Source: rammiI’m nothing but an afterthought in your hands. (x)
Rammi’s got skillz
i-wanna-get-in-englands-pants:
the worst fuckin thing is
“oh you sing? are you a good singer? SING SOMETHING FOR ME RIGHT NOW”
“do you draw? you do? DRAW ME”
like no
“you write? MAKE ME A CHARACTER IN YOUR STORY”
“you act? CRY FOR ME RIGHT NOW”
“You speak that language?! Say something in it!”
“you murder? KILL ME RIGHT NOW”
The last one seems more doable
(via huzzahitsthedoctor)
Source: somewherethats-green
David Wenham is the anti-Sean Bean.
Your dad sends you off in a hopeless battle against an overwhelming number of orcs?
Don’t die.
Hugh Jackman drags you along to fight vampires in Transylvania?
Don’t die.
Join a suicide mission to stop the Persian army for Sparta?
Don’t die.
I”m not sure that guy can be killed.
(via nymphetaminesecret)
Source: nudityandnerdery
I also think the role of the assistant has changed since Steven Moffat started overseeing Doctor Who. Rose, Martha and Donna were chosen to travel with the Doctor because they showed in one way or another that they were smart and up to the challenge. Amy and Clara both come to the Doctor first and foremost as mysteries. Amy is the little girl who grew up with a rift in time in her bedroom wall, who doesn’t know why she doesn’t have parents. She spends many episodes being mystically both pregnant and not pregnant but doesn’t know a thing about it and all our information about it comes through the Doctor. What the fuck is that?
Some version of Clara dies on screen twice before she is taken on as the assistant, and it seems like the Doctor takes up with her to find out why. In both cases, the woman is not of interest for her character or her abilities, but for some fundamental mystery in her being. The mystery isn’t even a secret she’s keeping, something over which she has control- it’s something she does not know about, that the Doctor must puzzle out in his own mind. It’s not about her- it’s about what’s wrong with her. When Steven Moffat took over Doctor Who, women became a problem.
"What is wrong with Doctor Who? (via zelda-fistgerald)
I think the concept of women being a problem under Steven Moffat explains a lot about the way women are treated recently in Doctor Who.
Women’s emotions? PROBLEM! Rory can have a heart to hear with the Doctor about his duel memories, but when Amy wants to talk to him about the same problem in a “Night and the Doctor” short, the Doctor runs away shouting, “She’s having an EMOTION!”
Women’s sexuality? PROBLEM! That’s why River Song, the most sexually assertive character in Moffat’s era, is eventually made out to be a complete Femme Fatale.
Women’s concerns about their safety? PROBLEM! So when Clara is finally informed about the fact the Doctor has seen her die multiple times, that knowledge has to be removed from her mind so that they don’t spend the rest of the season discussing the problem on equal footing.
(via whovianfeminism)
(via whovianfeminism)
consultant-ninja-from-gallifrey:
That tag wins all the awards, in the history of ever.
headcanon accepted
HEADCANON ACCEPTED.HEADCANON ACCENPTED
HEADCANON FUCKING ACCEPTED.
HEADCANON COMPLETELY ACCEPTED.
forever reblogHEADCANON BEYOND ACCEPTED
THIS GOES BEYOND HEADCANON THIS IS LAW OKAY
(via huzzahitsthedoctor)
Source: flapperorslapper
A reminder to NEVER overlook or underestimate the details. There’s a little bit of ‘amazing’ in each one.
Wow..
(via nymphetaminesecret)
Source: booksarealwaysthere
Why Animal Crossing is a incredible and better than all the games you play, combined.
(via happiness-startsfromtheinside)
Source: liberalartist
Gabriel, you are five.
That awkward moment when you are a powerful archangel and the safest place you can think of is the backseat of the Impala.
(via yourethepotatoone)