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#pls go follow aimee her stuff is AMAZING
sketchytea · 3 years
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inb4 i start drawing a ton of this gremlin man, sav belongs to @eye-may ✨
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katsuhera · 3 years
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PLEASE DROP SOME OF YOUR FAV WRITERS REGARDLESS OF FANDOM 🥺
hihi!! (heh i saw you asked ria as well, most of the recs she gave are similar to mine so i hope my list still helps 🥺)
also i really do not mean to leave anyone out 🥺 there are so so many talented writers across these fandoms, this is just a list i could come up with off the top of my head. i might update as i remember! also, important note – each of these writers have their own rules pertaining to nsfw (18+) content. please be cognizant of their rules and respect them! 
multifandom
@bakugohoex ria writes for hq, bnha and aot and her works are just *chefs kiss* (also extra points to ria because she lewded guy fieri with me)
@junisfics juniper i think is technically multifandom (pls correct me if i’m wrong 🥺) but her aot fics are literally,,, oh my god fucking amazing. i live for her ‘the worthy’ series
@ererokii aimee writes for aot, bnha and genshin impact! pls i love her work sm
@bakuushi mich writes for bnha and hq!! she’s so creative and her stuff is amazing pls
@miyangel cloud writes for bnha, hq and jjk!! i recently came across their blog and i’m kind of obsessed
@alrightberries boop writes for aot, bnha and jjk i believe! i’m in love with her theme it’s so beautiful and organized, and not to mention her writing is just top-tier
@jae-ren serena writes for aot and jjk and god,,, amazing stuff highly recommend
@marviess march writes for bnha and aot!! her aesthetic is literally supreme and her writing is as well (also seeing her interactions with her char anons make my entire day, plus she’s the sweetest human ever, please please go check her out!)
@therealvalkyrie writes for aot and mha, but mostly aot (pls correct me if i’m wrong!!) and her content is just so good
@tsuhika writes for bnha and haikyuu and i swear none of her content misses. just so so amazing
@myherowritings writes mostly for bnha, but also genshin impact and hq i believe!! sof’s stuff is so so good, i was obsessed with her ceo!shouto series
@setenuma sofi writes for aot, bnha, hq and atla i believe!! pls their writing is so great plus their blog is so beautiful
@sukunasfootrest rue writes for bnha, jjk and aot and her levi series... literally is so amazing. pls i highly rec
attack on titan
@alert-arlert ryn is the LITERAL loml and their writing is so fucking amazing, one of the first aot blogs i followed since i made my acc 🥺
@shisoaya GOD i love naya’s writing, also she draws and she’s so fkn talented? please go check her out
@murmikaa mika is so fucking good at writing oh my god. go check her out!
@eremiie charm's stuff makes my fucking legs go numb. her eren stoner fic was stuck in my mind for literal weeks
@miekasa no words just pls go check out her blog. i recommend literally every single one of her fics
@jaegerbombb sofia is legit the sweetest and her blog is so amazing. i love her and her writing so much
@melancholicmonologue mara is such a beautiful soul of a person and her writing is chefs kiss as well! im in love with literally everything she writes (and she’s responsible for me becoming a zeke fker so,,, you can see the power she holds)
@anlian-aishang anlian literally feeds me with her levi content and leaves my jaw dropped
@ackermans-freedom-inc suz’s writing fills my heart constantly pls AND SUZ IS JUST THE SWEETEST PERSON ALIVE HOW ARE YOU THIS PERFECT
haikyuu
@atsumuse mimi is just amazing. i have nothing to say besides that literally i read her stuff before i even started writing and they’ve left such a vivid imprint on my mind
@samuslut wing is so so talented and has so much content i live for her inarizaki fics
@strawberryakaashi cait is responsible for me even paying attention to/starting to write for akaashi tbh 
boku no hero academia
@lady-bakuhoe jo is just the coolest. and i read through her bakugou mlist like it’s the morning news bye
@jirou-s christine’s writing never misses pls and her aesthetic is so beautiful i cannot
@rat-suki annie has amazing content. like... no words. her thin walls fic was one of the first fics i ever read on tumblr and when i say that i still think about it to this day i mean it
@shoutogepi rosie makes my mind blank with her shouto content. literally have no words besides this pls just read her stuff. all of it​
@todorkihoe alex is one of the first people i ever followed on tumblr and for good mf reason. their bnha content fed me for the longest time, thank you alex ily
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njawaidofficial · 7 years
Text
Behind the viral push to save one of the most inclusive shows on TV.
http://styleveryday.com/2017/08/13/behind-the-viral-push-to-save-one-of-the-most-inclusive-shows-on-tv/
Behind the viral push to save one of the most inclusive shows on TV.
If Cameron Esposito and Rhea Butcher can do it, so can Hollywood’s biggest names.
The good news: A really funny, awesomely diverse sitcom wrapped up work on its second season. The bad news: You might never get to see it.
Any Seeso subscribers in the house? Likely not, and that’s kind of what’s causing this predicament. On Wednesday, the NBCUniversal-backed comedy streaming service announced plans to shut down after about a year and a half in operation.
It’s sad news, too, because Seeso was home to “Take My Wife,” a critically acclaimed sitcom from IRL married duo Cameron Esposito and Rhea Butcher. The show follows the slightly fictionalized lives of Esposito and Butcher as they try to find personal and professional success. The premise — comedians just trying to make it in the real world — is well-worn territory, but you’ve almost certainly never seen it done like this.
The show’s second season recently finished filming, but with Seeso calling it quits, there’s no telling if and when it will ever air.
It’s an important show, and it’s absolutely worth saving.
In case “Take My Wife” never finds a home (hopefully it will), Esposito tweeted a few important stats about the second season’s production — specifically, the demographics of the cast and crew.
Wanted to tell u what having a show on Seeso allowed us to do. I am so proud of #TakeMyWife. pic.twitter.com/UatqOyrPY7
— Cameron Esposito (@cameronesposito) August 9, 2017
She urged followers to retweet her original post and help spread the message using the #TakeMyWife hashtag.
The outpouring of support for this tweet is getting folx on the phone. Pls keep it going for #TakeMyWife https://t.co/1Dqpsky8I7
— Cameron Esposito (@cameronesposito) August 10, 2017
People of color, women, and members of the LGBTQ community are under-represented both in front of and behind the camera. “Take My Wife” set out to change that.
A report from the Ralph J. Bunche Center for African American Studies at UCLA looked at 200 top-grossing films and more than 1,200 TV shows between 2014 and 2015 and found that women and people of color were underrepresented on screen and in production. GLAAD ran a similar analysis with similar results about the role of LGBTQ people in entertainment media.
Photo by Jonathan Leibson/Getty Images for Los Angeles LGBT Center.
With “Take My Wife,” Esposito and Butcher made a concerted effort to involve members of historically underrepresented communities in the show’s production. They hope this proof of concept sends a message to Hollywood execs — but if there’s hope of persuading industry power players to change how they cast and hire, it probably helps if, you know, the finished product actually airs somewhere.
We had a lot of straight, cis, white guys and gals on both seasons of our show – THEY WERE/ARE ALSO GREAT. #TakeMyWife
— Rhea Butcher🏳️‍🌈⚾️ (@RheaButcher) August 10, 2017
Creating a world where people can see themselves in the media they consume has an effect beyond just this show.
Riley Silverman, a trans comic from Los Angeles, landed a role on “Take My Wife.” In a series of tweets, she nailed why diverse, representative media is important.
I’ve never seen a woman who looks like me on TV before, and #TakeMyWife gave me the chance to *be* a woman who looks like me on TV.
— Riley Silverman (@ryesilverman) August 10, 2017
More than just characters on a screen, representation is about not feeling alone in the world. “It would have meant the world to me to see myself represented,” Silverman says via Twitter direct message. “We didn’t talk about any of this stuff when I was a kid so I spent years of my life thinking I was just broken. The first time I heard anything trans related was as a punchline in a Cracked magazine parody of Batman, and yet it still made me realize there were others like me out there and I wasn’t alone. And maybe I would be okay.”
Pop stars Tegan and Sara, who appeared in the “Take My Wife” holiday special, tweeted, “I wonder what my life would have looked like if I’d seen thoughtful + positive #LGBTQ representation on TV when I was young.”
A handful of the show’s writers and actors got in on the action, heaping praise on Esposito and Butcher’s work and support…
#TakeMyWife is a special little show that’s honest and unique in its voice and representation. Proud of @cameronesposito and @RheaButcher pic.twitter.com/bN5hiFQ4SV
— Zeke Nicholson (@DJZiggyZeke) August 10, 2017
#TakeMyWife gave me a huge opportunity by committing to casting queer actors in queer roles. Please don’t let the second season go unaired!
— GABY DUNN 🏳️‍🌈 (@gabydunn) August 10, 2017
#TakeMyWife is a great show made by my good pals & sometimes I’m on it. To me, that’s all a show needs to be worth saving, but here’s more: https://t.co/LAMlk6Bzjg
— Eliza Skinner (@elizaskinner) August 11, 2017
…as did the show’s fans, celebrities, and media figures, bringing the #TakeMyWife hashtag to Twitter’s list of trending topics.
#TakeMyWife is funnier than every network comedy I’ve seen in a long while. Knowing it comes from this diverse a group is no surprise. https://t.co/AD28QNtthC
— Jamil Smith (@JamilSmith) August 11, 2017
Let’s help support another women-driven comedy by throwing some love to #TakeMyWife so it can find a new home! @CW_CrazyXGF @TheCW @netflix https://t.co/jiEBGW4gif
— Bunchkins (@bunch_of_fans) August 11, 2017
Let’s find this show a home. https://t.co/vfMjaepoJk
— Aimee Mann (@aimeemann) August 11, 2017
take #TakeMyWife, please.
(if you are a TV network or streaming service or psychic brain connection facilitator.) https://t.co/8pBy1QoJSb
— Myq Kaplan (@myqkaplan) August 11, 2017
I have no doubt that #TakeMyWife will find a huge audience on an amazing platform. Bidding war! https://t.co/rUiMuS5Lgt
— Allie Goertz (@AllieGoertz) August 11, 2017
We LOVE #TakeMyWife. ❤️🌈✨RT if you want to see season 2! https://t.co/L9Ai91oiEG
— GLAAD (@glaad) August 11, 2017
Travis McElroy of “My Brother, My Brother and Me” (which was also on Seeso and has been saved by a different streaming platform), joined the fight.
SAVE #TakeMyWife! An amazing show featuring 2 of my favorite people in this world! THE SHOW MUST GO ON! TELL EVERYONE! https://t.co/oYUaWxslfa
— The Travis McElroy (@travismcelroy) August 11, 2017
Hopefully, a network or streaming provider will realize that there’s a really great show ready for the world to see and give it the audience it truly deserves. You can get involved in the push to save the show by tweeting using the #TakeMyWife hashtag.
If #TakeMyWife finds a home it’ll be bc of u all. Thank u. pic.twitter.com/cMeUxGmIIO
— Cameron Esposito (@cameronesposito) August 11, 2017
#Inclusive #Push #Save #Shows #TV #Viral
0 notes
tragicbooks · 7 years
Text
<p>Behind the viral push to save one of the most inclusive shows on TV.</p>
If Cameron Esposito and Rhea Butcher can do it, so can Hollywood's biggest names.
The good news: A really funny, awesomely diverse sitcom wrapped up work on its second season. The bad news: You might never get to see it.
Any Seeso subscribers in the house? Likely not, and that's kind of what's causing this predicament. On Wednesday, the NBCUniversal-backed comedy streaming service announced plans to shut down after about a year and a half in operation.
It's sad news, too, because Seeso was home to "Take My Wife," a critically acclaimed sitcom from IRL married duo Cameron Esposito and Rhea Butcher. The show follows the slightly fictionalized lives of Esposito and Butcher as they try to find personal and professional success. The premise — comedians just trying to make it in the real world — is well-worn territory, but you've almost certainly never seen it done like this.
youtube
The show's second season recently finished filming, but with Seeso calling it quits, there's no telling if and when it will ever air.
It's an important show, and it's absolutely worth saving.
In case "Take My Wife" never finds a home (hopefully it will), Esposito tweeted a few important stats about the second season's production — specifically, the demographics of the cast and crew.
Wanted to tell u what having a show on Seeso allowed us to do. I am so proud of #TakeMyWife. http://pic.twitter.com/UatqOyrPY7
— Cameron Esposito (@cameronesposito) August 9, 2017
She urged followers to retweet her original post and help spread the message using the #TakeMyWife hashtag.
The outpouring of support for this tweet is getting folx on the phone. Pls keep it going for #TakeMyWife https://t.co/1Dqpsky8I7
— Cameron Esposito (@cameronesposito) August 10, 2017
People of color, women, and members of the LGBTQ community are under-represented both in front of and behind the camera. "Take My Wife" set out to change that.
A report from the Ralph J. Bunche Center for African American Studies at UCLA looked at 200 top-grossing films and more than 1,200 TV shows between 2014 and 2015 and found that women and people of color were underrepresented on screen and in production. GLAAD ran a similar analysis with similar results about the role of LGBTQ people in entertainment media.
Photo by Jonathan Leibson/Getty Images for Los Angeles LGBT Center.
With "Take My Wife," Esposito and Butcher made a concerted effort to involve members of historically underrepresented communities in the show's production. They hope this proof of concept sends a message to Hollywood execs — but if there's hope of persuading industry power players to change how they cast and hire, it probably helps if, you know, the finished product actually airs somewhere.
We had a lot of straight, cis, white guys and gals on both seasons of our show - THEY WERE/ARE ALSO GREAT. #TakeMyWife
— Rhea Butcher🏳️‍🌈⚾️ (@RheaButcher) August 10, 2017
Creating a world where people can see themselves in the media they consume has an effect beyond just this show.
Riley Silverman, a trans comic from Los Angeles, landed a role on "Take My Wife." In a series of tweets, she nailed why diverse, representative media is important.
I've never seen a woman who looks like me on TV before, and #TakeMyWife gave me the chance to *be* a woman who looks like me on TV.
— Riley Silverman (@ryesilverman) August 10, 2017
More than just characters on a screen, representation is about not feeling alone in the world. "It would have meant the world to me to see myself represented," Silverman says via Twitter direct message. "We didn't talk about any of this stuff when I was a kid so I spent years of my life thinking I was just broken. The first time I heard anything trans related was as a punchline in a Cracked magazine parody of Batman, and yet it still made me realize there were others like me out there and I wasn't alone. And maybe I would be okay."
Pop stars Tegan and Sara, who appeared in the "Take My Wife" holiday special, tweeted, "I wonder what my life would have looked like if I'd seen thoughtful + positive #LGBTQ representation on TV when I was young."
A handful of the show's writers and actors got in on the action, heaping praise on Esposito and Butcher's work and support...
#TakeMyWife is a special little show that's honest and unique in its voice and representation. Proud of @cameronesposito and @RheaButcher http://pic.twitter.com/bN5hiFQ4SV
— Zeke Nicholson (@DJZiggyZeke) August 10, 2017
#TakeMyWife gave me a huge opportunity by committing to casting queer actors in queer roles. Please don't let the second season go unaired!
— GABY DUNN 🏳️‍🌈 (@gabydunn) August 10, 2017
#TakeMyWife is a great show made by my good pals & sometimes I'm on it. To me, that's all a show needs to be worth saving, but here's more: https://t.co/LAMlk6Bzjg
— Eliza Skinner (@elizaskinner) August 11, 2017
...as did the show's fans, celebrities, and media figures, bringing the #TakeMyWife hashtag to Twitter's list of trending topics.
#TakeMyWife is funnier than every network comedy I've seen in a long while. Knowing it comes from this diverse a group is no surprise. https://t.co/AD28QNtthC
— Jamil Smith (@JamilSmith) August 11, 2017
Let's help support another women-driven comedy by throwing some love to #TakeMyWife so it can find a new home! @CW_CrazyXGF @TheCW @netflix https://t.co/jiEBGW4gif
— Bunchkins (@bunch_of_fans) August 11, 2017
Let's find this show a home. https://t.co/vfMjaepoJk
— Aimee Mann (@aimeemann) August 11, 2017
take #TakeMyWife, please. (if you are a TV network or streaming service or psychic brain connection facilitator.) https://t.co/8pBy1QoJSb
— Myq Kaplan (@myqkaplan) August 11, 2017
I have no doubt that #TakeMyWife will find a huge audience on an amazing platform. Bidding war! https://t.co/rUiMuS5Lgt
— Allie Goertz (@AllieGoertz) August 11, 2017
We LOVE #TakeMyWife. ❤️🌈✨RT if you want to see season 2! https://t.co/L9Ai91oiEG
— GLAAD (@glaad) August 11, 2017
Travis McElroy of "My Brother, My Brother and Me" (which was also on Seeso and has been saved by a different streaming platform), joined the fight.
SAVE #TakeMyWife! An amazing show featuring 2 of my favorite people in this world! THE SHOW MUST GO ON! TELL EVERYONE! https://t.co/oYUaWxslfa
— The Travis McElroy (@travismcelroy) August 11, 2017
Hopefully, a network or streaming provider will realize that there's a really great show ready for the world to see and give it the audience it truly deserves. You can get involved in the push to save the show by tweeting using the #TakeMyWife hashtag.
If #TakeMyWife finds a home it'll be bc of u all. Thank u. http://pic.twitter.com/cMeUxGmIIO
— Cameron Esposito (@cameronesposito) August 11, 2017
0 notes
socialviralnews · 7 years
Text
<p>Behind the viral push to save one of the most inclusive shows on TV.</p>
If Cameron Esposito and Rhea Butcher can do it, so can Hollywood's biggest names.
The good news: A really funny, awesomely diverse sitcom wrapped up work on its second season. The bad news: You might never get to see it.
Any Seeso subscribers in the house? Likely not, and that's kind of what's causing this predicament. On Wednesday, the NBCUniversal-backed comedy streaming service announced plans to shut down after about a year and a half in operation.
It's sad news, too, because Seeso was home to "Take My Wife," a critically acclaimed sitcom from IRL married duo Cameron Esposito and Rhea Butcher. The show follows the slightly fictionalized lives of Esposito and Butcher as they try to find personal and professional success. The premise — comedians just trying to make it in the real world — is well-worn territory, but you've almost certainly never seen it done like this.
youtube
The show's second season recently finished filming, but with Seeso calling it quits, there's no telling if and when it will ever air.
It's an important show, and it's absolutely worth saving.
In case "Take My Wife" never finds a home (hopefully it will), Esposito tweeted a few important stats about the second season's production — specifically, the demographics of the cast and crew.
Wanted to tell u what having a show on Seeso allowed us to do. I am so proud of #TakeMyWife. http://pic.twitter.com/UatqOyrPY7
— Cameron Esposito (@cameronesposito) August 9, 2017
She urged followers to retweet her original post and help spread the message using the #TakeMyWife hashtag.
The outpouring of support for this tweet is getting folx on the phone. Pls keep it going for #TakeMyWife https://t.co/1Dqpsky8I7
— Cameron Esposito (@cameronesposito) August 10, 2017
People of color, women, and members of the LGBTQ community are under-represented both in front of and behind the camera. "Take My Wife" set out to change that.
A report from the Ralph J. Bunche Center for African American Studies at UCLA looked at 200 top-grossing films and more than 1,200 TV shows between 2014 and 2015 and found that women and people of color were underrepresented on screen and in production. GLAAD ran a similar analysis with similar results about the role of LGBTQ people in entertainment media.
Photo by Jonathan Leibson/Getty Images for Los Angeles LGBT Center.
With "Take My Wife," Esposito and Butcher made a concerted effort to involve members of historically underrepresented communities in the show's production. They hope this proof of concept sends a message to Hollywood execs — but if there's hope of persuading industry power players to change how they cast and hire, it probably helps if, you know, the finished product actually airs somewhere.
We had a lot of straight, cis, white guys and gals on both seasons of our show - THEY WERE/ARE ALSO GREAT. #TakeMyWife
— Rhea Butcher🏳️‍🌈⚾️ (@RheaButcher) August 10, 2017
Creating a world where people can see themselves in the media they consume has an effect beyond just this show.
Riley Silverman, a trans comic from Los Angeles, landed a role on "Take My Wife." In a series of tweets, she nailed why diverse, representative media is important.
I've never seen a woman who looks like me on TV before, and #TakeMyWife gave me the chance to *be* a woman who looks like me on TV.
— Riley Silverman (@ryesilverman) August 10, 2017
More than just characters on a screen, representation is about not feeling alone in the world. "It would have meant the world to me to see myself represented," Silverman says via Twitter direct message. "We didn't talk about any of this stuff when I was a kid so I spent years of my life thinking I was just broken. The first time I heard anything trans related was as a punchline in a Cracked magazine parody of Batman, and yet it still made me realize there were others like me out there and I wasn't alone. And maybe I would be okay."
Pop stars Tegan and Sara, who appeared in the "Take My Wife" holiday special, tweeted, "I wonder what my life would have looked like if I'd seen thoughtful + positive #LGBTQ representation on TV when I was young."
A handful of the show's writers and actors got in on the action, heaping praise on Esposito and Butcher's work and support...
#TakeMyWife is a special little show that's honest and unique in its voice and representation. Proud of @cameronesposito and @RheaButcher http://pic.twitter.com/bN5hiFQ4SV
— Zeke Nicholson (@DJZiggyZeke) August 10, 2017
#TakeMyWife gave me a huge opportunity by committing to casting queer actors in queer roles. Please don't let the second season go unaired!
— GABY DUNN 🏳️‍🌈 (@gabydunn) August 10, 2017
#TakeMyWife is a great show made by my good pals & sometimes I'm on it. To me, that's all a show needs to be worth saving, but here's more: https://t.co/LAMlk6Bzjg
— Eliza Skinner (@elizaskinner) August 11, 2017
...as did the show's fans, celebrities, and media figures, bringing the #TakeMyWife hashtag to Twitter's list of trending topics.
#TakeMyWife is funnier than every network comedy I've seen in a long while. Knowing it comes from this diverse a group is no surprise. https://t.co/AD28QNtthC
— Jamil Smith (@JamilSmith) August 11, 2017
Let's help support another women-driven comedy by throwing some love to #TakeMyWife so it can find a new home! @CW_CrazyXGF @TheCW @netflix https://t.co/jiEBGW4gif
— Bunchkins (@bunch_of_fans) August 11, 2017
Let's find this show a home. https://t.co/vfMjaepoJk
— Aimee Mann (@aimeemann) August 11, 2017
take #TakeMyWife, please. (if you are a TV network or streaming service or psychic brain connection facilitator.) https://t.co/8pBy1QoJSb
— Myq Kaplan (@myqkaplan) August 11, 2017
I have no doubt that #TakeMyWife will find a huge audience on an amazing platform. Bidding war! https://t.co/rUiMuS5Lgt
— Allie Goertz (@AllieGoertz) August 11, 2017
We LOVE #TakeMyWife. ❤️🌈✨RT if you want to see season 2! https://t.co/L9Ai91oiEG
— GLAAD (@glaad) August 11, 2017
Travis McElroy of "My Brother, My Brother and Me" (which was also on Seeso and has been saved by a different streaming platform), joined the fight.
SAVE #TakeMyWife! An amazing show featuring 2 of my favorite people in this world! THE SHOW MUST GO ON! TELL EVERYONE! https://t.co/oYUaWxslfa
— The Travis McElroy (@travismcelroy) August 11, 2017
Hopefully, a network or streaming provider will realize that there's a really great show ready for the world to see and give it the audience it truly deserves. You can get involved in the push to save the show by tweeting using the #TakeMyWife hashtag.
If #TakeMyWife finds a home it'll be bc of u all. Thank u. http://pic.twitter.com/cMeUxGmIIO
— Cameron Esposito (@cameronesposito) August 11, 2017
from Upworthy http://ift.tt/2vXRidj via cheap web hosting
0 notes