The lyricist specifically said that after watching Gundam, she came away with the idea that humans repeat their sins, and that in the end people fight not for abstract ideals like freedom or justice, but for someone they personally love. That idea became central to the song. Simple as.
cool internet things pt. 6
https://t.co/wTGYG7tYm3 - math visualized
https://t.co/09hFmr9csj - visual instruments
https://t.co/H7iFmVtUFu - every music genre ever
https://t.co/uTCkmA9wVf - a camera that prints poems
https://t.co/m4LrYSv4ib - digital stamp collection
https://t.co/447WHCUPFY - a living digital sketchbook
some of the cool people behind these:
@michelletliu, @marijanapav, @rpavlini, @S_Conradi, @EveryNoise, @S_Conradi, @itsjessyin, @kelin_online
In fiction evil is often written to have depth and complexity while good is written to be simple and boring. But in real life evil is boring and predictable while good is complex and unique every single time.
So, I took multiple classes on Moby-Dick as an undergrad & one of the first things you learn is that Ishmael is NOT his name; it’s an allusion to Ishmael from the Book of Genesis (the exiled son of Abraham, of whom it was prophesied, “His hand shall be against every man, and every man’s hand against him”). The narrator imagines himself an outcast, rejected by society & forced to seek his destiny on the high seas. His self-understanding is beautifully transformed during the scene in which he shares a bed with the cannibal harpooner Queequeg, who becomes his bosom friend. As his heart softens, he writes, “I felt a melting in me. No more my splintered heart and maddened hand were turned against the wolfish world.” Love has come to redeem him. He is Ishmael no more.
After the ending of the Boys
Hughie realized that superheroes need to go through proper education to go out in the field so he created a school for them a sort of academia for heroes
...a hero academia
heterosexual tiktok posting is a constant pendulum swinging between “my big strong man guides me everywhere and I get to turn my brain off” and “my husband doesn’t know the difference between a pomegranate and a red onion”