bee: A lushly stylised pair of red animated lips. (Bitch mode)
Please comment on this post and tell me:

1. Where you found me

2. What your username is there if it's different from your DW one (if applicable)

Note:

- I do not welcome minors to this space. I do not have the right to know your age and I do not want to know your exact age. Just don't ask for access if you're under 18.




I have left tumblr.
bee: A Lisa Frank version of Pierrot (Clown Mode)
- Mr Bean (Clown, Pulcinella)

- Sacha Baron Cohen's works (I would venture to say Cohen is very much a post-modern Brighella or Pulcinella, actually!)

- Robin Williams (Harlequin)

- Wolf from 10th Kingdom (Clown + Pedrolino)

- Beetlejuice (all incarnations, Harlequin (cartoon) or Brighella (movie, musical), also elements of Pulcinella)

- The Sidekick (as well as the villainous Henchling) is a descendant of Clown (the character) and can also have elements of other archetypes.

- Any comedy duo is based on Auguste/Whiteface clown teams.

- Many, many cartoon villains are descended of various clowns, mostly Arlecchino, Brighella, Padrone, Scaramouche, or Capitano.

- Stand-up is descended from clowning!

- ALL comedy, to a certain extent, is descended from clowning.

The truth is, you probably do like clowns, but you just may not like the traditional masks or makeup. But that's not all clowns are, that's just one way the character is visually communicated. In the modern era we largely don't use stage-levels of makeup anymore, because of leaps forward in both film and makeup tech.

You like a sad yearning disaster character? That's a Pierrot!

You like tricksy disaster characters? That's Harlequin (and sometimes Pulcinella).

You like comedic villains? That's Brighella and Scaramouche! (yes, Scaramouche is a clown, not just a silly word from a Queen song)

You like comically overblown vanity? Let me introduce you to Capitano and La Signora!

Any comedic archetype has roots in clowning. That's just the root of all comedy. It's clowns all the way down.

Thra Notes

Dec. 16th, 2021 07:54 am
bee: A gif of Courage the Cowardly Dog typing on a desktop with his usual expression of anxiety. (Writing Mode)
Misc Skeksis Notes

- Known as The Wry Lord by the podling staff, SkekVi is the kindest of the skeksis. This isn't because they care about the podlings especially much, but more that being cruel brings them no pleasure/bores them, and so they don't expend the energy to do it. It's more fun to praise, and so they do. The result is indistinguishable from true kindness, though.

- Baby skeksis are called chikits.

- None of the skeksis were ever babies, nor had they parents, so none of them know how parenting works or what a child even is.

- SkekTek knows how to care for small things that need care though, making them the most well-equipped to be a parent.

- Chikits take 60 days to hatch.

- Skeksis are a kind of mound-builder. They don't sit on their eggs, they pile things on top of them and constantly check the temperature with their beak.

- Skeksis don't have the concepts of hope as in 'i hope this will happen'. They just state that what they want to happen will happen.

- Affection is shown with fussing, mirroring, preening, various vocalisations such as thokking, churrs, and trilling.

- Agreeing with someone is actually seen as placation, and therefore indication of lower social status in the pecking order. Doing so for no discernable reason comes off as almost rude, considering it's only done when you want a favour and aren't owed one. This includes saying 'please' and 'thank you', which is why a skeksis not saying that is a sign of respect.

- Bickering, talking over, finishing sentences, interrupting (with same subject and enthusiasm level), and argument are actually seen as a sign you care about the other person and see them as equal and respect them and yourself as well as a sign you are enjoying and engaged with the conversation.

- Yes they are a Yelling Culture.

- They're crows. They are crows.

Language Notes

- Podling has gendered pronouns, but they're not identities. Podling worldview is through the lens of how plants work, so 'she' simply means someone's the one that carried the children at the moment, it's more of an indication of who was the one making the seeds (bc like most of Thra, Podlings are matriarchal, who bore the seeds is much more important). There's not even really a sense that a person bearing seeds can only do that, due to most plants being perfect bisexuals.

- Thou/thee/thy/thine has become less a singular pronoun and more of an inferior pronoun. 'You' is for superiors and equals, 'Thou' is for inferiors. Only used by skeksis.

- Trigon is the word for a triangle. Quatragon is a square or rectangle.
bee: A lushly stylised pair of red animated lips. (Screw Canon)
Fandom: The Dark Crystal

Characters: SkekTek, SkekVi

Pairing(s): SkekTek/SkekVi

Chapter Authors: Spiderheart, Lycaenion

Chapter Wordcount: 3,600

Chapter Rating: Explicit Sex

Chapter Contains: Defamiliarization, Alien Bio, Alien Sex, Alien Culture, Lactation Kink, Oviparous Skeksis, Hypnokink, Domination/submission

Chapter Summary: After the events of Age of Resistance keep them away from SkekVi, SkekTek comes back to find a surprise development.

Notes: All Skeksis use 'they' pronouns.

( Chapter Two: Egg Machine )
bee: A lushly stylised pair of red animated lips. (Default)
Title: The Sensualist

Fandom: The Dark Crystal

Wordcount: 549
Rating: T

Characters: SkekTek, SkekVi (OC)
Pairing(s): SkekTek/SkekVi
Contains: Defamiliarisation, Science, Character Study, Skeksis-centric

Summary: Skeksis have no manner of understanding of reproduction, and are horrified when SkekTek tries to explain what he's discovered.

All but SkekVi, The Sensualist, who everyone knows seeks new sensations of any kind, and has already gone through all the ones that aren't horrifyingly perverse.


( Read on AO3 )
bee: A lushly stylised pair of red animated lips. (Default)

Here's a guide to how this all works on a cultural level:


Glossary


Comm - A comm is a community. Plural: comms.

F-locked - F-locking your journal means all your entries are only viewable by people you grant access to, that are on your access list. The 'f' stands for 'friend', because f-locking was a practise that originated on LJ, where access and subscribing were bundled under the term 'friending'. F-locking helps cut down on drama and harrassment by letting you talk to your access list or even specific access lists depending on how intimate a friend various people are.

Mod - moderator. Plural: mods.

Differences from Tumblr


- The people you subscribe to are on your Reading page. Anyone can see them. This is how you can make new friends! Go to a friend's reading page and see what comms they're in and who they follow!

- No more 'if you follow someone you automatically give them access to locked posts'. You control your privacy! Maybe you want to give someone access, but not read their journal; maybe you want to read someone's journal but not give them access just yet! Maybe you want to give them both! But you have choices, just like in real life, you don't have to treat privacy as an all-or-nothing game!

- Profile pages are complex and you can put custom html in there!

- Profile page has an interest list! Put your interests down and if they light up as a link, click them! That takes you to a list of users and comms that all have that interest too! Make friends! Join comms!

- There are no likes, no reblogs--your OP stays on YOUR journal, and people comment and talk to you and one another all in one spot! No more confusing chains, and everyone can see all the different threads and join in a real discussion! Again, make friends!

- You can post to a comm, which means you can separate your fandom stuff from everything else. This means boundaries are automatic and nobody has to see stuff they didn't sign up to see.

- Comms also centralise fandom activity--post your fic and art to the comm where it will be seen by fandom people!

- Tags are much shorter here, because we use them not to chatter but to categorise posts and make them easier to find (this is especially useful for comms, icon makers, etc). Colons create tag categories (example: 'character: sibby', 'pairing: sibby/rach').

- You can edit an entry and because there are no reblogs, the changes are immediately visible to everyone. For big edits, it's common practise to put 'ETA:' before your additions, and you can add a date/time if you're fancy.

- We have at mentions, but you can also link to other usernames on other sites with a special tag! You can find out how to do that here.

Practises



We have multiple icons (also called avatars), they are 100x100 and gifs are allowed!


- For courtesy and safety of photosensitive users, please don't make your icons flash quickly.

- You can pick a different icon for each journal entry. This can help give your journal entry or comment a 'tone', or you can have different icons for posting in different fandom comms.

- If you find an icon somewhere, it is common practise to put the maker's username in the description.

Extra features for entries!


- Every entry you can put a mood, location, and music. You can also change your journal theme to list these as different things! Go wild!

- You can customise the text. Have your comments be 'whispers' or 'squees', call your reading page whatever you want!

- Entries (and profiles) allow more html! You can put TABLES, you can fine-tune bold and italics (and colour). The cut tag actually works, and you can end it and put text AFTER it! Find out how here.

How to post fic here


- A header is nice, and you can make an easy one here

- Post your fic or art under a cut tag.

- Link to previous chapters if they're not all posted on an archive like AO3.

- Fancy people can make the link to AO3 look like a cut tag! That's a fun little thing you can do if you want.

How to Comm


- Comms tend to have moderators and rules. Rules are posted on the profile of the comm, and the usernames of moderators are as well.

- Comms can be f-locked too! And you can lock a post to a comm so that only members of that comm can see it, too.

- Comms can have open membership, or you can need to apply to join.

- Comms can have rules or not, but all comms have at least one moderator that created the comm in the first place.

- Comms can also have it set so they can have many people subscribing, but only certain people are allowed to post. This can be useful for comms that are a small group of writers that have agreed to post on a schedule (such as writing comms with weekly themes), or for communities where the mods post an entry that starts a discussion and most of the interaction goes in comments (such as news or comic scans comms).
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