Gail Simone's Blog, page 850

December 12, 2012

hellomynameisninja:


I’m so proud to say my local Los Angeles...



:




I’m so proud to say my local Los Angeles ABC has the first Muslim (hijabi) woman news anchor on American television. So many happy tears :’)


This my friends is the world moving forward. I’m so proud.



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Published on December 12, 2012 12:04

thebatsbirds:


Batgirl 12

These two need to work together more...



thebatsbirds:




Batgirl 12



These two need to work together more often.


And Kate needs to be part of the Batfamily. 




Agreed and AGREED.



The fun thing about this issue was showing that these two women are NOT THE SAME BECAUSE THEY HAVE RED HAIR.



:)

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Published on December 12, 2012 09:29

cosplayblog:

Batgirl and Catwoman from DC Comics

Photographer:...



cosplayblog:



Batgirl and Catwoman from DC Comics



Photographer: Martin Wong [deviantArt | Facebook]






Um.



Is the internet even ALLOWED to be this hot?

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Published on December 12, 2012 09:27

You know who easily and completely understands Wonder...



You know who easily and completely understands Wonder Woman?


These two right here.


You know who finds her ‘difficult’ to understand?


Everyone in Hollywood, apparently.

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Published on December 12, 2012 08:54

APE IN A CAPE: Antitheism

APE IN A CAPE: Antitheism:

oddchelonian:



gailsimone:



Multiple requests to make this rebloggable:




Miss Simone, I was wondering: how do you feel about antitheism? See, I like to think of myself as being a pretty dang mellow person, spiritually speaking: I have many friends of many different religious or nonreligious backgrounds and beliefs,…



But … is it being an asshole when somebody brings something up in conversation where they obviously just assume that everyone agrees with their religious views, and you call them out on it?


I don’t go out of my way to troll religious people, but if they decide to bring it up, then I’m certainly going to be vocal about it.





But that implies that there is no way to state your opinion without being an ass and I don’t believe that for a second.


It’s not a choice of SILENCE or BEING A DICK.


There are other choices as well. Most of them are better.

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Published on December 12, 2012 08:47

Antitheism

Multiple requests to make this rebloggable:





Miss Simone, I was wondering: how do you feel about antitheism? See, I like to think of myself as being a pretty dang mellow person, spiritually speaking: I have many friends of many different religious or nonreligious backgrounds and beliefs, and we support each other in our right to be theistic or nontheistic however we want. But I have one friend who constantly espouses that all religions are poisonous, and any benefit they have could be derived without them, but their problems are unique.
Anonymous

I am both a skeptic and an atheist myself, and I think everyone’s entitled to their opinions.


But being either or both of those things is no guarantee that you are a decent human being with empathy and compassion. Neither of those things comes with a license to treat people who believe differently like shit.


The atheism and skeptical movements are rife through with privilege all the way up to the top writers in both groups.  There is a common tendency for them to fail utterly and lapse into xenophobia, misogyny, racism, privilege denial and lots, lots more. 


We are entitled to our opinions. I don’t think we’re entitled to be assholes.

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Published on December 12, 2012 08:04

To Be Unchained

sonofbaldwin:




image


Do you agree with my friend Clay Cane?


“In this review, I will not argue the trite debate whether the film is or isn’t that hot-button word: racist. Racism is the Central Park Five, the execution of Troy Davis and wannabe cops who ‘stand their ground’ to unarmed Black boys — not a Hollywood film, which is meant for entertainment and includes some of the most respected and intelligent Black actors of today.”

I do not.

Respectfully, I think it’s a mistake to imagine racism can only operate as overt action and not as covert psychological assault in the form of filmic propaganda (BIRTH OF A NATION was also a Hollywood film meant for entertainment). The idea that entertainment can’t also be a vehicle for the transportation of bigotry is, to me, mind-boggling (think of vaudevillian blackface). By the logic my friend is espousing above, films that promote racist stereotypes or The White Gaze Revenge Fantasy Idea of Blackness can’t be racist if they employ respected and intelligent black people (that absolves GONE WITH THE WIND of any racism). The assumption, I suppose, being that Kerry Washington (and Jamie Foxx?) would not have agreed to act in DJANGO UNCHAINED if she thought it was racist because she’s a conscious sister and we can trust her judgment and, therefore, we can trust Quentin Tarantino. I don’t think that point of view accounts for the idea that Hollywood is a strange beast. Oftentimes, personal politics plays second fiddle to opportunity—ESPECIALLY for black actors.

I think I understand the desire to defend the things we enjoy, but how can we ignore the set-up of this film? The enslaved black man isn’t his own agent of freedom. He’s saved from slavery by a white drifter who then goes on to teach him how to be a “real man” (which is simply film-code for “civilizing the savage”) so that he can go on ahead and save his “wife” from the brutality of other white men. There are many white supremacist implications JUST in that narrative. Simply because characters have depth and a story is compelling doesn’t absolve it of white supremacist propaganda—even in a story where a few black folks win. The White Savior is a product of racism. There’s no way to escape that.

And how can we look at this film in a vacuum? How can we not look at it in the context of the fact that Hollywood told Danny Glover flat out that he couldn’t make a film about a REAL black historical hero, but Quentin Tarantino got the, not green light, but AQUAMARINE light, to create a film about a fictitious black figure in a fictitious story that Clay says is “surprisingly historically correct”?

Clay notes that the film uses the word “nigger” about 108 times, but that he felt that it was properly contextual for the film. I would like to step OUTSIDE the film for a moment and think about the filmmaker. Given his pattern of behavior and his own philosophy, I wouldn’t be surprised if he wrote this film simply as an excuse to use the word 108 times and not be called on it because he can hide behind the notion that it’s “historical.” bell hooks can speak to the problematics of Tarantino much more intelligently and eloquently than I (read REEL TO REAL), but that there are problematics is, to me, hard to question.

I don’t think going to see DJANGO UNCHAINED makes people racist. I DO, however, believe that we become complicit in perpetuating racism and complacent in our critical evaluation of what we are seeing. I read the script for DJANGO UNCHAINED. That some people think that this is a film for black audiences is shocking. That some can read it as an empowering film for blacks and not see what I believe are massive white supremacist gazes (not to mention ignore philosopher Walter Benjamin’s notes on the danger of revenge film—ESPECIALLY when told by the Outsider) is very difficult for me to understand.

Or to put is as my grandmama used to: Just because it FEELS good doesn’t mean it’s good FOR you.


To characterize any critical debate about this film as “trite” is shade. It’s an attempt to end the conversation before it starts. Also the idea that the film “just states the way things were” strikes me as a simplistic reading that doesn’t allow for interrogative questions like: Why isn’t a black person permitted to tell the story? Why did a white man obsessed with the word “nigger” get to tell it? Why isn’t Django allowed to obtain his own autonomy without the help of the white savior? Why does Samuel L. Jackson, an already dark-skinned black man, have to appear in blackface to play his role of House Negro?


But I suppose we all come to art/entertainment with our own experiences—shared and separate.

So let’s open this up to a larger discussion. What say you, fam?

All opinions are welcome as long as they remain respectful and bigotry-free.


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Published on December 12, 2012 07:37

Miss Simone, I was wondering: how do you feel about antitheism? See, I like to think of myself as being a pretty dang mellow person, spiritually speaking: I have many friends of many different religious or nonreligious backgrounds and beliefs, and we supp

I am both a skeptic and an atheist myself, and I think everyone’s entitled to their opinions.


But being either or both of those things is no guarantee that you are a decent human being with empathy and compassion. Neither of those things comes with a license to treat people who believe differently like shit.


The atheism and skeptical movements are rife through with privilege all the way up to the top writers in both groups.  There is a common tendency for them to fail utterly and lapse into xenophobia, misogyny, racism, privilege denial and lots, lots more. 


We are entitled to our opinions. I don’t think we’re entitled to be assholes.

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Published on December 12, 2012 07:35

philnoto:

Marvel Girl - Just got Manga Studio 5 yesterday and...



philnoto:



Marvel Girl - Just got Manga Studio 5 yesterday and wanted to try out the colors on it. I LOVE the oil and watercolor brushes. Very easy to use and a great natural look to them. Highly recommended.





WANT WRITE PHIL DRAW WANT WANT WANT.

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Published on December 12, 2012 07:23

wheresmae:

ijustd0i:

Calvin & Hobbes Project | #5

I am so...





wheresmae:



ijustd0i:



Calvin & Hobbes Project | #5



I am so in love with this…




Wait. Twins, Calvin and Hobbes, AND a Spidey poster?



I WANT TO LIVE IN THEM.

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Published on December 12, 2012 07:17

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