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DramaQueen

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Status Replies posted by DramaQueen

  1. Things that are just True:

    - Ice cream tastes better in a fancy bowl

    Or a waffle cone

     

    - Drinks taste better from a straw

    Or a fancy glass

     

    - Sparkling cider somehow tastes better when you drink it for no reason at all than it does on a special occasion

  2. Siblings are weird. It's like "I'd give you my kidney for a life-saving surgery, but no, you can't have some of my potato chips"

  3. Siblings are weird. It's like "I'd give you my kidney for a life-saving surgery, but no, you can't have some of my potato chips"

  4. Favorite musical, go

    1. DramaQueen

      DramaQueen

      (also y'all should check out my musical recommendations thread, I believe it's linked in my signature (can't check cuz I'm on mobile and I'm lazy), feel free to drop your own recommendations, if I agree, I'll add them to the list, if I haven't listened to them, I'll listen and then if I agree I'll add them to the list)

    2. (See 20 other replies to this status update)

  5. Favorite musical, go

    1. DramaQueen

      DramaQueen

      I haven't heard of Spies are Forever

      I've heard of but not listened to Bad Cinderella and &Juliet

    2. (See 20 other replies to this status update)

  6. Favorite musical, go

    1. DramaQueen

      DramaQueen

      Don't look at this until after you've posted your response

      Spoiler

      If you say something I don't know, you get a (totally not spiked) cookie

       

    2. (See 20 other replies to this status update)

  7. https://youtube.com/@AllySheehan

    disclaimer: I do not identify as a swiftie.

    But if you do (or if you appreciate Taylor Swift at all (which everyone should)) this is a really good channel and I'm learning SO MUCH

    Also Taylor has an unreleased song (that will remain unreleased :( but it can be found on the internet if you look for it) called Drama Queen

    Like, how many of y'all can say you share a name with a Taylor Swift song? That's what I thought, I win.

  8. In case anyone was wondering how stupid my sense of humor can be

    I just looked at the box of corn dogs in my freezer that says "classic corn dogs" and in my head just went "classic corn."

    AND IT WAS ABSOLUTELY HILARIOUS TO ME

    FOR WHAT REASON

    NONE WHATSOEVER

  9. Happy birthday!!! 

    Hopefully it's been a good one! ^_^

  10. Happy birthday, Dramaqueen! You're a great member of the shard!

  11. All hail the day of the birth of the Queen

    Happy Birthday!

  12. Happy birthday!

  13. Happy birthday!!! Haven’t interacted with you much but I can see the community you’ve started here in the Shard and it wouldn’t be the same without you!!

  14. Remind me not to forget your birthday is tomorrow tomorrow

    Or... remind me not to forget that your birthday is today tomorrow?

    Or remind me today that your birthday is tomorrow?

     

    On second thought I'll figure it out

  15. Happy storming birthday!

  16. Remind me not to forget your birthday is tomorrow tomorrow

    Or... remind me not to forget that your birthday is today tomorrow?

    Or remind me today that your birthday is tomorrow?

     

    On second thought I'll figure it out

  17. All hail the day of the birth of the Queen

    Happy Birthday!

  18. Hey!

    Anyone need any kind of help that I could provide? Words of affirmation, internet hugs, character names, whatever, feel free to ask and I will do my best to provide :))

  19. Spiderman: Across the Spiderverse is SO FREAKING GOOD!!!

    I think I'll need to watch it at least five more times before I can properly express how much I enjoyed it, so for now suffice it to know that me and the friend I went to see it with were elbowing each other with excitement and awe basically the entire time.

    And then afterwards when we were trying to rant to each other about it, the conversation went something like this:

    Me: And then--the part where--yknow, they--amxnnsjsjjsjjshbsAAAAHAHHAGAHGZGZHHAHHhahgzhahha

    Him: YEAH AND THEN THEY AJXJJSHHXHHZHSHXHJSJZKKAKZKJDHHAJJJHAHHAHHA

    Me: YEAH!!!!!!!!! I JUST AJXHHAHZHHZHAHHAAAAAAAAA

    Him: YEAH!!!!!!!!

  20. There are two camps for Best Spiderman Villain, and I would like to discern your guys' thoughts:

    • Green Goblin
    • Doc. Ock
  21. Gwen is the best character in Spiderverse 2 and this is why:

    Spoiler

    spoilers btw

    Spoiler
    Spoiler

    I ain't got the brain for an essay but basically:

    Gwen really doesn't want to hurt anyone, but always seems to find herself inadvertently doing so. Of course this stems from her losing her bestie Peter way back in the backstory by literally killing him on accident.

    But the way she goes about doing this always seems to hurt people in the long run. First of all (and perhaps most notably) with her dad, who would have likely been much more open to conversation about the Peter Murder Sitch had Gwen come out and told him the truth right away - and this should've been our first clue throughout the entire movie to the fact that she's lying to Miles.

    Gwen is probably better than any of the Spiders at lying, deception, and pushing people away. That was pretty much her entire arc in Spiderverse 1, coming to an ultimate conclusion with her accepting a friendship with Miles (and, of course, subsequently kicking off the best teen romance ever written in cinema history). But what's really interesting to me is that nothing has changed in her when she returns home, despite the memories - she still doesn't make more friends, she still doesn't talk to her dad (yet), and she still keeps all of her feelings bottled up inside her.

    Then when she tries being honest for once by revealing herself to her father (which, notably, was more out of desperation than anything), it only winds up with the most emotional gut-punch I've ever experienced in years as he tries to arrest her anyways. So of course she tries to run from her universe, and makes friends in the Spiderverse Elite Squad Force People - and they're good for her, but she's not solving any of those problems she's caused.

    Enter Spot, re-enter Miles, and re-re-enter Gwen. She's jeapordized an entire mission to go see the one person who really understood her in the first place. "We're the same. In the important ways."

    (Can you tell that I really need these two lovebirds to just... lovebird? I don't even need them to kiss. Just hold hands already dagnabit)

    But then we get to the point of her whole arc: that she hurts Miles. The reason she's come to visit him is a lie, and she completely hides the reason she isn't supposed to visit him in the first place.

    Why does she hide these things? Because she doesn't want to hurt him with the truth - and, of course, hurts him with the lie.

    Spiderman is a tragic hero to be, and Gwen just... carries that grief. Losing your uncle or your girlfriend's captain is bad enough, but losing your best friend? I couldn't even imagine. Family members are more like constants of life, where losing them is akin to completely shifting a paradigm - friends are people you go out of your way to add to your story.

    There's a reason why Bridge to Terabithia and The Book Thief just hit harder than... well, kinda just everything.

    Gwen is sixteen - she's a kid. Motorcycle lady mentions to Edgy Boy that "she's doing this on her own." Gwen is a kid carrying the pain of having lost Peter, the accusation of being his murderer, the fate of her world, and the fact that she can't even go see her only real best friend anymore. She's been hurt more than anyone, and only wants to not let anyone else get hurt like she has.

    But she does: over and over and over again. One of the core aspects of being Spiderman is that you can't always save everyone, so time and time again Gwen can't save her friends by being hurt by her actions.

    I rewatched the movie just today (as of writing this, anyways - it might be yesterday by the time I finish), and while some of it was slightly less impactful due to the lack of surprise or suspense (though it was still decidedly surprising in many ways and suspensful in many others), but more than anything I was just painfully aware of just how much Gwen was hiding the entire time. And too just how effortless it was. Dishonesty has been ultimately ingrained into her personality out of necessity and it is tragic.

    What I love most about her character, though, is the fact that she barely even hesitates to go after Miles after he even snaps at her during the (for lack of a better term) Intervention scene. For Peterbee it's like a child snapping at their parent - difficult, but effectively just one challenge among many in mentoring. For Gwen it's her actions directly leading to Miles taking out his anger and frustration on her.

    But then she's sent back to her father, and she finally opens up of her own volition about everything that she's had bottled up for years now (notably in the best scene in the movie) - and she finally reconciles with him, and is then capable of going after Miles to fix her mistake.

     

    (She's my favorite character)

     

    also spoil the things you have to say on this matter if they're... well, spoiler-y

     

  22. Gwen is the best character in Spiderverse 2 and this is why:

    Spoiler

    spoilers btw

    Spoiler
    Spoiler

    I ain't got the brain for an essay but basically:

    Gwen really doesn't want to hurt anyone, but always seems to find herself inadvertently doing so. Of course this stems from her losing her bestie Peter way back in the backstory by literally killing him on accident.

    But the way she goes about doing this always seems to hurt people in the long run. First of all (and perhaps most notably) with her dad, who would have likely been much more open to conversation about the Peter Murder Sitch had Gwen come out and told him the truth right away - and this should've been our first clue throughout the entire movie to the fact that she's lying to Miles.

    Gwen is probably better than any of the Spiders at lying, deception, and pushing people away. That was pretty much her entire arc in Spiderverse 1, coming to an ultimate conclusion with her accepting a friendship with Miles (and, of course, subsequently kicking off the best teen romance ever written in cinema history). But what's really interesting to me is that nothing has changed in her when she returns home, despite the memories - she still doesn't make more friends, she still doesn't talk to her dad (yet), and she still keeps all of her feelings bottled up inside her.

    Then when she tries being honest for once by revealing herself to her father (which, notably, was more out of desperation than anything), it only winds up with the most emotional gut-punch I've ever experienced in years as he tries to arrest her anyways. So of course she tries to run from her universe, and makes friends in the Spiderverse Elite Squad Force People - and they're good for her, but she's not solving any of those problems she's caused.

    Enter Spot, re-enter Miles, and re-re-enter Gwen. She's jeapordized an entire mission to go see the one person who really understood her in the first place. "We're the same. In the important ways."

    (Can you tell that I really need these two lovebirds to just... lovebird? I don't even need them to kiss. Just hold hands already dagnabit)

    But then we get to the point of her whole arc: that she hurts Miles. The reason she's come to visit him is a lie, and she completely hides the reason she isn't supposed to visit him in the first place.

    Why does she hide these things? Because she doesn't want to hurt him with the truth - and, of course, hurts him with the lie.

    Spiderman is a tragic hero to be, and Gwen just... carries that grief. Losing your uncle or your girlfriend's captain is bad enough, but losing your best friend? I couldn't even imagine. Family members are more like constants of life, where losing them is akin to completely shifting a paradigm - friends are people you go out of your way to add to your story.

    There's a reason why Bridge to Terabithia and The Book Thief just hit harder than... well, kinda just everything.

    Gwen is sixteen - she's a kid. Motorcycle lady mentions to Edgy Boy that "she's doing this on her own." Gwen is a kid carrying the pain of having lost Peter, the accusation of being his murderer, the fate of her world, and the fact that she can't even go see her only real best friend anymore. She's been hurt more than anyone, and only wants to not let anyone else get hurt like she has.

    But she does: over and over and over again. One of the core aspects of being Spiderman is that you can't always save everyone, so time and time again Gwen can't save her friends by being hurt by her actions.

    I rewatched the movie just today (as of writing this, anyways - it might be yesterday by the time I finish), and while some of it was slightly less impactful due to the lack of surprise or suspense (though it was still decidedly surprising in many ways and suspensful in many others), but more than anything I was just painfully aware of just how much Gwen was hiding the entire time. And too just how effortless it was. Dishonesty has been ultimately ingrained into her personality out of necessity and it is tragic.

    What I love most about her character, though, is the fact that she barely even hesitates to go after Miles after he even snaps at her during the (for lack of a better term) Intervention scene. For Peterbee it's like a child snapping at their parent - difficult, but effectively just one challenge among many in mentoring. For Gwen it's her actions directly leading to Miles taking out his anger and frustration on her.

    But then she's sent back to her father, and she finally opens up of her own volition about everything that she's had bottled up for years now (notably in the best scene in the movie) - and she finally reconciles with him, and is then capable of going after Miles to fix her mistake.

     

    (She's my favorite character)

     

    also spoil the things you have to say on this matter if they're... well, spoiler-y

     

  23. Gwen is the best character in Spiderverse 2 and this is why:

    Spoiler

    spoilers btw

    Spoiler
    Spoiler

    I ain't got the brain for an essay but basically:

    Gwen really doesn't want to hurt anyone, but always seems to find herself inadvertently doing so. Of course this stems from her losing her bestie Peter way back in the backstory by literally killing him on accident.

    But the way she goes about doing this always seems to hurt people in the long run. First of all (and perhaps most notably) with her dad, who would have likely been much more open to conversation about the Peter Murder Sitch had Gwen come out and told him the truth right away - and this should've been our first clue throughout the entire movie to the fact that she's lying to Miles.

    Gwen is probably better than any of the Spiders at lying, deception, and pushing people away. That was pretty much her entire arc in Spiderverse 1, coming to an ultimate conclusion with her accepting a friendship with Miles (and, of course, subsequently kicking off the best teen romance ever written in cinema history). But what's really interesting to me is that nothing has changed in her when she returns home, despite the memories - she still doesn't make more friends, she still doesn't talk to her dad (yet), and she still keeps all of her feelings bottled up inside her.

    Then when she tries being honest for once by revealing herself to her father (which, notably, was more out of desperation than anything), it only winds up with the most emotional gut-punch I've ever experienced in years as he tries to arrest her anyways. So of course she tries to run from her universe, and makes friends in the Spiderverse Elite Squad Force People - and they're good for her, but she's not solving any of those problems she's caused.

    Enter Spot, re-enter Miles, and re-re-enter Gwen. She's jeapordized an entire mission to go see the one person who really understood her in the first place. "We're the same. In the important ways."

    (Can you tell that I really need these two lovebirds to just... lovebird? I don't even need them to kiss. Just hold hands already dagnabit)

    But then we get to the point of her whole arc: that she hurts Miles. The reason she's come to visit him is a lie, and she completely hides the reason she isn't supposed to visit him in the first place.

    Why does she hide these things? Because she doesn't want to hurt him with the truth - and, of course, hurts him with the lie.

    Spiderman is a tragic hero to be, and Gwen just... carries that grief. Losing your uncle or your girlfriend's captain is bad enough, but losing your best friend? I couldn't even imagine. Family members are more like constants of life, where losing them is akin to completely shifting a paradigm - friends are people you go out of your way to add to your story.

    There's a reason why Bridge to Terabithia and The Book Thief just hit harder than... well, kinda just everything.

    Gwen is sixteen - she's a kid. Motorcycle lady mentions to Edgy Boy that "she's doing this on her own." Gwen is a kid carrying the pain of having lost Peter, the accusation of being his murderer, the fate of her world, and the fact that she can't even go see her only real best friend anymore. She's been hurt more than anyone, and only wants to not let anyone else get hurt like she has.

    But she does: over and over and over again. One of the core aspects of being Spiderman is that you can't always save everyone, so time and time again Gwen can't save her friends by being hurt by her actions.

    I rewatched the movie just today (as of writing this, anyways - it might be yesterday by the time I finish), and while some of it was slightly less impactful due to the lack of surprise or suspense (though it was still decidedly surprising in many ways and suspensful in many others), but more than anything I was just painfully aware of just how much Gwen was hiding the entire time. And too just how effortless it was. Dishonesty has been ultimately ingrained into her personality out of necessity and it is tragic.

    What I love most about her character, though, is the fact that she barely even hesitates to go after Miles after he even snaps at her during the (for lack of a better term) Intervention scene. For Peterbee it's like a child snapping at their parent - difficult, but effectively just one challenge among many in mentoring. For Gwen it's her actions directly leading to Miles taking out his anger and frustration on her.

    But then she's sent back to her father, and she finally opens up of her own volition about everything that she's had bottled up for years now (notably in the best scene in the movie) - and she finally reconciles with him, and is then capable of going after Miles to fix her mistake.

     

    (She's my favorite character)

     

    also spoil the things you have to say on this matter if they're... well, spoiler-y

     

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