Clarke
Ya know, an episode similar to the one on Ellen when Susan and Ellen kiss for the first time.
Scene Clarke and Bellamy have an intense moment, kiss and then pull apart with a funny look on their faces followed by this dialogue.
Bellamy Ummm
Clarke: Ahhhh
Bellamy: Did you feel anything?
Clarke (shaking head): Nope. No spark.
Bellamy (nodding): Yep, none.
Clarke (shrugs shoulders): Cool. So about those plans We are about to change 20 times in the next 42 minutes ....
A belated series of answers to @the-wip-project’s questions…
Day 16:
A. Not in any of my current wips. I could see how that adding the above would be feasible in one of them.
Day 17 & 20 involve homework. I will answer those ASAP.
Day 18:
A. Something that is nsfw
Day 19:
A. Right now, I’m forcing myself to work on one wip. Ideas for other wips are written in an “ideas” notebook I have. I have difficulty focusing at one thing at a time in general.
Day 21:
A. Good question! Enemies to lovers.
Day 22:
A. The science explanation scene that happens in the middle of a dramatic twist.
of @the-wip-project‘s challenge
Q33: What kind of gestures are your characters often using?
A33: Dragging their hand through their hair to push it off their face, shrugs, eye rolls, putting their hands in their pockets to make fists during tense moments.
The “hay is for horses” call back is from a cockney poem based on the alphabet but not the traditional “A is for Apple”. My dad, who was from London, England used to recite it to me whenever I said “hey” or “eh” (yes, I am Canadian).
My memory recalls the poem as follows:
Hay is for horses (A)
Beef or mutton
Seaforth Islanders (C)
Differential
Heave a brick (E)
Effervescent (F)
… I think G for a Q (Guinea for a ? )
I will do a search later to find the rest.
Such an excellent post! Reposting
the suffering never ends
this utopian canada that is portrayed by the government and the media is a lie. it's propaganda.
canadian society is not anti-racist. our government is the product of centuries of colonialism and oppression.
I know it's nice to think/pretend that everything is great here, but when you pretend that you are telling every person who has suffered under oppression and discrimination that our stories aren't real, that we are lying or exaggerating.
stop trying to convince yourself that there is equity and respect (especially for Indigenous people) on this land, and start working to make that a reality.
some things to get you started:
read up on the national centre for truth and reconciliation, and what the truth and reconciliation commission report says
learn about and donate to the unist'ot'en camp
support, donate to, and get involved with black lives matter canada
get involved with the canadian council for refugees
check out the rainbow railroad- an organization that helps LGBT+ people escape violence, oppression, and persecution
there are so many more great organizations and groups out there doing amazing work, so please if you can take the time to do some research and get involved, that would be wonderful.
tagging: @allthecanadianpolitics