Archaeologist turned museum worker turned library worker. Cat lady. I don't even know what this is any more. I have another blog, travelswithmyastromech.tumblr.com, where I post peculiar little photos of Star Wars figures. Everyone needs a hobby.
“You were terrible enough and enough of a public figure for your death to merit a Destiel News meme, but you were not noteworthy or influential enough for your death to merit a Crab Rave,” is an uttered depressing legacy to have as far as terrible people go.
yes we are all very impressed with the depth of your research. Your 27 citations in two sentences, however, goes past ‘impressive’ and becomes ‘your historical article looks like the goddamn warrior cats wiki page for firestar’
Genuinely what this article looks like
Than there is the other option:
which makes one grateful for citation styles that contracts the 90references into one, instead of doing stuff like
this.
because yes, we are really very impressed with the depth of your research, but come on
#1 reads like you’re stopping to take a breath in between every second of your presentation.
#2 reads like a pause to slap a 5-meter-thick pile of files onto the table.
I’m not in the Monster High or Monster As Teenager adjacent fandoms, but has anyone done “Daughter of The Thing (1982)” and it looks like just a teenaged girl version of Kurt Russell? No tendrils, no tentacles, just a girl with this exact fit and hair
She swears that she isn’t the daughter of The Thing (1982). She’s a totally normal human you guys. She shouldn’t even be at this school. She likes normal human things like not having her blood tested.
ALT
Ask and you shall receive
#she’s best frenemies with another character that’s basically teenage girl Keith David #who is also a Normal Human Girl with Normal Human Interests like not having her blood tested and never wearing jewelry #they constantly accuse each other of being a monster in disguise but at the same time they’re attached at the hip (via @blue-likethebird)
Everyone else shut up this is the most important addition to this post
Marble anthropoid sarcophagus, Graeco-Phoenician, last quarter of the 5th century BCE. MET (ID: 74.51.2454)
The sarcophagus consists of a hollowed lower box covered by a lid that slightly conveys the contours of the upper body and the legs. Earlier anthropoid sarcophagi represent the volumes of a body wrapped in a shroud. The only explicit human features here are the head of a woman, framed with curls, and the long locks disposed on her chest. This sarcophagus and the one nearby are among only four of this type found in Cyprus. It was introduced to the island by Phoenicians, who favored it between the fifth and third centuries BCE in Phoenicia and the many regions that they colonized. Over two hundred are known today, most of them from Sidon. (MET)