AU
Martín se entera que el rarito del curso gusta de el y decide rechazarlo de la manera más cruel que se le pudo frente a todo el colegio.
Al terminar al secundaria ninguno vuelve a hablarse y se reencuentran en la universidad donde los sentimientos de ninguno pareció cambiar con el tiempo.
¿Manuel tendra ganas de seguir insistiendo en el amor de alguien que no lo quiere? ¿Martín dara su brazo a torcer por un nuevo amor?
22 notes
·
View notes
IM LOOKING FOR MUTUALS (PLEASE)
heathers, hamilton, danny, drew, kurtis, sinjin drowning, art stuff! (i love to see peoples art too!!) and books!!!! if u follow me i’ll follow back!!
54 notes
·
View notes
Tracklist:
In The Heights • Breathe • Benny's Dispatch • It Won't Be Long Now • Inútil • No Me Diga • 96,000 • Paciencia Y Fe • When You're Home • Piragua • The Club • Blackout • Sunrise • Hundreds Of Stories • Enough • Carnaval Del Barrio • Atención • Alabanza • Everything I Know • Piragua (Reprise) • Champagne • When The Sun Goes Down • Finale
Submitter's Note: This is the Broadway stage version, not the movie
Spotify ♪ YouTube
13 notes
·
View notes
Hello cool person's blog that I just discovered-
Out of curiosity, could you, perhaps, tell us more about Mariner and Engineer?
HelllllllllO and thank you for asking about it! Mariner and Engie are veryyyyyyyy,,,,, interesting topic to discuss.
On Mariner’s end, he DOESN’T want to be here. He detests pretty much everything going on at Teufort and only goes along with is because the alternative was being taken in by the American Government for something he doesn’t like thinking about. He can barely stand being around most of the mercs to the point he refuses to let them know he speaks English so that they leave him alone. But Engineer? He’s almost everything Mariner can’t stand in a single person. A passive aggressive American, overly polite and underhanded, intelligent beyond anything Mariner can understand, and to really stick the final nail in the coffin, he seems way too nonchalant about all of this. His machines kill for him, and he takes down scores while lounging in a chair with sweet tea. All the other Mercenaries have their little quirks, but Engineer eludes him in a way that gets under Mariner’s skin.
As for Engineer, though? He thinks of Mariner as an enigma that he wants to figure out. A man that seems to detest killing, but ended up in Teufort of all places, is always unseen on the battlefield, has a mysterious past that no one really knows too much about, and doesn’t even speak English? That’s an interesting puzzle to solve. But all that digging eventually leads to infatuation, and Engineer finds himself spending more and more time around Mariner, much to Mariner’s own chagrin.
And so the two are kinda stuck in this song and dance now, Engineer trying to impress Mariner in any way possible, and Mariner wanting to get away from Engineer more and more the longer he’s forced to spend time with the other mercenary.
2 notes
·
View notes
Excerpt from the Hamilton the H2shO™️, an aqua fitness workout choreographed to the OBCR of the groundbreaking musical by Lin-Manuel Miranda💦💪🏽🎭🙏🏽❤️🤍💙
July 4th, Independence Day, is the day when the USA 🇺🇸 annually celebrates the approval of the Declaration of Independence. However, the congress actually voted to declare independence from Britain two days earlier on July 2nd, 1776. The Declaration of Independence was sent to the printer on July 4 and signed on August 2, 1776.
I share this to illustrate our cultural tendency to rewrite the history of our country’s founding and its founders. Case in point, Hamilton the Musical.
The Hamilton musical is not a documentary. As such, it takes dramaturgical liberties with the biography of Alexander Hamilton to compellingly tell his story in three hours. It captures his personality faults: his arrogance, impulsiveness, temper, womanizing, and tactlessness. Unfortunately, the musical glosses over his authoritarian political leanings. 🎭📖
Like John Adams, #Hamilton was opposed to anything that could even be construed as resembling #democracy, and loved monarchical authoritarianism.
At the Constitutional Convention in 1787, Hamilton argued that the United States should have one supreme executive with absolute veto, who would not be elected by the ignorant masses, but rather by electors. He argued that the executive and all the Senators should remain in their positions for life.
In 1798, Alexander, an immigrant himself, supported the Alien and Sedition Acts, which made it much harder for immigrants to become US citizens and gave the president the authority to deport or imprison any non-citizen living in the USA.
Hamilton wasn’t fond of slavery. But the politician also wasn’t particularly committed to the goal of abolishing it and was perfectly willing to set aside his personal feelings on the subject when it was personally expedient for him to do so. Particularly as he, like George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and James Madison, was a slave owner.
None of this diminishes the Hamilton Musical, it is simply a reminder that historically accurate storytelling is not a requirement of art. And one should not expect what you see on the stage or screen to the whole truth and nothing but the truth. Use your freedom, do the research. And VOTE.
2 notes
·
View notes