Hi! My name is Catherine! Media Arts Major/artist/ occasional cosplayer. This blog is on college related
SEMI HIATUS with a queue running!
Also, expect a ton of Star Wars/Star Wars Rebels stuff.
Humans, for the most part, don’t have a clue. They don’t want one or
need one, either. They’re happy. They think they have a good bead on
things.
Men In Black (1997) | dir. Barry Sonnenfeld
This is quite an interesting YouTube channel concept, and it shows that … Asian chicks kick ass! JESSICA CHOU is a young Asian American woman who has a YouTube channel which basically teaches other girls and women about how to fix their car.
“I think we don’t see as many female mechanics because the industry is still so heavily dominated by men. When we think of a mechanic, we think of men. When we see ads or posters of mechanics, we see men. When we see shows about cars, we see men. It will take a long time to change all of this, but in the 10 short months that I’ve been on this journey, I’ve met so many incredible people who are out to change the game.”
male mechanics are known to overprice and add on unnecessary services to female patrons because they assume they dont know shit about cars. go jessica!!!
what miles morales said: Anyone can wear the mask. YOU could wear the mask…
what every fan creator heard: SHAME IS CANCELLED. MAKE AN OC.
What this person heard: other people shouldn’t have fun because if I’m too afraid to make an OC than you should be too
No, the opposite– I was raised in the fan fiction era of mary sue litmus tests and I primarily have been an OC maker/new-character-insert fanfiction writer from the age of like, 12. My teens was full of hearing constantly from fandom that OCs were self-indulgent and bad and shameful and I am expressing my happiness that an actual primary text of fandom gave people the emotional space to make original characters
like please I am a fan creator. the first thing i did when I got home from the movies was make a spider-horse