The sign language interpreter was feeling it.
Learn more about it...
“It pains me to admit it but I do enjoy your surly retorts.”
9 Reasons Why People Think This Show is Gay
#1 - Undressing with a look #2 - Blatant leering at the royal bottom #3 - Gratuitous showing off of body #4 - Pantless assaults on manservant #5 - Loving embraces #6 - Secret glances #7 - Foot fetishes #8 - Eye fuckage #9 - Wanting manservant when naked
9 Reasons Why People Think This Show is Gay - Part 2
9 Reasons Why People Think This Show is Gay - Part 3
9 Reasons Why People Think This Show is Gay - Finale edition
9 Reasons Why People Think This Show is Gay - Part 5
“When you love a person, there’s always a tiny part of you that terrified that one day you’re gonna lose them. But you have to let the people you love know that you love them, even if it causes you a great deal of pain.” -“Why? It sounds awful.” -“Because you’re alive.”
Sex Education (2019– )
The Witcher AU » Jaskier as a red dragon
Their numbers are dwindling. Treasure seekers saw to that. But they do exist.
One of the things I did in 2020: I’ve read Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein! Long story short - I pretty much fell in love with the story.
Here are some things that popular culture won’t tell you about Frankenstein that I find too interesting not to share:
Victor was never a doctor, but a college dropout.
The monster doesn’t have a name, but at some point he calls himself Adam. Also “Frankenstein” is Victor’s last name, so if you choose to interpret Adam as Victor’s son, “Frankenstein” becomes the Monster’s last name too. The point is, it’s 100% valid to call Frankenstein’s Monster simply “Frankenstein”.
The Monster is described as beautiful - 8 feet tall, his features symmetrical with limbs in proportion; his hair lustrous black and flowing; and his eyes yellow. He’s also super-strong and super-fast, but I think that should go without saying.
Adam is also incredibly intelligent and calculating. And pretty snarky and eloquent in his way of speaking. Oh yeah, and he also speaks French.
Towards the end of the book there’s a scene where the Monster grins and runs away across the Europe, armed with a gun and many pistols and it’s just… it’s great.
As much as I would love for The Secret History to be adapted as an Oscar-bait, art house drama, I think the scene where Richard gets the two-hundred dollars for a new wardrobe could only truly be expressed as the most clichéd, teen movie-esque shopping montage possible.