Beatles / Playboy interview/ UK . 1964
grr I hate rendering
The moment where John and Paul face each other and get really unusually intimate on camera and it makes John falter and give up his shithead demeanor for a few seconds is so fucking insane and far more damning than any interview or retrospective analysis could be. They were genuinely so psychosexually involved with each other and we got it on fucking camera
put ๐ johgn ๐ lennon ๐ in ๐ fortnite ๐ so we can shoot him again ๐ซ
GUYS WHICH ONE DO YOU PREFER GUYS GUSY GUSY SOMEONE HELP
every story you hear about george harrison is either โyeah he fucked my wifeโ or โhe was the only being that truly understood the meaning of this mortal lifeโ
oh yah and the eddie munson peeking in the side might as well post tew!!! hoohohohoh i love using tumblr as my closet which i just throw stuff in!
oh iโm sure
๐ถโ๏ธ ๐๐ง๏ธ rain stops, goodbye
another redraw! this time based off this photo shoot, but specifically this colorized version!
cant wait for the paul dano reads thirst tweetsย
Thinking about the story of Paul always straightening John's tie.
Thinking about how for John, having his tie loose and the top button undone was his little act of rebellion and push back to having to wear suits all the time in their early years, and Paul always coming up to him before a show and straighten it up, was Paul saying "shape up, knock it off, don't disturb the peace."
But when Paul when he heard this, he said "Thereโs a story that I used to straighten Johnโs tie before we went on stage. That seems to have become a symbol of what my attitude was supposed to have been. Iโve never straightened anyoneโs tie in my life, except perhaps affectionately.โ
To Paul, he wasn't trying to tell John to stop, he wasn't asking him to change something about himself, he wasn't trying to make him do anything. To Paul, that was a show of affection. That's how he showed all the excitement and joy before they would go on stage together.
Paul saw fixing a problem as an act of love, and John saw it as an act of criticism.
And this, ladies and gentlemen, is a perfect illustration of how they were always doomed.