Guys, if you want to be a good artist and storyteller you need to absorb other media and influences beyond popular comics and movies and video games. Hell, even beyond visual art. Read novels, science articles, history books. Listen to podcasts, watch documentaries. Dip into different disciplines. Explore stuff outside your everyday. What you create and the pool of ideas you can pull out of is expanded by the knowledge you gain. Don’t do yourself a disservice by limiting your library. You never know when some weird shit you read about mushrooms could end up inspiring you or helping you solve a design/story problem.
In 2019 can we get more realistic aesthetics like broke bitch™️ where you wear the same jeans for two weeks straight and procrastinate as a specialty bc I can’t afford to be an art hoe and drink paint every single day
Another q: if you had to compose a list of everything that makes you an art hoe, the ULTIMATE art hoe, what would you put on it? Everything, like stuff you sould own, lifestyle etc. 💛
My entire world has been shattered by the realization that Garfield is an entirely plausible warrior cats name. A gar is a fairly common species of fish, and the cats of course know what a field is.
This knowledge is a great burden.
An important detail that I feel shouldn’t be ignored: Garfield would only be the name of a warrior, elder, or medicine cat. Other ranks/ages have assigned suffixes, meaning Garfield would also, at some point, hold the names:
I want mental health to be so normalised that little children can tell their parents if they’re feeling mentally ill just like they would if they had a stomach ache or a fever.
I want mental health to be so normalised that school lets you go home after a panic attack episode like they do if you sustain an injury.
I want mental health to be so normalised that when someone’s in recovery the people around them ask for progress reports and send get well soon cards just like they would for any other sort of recovery.
I want mental health to be normalised because every mental health disorder is just as frightening, just as damaging as a life threatening injury and we pass people by every day who are so unwell in this sense but who don’t receive a fraction of the care they deserve just because mental health is unseen.
@staff @support Since you seem to exclusively hire incompetent people, I’ve put together a handy little cheat sheet on how we average users consistently recognize pornbots at a quick glance. The examples used in this post are the two that followed me today, January 8, 2018.
1) Their URL is a string of random letters and numbers
Now this one can be tricky, because some users are weird like that. This one is really more of a red flag than a cut-and-dried identifier, but luckily, there are other steps!
2. If their profile icon isn’t itself porn (another red flag), they just won’t have one
Again, more of a red flag than an explicit pornbot nametag but definitely something to pay attention to.
3. The blog itself is mostly blank
You’ll most likely see no cover photos or blog descriptions. If you do, they’ll probably be something about mature busty milfs or teen twinks.
4. Every post links to an obscure, external URL
Here’s the big one! Pornbots are spam accounts meant to publish links to external content. The more links there are to the site, the more legitimacy they earn in browser algorithms. Essentially, they’re tricking google into thinking “Wow, all of these blogs like gjzpiee and helshvnsk8927 and bustymilfsandstepmoms728289929 are connected to this site, it must be legit.”
Your users recognize this shit daily, and it takes us two seconds. I understand that you’re not really concerned with child pornography and certainly not those pesky Nazis. This is clearly Verizon cleaning the site of a userbase it didn’t want so it can advertise to those who stay.