May 20, 2013

laymelahey:

scott mccall (◕‿◕✿)

(via swingsetindecember)

May 20, 2013

alphaesque:

lydia’s hair (◡‿◡✿)

lydia wanting one(✿◠‿◠)

lydia possible partial sex scene (◕‿◕✿)

lydia (✿♥‿♥)

(via beaconhillsorgy)

May 20, 2013
teen wolf psa

swingsetindecember:

  • hate on teen wolf female characters for getting some pants action and i’ll unfollow like the dickens
  • hatin’ on teen wolf female characters for their life choices while woobifying the male characters for theirs, and i’ll pretend we never met

11:19pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/ZtY38wlSCM-H
  
Filed under: teen wolf pls 
May 18, 2013

teen wolf is misogynistic 
to prove that, i made a graph
and then i got really sad
then angry

teen wolf is misogynistic 

to prove that, i made a graph

and then i got really sad

then angry

(Source: swingsetindecember, via lielabell)

May 17, 2013
On Scott McCall (and why I wish TW would stop making me hate him)

verstehen1:

Okay, see, here’s the inherent flaw with pretty much all modern (and some classic even) heroic narratives: the hero only becomes the hero at the expense of other people. In short: the hero is rewarded for taking action, regardless of what those actions are or the consequences of those actions. All the other characters, even characters cast in roles of support to the hero end up punished for taking actions but especially actions taken in defense of themselves or others. This tendency gets especially problematic when it comes to female characters, whom often experience sexualized narratives, especially sexualized violence, in response to taking action. 

Scott continually takes actions — good, dumb, heroic, devious, a mix of all of these — but those actions always have consequences for the people around him. For example, if Derek had succeeded in killing Jackson/the kanima, how many lives might that have saved? So, while arguably fighting to “save” Jackson is the heroic action, Scott’s insistence on doing so directly leads to letting Matt continue to rampage throughout the town. Other people pay the consequences, Scott does not. Scott’s actions with Allison continually paint Allison as the, hrm, not necessarily “bad guy” but often “hysterical,” or “misguided,” or just a “bitch” (fandom’s term following the season 2 ending, not mine). The audience obviously knows a lot more information about what’s going on than Allison ever does throughout the entire show, from when she “stupidly” breaks up with Scott for lying to her and putting her in danger and standing her up and being an all-around creep, or when she hunts and studies  dangerous werewolves with the one person who actually tries to tell her stuff that she needs to know about her family, her friends, and her boyfriend, or loses it following the completely unjustified death of her mother caused by one of those very dangerous werewolves… all stuff that could have gone so very differently if, you know, the men in her life — Scott in particular — had just talked to her. Scott’s actions in hiding the various truths from Allison — about himself, about her family — create consequences for Allison, really serious consequences for her mental, physical, and emotional health (not to mention the loss of her mother, the loss of her beloved aunt, the loss of likely any trust she had in her parents or family)… and Scott’s consequences boil down to being sad that he’s not dating Allison anymore and going back to where he started before he was bitten. There’s already a 700-odd something note post that describes my feelings about Scott’s actions regarding Derek so, yeah, we’re not going to go there because this will likely loose coherency and descend into rabid rants about agency narratives and how I kind of want to stab everyone in the TW writers’ room when I actually sit and think about it. 

Read More

May 17, 2013

margaery-tyrell:

april photoshop challenge

favorite character from teen wolf - isaac lahey @prayzer

(Source: ilahey, via winchestersarrow)

May 17, 2013
kellifer-k:

Derek pinches the bridge of his nose, obviously pained. “Okay, yes, i get that pixies turned Stiles into a kitten. Did the pixies also stick the reindeer hat on him?”
Isaac and Scott shuffle their feet and look shifty.
“Yeah, I thought so. Tell me something though, did you just happen to have a festive kitten hat lying around for such an occasion?”
“We ordered it off Amazon,” Scott says.

kellifer-k:

Derek pinches the bridge of his nose, obviously pained. “Okay, yes, i get that pixies turned Stiles into a kitten. Did the pixies also stick the reindeer hat on him?”

Isaac and Scott shuffle their feet and look shifty.

“Yeah, I thought so. Tell me something though, did you just happen to have a festive kitten hat lying around for such an occasion?”

“We ordered it off Amazon,” Scott says.

(via swingsetindecember)

May 16, 2013

danielshaarman:

i need teen wolf to come back but at the same time i want it to go very far away

(via breenwolf)

11:27pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/ZtY38wl8MlQS
  
Filed under: y u p teen wolf 
May 16, 2013

handofgold:

things i would have accepted for the lydia promo

  • something revenge related
  • something narrated by her
  • something without her in a body bag

image

(Source: perseused, via 1001-cranes)

5:27pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/ZtY38wl70HCx
  
Filed under: teen wolf spoilers 
May 16, 2013

fuck-it-fire-everything:

scoutsxhonor:

fuck-it-fire-everything:

Popular Theory

Lydia doesn’t expect her homecoming to be any kind of party. The name itself had always leaned a bit too far towards farce for her to take it seriously, even at school; what were they coming home to? Certainly not the hallowed halls of Beacon Hills High’s gym.

She may have been The Pretty Girl back then, but always in the weaponized, pointed way of someone with something to hide, someone itching to move on. Being crowned homecoming queen had been something to collect, a little keepsake of her ability to manipulate, to obfuscate to such an extent that people thought it was important. If nothing else, it was a practical manipulation of a simplistic voting system.

Nevertheless, looking back now, there’s something faintly ironic about being crowned, in name, for coming back to the start. Square one, the origin point. Home. Congratulations, you’re royalty, destined to regress.

Read More

At this point in history I think my most bulletproof kink is for Lydia/vengeance or Lydia/not caring or at least Lydia/understanding that everything that happened to her after Scott McCall got turned is total, utter bullshit and she should never have anything to do with those motherfuckers ever again if she can help it.

My additional Lydia ships include Lydia/Revenge and Lydia/a storied career in mathematics, possibly getting headhunted by the pentagon to wreak havoc in special ops. Or just Lydia/the salient facts of the situation at hand, that would also be nice.

(via 1001-cranes)

May 16, 2013
On Scott McCall (and why I wish TW would stop making me hate him)

verstehen1:

Okay, see, here’s the inherent flaw with pretty much all modern (and some classic even) heroic narratives: the hero only becomes the hero at the expense of other people. In short: the hero is rewarded for taking action, regardless of what those actions are or the consequences of those actions. All the other characters, even characters cast in roles of support to the hero end up punished for taking actions but especially actions taken in defense of themselves or others. This tendency gets especially problematic when it comes to female characters, whom often experience sexualized narratives, especially sexualized violence, in response to taking action. 

Scott continually takes actions — good, dumb, heroic, devious, a mix of all of these — but those actions always have consequences for the people around him. For example, if Derek had succeeded in killing Jackson/the kanima, how many lives might that have saved? So, while arguably fighting to “save” Jackson is the heroic action, Scott’s insistence on doing so directly leads to letting Matt continue to rampage throughout the town. Other people pay the consequences, Scott does not. Scott’s actions with Allison continually paint Allison as the, hrm, not necessarily “bad guy” but often “hysterical,” or “misguided,” or just a “bitch” (fandom’s term following the season 2 ending, not mine). The audience obviously knows a lot more information about what’s going on than Allison ever does throughout the entire show, from when she “stupidly” breaks up with Scott for lying to her and putting her in danger and standing her up and being an all-around creep, or when she hunts and studies  dangerous werewolves with the one person who actually tries to tell her stuff that she needs to know about her family, her friends, and her boyfriend, or loses it following the completely unjustified death of her mother caused by one of those very dangerous werewolves… all stuff that could have gone so very differently if, you know, the men in her life — Scott in particular — had just talked to her. Scott’s actions in hiding the various truths from Allison — about himself, about her family — create consequences for Allison, really serious consequences for her mental, physical, and emotional health (not to mention the loss of her mother, the loss of her beloved aunt, the loss of likely any trust she had in her parents or family)… and Scott’s consequences boil down to being sad that he’s not dating Allison anymore and going back to where he started before he was bitten. There’s already a 700-odd something note post that describes my feelings about Scott’s actions regarding Derek so, yeah, we’re not going to go there because this will likely loose coherency and descend into rabid rants about agency narratives and how I kind of want to stab everyone in the TW writers’ room when I actually sit and think about it. 

Read More

(via 1001-cranes)

May 16, 2013
withprettywords:

#democracy

withprettywords:

#democracy

(via swingsetindecember)

2:50pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/ZtY38wl6aZOQ
  
Filed under: teen wolf babies 
May 15, 2013

(Source: lonewolfed, via lielabell)

May 12, 2013
The relativity of trauma and why it is and isn’t an excuse

suaine:

Read More

excellent meta, equally excellent tags

 characters are not people either and it’s okay to love the broken ones even if they are doing terrible things except Gerard Gerard should die

May 9, 2013

(Source: hoechlined, via sarabibliomania)

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