i know this isnt news at all but for this ides of march i think we should just take a moment to appreciate the beauty of jughead riverdale not only being put in a homoerotic rivalry storyline where the rivals actor went on his dnd instagram account to tell 19 people on live unprompted that he was genuinely playing it as a gay story but also this rival character was a thinly veiled parody of a world famous author ras had previously worked with (adapting his famous book as a musical) acting like a parody of said authors most famous character playing out a parody of a book one of that authors classmates wrote about their weird ass college time and then two seasons later ras used his musical adaptation of this guys book as the seasonal musical episode. and also the ides of march was a significant plot point in the homoerotic rivalry for like no reason.
my other entries for daszombes’ deadlands concept!! my orange hookfruit was accepted and i wanted to share some of the other last-minute submissions haha. i was COOKING that night. anyways its all old art but its what i got to share rn lol. all around das stuff💥💥
other peep drawing was sluggo, my best friend :]💛🧡 mostly my art here though
yes im dropping two das posts in a row *passes out*
So it was that Jonathan Strange spent half of every year of his childhood at Mr Erquistoune's house in Charlotte-square in Edinburgh, where, it is to be presumed, he learnt to hold no very high opinion of his father. There he received his early education in the company of his three cousins, Margaret, Maria, and Georgiana Erquistoune. Edinburgh is certainly one of the most civilized cities in the world and the inhabitants are full as clever and as fond of pleasure as those of London. Whenever he was with them Mr and Mrs Erquistoune did everything they could to make him happy, hoping in this way to make up for the neglect and coldness he met with at his father's house. And so it is not to be wondered at if he grew up a little spoilt, a little fond of his own way and a little inclined to think well of himself.
"Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell", by Susanna Clarke
(The west end of Charlotte Square, Wikimedia Commons)