blanchechic - Percy Blinders
Percy Blinders

she/her. desi. standbi. certified bollywood buff. multifandom.dupattas. sunflower fields. lotuses. cigarettes in lehengas. phool. kajal. yeh aankhein.लोग जुड़ते गये और बनता गया कारवाँ, मेरी जान

225 posts

Latest Posts by blanchechic - Page 2

2 months ago
David Lynch And Sheryl Lee On The Set Of Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me (1992)

David Lynch and Sheryl Lee on the set of Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me (1992)

3 months ago

I am very wary of people going "China does it better than America" because most of it is just reactionary rejection of your overlord in favor of his rival, but this story is 1. absolutely legit and 2. way too funny.

I Am Very Wary Of People Going "China Does It Better Than America" Because Most Of It Is Just Reactionary

US wants to build an AI advantage over China, uses their part in the chip supply chain to cut off China from the high-end chip market.

China's chip manufacturing is famously a decade behind, so they can't advance, right?

I Am Very Wary Of People Going "China Does It Better Than America" Because Most Of It Is Just Reactionary

They did see it as a problem, but what they then did is get a bunch of Computer Scientists and Junior Programmers fresh out of college and funded their research in DeepSeek. Instead of trying to improve output by buying thousands of Nvidia graphics cards, they tried to build a different kind of model, that allowed them to do what OpenAI does at a tenth of the cost.

I Am Very Wary Of People Going "China Does It Better Than America" Because Most Of It Is Just Reactionary

Them being young and at a Hedgefund AI research branch and not at established Chinese techgiants seems to be important because chinese corporate culture is apparently full of internal sabotage, so newbies fresh from college being told they have to solve the hardest problems in computing was way more efficient than what usually is done. The result:

I Am Very Wary Of People Going "China Does It Better Than America" Because Most Of It Is Just Reactionary

American AIs are shook. Nvidia, the only company who actually is making profit cause they are supplying hardware, took a hit. This is just the market being stupid, Nvidia also sells to China. And the worst part for OpenAI. DeepSeek is Open Source.

I Am Very Wary Of People Going "China Does It Better Than America" Because Most Of It Is Just Reactionary

Anybody can implement deepseek's model, provided they have the hardware. They are totally independent from DeepSeek, as you can run it from your own network. I think you will soon have many more AI companies sprouting out of the ground using this as its base.

I Am Very Wary Of People Going "China Does It Better Than America" Because Most Of It Is Just Reactionary
I Am Very Wary Of People Going "China Does It Better Than America" Because Most Of It Is Just Reactionary

What does this mean? AI still costs too much energy to be worth using. The head of the project says so much himself: "there is no commercial use, this is research."

I Am Very Wary Of People Going "China Does It Better Than America" Because Most Of It Is Just Reactionary

What this does mean is that OpenAI's position is severely challenged: there will soon be a lot more competitors using the DeepSeek model, more people can improve the code, OpenAI will have to ask for much lower prices if it eventually does want to make a profit because a 10 times more efficient opensource rival of equal capability is there.

And with OpenAI or anybody else having lost the ability to get the monopoly on the "market" (if you didn't know, no AI company has ever made a single cent in profit, they all are begging for investment), they probably won't be so attractive for investors anymore. There is a cheaper and equally good alternative now.

AI is still bad for the environment. Dumb companies will still want to push AI on everything. Lazy hacks trying to push AI art and writing to replace real artists will still be around and AI slop will not go away. But one of the main drivers of the AI boom is going to be severely compromised because there is a competitor who isn't in it for immediate commercialization. Instead you will have a more decentralized open source AI field.

Or in short:

I Am Very Wary Of People Going "China Does It Better Than America" Because Most Of It Is Just Reactionary
3 months ago
blanchechic - Percy Blinders

Whenever someone makes fun of his outfits, my heart sinks. Be nice to him. He's too sweet for this world. He looked sexy af and exuded joy like a radiant sunbeam of love.

3 months ago

Why am I so stupid chronicles pt.1

This whole time I was thinking wow janet jackson looks so much like michael jackson and then I saw a picture of her recently and again thought wow the resemblance is uncanny and then was thinking ooooh have they ever been in a room together and tried to google about the resemblance only to realize they’re freaking SIBLINGS??!!!???!?!!?

My brain can’t be bothered, ahhhhh the perks of not being american (srsly the country needs help) hehehehehehe


Tags
3 months ago
Ophelia (1894) By John William Waterhouse

Ophelia (1894) by John William Waterhouse

3 months ago
Goth Woman In Old Paintings.
Goth Woman In Old Paintings.
Goth Woman In Old Paintings.
Goth Woman In Old Paintings.

Goth woman in old paintings.

3 months ago
NICOLA COUGHLAN As CLARE DEVLIN Derry Girls (2018-2022)
NICOLA COUGHLAN As CLARE DEVLIN Derry Girls (2018-2022)
NICOLA COUGHLAN As CLARE DEVLIN Derry Girls (2018-2022)
NICOLA COUGHLAN As CLARE DEVLIN Derry Girls (2018-2022)
NICOLA COUGHLAN As CLARE DEVLIN Derry Girls (2018-2022)
NICOLA COUGHLAN As CLARE DEVLIN Derry Girls (2018-2022)
NICOLA COUGHLAN As CLARE DEVLIN Derry Girls (2018-2022)
NICOLA COUGHLAN As CLARE DEVLIN Derry Girls (2018-2022)
NICOLA COUGHLAN As CLARE DEVLIN Derry Girls (2018-2022)
NICOLA COUGHLAN As CLARE DEVLIN Derry Girls (2018-2022)
NICOLA COUGHLAN As CLARE DEVLIN Derry Girls (2018-2022)

NICOLA COUGHLAN as CLARE DEVLIN Derry Girls (2018-2022)

3 months ago
Goats Shelter In Mawsynram Bus Stop. Amos Chapple

Goats shelter in Mawsynram bus stop. Amos Chapple

3 months ago

women in PHLEGM (poetry, history, language, english literature, ghost stories, music)

3 months ago
2024 + HORROR
2024 + HORROR
2024 + HORROR
2024 + HORROR
2024 + HORROR
2024 + HORROR
2024 + HORROR
2024 + HORROR
2024 + HORROR
2024 + HORROR
2024 + HORROR
2024 + HORROR
2024 + HORROR
2024 + HORROR
2024 + HORROR
2024 + HORROR
2024 + HORROR
2024 + HORROR
2024 + HORROR
2024 + HORROR
2024 + HORROR
2024 + HORROR
2024 + HORROR
2024 + HORROR
2024 + HORROR
2024 + HORROR
2024 + HORROR
2024 + HORROR
2024 + HORROR
2024 + HORROR

2024 + HORROR

3 months ago
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The
“60s Horror Movies Reflect An Era Of Rapid Change And Uncertainty, And A Yawning Generation Gap. The

“60s horror movies reflect an era of rapid change and uncertainty, and a yawning generation gap. the social stability of the post-war years crumbled as attitudes to everything from hemlines to homosexuality underwent a seismic shift. horror movies, especially those made for low budgets outside the mainstream studio system, offered ways to process and interpret the rapid pace of change. they often served as cautionary tales about the dangers of abandoning traditional values.”

3 months ago

I think the most radical thing the hunger games does is tell young people that the most revolutionary thing you can do is have unconditional love for humanity. Katniss throughout the entire series is guided by a deep sense of compassion for the people around her. It is what causes her to volunteer, to bury rue, to mercy kill cato, its why she tries to save peeta, why finnick telling her to remember who the real enemy is works, and even though her compassion for the larger world falters when peeta is kidnapped, it comes back when she visits hospitals and asks for mercy for other victors and ultimately, it is love and belief in a better humanity that makes her kill coin. Through it all, she maintains an unfaltering belief in the fundemental goodness of humanity, which is diametrically opposed to dr gaul's and snow's worldview. Peeta is even more unwaveringly compassionate

So the series tells young people that the most revolutionary thing you can be is compassionate. Let compassion drive your politics. Let yourself believe in the fundemental goodness of people. And i think that's deeply important in a world that touts the superiority of pure reason or logic, to allow yourself to be guided by something as emotional as compassion. Katniss everdeen tells us that your politics should be rooted in compassion in a world that thinks detatchment or cynicism is intelligence and i think thats v cool

3 months ago

i keep seeing people in their late teens/early twenties having a "[X] content intended for younger audiences does not feel satisfying to me anymore but i don't know where to start to branch out into adult fiction" moment and i thought i would give some recommendations for adult fiction for my fellow creepy crawly queer people. all or at least a LOT of it will be on the darker and more fucked up side bc i primarily engage with horror and thriller media personally but feel free to add on with more or recommendations from other genres :)

edit: i am continuing to add to this list so there might be new recs (highlighted in pink) in here every once in a while! also want to add that there's a variety of POC, queer, and disabled authors in here as well, i am also all of the above (asian, aro lesbian, poly, disabled) and tried to incorporate as many wickedly talented, compelling narratives as possible. that's all, happy reading!

A Certain Hunger, Chelsea G. Summers

A Darker Shade of Magic, V. E Schwab*

A Dowry of Blood, S.G Gibson

Animal, Lisa Taddeo*

A Ripple of Power and Promise, Jordan A. Day*

Bunny, Mona Awad*

Children of Blood and Bone, Tomi Adeyemi*

Cursed Bread, Sophie Mackintosh*

Dark Places, Gillian Flynn

Dead Girls Don't Say Sorry, Alex Ritany

Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead, Olga Tokarczuk*

Eileen, Ottessa Moshfegh*

Fruiting Bodies, Kathryn Harlan*

Goddess of Filth, V. Castro*

Gone Girl, Gillian Flynn

House of Leaves, Mark Danielewski

If I Had Your Face, Frances Cha*

Into the Drowning Deep, Mira Grant

Iron Widow, Xiran Jay Zhao

Jackal, Erin E. Adams*

Juniper and Thorn, Ava Reid*

Kindred, Octavia Butler*

Manhunt, Gretchen Felker-Martin*

Mexican Gothic, Silvia Moreno-Garcia

Ninefox Gambit, Yoon Ha Lee*

Rabbits, Terry Miles*

Scorched Grace, Margot Douaihy*

Sharp Objects, Gillian Flynn

She is a Haunting, Trang Thahn Tran

Slewfoot, Brom

Sorrowland, Rivers Soloman

Summer Sons, Lee Mandelo

Supper Club, Lara Williams*

The Centre, Ayesha Manazir Siddiqi*

The Change, Kirsten Miller

The Death of Jane Lawrence, Caitlin Starling*

The Dreamer Trilogy, Maggie Stiefvater

The Haunting of Hill House, Shirley Jackson

The Hollow Places, T. Kingfisher*

The Human Origins of Beatrice Porter, Soraya Palmer*

The Jasmine Throne, Tasha Suri

The Locked Tomb, Tamsyn Muir

The Luminous Dead, Caitlin Starling*

The Red Tree, Caitlin Kiernan*

The Unfamiliar Garden, Benjamin Percy*

Vicious, V. E Shwab

Wake, Siren, Nina MacLaughlin*

We Have Always Lived in the Castle, Shirley Jackson

What Moves the Dead, T. Kingfisher*

3 months ago

yes babe you’re so bunny a certain hunger my year of rest and relaxation boy parts the pisces gone girl milk fed nightbitch the bell jar the virgin suicides earthlings pizza girl vladimir and ily for it

3 months ago

how does it feel to be surrounded by other delusional, left-wing scumbags in that echo chamber you call a 'fandom'?

It feels pretty good, actually! I like being surrounded by people who share my values and ethics because it makes me feel safe and supported. But, more than anything, it feels really really good not to be surrounded by fascists.

3 months ago
- "Love Is Innocent, Love Is Pure, And Love Is Willing To Sacrifice Everything For The Ones It Loves."
- "Love Is Innocent, Love Is Pure, And Love Is Willing To Sacrifice Everything For The Ones It Loves."
- "Love Is Innocent, Love Is Pure, And Love Is Willing To Sacrifice Everything For The Ones It Loves."
- "Love Is Innocent, Love Is Pure, And Love Is Willing To Sacrifice Everything For The Ones It Loves."
- "Love Is Innocent, Love Is Pure, And Love Is Willing To Sacrifice Everything For The Ones It Loves."
- "Love Is Innocent, Love Is Pure, And Love Is Willing To Sacrifice Everything For The Ones It Loves."
- "Love Is Innocent, Love Is Pure, And Love Is Willing To Sacrifice Everything For The Ones It Loves."
- "Love Is Innocent, Love Is Pure, And Love Is Willing To Sacrifice Everything For The Ones It Loves."
- "Love Is Innocent, Love Is Pure, And Love Is Willing To Sacrifice Everything For The Ones It Loves."

- "Love is innocent, love is pure, and love is willing to sacrifice everything for the ones it loves."

3 months ago

you cut off women from dancing, because girls of good characters do not indulge in such lewd activities. if they become one with their swaying hips, how will you hold down their bodies and spirits?

you cut off women from reading, because books have so many vile ideas about freedom and humanity. hence, they may begin to spin ideas from the yarn of knowledge, jeopardising the conditional safety of your cage.

you cut off women from adorning themselves lovingly, because lest they begin to like the shape of their noses or the curves of their waist; they will stop caring about other people and conforming to your standards of beauty.

you cut off women from expressing because girls from good families do not raise their voices. you say the devil resides in their voice boxes and if they don’t watch their tongues, they may taint the name of their families.

you cut off women from being, so the only thing they’re left with is fear and misery. grinding that terror on the stone of fate like grains, they toil away their lives.

then you call them many many rotten things if any of them refuses to believe this. still, if they don’t comply, force is applied repeatedly.

they become a skeleton of their potential self, grieving in secrecy; because privacy is a luxury. what if in the empty silence they finally start thinking & questioning?

yet, you wonder why they’re exhausted and angry, fighting silent wars within and outside.

3 months ago

Books that I would overthrow a moderate to large kingdom for a physical copy of:

Carmilla (Sheridan Le Fan): aka the lesbian vampire novel that predates dracula

Shapeshifters: a history (John B Kachuba)

Dante's inferno (I'm a sucker for dramatic ass poets screeching about hell and cursing their enemies with elaborate metaphors)

Declare (Tim Powers)

Macbeth (like I said, dramatic guys screeching and cursing their enemies)

The Castle of Otrando

The Silmarillion

Lord of the rings box set

Dracula

I fear my local libraries are quite bare when it comes to historical, gothic and occult texts. honk honk :( the local library has one singular book to do with witchcraft except its about Wicca and the sources = "just trust me bro" overall not a great book to consult. Completely rife with misinformation from my recollection.

3 months ago

Hey so like many of you, I saw that article about how people are going into college having read no classic books. And believe it or not, I've been pissed about this for years. Like the article revealed, a good chunk of American Schools don't require students to actually read books, rather they just give them an excerpt and tell them how to feel about it. Which is bullshit.

So like. As a positivity post, let's use this time to recommend actually good classic books that you've actually enjoyed reading! I know that Dracula Daily and Epic the Musical have wonderfully tricked y'all into reading Dracula and The Odyssey, and I've seen a resurgence of Picture of Dorian Gray readership out of spite for N-tflix, so let's keep the ball rolling!

My absolute favorite books of all time are The Haunting of Hill House and We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson. Classic psychological horror books about unhinged women.

I adore The Bad Seed by William March. It's widely considered to be the first "creepy child" book in American literature, so reading it now you're like "wow that's kinda cliche- oh my god this is what started it. This was ground zero."

I remember the feelings of validation I got when people realized Dracula wasn't actually a love story. For further feelings of validation, please read Frankenstein by Mary Shelley and The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson. There's a lot the more popular adaptations missed out on.

Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier is an absolute gem of a book. It's a slow-build psychological study so it may not be for everyone, but damn do the plot twists hit. It's a really good book to go into blind, but I will say that its handling of abuse victims is actually insanely good for the time period it was written in.

Moving on from horror, you know people who say "I loved this book so much I couldn't put it down"? That was me as a kid reading A Little Princess by Frances Hodgson Burnett. Picked it up while bored at the library and was glued to it until I finished it.

Peter Pan and Wendy by JM Barrie was also a childhood favorite of mine. Next time someone bitches about Woke Casting, tell them that the original 1911 Peter Pan novel had canon nonbinary fairies.

Watership Down by Richard Adams is my sister Cori's favorite book period. If you were a Warrior Cats, Guardians of Ga'Hoole or Wings of Fire kid, you owe a metric fuckton to Watership Down and its "little animals on a big adventure" setup.

A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry was a play and not a book first, but damn if it isn't a good fucking read. It was also named after a Langston Hughes poem, who's also an absolutely incredible author.

Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury is a book I absolutely adore and will defend until the day I die. It's so friggin good, y'all, I love it more than anything. You like people breaking out of fascist brainwashing? You like reading and value knowledge? You wanna see a guy basically predict the future of television back in 1953? Read Fahrenheit.

Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain and To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee are considered required reading for a reason: they're both really good books about young white children unlearning the racial biases of their time. Huck Finn specifically has the main character being told that he will go to hell if he frees a slave, and deciding eternal damnation would be worth it.

As a sidenote, another Mark Twain book I was obsessed with as a kid was A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court. Exactly what it says on the tin, incredibly insane read.

If Beale Street Could Talk by James Baldwin is a heartbreaking but powerful book and a look at the racism of the time while still centering the love the two black protagonists feel for each other. Giovanni's Room by the same author is one that focuses on a MLM man struggling with his sexuality, and it's really important to see from the perspective of a queer man living in the 50s– as well as Baldwin's autobiographical novel, Go Tell it on the Mountain.

Agatha Christie mysteries are all still absolutely iconic, but Murder on the Orient Express is such a good read whether or not you know the end twist.

Maybe-controversial-maybe-not take: Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov is a good book if you have reading comprehension. No, you're not supposed to like the main character. He pretty much spells that out for you at the end ffs.

Animal Farm by George Orwell was another favorite of mine; it was written as an obvious metaphor for the rise of fascism in Russia at the time and boy does it hit even now.

And finally, please read Shakespeare plays. As soon as you get used to their way of talking, they're not as hard to understand as people will lead you to believe. My absolute favorite is Twelfth Night- crossdressing, bisexual love triangles, yellow stockings... it's all a joy.

and those are just the ones i thought of off the top of my head! What're your guys' favorite classic books? Let's make everyone a reading list!

3 months ago

The Creature: You made me, therefore you must bear the consequences of my creation.

Victor Frankenstein: Nuh-uh

The Creature: fym nuh-uh?

3 months ago
Mood

Mood

3 months ago
Reminder For When He “saves” It. He Was The One Who Wanted This, And Now He Gets To Be The Hero And

Reminder for when he “saves” it. He was the one who wanted this, and now he gets to be the hero and win favour with young constituents. Don’t give him the credit for fixing his own problem.

3 months ago
"People Hate That I Compare It To An Abusive Ex-boyfriend. Girl, I've Been There, I Say That For A Reason."
"People Hate That I Compare It To An Abusive Ex-boyfriend. Girl, I've Been There, I Say That For A Reason."
"People Hate That I Compare It To An Abusive Ex-boyfriend. Girl, I've Been There, I Say That For A Reason."
"People Hate That I Compare It To An Abusive Ex-boyfriend. Girl, I've Been There, I Say That For A Reason."

"People hate that I compare it to an abusive ex-boyfriend. Girl, I've been there, I say that for a reason." - Chappell Roan for Faces of Music (2025)

3 months ago
Shannon Elle - Clouds
Shannon Elle - Clouds
Shannon Elle - Clouds
Shannon Elle - Clouds

shannon elle - clouds

3 months ago

Was scrolling through AO3 and found this gem

Was Scrolling Through AO3 And Found This Gem

Enemy to parent is a trope we have to popularise lmao

3 months ago

"if you're going to write dark fiction you should explicitly state that it's not okay to do in real life so that a child doesn't see it and think it's okay"

actually i don't cater my art to children, my art is not intended for children, and it's not my responsibility to parent them. hope this helps

3 months ago
Ewan Mitchell As Aemond Targaryen
Ewan Mitchell As Aemond Targaryen
Ewan Mitchell As Aemond Targaryen
Ewan Mitchell As Aemond Targaryen

Ewan Mitchell as Aemond Targaryen

2.01 • A Son for a Son

3 months ago
The Urge Is So Very Strong

the urge is so very strong

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