broken | beautiful

Apr 09

realization: i’m following 47 tumblr…ers. tumblrites? blogs.

consequence: as i find new blogs to follow, i peruse their archives and totes reblog things that are eons old in internet time. but they’s lovely, so i wish to give them love anyway.

plan: follow three more blogs. obviously. 

Apr 09
yoisthisracist:

hurrdurrrr submitted this picture. :( :(:(:( For real though, that is some depressing-ass shit.

yoisthisracist:

hurrdurrrr submitted this picture.

:(

:(:(:(

For real though, that is some depressing-ass shit.

Apr 09

COMIC ART CORRECTIONS: cat-boob-butt pose →

eschergirls:

skart87 submitted:

Just saw the article with the sleeping cats.
Here’s an example of a cat butt-boob pose.

Cheers!

The sad part is I don’t even think that cat is as twisted as some of the poses in this tumblr. I only see one butt “cheek” (do cats have butt…

Apr 05

post-carbon:

“The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago. The next best time is now.”

Chinese Proverb (via fuckyeahgreenanarchy)

Apr 05

thisdanobrien:

noel:

Episode 7 - FASHION

“I like to wear flats, for when I go to the pond to put hats on ducks.”

one of my partners has told me that i basically am a manic pixie dreamgirl.

for my own sanity, i decide to assume it’s a compliment?

Apr 05

defranco:

“I love Lindsay more than… anything.”

:)

just too kyewt

Apr 05
violentsandwich:

lightningsshadow:

paranoidandroid42:

yes i’m a boy
yes i play videogames ;]
don’t hit on me silly girls xoxoxo

wft boys don’t play videogames
get back in the garage and fix my car.

get back in the garage and fix my car.

violentsandwich:

lightningsshadow:

paranoidandroid42:

yes i’m a boy

yes i play videogames ;]

don’t hit on me silly girls xoxoxo

wft boys don’t play videogames

get back in the garage and fix my car.

get back in the garage and fix my car.

Apr 05

esdafable:

jinkking:

unbakedbreads:

steveholtvstheuniverse:

meeoh-my:

fisherpon asked for a photoset of my humanized pony designs, so here they are!  

These are amazing!

human ponies that aren’t all white and hourglass shaped?

WHAT IS THIS

<333333

Ayyiiee! YES, amazing design aesthetic. Varied female figures. Women who are CARTOON CHARACTERS, not props.

Apr 05

Bill O'Reilly Stands Up for Transgender Miss Universe Contestant →

limiculous:

geromytime:

democratsaresexier:

Conservative Fox News host Bill O’Reilly seemed supportive of a transgender woman’s right to compete in the Miss Universe competition during his show on Friday. During a segment about Miss Universe’s decision to prohibit Jenna Talackova from participating in the pageant because she is trans, O’Reilly asked, “What right does the Miss Universe pageant have to violate this lady’s right to be a woman? They are basically saying because you weren’t born a woman you don’t have a right to be a woman..[I]t doesn’t sound right to me.” The comments represent a significant evolution for O’Reilly, who in 2010 compared transgender people to Ewoks.

even bill o’reilly gets it. hot damn *applause*

Apr 05
spicyobsession:

damnlayoffthebleach:

jedifreac:

damnlayoffthebleach:

Mulan
Chinese
From here http://sakimichan.deviantart.com/

BRHood: Hey guys! I’m going to need some help on this. And I’d love it if our Chinese and other Asian followers who may know more than us could comment so we can get this discussion going.
I remember a while ago, like a year or so ago, I read THIS POST (took me soooooo long to find it again) discussing Mulan from a feminist aspect. In hindset, it annoying uses western ideas of “feminism” to critique a Disney version of a Chinese story, but whatever. In the article (which I think the girl wrote for a school assignment), it’s mentioned that the Disney Mulan does not really LOOK authentically Chinese.

 Part of Mulan’s charm as  Disney Princess and Asian woman is her ravishing beauty, pale skin and “tiny waist.”  However, as Zhongshun writes, “…it was never stressed in the ancient poem that Mulan was a ravishing beauty” (Zhongshun 23).  Furthermore, Zhang Renjie argues that Disney artists “chose to create a Mulan that looks like a Vietnamese” (Renjie 31), versus an authentic-looking Chinese girl.  

I would love it if our Chinese followers could maybe clarify. I say this because this submission made me wonder just how “whitewashed” the first picture is when the second picture (the original Disney version) , from my understanding, is not an accurate portrayal of Chinese girls. So what should Mulan REALLY look like? Thank you kindly for any responses we may get.

As a young-ish Asian American girl when Mulan first came out in the early 2000s, I distinctly remember not liking Mulan’s appearance. I never really pinned down why exactly this was until recently.
I mean, what was up with those slanty eyes? I remember arguing with white kids on the playground when I was younger and the only Asian in my class that Asians didn’t have slanty eyes, see how I did not; I really resented that Mulan had slanty eyes and here Disney was winning the battle over that stereotype.
I just remember thinking: she is Asian and ethnically Han Chinese, like me (though my family is more Taiwanese than Chinese at this point)…but I don’t look like that, do I?
And I can appreciate Disney basing her appearance on ancient Chinese standards of beauty with the round face and thick eyebrows and defined features, because that is a thing, but still…working on the Racebending protest I really, really began to resent Mulan.
Rage resent. Because people would say things like, “If Aang is supposed to be Asian, why doesn’t he have slanty eyes, why doesn’t he look more like Mulan.” And even if I had contextual proof (eg. the Avatar creators have stated that they decided to use the Korean animated art style to draw faces since that was what those artists were good at, etc.) there was still this mental disconnect…because Aang did not look like what white people (and really all Americans via osmosis) EXPECTED Asians to look like. Because these stereotypes are so engrained.
Early on in the Airbender protest, I remember giving a long ass PowerPoint presentation on the Asian elements of Avatar: The Last Airbender to a prominent Asian American advocacy group in order to convince them that Avatar was in fact being whitewashed. The leaders of the organization told us that Aaang and co. had round blue eyes and they were confused, until I reminded them that this was the case in anime as well.
I remember protesting the Runaways casting calls because Marvel was seriously, seriously considering whitewashing the Japanese American character of Nico Minoru. I remember approaching other longstanding Asian American groups with this news to ask for their support in pursuing the issue. I would send out these briefing sheet emails and attach images of Jo Chen’s beautiful covers featuring Nico. I encountered so much resistance because to these older non-comic book, non-anime savvy Asian American advocates, Nico “didn’t really look that Asian” to them. Instead of being happy that for once, we were not being drawn with exaggerated, stereotypical features, they doubted that Nico was Asian at all.
We got the same questions from mainstream geek press. “She doesn’t look Asian to me.” So I began to cull images of Nico from all of the different artists who worked in the book. And I noticed that the Asian, Asian American and Asian Canadian artists would draw Nico looking, well, “normal” …and the non-Asian artists were more likely to, well…draw her as looking like Mulan. Because that is what we are accustomed to imagining cartoon Asians as “looking like.”

My love-hate relationship with Mulan is really impacted by the way she was depicted, to the point where I still can’t stand Mulan merchandise. I’ve been looking for an Asian Barbie doll for a long time but I feel like the Mulan doll isn’t a good substitute because of her exaggerated racialized features. I don’t know if I am the only Asian who feels this way or not. I simply experience a lot of cognitive dissonance between how I feel Mulan should look like and how she does look like. I PARTICULARLY resent Disney for always marketing her in the same goddamn outfit she sings about as oppressing her in the movie, and for calling it a freaking “kimono” last Halloween, etc.
http://mickey89eli.deviantart.com/art/Real-Mulan-94298507
And for me, it isn’t about wanting Mulan to look more “white” even though yes, I grew up in a culture that taught me that white beauty was normative and to have her not look like the other princesses is kind of othering, etc…It’s just about her not looking like an alien. Because I’m pretty sure part of the reason why aliens are drawn with slanted eyes is because in the early and late 1800s Asian immigrants were referred to as celestials and aliens because we looked so different. (citation needed.)
To me, Mulan looks like what white people expect Asian people to look like, and not what I felt Asian people should look like—or do look like. While I don’t think the first picture is perfect either, it is closer to how I would have drawn Mulan.

TayTay:
Read 

Anyone else want to add?

I’m on the fence about this. I’m a Chinese girl who doesn’t mind that Mulan looks so stereotypically Chinese. People from different racial groups have facial features either unique or common to that particular group. For Asians, the most prominent thing will be the epicanthic fold, which Mulan has. I’m alright with that. Still, I understand where jedifreac is coming from. Not every Asian looks like Mulan, and neither are they supposed to look like her—for example, I don’t have slanted eyes with the epicanthic fold. 
As someone who draws as a hobby though, I like that Mulan stands out so much from the Disney pack. I like the thick eyebrows and golden undertone to her skin and full lips. I’m not saying that differentiating Mulan to such an extent doesn’t come with its own host of problems, but at the time the movie came out, I was too overjoyed to watch a Disney Princess on the big screen with whom I could share a passing resemblance to care about anything else. 

spicyobsession:

damnlayoffthebleach:

jedifreac:

damnlayoffthebleach:

Mulan

Chinese

From here http://sakimichan.deviantart.com/

BRHood: Hey guys! I’m going to need some help on this. And I’d love it if our Chinese and other Asian followers who may know more than us could comment so we can get this discussion going.

I remember a while ago, like a year or so ago, I read THIS POST (took me soooooo long to find it again) discussing Mulan from a feminist aspect. In hindset, it annoying uses western ideas of “feminism” to critique a Disney version of a Chinese story, but whatever. In the article (which I think the girl wrote for a school assignment), it’s mentioned that the Disney Mulan does not really LOOK authentically Chinese.

 Part of Mulan’s charm as  Disney Princess and Asian woman is her ravishing beauty, pale skin and “tiny waist.”  However, as Zhongshun writes, “…it was never stressed in the ancient poem that Mulan was a ravishing beauty” (Zhongshun 23).  Furthermore, Zhang Renjie argues that Disney artists “chose to create a Mulan that looks like a Vietnamese” (Renjie 31), versus an authentic-looking Chinese girl. 

I would love it if our Chinese followers could maybe clarify. I say this because this submission made me wonder just how “whitewashed” the first picture is when the second picture (the original Disney version) , from my understanding, is not an accurate portrayal of Chinese girls. So what should Mulan REALLY look like? Thank you kindly for any responses we may get.

As a young-ish Asian American girl when Mulan first came out in the early 2000s, I distinctly remember not liking Mulan’s appearance. I never really pinned down why exactly this was until recently.

I mean, what was up with those slanty eyes? I remember arguing with white kids on the playground when I was younger and the only Asian in my class that Asians didn’t have slanty eyes, see how I did not; I really resented that Mulan had slanty eyes and here Disney was winning the battle over that stereotype.

I just remember thinking: she is Asian and ethnically Han Chinese, like me (though my family is more Taiwanese than Chinese at this point)…but I don’t look like that, do I?

And I can appreciate Disney basing her appearance on ancient Chinese standards of beauty with the round face and thick eyebrows and defined features, because that is a thing, but still…working on the Racebending protest I really, really began to resent Mulan.

Rage resent. Because people would say things like, “If Aang is supposed to be Asian, why doesn’t he have slanty eyes, why doesn’t he look more like Mulan.” And even if I had contextual proof (eg. the Avatar creators have stated that they decided to use the Korean animated art style to draw faces since that was what those artists were good at, etc.) there was still this mental disconnect…because Aang did not look like what white people (and really all Americans via osmosis) EXPECTED Asians to look like. Because these stereotypes are so engrained.

Early on in the Airbender protest, I remember giving a long ass PowerPoint presentation on the Asian elements of Avatar: The Last Airbender to a prominent Asian American advocacy group in order to convince them that Avatar was in fact being whitewashed. The leaders of the organization told us that Aaang and co. had round blue eyes and they were confused, until I reminded them that this was the case in anime as well.

I remember protesting the Runaways casting calls because Marvel was seriously, seriously considering whitewashing the Japanese American character of Nico Minoru. I remember approaching other longstanding Asian American groups with this news to ask for their support in pursuing the issue. I would send out these briefing sheet emails and attach images of Jo Chen’s beautiful covers featuring Nico. I encountered so much resistance because to these older non-comic book, non-anime savvy Asian American advocates, Nico “didn’t really look that Asian” to them. Instead of being happy that for once, we were not being drawn with exaggerated, stereotypical features, they doubted that Nico was Asian at all.

We got the same questions from mainstream geek press. “She doesn’t look Asian to me.” So I began to cull images of Nico from all of the different artists who worked in the book. And I noticed that the Asian, Asian American and Asian Canadian artists would draw Nico looking, well, “normal” …and the non-Asian artists were more likely to, well…draw her as looking like Mulan. Because that is what we are accustomed to imagining cartoon Asians as “looking like.”

My love-hate relationship with Mulan is really impacted by the way she was depicted, to the point where I still can’t stand Mulan merchandise. I’ve been looking for an Asian Barbie doll for a long time but I feel like the Mulan doll isn’t a good substitute because of her exaggerated racialized features. I don’t know if I am the only Asian who feels this way or not. I simply experience a lot of cognitive dissonance between how I feel Mulan should look like and how she does look like. I PARTICULARLY resent Disney for always marketing her in the same goddamn outfit she sings about as oppressing her in the movie, and for calling it a freaking “kimono” last Halloween, etc.

http://mickey89eli.deviantart.com/art/Real-Mulan-94298507

And for me, it isn’t about wanting Mulan to look more “white” even though yes, I grew up in a culture that taught me that white beauty was normative and to have her not look like the other princesses is kind of othering, etc…It’s just about her not looking like an alien. Because I’m pretty sure part of the reason why aliens are drawn with slanted eyes is because in the early and late 1800s Asian immigrants were referred to as celestials and aliens because we looked so different. (citation needed.)

To me, Mulan looks like what white people expect Asian people to look like, and not what I felt Asian people should look like—or do look like. While I don’t think the first picture is perfect either, it is closer to how I would have drawn Mulan.

TayTay:

Read 

Anyone else want to add?

I’m on the fence about this. I’m a Chinese girl who doesn’t mind that Mulan looks so stereotypically Chinese. People from different racial groups have facial features either unique or common to that particular group. For Asians, the most prominent thing will be the epicanthic fold, which Mulan has. I’m alright with that. Still, I understand where jedifreac is coming from. Not every Asian looks like Mulan, and neither are they supposed to look like her—for example, I don’t have slanted eyes with the epicanthic fold. 

As someone who draws as a hobby though, I like that Mulan stands out so much from the Disney pack. I like the thick eyebrows and golden undertone to her skin and full lips. I’m not saying that differentiating Mulan to such an extent doesn’t come with its own host of problems, but at the time the movie came out, I was too overjoyed to watch a Disney Princess on the big screen with whom I could share a passing resemblance to care about anything else.