“your on your own kid” is such a jade song, because like…she was always on her own. like she finally thinks she’s not alone, only to be told by alt calliope “well you’re a space player”
like she can’t even join a game with all her friends and not be lonely. even in the epilogues + hs^2, she’s either possessed or second to davekat. like she’s never someone’s 1. choice, and she just has to accept that she’s on her own, and she always has been :(
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Something Borrowed Something Blue OCs + Text posts
ft. Esme Bridgerton, Felix Heart, Adaline Evans & Rosemary Taylor.
taglist: @witchofinterest @veetlegeuse @arrthurpendragon @sentineljedi @stanshollaand @foxesandmagic @edshopper @eddiemunscns @carmens-garden @dancingsunflowers-ocs @raith-way @ginevrastilinski @wordspin-shares @oneirataxia-girl @cecexwrites @bravelittleflower
Send an ask/message if you wish to be added or removed!
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Pantheon Trailer
“A young woman begins receiving messages from an unknown number that claims to be her deceased father. Trying to uncover the truth, she stumbles upon a larger conspiracy involving the singularity.” (AMC)
Pantheon stars Katie Chang, Paul Dano, Daniel Dae Kim, William Hurt, Maude Apatow, Rosemarie DeWitt, Aaron Eckhart, and Taylor Schilling. The series is based on the short stories of Ken Liu. Craig Silverstein serves as writer, creator, showrunner, and executive producer of the series. Titmouse is in charge of the animation.
Pantheon premieres on AMC+ on September 1, 2022.
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Make Time for James Taylor’s Limited “Ohne Filter” Streaming Event
- Complete 1986 West German Performance Online through Nov. 26
While the 1980s weren’t kind to musicians of James Taylor’s era, ol’ J.T. bucked that trend - kicked it in the teeth, actually.
Taylor is streaming his March 27, 1986, appearance on the West German “Ohne Filter” television program through Nov. 26. And across 90 minutes and 21 songs, Taylor proves that despite the horrendous fashion; some cheesy, of-the-era keys from the otherwise-spectacular Bill Payne; and an unfortunate arrangement of “Mexico,” the ’80s were quite good to the Walking Man.
Recently cleaned up and with full command over his voice, Taylor was never a better vocalist than during this period. The flexibility he displays on such belters as “Country Road,” “Brother Trucker” and “Steamroller Blues” proves that for every ballad like “Don’t Let Me be Lonely Tonight” and “Long Ago and Far Away,” there is an equal and opposite reaction.
Backed by a crack band that in addition to Little Feat’s Payne includes bassist Leland Sklar, drummer Carlos Vega, electric and pedal-steel guitarist Dan Dugmore and singers Arnold McCuller and Rosemary Butler, Taylor spans his discography up to that point and puts on a hell of a genre-jumping show.
Starting solo as a folkie, Taylor serenades the studio audience with “You Can Close Your Eyes.” He heads out to the country as a duo with Dugmore (on steel) for “Sweet Baby James,” before joining in a harmonic trio with McCuller and Butler on a drop-dead gorgeous rendition of “Wandering.”
The full band transports Europe to South America on “Only a Dream in Rio;” sans instruments, Taylor, McCuller, Butler and Sklar sing the novelty “Traffic Jam” and revisit the early days of rock ‘n’ roll with “Sea Cruise,” which is corny, but fun.
Taylor sings all of these styles authoritatively and perfectly - confident, in control and clearly having a good time doing so.
Grade card: James Taylor “Ohne Filter” - 3/27/86 - A-
11/25/23
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