americanperv:

so much like my dreams.., its scary.

americanperv:

so much like my dreams.., its scary.

shared 5 minutes ago on May/23, with 14 notes | via teroknortailor / source | reblog


"I had insisted on half women on board [the Enterprise]. The network came to me and said, ‘You can’t have half women. Our people say it will make it look like a ship with all sorts of mad sexual things going on – half men and half women.’ So we argued about it like a poker game and they finally said, ‘Okay. We’ll settle for one-third women.’ I figured one-third women could take care of the males anyway."

Gene Roddenberry, from personal conversations with Gene in 1990, at La Costa, CA

(x)

We love classic Trek because its creator promoted equality.

(via whyweloveclassictrek)
shared 6 minutes ago on May/23, with 247 notes | via this-is-what-you-would-have-done / source | reblog



rise in perfect light; an into darkness mix
i. burning in the skies; linkin park | ii. gravity; embassy | iii. laura palmer; bastille | iv. lifeline; angels & airwaves | v. bones (acoustic); young guns | vi. never let me go; florence + the machine | vii. if i lose myself (acoustic); onerepublic | viii. no light, no light; florence + the machine | ix. where we belong; thriving ivory | x. get lucky; daughter
{listen}

rise in perfect light; an into darkness mix

i. burning in the skies; linkin park | ii. gravity; embassy | iii. laura palmer; bastille | iv. lifeline; angels & airwaves | v. bones (acoustic); young guns | vi. never let me go; florence + the machine | vii. if i lose myself (acoustic); onerepublic | viii. no light, no light; florence + the machine | ix. where we belong; thriving ivory | x. get lucky; daughter

{listen}

shared 21 minutes ago on May/23, with 161 notes | via shesdonejim / source | reblog
X yeeessss X music X q


monomi045:

The Hannibal fandom tho like they came outta no where one second everyone was just

image

and then

image

shared 36 minutes ago on May/23, with 13,894 notes | via percychekov / source | reblog
X sdfskd X yes X hannibal X q


Anonymous said:
OH MY GOSH! You are so cute! I love your voice and your face and your hair and, gosh, you are just awesome! Have a spectacular day!  

JSHGkshkHLkh thANK YOUUUU <3

shared 37 minutes ago on May/23 | reblog


numbtongue:

things that i hate with a fiery passion: star trek

things that i love with a fiery passion: star trek

shared 42 minutes ago on May/23, with 35 notes | via drleonardhoratiomcsassypants / source | reblog


  • Crew member: As the second in command here in engineering, it is my job to take on Mr Scott's job when he is unwell, absent or, in this case, resigned.
  • Crew member: I have been training for years for this position, took engineering at the academy, and have worked my way up the ranks properly.
  • Chekov: Hello I am here I am in charge now
  • Crew member: Who the fuck are you
  • Crew member: You are like, 12
  • Crew member: Are you even an engineer
  • Crew member: Stop
shared 45 minutes ago on May/23, with 83 notes | via drleonardhoratiomcsassypants / source | reblog


kookyteen:

i want an episode of hannibal where will and hanni get really stoned and will’s like ” oh man lets go get some munchies” and hanni’s like yeah so they drive out to 7-11 and they meet back at the till like 10 minutes later and hannibal has a dead body and will has cheetos and hes like what

shared 52 minutes ago on May/23, with 5,911 notes | via beejabbers / source | reblog


this motherfucker

shared 57 minutes ago on May/23, with 3 notes | | reblog


"

Nichols’ role as Uhura, in particular, was revolutionary: “As most Americans’ first encounter with a nuanced, authoritative character played by an actor who was not only African-American but also a woman, her impact was even more extraordinary considering Nichols almost didn’t return after the show’s first season.” As she explained to the Wall Street Journal in 2011, she’d decided to leave the show and return to Broadway, but a chance introduction at a fundraiser to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. – the self-proclaimed “biggest Trekkie on the planet” – made her reconsider.

“He took my hand and thanked me for meeting him,” she remembered, “He then said, ‘I am your greatest fan.’ All I remember is my mouth opening and shutting. I thanked him so much and told him how I’d miss it all. He asked what I was talking about, and told me that I [couldn’t] leave the show.” “You are changing the minds of people across the world, because for the first time, through you, we see ourselves and what can be,” he told her.

"

- from “Star Trek’s History of Progressive Values — And Why It Faltered on LGBT Crew Members” on Wired.com -

We love classic Trek because of this.

(via whyweloveclassictrek)

shared 1 hour ago on May/23, with 120 notes | via theponfarr / source | reblog



Title: Unknownabout this show
Artist: UnknownJoan Watson
Album: Unknownyeah
Played: 10101 times

image

shared 1 hour ago on May/23, with 2,004 notes | via wordstomeawhisper / source | reblog


raktajino-hot:

horticulturalcephalopod:

bunnybotbaby:

someone make Khanberbatch Bingo please. some of the arguments that his stans make are really hilarious in a “oh god how is this person actually arguing this” kind of way

imagei tried

We need to merge this with this.

shared 1 hour ago on May/23, with 531 notes | via raktajino-hot / source | reblog


poodlepants:

I’ve been harping on this subject a lot lately, but I feel like somebody has to. The fact that Khan has been changed to a white man is quietly being accepted, and the performance lauded. I’ve seen people trying to say JJ did a good thing by taking color out of the equation, and that they are tired of POC being cast as the villains. 

Do people not realize the history that was made when Khan appeared on network television? Let’s look at what was going on around the time Khan made his debut on network TV.

  • August 28, 1963: 20,000 blacks and whites gather at the Lincoln Memorial to hear speeches against racism; among them is Martin Luther King Jr’s “I Have a Dream.”
  • June 12, 1963: Civil Rights activist Medgar Evers is gunned down outside of his home. His killer is not convicted until the year 1994.
  • Summer 1964: The Mississippi Summer Freedom Project begins; civil rights workers help blacks register to vote. 3 are killed and many black churches and homes are burned in retaliation.
  • August 4, 1964: Civil rights workers James E. Chaney, Michael Schwerner, and Andrew Goodman were murdered by the Ku Klux Klan.
  • March 7, 1965: Martin Luther King Jr. leads a 54-mile march to support black voter registration. They marched from Selma to Montgomery.
  • June 12, 1967:Banning interracial marriage is ruled unconstitutional by Supreme Court.
  • July 1967: More race riots occur in Detroit and New York; they are the worst riots in US history and result in 43 Detroit deaths.
  • April 4, 1968: While outside his home, Martin Luther King Jr. is murdered by James Earl Ray; riots broke out in 125 cities in response.

 

“Space Seed” premiered on television in February of 1967, right smack dab in the middle of all this. Before Khan, Star Trek included a black woman, and Asian man, and a Russian character as main parts of the crew on the Enterprise. All three had vitals roles on the ship, and Captain Kirk looked to them for answers, and trusted them to help him complete his mission.

Do you not realize how huge this was? This was something people had never seen before, and to date, still don’t see it all that often. This broke the ground for so many of the actors and actresses we all know and love. This was history being made.

Then came Khan. While Ricardo Montalban was not a man of Indian descent, he was still a man of color. He was a man of color, playing a character that rivaled Captain Kirk. He was a character that commanded respect and admiration from those around him, because he was smart, cunning, charismatic, and powerful. 

Khan Noonien Singh was a man that could out think and out muscle any person on the Enterprise. To state it more simply, a man of color was more powerful and more intelligent than all the other men and women aboard the Enterprise. Without Marla McGivers help, Kirk would not have been able to stop him.

A man of color would have defeated the crew of the Enterprise were it not for a guilty conscience and the use of a club. Khan’s strength could have easily overpowered Kirk’s, and it would have, had he not hit him over the head with a heavy tool. 

This is what makes Khan more than the stereotypical POC villain. Khan is super human. He is created to be stronger, faster, smarter and better than a normal human being. He rises above the stereotype because he is BETTER than all aboard the Enterprise. 

On top of that, a white woman falls in love with a man of color. In 1967. She gives up everything she’s known to be with him. The fact that Khan was a POC, and he was far more powerful and far more capable than all the others makes him stand apart from your stereotypical role POC are given when they play the part of the villain.Khan is an icon of television for being a groundbreaking character in the middle of our Civil Rights movement, just like Uhura and Sulu are. 

Would you be okay if someone changed the race of Uhura or Sulu? I can’t see how you could be. There would be outrage from here to the moon if anyone tried to cast either of them as anything other than an Asian man, and an African American woman.

Yet with Khan, because he’s the villain, people think it’s okay to erase what he was because of what we’ve gone through over the past decade or so. Don’t you see? It’s because of that that Khan should have been cast as a man of Indian descent, as his biography clearly states he is. I know Ricardo was not Indian, as I’ve stated before, but back then getting POC on TV in roles that were main parts of the story wasn’t as easy as it is now. That’s why this is even more inexcusable. There is nothing to stop Paramount or JJ Abrams from casting any person from any ethnicity on the planet, and they chose to take one of the most iconic roles that belonged to POC, and give it to a white man. 

It’s like taking the history of Star Trek, taking all the things it did to pave the way for so many people by refusing to stick to what was accepted, and throwing it in the mud. Everything about Star Trek was promoting acceptance of those different than ourselves, whether those people were green skinned aliens, or African American, or Asian. 

Look at all the POC on TV or in movies today. Who do you think started the path to stardom for them? Who do you think started chipping away at those barriers that would have prevented them from becoming big name stars in the media?

Lucille Ball, Desi Arnaz, Gene Roddenberry, Nichelle Nichols, George Takei, and Ricardo Montalban. 

Now, after reading all of this, if you can look me in the eye and still tell me you see nothing wrong with the fact that a white man is playing the role of Khan, well then, I guess that’s the opinion you’re going to stay with.But my hope is that maybe, just maybe, you can see why there are people out there who are so upset, and why the silent acceptance of this casting choice needs to be stopped. 



shared 1 hour ago on May/23, with 1,210 notes | via poodlepants / source | reblog


I’m gonna barf

shared 1 hour ago on May/23 | reblog


nospockdasgay:

Oh my god. This is wonderful.

shared 1 hour ago on May/23, with 4,758 notes | via drleonardhoratiomcsassypants / source | reblog