It’s okay to admire your fave and support them, but there’s a line between being a fan and acting like you have ownership over them. They’re still their own person, not someone you can control or speak for.
one day people will finally realize and appreciate how much editors contribute to fandoms and how hard they work on their edits. maybe when that day comes people will finally respect editors and not try to steal their hard work and benefit from it themselves.
If your favorite can only shine when you're dragging another actor, maybe it's time to rethink the strategy. Talent speaks for itself.
You don't have to tear one actor down to praise another. It's getting old, and honestly, it says more about the person than the actors.
i'm in so many fandoms, and honestly, i love every single one of them. each fandom came into my life at different points, and somehow they've all become a part of who i am. some stayed for years, some were short lived, but they all gave me something to hold onto.
remember guys practice the “don't like, don't read” rule when you see tags that you don’t like then scroll past it no need to screenshot it and post it.
being vocal doesn't automatically mean you're right, just as being silent doesn't automatically mean you don't care. people support in different ways, and neither should be used to measure how much someone loves their idol. having a backbone isn't defined by how loud you are.
So annoying that some people still care. As long as they want to kiss boys in shows for my viewing enjoyment...I couldn't give a shit who they go home to.
being multifandom is actually a struggle because there’s simply not enough room in a pfp, header, or bio for every piece of media that’s fundamentally shaped me as a person