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Joined 2 months ago
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Cake day: April 14th, 2025

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  • 13 was a lot like 6 in that her expanded universe material is way, way better than her TV episodes. Seriously, if you haven’t read “Star Tales,” it has some of the most amazing Doctor Who stories ever, especially the one with Elvis, which made me weep.

    And The Witchfinders has an amazing novelization that really dives into gender roles much deeper than the episode itself, thanks to 13’s inner monologue.

    And the Doctor Who fanzine “More of the Universe” adds tons of stories that fix Thasmin, and it was endorsed by Jodie herself.

    Chibnall is just really bad at writing the character, in my opinion.


  • I watched his era years after everyone else did. Matt Smith had an amazing first episode with really defined quirky characterization. Then his next few episodes, he’s mostly just angry and shouting at everyone, and all of that fun eccentric energy just goes away. During that part of series 5, I was calling him the “Gordon Ramsay” Doctor.

    After that, his characterization just felt really inconsistent and all over the place, to the point where he felt like three different characters inelegantly melded into one. It’s way harder to get a read on his overall personality than every other Doctor, and I need to rewatch to make sense of his very disparate psyches and emotional responses to things.

    By series 6, the show fell victim to a “mystery box” writing style where Moffat seemed to be making it up as he went along. Much like Sherlock, he was also constantly teasing Tumblr theorists to the detriment of the writing…

    He also unlearns a lot of the Tenth Doctor’s lessons with little to no commentary or repercussions.

    I spent his entire era craving the consistent characteristics I saw in The Eleventh Hour and rarely getting that. Exceptions: Amy’s Choice, The Lodger, Night Terrors, Closing Time, and his finale were all fantastic Eleventh Doctor episodes, and if he had depicted like that in every episode, he’d be my favorite.









  • A lot of times I’m not sure what’s definitively feminine or masculine because the social norms tend to shift. This is stuff that feels feminine to me though:

    I love the gothic side of femininity. Pentacles and black dresses and dark makeup and horror movies. One of my best friends is pagan, and I’m in her coven for moral support and the much cooler Pagan holidays (Yule > Christmas). I’m actually not embarrassed to say I was big into the Twilight craze in high school and I still love bands like Evanescence and Lacuna Coil to this day.

    I think we’re at the point where fantasy novels are female-coded. I too get the feminine urge to slay the Witch-King.

    Is hiking and camping a femme thing? I’m a nature girl 🍁

    Aside from that, sewing, gardening, manicures, aromatherapy, Aggretsuko, fall, pumpkin spice lattes, and rom-coms if they’re written well. (My fave is “The Holiday.”)



  • Like others have said, raising men properly, but also monitoring their internet usage during formative years. If they aren’t given unlimited tablet/internet access, which is often the case, boys will always still find ways to outsmart parental locks, and parents need to stay two steps ahead.

    I’ve heard so much messed up stuff involving the internet and Gen Z/Alpha in the news that’s even worse than Andrew Tate exposure.

    I’m kind more worried about future Gen Alpha men and younger Zoomers than Baby Boomer men at this point, but hopefully I’m wrong. There’s still time.


  • MystValkyrie@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto196@lemmy.blahaj.zonegamer rule
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    6 days ago

    Yep, most male gamers who take issue with Aloy can’t tell she has some light coverage, and then criticize her for not wearing makeup and being ugly, which is amusing. And sad too, that even wearing makeup doesn’t satisfy their impossible standards because it’s still not enough makeup.

    Maybe Aloy plucks? Some people just have great eyebrows without having to do anything, and I am jealous of those people.


  • I want to preface my experience by saying the wage gap is a serious problem and women deserve to be paid the same as our male coworkers for the same job, not to mention women being overlooked for raises and promotions.

    Early in college, I took a job working summers at a newspaper manufacturing warehouse for $7.50 an hour to try to get my foot in the door in the journalism field. The starting pay and job titles were the same for all the entry-level folks, but the actual work was sex-segregated, and they put me with the men, which really sucked. For the cis women, it was mostly standing in place, feeding newspapers into a machine and making sure there weren’t any jams. On one occasion when I got randomly put on the elusive morning shift (which never happened again), I was put on the feeders, and it was pretty easy; the worst part was pulling out a paper jam since that would halt the whole production line, but that rarely happened. Otherwise, for the cis men and one trans woman (me), we would do the packaging and loading. It was two or three people doing a physically strenuous job that required more workers to perform optimally, with one person frequently calling in sick, constant multitasking/running back and forth, lots of overtime and a handful of OSHA violations, including me being expected to operate a forklift without being certified. I don’t know why they didn’t hire more people with certifications or spread out the tasks more evenly. Things were so frantic all the time I’m glad I never got hurt on the job.

    It was a lot of overtime, with random scheduling often landing me in the graveyard shift, so I didn’t have a social life during that time and I wasn’t sleeping very well. I put my two weeks’ the moment I was offered an internship writing and editing for a local magazine. The one positive is that I was in really amazing shape for those summers.


  • even if you could theoretically tell a story that sounds somehow “unfair” depending on your storytelling skills.

    Yeah, they sure do love pulling the Riley Gaines card even though she came in fifth, making it a total nonsequitur.

    And I totally agree that this debate is too big considering it only targets a tiny handful of athletes. I say it’s complicated because some arguments used feel, circumstantial? As in, “Trans women should play with women because there’s only a couple of them anyway?” Would acceptance of that argument lead to tokenism? BWhat if, for whatever reason, a sports team happened to take on a lot of trans woman? I think that would be okay, but I worry it would dredge the debate up all over again.

    Or, people often say, “Trans women should be allowed to play with women because they rarely win anyway.” But what if a trans woman ends up on a winning streak and then another controversy erupts? I feel uncomfortable that our condition for entry is framed as our failure to win, and that if we win, then by implication we get othered as opposed to just being a woman who won a sports game one time. This recently happened, actually. https://www.erininthemorning.com/p/ca-school-sports-authority-panders

    This is to say, I’m just thinking aboug how we come to a supporting argument that ages with grace? And what argument should that be? Not that I think any pro-trans argument would satisfy some people, with it being the wedge issue that makes TERFS out of people originally left of center. I guess I don’t know the answer at this point.





  • MystValkyrie@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto196@lemmy.blahaj.zonegamer rule
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    8 days ago

    You’d think the literal apocalypse happening would be an acceptable justification for not being dolled up 100% of the time, yet here we are with Aloy.

    And honestly, she looks pretty good for someone socially ostracized her whole life, not having a mom, and roughing it her whole life in a cabin that doesn’t have running water. It could be a whole lot worse than just peach fuzz 🤷‍♀️


  • Tinted primer. I bought it with tinted moisturizer just to use during hot summer days, but it made me realize I’m not really into wearing a full face of foundation and now I wear it all the time.

    It’s great for a natural look and kind of does everything. It color-corrects like concealer, adds emphasis to my cheekbones, fixes the dark rings under my eyes, and covers up the imperfections with my skin.

    I usually pair it with eyeliner and mascara and nude lip gloss and it’s a nice minimalist look.