NIGHTMARETOBER IS BAAAAAAACK!!!
And this year comes renewed!!!
Here are the rules: Each daily piece will be referencing anything horror/terror related (either a fictional character, a creepypasta, a urban legend, etc)
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One of the most toxic things about mainstream media today is the insecurity they have of their own ideas disguised as the belief that they can somehow iterate or “update” the classics.
If you’re gonna make all these changes, why use the IP at all? Just make it a new IP.
You won’t, because you don’t actually believe your ideas alone hold enough substance to keep people around, so you latch onto something that has already proven itself like a parasite to give your ideas legitimacy.
It’s ok to draw inspiration from the greats, but why do we constantly feel the need to supplant them with our own twisted versions of them?
I would say it all feels stagnant, but really it just feels like rotting instead.
@Acerola_t I call it Millenialism. It's basically avoiding any embarrassment by just making everything a joke or ironic. Any failure can be brushed off by "whatever, i wasn't trying". When they see someone trying their best unironically, it just looks weird to them.
Your mother is problematic. Your father is problematic. Your son is problematic. Your aunt is problematic. The cashier at the local Tesco is problematic. You've probably bought a cookie from a bakery made by hands that have done unspeakable things. Every chocolate bar you've ever eaten has probably killed a 7 year old child slave in Cameroon. The gas that drives your car is fueled by engines of death. Every person who has ever smiled at you in the streets has committed some act that if you knew about it, would make you profoundly dislike them.
We have all been bad, small, petty, unlikeable, cruel, downright mean. Authors are not special "problematic" beings, they're just more public. Part of being an adult is recognizing that without mercy for our fellow human beings, and ourselves, we'd all be condemned to death. Reading fiction should help us understand that we're all irreparably tainted with evil, every system is corrupted, every line is broken.
And like, that's okay. That's what it means to be alive.
Your mother is problematic. Your father is problematic. Your son is problematic. Your aunt is problematic. The cashier at the local Tesco is problematic. You've probably bought a cookie from a bakery made by hands that have done unspeakable things. Every chocolate bar you've ever eaten has probably killed a 7 year old child slave in Cameroon. The gas that drives your car is fueled by engines of death. Every person who has ever smiled at you in the streets has committed some act that if you knew about it, would make you profoundly dislike them.
We have all been bad, small, petty, unlikeable, cruel, downright mean. Authors are not special "problematic" beings, they're just more public. Part of being an adult is recognizing that without mercy for our fellow human beings, and ourselves, we'd all be condemned to death. Reading fiction should help us understand that we're all irreparably tainted with evil, every system is corrupted, every line is broken.
And like, that's okay. That's what it means to be alive.
Being afraid of reading "problematic authors" is due to your own insecurity with your beliefs and identity. You think that if you read "bad people", you'll become bad yourself, soaking up their toxins like a dim sponge. This is because you are stupid and can't trust yourself.
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What would probably help is if the people pushing this would actually do these creators a service and leave a vocal, visible review of these works instead of lauding them purely because of some arbitrary qualifier like skin color.
Imagine being one of these artists and writers and someone just tells you “I’m watching this and supporting this because you’re Black!” And they don’t say a thing about anything you put into the work. No mention of the writing or animation or art style. Just “you’re Black!”.
Would feel like I was being talked down to if someone did that to me, honestly.