[ID: traditional sketch with two panels featuring characters from The Owl House. The first panel is of Hunter very excitedly reading a Warriors novel. In the second panel he, Flapjack, Gus, and Luz are tucked in bed, with Hunter infodumping about warrior cats lore while the others listen intently. Text reads, "So they reveal that it was actually Tigerclaw who killed Redtail, and Ravenpaw was innocent all along! He was just framed" "So cool!" /End ID.]
Sleepover! Luz lets Hunter borrow her books! Neurodivergent momence! That's it that's the post đ
Some quick mouse form/anatomy practice- gave âem BEES.
Definitely more to come. 8)Â Â
Ballpoint pen and brush pen
The strangest thing happened after a few days post my watching of S2. I got a wave of real, bittersweet sadness.
Not due to the obvious â I was dealing with that too, but with more excitement than anything â but because I realized something, as a writer and consumer of media. I realized that itâs unlikely Iâll ever get a media experience close to what I experienced at the end of Good Omens 2. Because really, its setup was absolutely unparalleled â in general, and for myself personally.
I am currently writing my third romance, and what Iâve learned primarily about the genre, the way for it to really work, is that there needs to be something keeping the couple apart initially. The more things keeping the couple apart, the stronger the romance hits. The more the couple clashes with each other, the better it is. Societal norms, class issues, initial dislike, literal dangerâall these aspects are what make a romance a story. Itâs that conflict that creates the compelling narrative. No romance was ever popular because things worked out well from the beginning â itâs that âlook at what we were, and look at us nowâ aspect that gives readers/watchers that satisfaction. Itâs the âI canât believe this happenedâ effect. The âI would never have foreseen thisâ effect. The âtheyâll never be togetherâ effect. Itâs why forbidden romances are so incredibly popular.
Another aspect that makes a romance story really work well is the amount of time it takes for the romance to develop. A couple that gets together after a few days? Eh, itâs tricky. You better make it really dramatic somehow. A great example is Titanic â class differences, betrothal, and a huge amount of danger threatens this couple, so them being in love after only a few days works. But what really sells this one is because we can see how this romance has survived beyond those few days. We see it 80 years in the future, still there, in the memory of Rose. That is why it hits so hard. Romances that span over long periods of time (especially ones that are bittersweet/tragic) hit so much more than ones spanning a short period.
But wait! Thereâs more!
You can up this effect by not only having the romance take time in storyâŚbut having it take time in real life, for the viewer/reader.
This is why romances in TV shows that take years to finally work out are so compelling. Itâs that âPam and Jimâ effect, that will-they-wonât-they deal. We are waiting right along with them, and weâre feeling that same relief when all those things keeping them apart finally fall away. This is harder to pull off, because thereâs never that guarantee that the story will make it that far. TV shows get cancelled, creators lose interest or die, etc. So itâs not just âWill They, Wonât They,â itâs âWill They, Wonât They, Can They Even Try?â
This is also compounded by that fear that it wonât happen in-story after all, and while in romances youâre pretty positive that things work out (they kinda have to, for it to be labeled a âromanceâ) in other media, thereâs always that possibility. Look at Community â thereâs a forbidden/conflict-ridden romance that didnât end up working out, even though it was âWill They, Wonât Theyâd for six entire seasons. You also then have shows and ships where fans are almost sure it wonât happen, but still hold out hope. (See: Supernatural, Sherlock, etc.)
Now. Now look at Good Omens. Look at that absolutely unparalleled, unbelievable set up. Itâs unbelievable because it takes almost every single thing that makes a romance compelling, and not only uses all of them, but dials them up to 11.
Why are they at odds? Why are they forbidden from being together?
Because they are literally the most opposing forces you can imagine in Western Canon. They are the Angel Guarding The Gate and The Serpent of Eden. The literal only way you couldâve made this a bigger deal wouldâve been to make it God and Satan, and even that wouldâve not hit as hard, because itâd be like two CEOs getting together â thereâs no fear of a higher power adding that delicious conflict. And to add to all this, in real life, the couple is portrayed as two men, which adds that second meta level of conflict.
And what fear/danger is keeping this couple apart?
Not just familial disappointmentâbut disappointment from God and Heaven and Hell. Not just moral guilt, but the guilt of potentially dooming the entire Earth. And finally, on top of that, the very real danger of being killed. Not only that, but making it as though you never even existed.
And in real life, they face all those roadblocks that queer couples in media have been battling for years and years, but I'll talk about that more in a second.
Okay, then Time. How long have they been kept apart?
ForâŚall of it.
All of the time that ever existed.
They, quite literally, could not have been kept apart longer.
And this leads into those final two points, the ones that actually really sell it. Because I can sit down right now and write a story about an angel and a demon falling for each other at the beginning of time against all oddsâŚbut what I canât do is to have already written it thirty-three years ago.
Thatâs how long this story has existed. Thirty. Three. Years.
Iâm not even counting how this is using characters that have existed as opposing forces for thousands of years. Iâm not even saying that, even though thatâs also a part of it. But besides that, this story, this exact story started thirty-three years ago, and is still being continued by the author to this day.
Do you know how uncommon that is?
Yes, we have canon that has lasted for many, many years. Hundreds. We get new versions of beloved older stories ever year. But itâs so very rare that they are by the same creator. We get new Sherlock Holmes content, but it is not written by Arthur Conan Doyle. This, on the other hand, is actual canon content, written by the author of the original. That is unbelievably rare.
That means weâve got a fandom where some people have grown up with these characters. People who read it at twenty are fifty-three. People who read it at fifty are eighty-three. Kids who saw their parents reading the book now have children of their own. It is a cult classic that has been in the hearts of so many people for generations. Me, personally, I fell in love with it ten years ago, at age twenty, at the very beginning of my own writing journey. This story means so much to people, because itâs stood that test of time.
And yet, this story was never explicitly romantic. So many saw it that way, but it was never something confirmed. Because this was a book from the 90s, at a time where this kind of romance just wasnât in popular media if it wasnât played as a joke. It was, back then, the same kind of âforbiddenâ as a romance between angel and demon. So people imagined, but they never expected anything more. And theyâve continued not expecting more, because even in the 2019 first season, there was never any true confirmation of anything, and people accepted it. You have a 33-year-old story here â itâs possible that this major change/confirmation could happen, but all things considered, it was unlikely. You would never blame the creator for not making major developments to a story they wrote with their late friend a lifetime ago. And no one in production was saying a word to confirm or deny, but weâve seen all this before. It was a Will-They-Wonât-TheyâŚProbably-Not situation.
And then you have the end of S2.
And that's where that bittersweet sadness comes in for me, personally. Not at a huge level, not to the point where I'd have it any other way, but it's there regardless. Because I realized that this was a unique situation that could never be replicated, for me, and likely for many, especially readers of the book pre-show. In all likelihood, I would never again experience a romantic payoff like this one. Because it was the most forbidden of forbidden romances, the couple of which have been kept apart by the worst of all dangers and highest level of guilt for the longest amount of time literally possible, written over a real-life span of time where this kind of romance went from âcompletely taboo even in real lifeâ to âfinally acceptable in popular media,â written by the same creator, and not confirmed as canon until the story reached the age of Jesus Christ himself.
And the real kicker is, even after everything these two literally star-crossed lovers have gone throughâŚtheyâre still being kept apart. Theyâve still not taken down those final, seemingly insurmountable barriers between them. It wasnât a âhere you go đâ move to make long-time fans happy â itâs being used as a perfect, painful plot point. After 33 years, weâre still having to wait longer.
Chef's kiss. Couldnât have been a better set up if it was mathematically calculated. And yet, the best part is that it happened organically.
It just works.
I LOVE THIS FIC i wanna send it to all my friends. jk i have already done that
feminism without trans gals ainât feminism.
Seeker of Knowledge, a short comic I made! :D
I saw the tree bearing the furits of knowledge. I did not pick from it.
I saw the beast of old wisdom upon a stone, who was seeked by kings and emperors. I did not ask from it.
I saw the spring beneath the tree, gleaming with truth and screts. I did not drink from it.
I followed the flow of the stream to a great abyss. And I looked.
In it, I saw the great coils of the universe. Breathing a rhythm.
The Sound of Music (1965) dir. Robert Wise
hey guys guess what
kiss kiss fall in love
i know we joke about cis artists having the weirdest sense of anatomy, but also even when the anatomy is fine, no one seems to want to draw women doing normal things