what the Willoughby
SPOILERS FOR THE WILLOUGHBY’S MOVIE!!!
first tickle fic
Lee: Tim
ler: Nanny
ok so y’all know that one scene in the willoughby’s? Where the Nanny has come to bust him out and he says something about his Willoughby family not being great? And she hits him with a pillow? I was thinking it could go more like this…
“all I wanted was to be part of a great Willoughby family.” Tim stated sadly. Then he flinched.
poke
”he-hey!! What the Willoughby?!” He cried out, startled. Nanny—disguised as “phill”—had poked his side.
“are you saying Jane’s not great?”
another poke to the side. He tried to protect it, but Nanny gently grabbed his tiny arms and held them steadily.
“w-what? No-HOho! Thahat’s not—“
A quick spider tickle to his side this time.
“Barnaby A’s not great?”
“nohoho, I—“
another spider up his exposed side
“Barnaby B’s not great??”
“Nohoho, nahat what I was—“
She squeezed Tim’s ticklish flesh, and he cackled.
“You’re not great?!”
“NohoHOHoho!!”
Nanny let him go, and he rubbed his side to get his of the phantom tingles.
“C’mon, then. Let’s blow this pop stand bro-bro.” She said in her low voice, imitating phill.
Tim put his hat on before replying, “let’s do it, brother brother.
end!
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WRITTEN BRACKET BELOW THE CUT!
Polls start April 3rd at 3:00 pm EST!
LEFT SIDE, UP TO DOWN
1. I Hired A Clown For My Birthday And All I Got Was This Stupid Album !! - Gum Disease VS Hansel And Gretel - Sodikken
2. From Rotting Fantasylands - Nero's Day At Disneyland VS anarchy!! - STOMACH BOOK
3. Melodrama - Lorde VS maybe i will see you at the end of the world - Sydney Sprague
4. Another Light - Red Vox VS Dog Police - Dog Police
5. Oil Of Every Pearls Un-Insides - Sophie VS The Electric Lady - Janelle Monáe
6. Fear Of Death - Tim Heidecker VS Yellow Magic Orchestra (USA) - Yellow Magic Orchestra
7. Is This It (USA) - The Strokes VS Four-Calendar Cafe - Cocteau Twins
8. Ditzy Scene - Cardiacs VS I Brought You My Bullets, You Brought Me Your Love - My Chemical Romance
9. Hypnotize - System Of A Down VS Subliminal Sandwich - Meat Beat Manifesto
10. The Eternal Struggles Of The Howling Man - Rob Zombie VS Willoughby's Beach - King Gizzard And The Lizard Wizard
11. Transcendental Youth - The Mountain Goats VS Oceanborn - Nightwish
12. Odyssey - Valiant Hearts VS Melon Collie and the Infinite Sadness - The Smashing Pumpkins
13. Hosannas from the Basements of Hell - Killing Joke VS Blood Fire Death - Bathory
14. Irratics - Irratics VS Tago Mago - CAN
15. Fragile - Yes VS The Mollusk - Ween
16. Snakey Wake - The Residents VS Out Of The Blue - Electric Light Orchestra
RIGHT SIDE, UP TO DOWN
17. They Might Be Giants - They Might Be Giants VS Weezer (Blue Album) - Weezer
18. Sigma - REOL VS Soft Sounds From Another Planet - Japanese Breakfast
19. By The Way - Red Hot Chili Peppers VS In The Court Of The Crimson King - King Crimson
20. Plastic Beach - Gorillaz VS Alpocalypse - Weird Al Yankovic
21. Titanic Rising - Weyes Blood VS Wasteland, Baby! - Hozier
22. How To Be A Human Being - Glass Animals VS Axis: Bold As Love - The Jimi Hendrix Experience
23. Bitchboy - The Oozes VS Insomnia - Johnny Manchild and the Poor Bastards
24. 3d Virtual Buddies - Dream Puzzles VS Elsewhere - Set It Off
25. Tmp2 - Graham Kartna VS ABSOLUTE EARRAPE 99999 - Algorithm Dude
26. The Ugly Art - Machine Girl VS Jill's Psychedelic Sunday - Paul Shapera
27. Can't Buy A Thrill - Steely Dan VS Life In Cartoon Motion - MIKA
28. Prequelle - Ghost VS Dead Man's Party - Oingo Boingo
29. OK Go - OK Go VS La Culpa - Los Bunkers
30. Marvin's Marvelous Mechanical Museum - Tally Hall VS Dinosaurchestra - Lemon Demon
31. Days Of Future Passed - The Moody Blues VS A Kiss In The Dreamhouse - Siouxsie and the Banshees
32. Pretty Hate Machine - Nine Inch Nails VS Dance Fever - Florence and the Machine
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THIS DAY IN GAY HISTORY
based on: The White Crane Institute's 'Gay Wisdom', Gay Birthdays, Gay For Today, Famous GLBT, glbt-Gay Encylopedia, Today in Gay History, Wikipedia, and more …
1766 – Christoffel Bosch van Leeuwarden, a seventy year old porter in the Netherlands, was convicted of seduction to sodomy and sentenced to three years of prison labour.
1880 – A medical journal publishes an article, "Notes upon Sodomy," which claims that men who engage in sodomy have a different type of penis from those who don't.
1918 – James Daly (d.1978) was an American theater, film, and television actor, who is perhaps best known for his role as Paul Lochner in the hospital drama series Medical Center, in which he played Chad Everett's superior.
Daly was born in Wisconsin Rapids in Wood County in central Wisconsin, to Dorothy Ethelbert (Hogan) Mullen, who later worked for the Central Intelligence Agency, and Percifer Charles Daly, a fuel merchant. During the 1930s, Daly studied drama and acted in shows before he worked for the armed services, and served with the United States Navy as World War II ended.
Daly was a music major at the University of Wisconsin, a drama major at Iowa State University, and attended Carroll College before receiving a degree from Cornell College in Mount Vernon, Iowa.[3] Cornell College later presented him with an honorary Doctor of Fine Arts degree.
Daly was an accomplished stage actor, starting out in 1946 as Gary Merrill's understudy in Born Yesterday. His starring roles on Broadway included Archibald MacLeish's Pulitzer Prize- winning J.B. and Tennessee Williams' Period of Adjustment.
Between 1953 and 1955, Daly appeared in the TV series Foreign Intrigue. He guest-starred on many television series, including Appointment with Adventure (two episodes), Breaking Point, Mission: Impossible, The Twilight Zone ("A Stop at Willoughby"), The Tenderfoot (1964) for Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color, The Road West (1966 episode "The Gunfighter"), Custer, Gunsmoke, Combat!, The Fugitive, The Virginian, and Twelve O'Clock High. He portrayed Mr. Flint (an apparently immortal human) in the Star Trek episode "Requiem for Methuselah" (1969).
In 1958, Daly signed a contract with the R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company to do television commercials for Camel cigarettes. He served as the Camel representative for seven years, being flown by Reynolds throughout the United States to be filmed smoking a Camel cigarette at various locations.
According to his son Tim Daly during an interview on CBS News Sunday Morning, James Daly came out to Tim as gay a decade after divorcing his wife Hope. His struggle to come to terms with his sexual orientation nearly put a rift between him and his family. As homosexuality was still considered a mental illness until the early 1970s, he and his wife tried and failed at "curing" him. After their divorce, Daly decided to limit his contact with his children out of fear that they would end up mentally ill themselves.
Two of Daly's children, Tyne Daly and Tim Daly, and his granddaughter, Kathryne Dora Brown, and grandson, Sam Daly, are actors. Tyne appeared on Daly's TV series, Foreign Intrigue, as a child. The elder Daly and his daughter both guest-starred separately in the original Mission: Impossible TV series. Tim appeared as a child with his father in Henrik Ibsen's play, An Enemy of the People. Daly had two other children: daughters, Mary Glynn and Pegeen Michael.
Daly died on July 3, 1978, of heart failure in Nyack, New York, two years after Medical Center ended, and while he was preparing to star in the play Equus in Tarrytown, New York. His ashes were sprinkled into the Atlantic Ocean.
1923 – The American composer Ned Rorem, American composer, was born today. He is most well-known and praised for his song settings. He was born in Richmond, Indiana and received his early education in Chicago. He later travelled in Europe and North Africa.
During the time he lived in Morocco and Paris (1949-57), his song texts came from several languages. An avid diarist, in 1969 he published his Paris Diary, which, with his later diaries, has brought him some degree of notoriety, as he is honest about his and others' sexuality, describing his relationships with Leonard Bernstein, Noël Coward, Samuel Barber, and Virgil Thomson, and outing at least a few people.
Rorem has written extensively about music as well. These essays are collected in anthologies such as "Setting the Tone", "Music From the Inside Out", and "Music and People". His music prose is much admired, not least for its barbed observations about prominent musicians such as Pierre Boulez.
1954 – Ang Lee, the Oscar-winning Taiwanese-born director was born today. Lee decided to take on a small-budget, low-profile independent film based on Annie Proulx's Pulitzer Prize-finalist short story originally published in The New Yorker, Brokeback Mountain. In a 2005 article by Robert K. Elder, Lee was quoted as saying, "What do I know about Gay ranch hands in Wyoming?" In spite of the 'straight' director's removal from the subject at hand, Brokeback Mountain showcased Lee's skills in probing depths of the human heart.
The 2005 movie about the forbidden love between two Wyoming cowboys immediately caught public attention and initiated intense debates. The film was critically acclaimed at major international film festivals and won Lee numerous Best Director and Best Film awards worldwide. In addition, "Brokeback" became a cultural phenomenon and a box office hit. "Brokeback" was nominated for a leading eight Oscars and was the frontrunner for Best Picture heading into the March 5 ceremony, but lost out to Crash, a story about race relations in Los Angeles, in a controversial upset. There was speculation that the film's depiction of homosexuality might have been the reason for that upset, while others speculate that Crash was simply a better movie. Lee said he was disappointed that his film did not win Best Picture, but was honored to win Best Director, becoming the first Asian to ever win the award.
If you're a fan of Brokeback but don't know Ang Lee's other work, we'd recommend his brilliant and touching 1993 film "Wedding Banquet." The film about an interracial Gay couple and the meeting of cultures is a treasure.
He also managed to successfully film Life of Pi, the claustophobic story of a castaway boy and a Bengal tiger togetther adrift in a lifeboat - in widescreen 3D, yet!
1971 – Matthew Williamson is an English fashion designer.
Williamson is openly gay. He counts celebrities such as Cat Deeley, Sienna Miller, Kelis, Jade Jagger and Plum Sykes amongst his friends, but has often been criticised by others in the fashion industry for using them to promote his designs.
He was born in Manchester, England, and studied in Manchester at Loreto College until he was 17. He then moved to London to attend school at Central Saint Martin's College of Art and Design, graduating in 1994.
His eponymous fashion house was founded in February 1997. That same year, Williamson debuted his collection 'Electric Angels' at London Fashion Week. His collections were displayed during New York Fashion week in 2002. His store at 28 Bruton Street, in Mayfair, London, followed in 2004.
In 2005, he launched his own perfume range; the following year he was appointed Creative Director at Emilio Pucci. In 2007, a runway show of his designs was incorporated into the video for Prince's song "Chelsea Rodgers" from his Planet Earth album. In 2007, the Design Museum, London, hosted a restrospective of his work entitled "Matthew Williamson – 10 years in Fashion".
In 2008, Williamson was awarded the "Red Carpet Designer" accolade at the British Fashion Awards where he has also received three nominations for Designer of the Year. In September 2008 Matthew Williamson returned to London full-time to focus fully on his own label's forthcoming ventures and expansion. He made a guest appearance on season 7 of Project Runway. The episode aired on 28 January 2010.
In October 2010 it was announced that Matthew Williamson signed a new licensing deal with MBFG. The deal began a new line – Muse by Matthew Williamson.
His collections are shown twice a year during New York Fashion Week, and they often have an Indian influence, perhaps related to the time Williamson spent working in India for the clothing store Monsoon.
1993 – In Helena, Montana, the state supreme court ruled that transvestitism is not a sufficient reason to deny a father joint custody of his 3-year old child.
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