossover? No crossovers yet, although I'm hoping to write a Hook (the 1991 movie) & Peter Pan (the book by J.M. Barrie) long-fic someday. That's not all that crazy though...haha.
11. Have you ever had a fic stolen? Not that I'm aware of, but I don't go looking. Eek.
12. Have you ever had a fic translated? No, but that would be very cool!
13. Have you ever co-written a fic before? I'm currently co-writing an MC x MC fic with heyitszev. Someday we'll (hopefully) finish it because it's SO FREAKING GOOD ALREADY. AHHH.
14. All time favorite ship? I have consumed many ships over the years, but the one that always sticks with me is Cassian/Jyn (aka Rebelcaptain) from Rogue One. My own ship (Sebastien, Sebastian x Damien) may also be added to this list soon as these boys have consumed my every waking thought for nearly a year and a half now. Lol.
15. What's a WIP you want to finish but doubt you ever will? I don't think I've ever not finished a WIP? Hopefully I didn't just jinx myself...
16. What are your writing strengths? Banter, emotional whiplash (sorry lol), foreshadowing, and plot twists. At least I think so. Haha.
17. Thoughts on dialogue in another language? I like it! I minored in Spanish in college and have always wanted to use Spanish in a fic, but haven't really had the opportunity to yet. Maybe if I ever get around to writing a Cassian Andor-centered fic, I'll finally do it. We'll see.
18. First fandom you wrote in? Star Wars! I wrote a shit ton of Anakin/Padme when I was a young teen.
19. Favorite fic you've written? If you had asked me a few months ago, it would have been "Burning Bright", but it's now my current WIP, "You Cannot Put a Fire Out." I put a lot of myself and my insecurities into these two fics, and they were both written at a pretty emotionally turbulent time of my life, so they have a special place in my heart.
20. There's no twentieth question, so take this as your cue to give yourself a hug. (Yes, I'm talking to you!) <3
No pressure tags: @morelikeravenbore @endless-starlight-legacy
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najuwu Ā· 1 year ago
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What do you think about tumblrs vs. Twitter
Which one is better for sharing interest or user differents
Bro tumblr is sooooooo much better than Twitter for fandoms and interests. The tags make it infinitely easier to find what u like and people that talk about what u like. The main reason I migrated here cuz all of my favorite things have non existent fandoms in twitter, and here I was able to find SOOOO much content and people that share the same interests as me!!! Itā€™s so fun
Also the user culture around here is a lot friendlier, u donā€™t have to walk on eggshells when interacting with someone. Itā€™s not weird to go through someoneā€™s entire blog and like everything, itā€™s not weird to comment or rb anything, itā€™s just so much easier to make friends! Like this very ask, smth like this would never happen on Twitter. Iā€™m still kinda shy here and the twitter culture hasnā€™t completely left my brain, but Iā€™ve met some very cool people! And there isnā€™t a new drama or discourse everyday
Iā€™m saying all this as someone that exclusively used Twitter for 4 years and was kinda addicted to it, I only stopped completely when the new Zelda game came out and I if I got any spoilers before playing it I would combust into flames. So I came to tumblr, cuz just as it is super easy to find what u like, itā€™s super easy to filter out anything u want to avoid. I muted every possible variation of ā€œtears of the kingdom spoilersā€ and every characterā€™s names. And I didnā€™t get any spoilers for 2 months! If this was twitter I wouldā€™ve gotten some in the first day of release.
All in all, here I can only see what I want and super easily, the culture is much friendlier, and isnā€™t owned by Elongated Muskrat :) twitter is set on fire every day now, Iā€™m glad I jumped the boat before it got too bad (I quit in may). The only thing I miss about it is the cool people I left there and I also used it to see news, idk about any news accounts here in tumblr, besides the destiel memes lmao (also Iā€™m Brazilian so I highly doubt anyone will post news about my country here, 99,9999% of everything is in English). Also the video player in tumblr is DOGSHIT lmao. But anyways. Tumblr very good šŸ‘
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drill-teeth-art Ā· 2 years ago
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A question from a small tumblr artist-
Should I focus on making good art based on what I want or pumping out art that people want to see?
You're pretty cool too šŸ‘
If you want my genuine answer as an art guyā€¦
I would focus more on making art that you want to make. Speaking as a guy who didnā€™t think Iā€™d ever get this much attention on a platform, I just kinda post whatever I want. I just happen to really love Transformers and then posted about it relentlessly, but honestly I would still be drawing Transformers if I didnā€™t get as many notes as I do. Iā€™m really lucky my art has circulated around so much, and Iā€™m super grateful for the attention and support I get! I pretty rarely post about my OCs on here, but I still love them and draw them. Just got that robot focused brain. It really does help thereā€™s already a fandom for what I post. Iā€™m not a marketing guy by any means, and I donā€™t have like. Tips and tricks for building your following beyond likeā€¦ Draw and post. Most popular tags first on your posts. Interact with people when they reach out in your ask box or something. I think I got really lucky that my work resonates with others. I make most of what I do for me, and I try not to get bogged down in what will do numbers. So I recommend others do the same. It has done wonders for my self esteem to focus on pleasing me first with my work, but thatā€™s my art practice. Others art practice and what they want from it is different from mine. And thatā€™s okay! So I guess after all that rambling, I recommend figuring out what you want from your own art before thinking too much about the audience.
Side note: Am I big Tumblr artist? Medium? When did that happen? Iā€™m kinda just a guy.
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sarksdimension Ā· 3 years ago
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šŸ‘šŸ’øšŸŽØ?
From this ask game!
Iā€™m gonna answer all of these for both of my fictional identities.
šŸ‘ What's your favorite thing about your source?Ā 
This is actually kinda tricky.Ā 
For my identity as Sark, thereā€™s a lot of things in-source that arenā€™t great if Iā€™m being honest, but I can admire the effort that goes into making whole entire games for your story. The fanart and such is also good, and so is the community for the most part.
For my identity as Longtail, I have a lot of second-hand nostalgia from my other systemmates surrounding Warriors. My favourite thing about the source is probably the overall tone of the books. It takes itself seriously despite being about cats and I love that for the series.Ā 
šŸ’ø Do you own any merch of your source?Ā 
For my identity as Sark, I donā€™t own any merch from the specific fangame Iā€™m from because none exists, but we do own a Sonic the Hedgehog plush and a Shadow the Hedgehog plush too! Weā€™re always on the lookout for any sort of Sonic related merch we can get our hands on.
As for my Longtail identity, I donā€™t own anything from Warriors as a source but Iā€™m very tempted to buy some things from their store once we have enough money. Anything with Longtail on it needs to be mine.
šŸŽØ How do you feel about fanart?
Answering for both of my identities, fanart is cool, honestly! Some of it can be a little weird but thatā€™s normal for any fandom and itā€™s easy to block out using tag filters. Thereā€™s just thisĀ ā€œoh my god itā€™s me!!ā€ feeling I get when I see people draw art of my identities and itā€™s fun seeing other peopleā€™s takes on the characters.
What I donā€™t like is weird comments on my art Iā€™ve drawn of myself specifically. Sometimes fandoms are scary and need to leave me alone.
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