dengesizpsycho:

endromeda:

chronographer:

wackd:

ultrafacts:

He was a young artist employed by the Disney studio, but tasked with the entry-level job of finishing off the work of the animators and crafting the “in-between” animations that completed the characters’ movements. Wong had learned that studio executives were creating a film from the new novel, Bambi, A Life in the Woods by Felix Salten. Tom says the young artist read the book and without consulting his supervisor, “took the script and painted some visual concepts to set the mood, color and the design.” 

His sketches recalled the lush mountain and forest scenes of Sung dynasty landscape paintings. His initiative paid off. Walt Disney, who was looking for something new for the film, was captivated and personally directed that Wong be promoted. Today, top animators and illustrators revere Wong’s work. Children today are as enchanted by the misty, lyrical brushstrokes of Wong’s colorful nature scenes, inspired by his training at Otis College of Art and self-study of Sung Dynasty art 

Source [x]

Follow Ultrafacts for more facts

HE’S STILL ALIVE

HE’S 105 YEARS OLD AND HE’S *STILL FUCKING ALIVE*

THIS GUY HELPED MAKE THE FILM THAT MADE ME WANT TO BE A FILMMAKER AND *HE IS STILL ALIVE*

AAAAAAAAAAAAAH

I met him at a gallery event a number of years ago and, UGH HE IS SO TALENTED AND SO KIND AND ENCOURAGING THERE IS A REASON WE ALL LOVE HIM. Also, my alma.

GUYS WTF IS THIS CRAZY TALENTED GUY- HE MAKES KITES TO WOW JUST WOW

OMG  PEOPLE NEED TO KNOW

Hi, I’m Lena and I really love your blog. I have a meta question that I’m not sure where to start looking for the answer. I don’t know if you’ve researched this, but if Bucky’s family had been slightly well-off, maybe lower middle class, where in Brooklyn would they have lived? I’m working on my Stucky Big Bang and I’m writing that Bucky’s mother was Jewish and his father was Catholic, but that he was still raised Jewish. There’s so much Yiddish in my story! I’d really appreciate the help! Best.

hansbekhart:

hansbekhart:

Hello friend!  Thank you so much, I’m glad you enjoy it :).  My apologies for the delayed reply – I recently moved across country and it’s been a time dealing with all the real life stuff.  

So first off, yay for Stucky Big Bang and yay for interfaith Barnes family!  That’s the way I write them myself, so I didn’t have to research much to answer this question. Yay for all the Yiddish!  Do you speak it??  That is super cool, and I am all for multilingual fics.  I hope you will send me the link to your story once posted!  I would love to read it.

Families immigrating to New York during the relevant time period (you’re most likely talking about direct or first generation immigrant families, as New York City saw its largest wave of immigration between the 1870s through 1924) were likely to spend their first few years in Manhattan, and then make for their respective ethnic enclaves in the outer boroughs (Brooklyn and Queens, primarily, but many made questionable life decisions and moved to Long Island and New Jersey).  Jewish families mostly made that trip from the Lower East Side out to Brooklyn neighborhoods like Crown Heights (what was known in the 1930s as Eastern Parkway),  Flatbush, Brownsville (probably more lower class than middle), or Williamsburg (definitely more religiously orthodox than secular). 

As far as what their homes might have looked like, you’re looking at brownstones in Crown Heights and Flatbush, and tenements in Brownsville and Williamsburg.  You can find links to relevant images and descriptions here, and more generally in my master meta post.

Please allow me to point you to some more specific resources!  1940s New York is one of my favorite websites, because it gives a great breakdown for what neighborhoods were called at the time, what they looked like, and the demographic breakdown block by block.  To give you some context about how far that median rent could stretch, please check out this excellent meta post.  

I have some light reading for you regarding Jewish enclaves, and Brownsville specifically.  If you’re looking for some more in depth resources, I recently purchased Jews of Brooklyn and Brownsville: the Jewish Years myself (I can’t vouch 100%, as I haven’t had time to read through them entirely, but they are highly rated).  Jews of Brooklyn is somewhat available as an ebook? 

Hopefully this is helpful!  If you have more questions or are wondering anything specifically, please let me know.  If you’d like me to answer something privately, please say so in a message. 

Thank you to @dancinbutterfly for the opportunity to clarify: being raised Jewish is not limited to neighborhoods, but very much does include religious traditions.  It’s not limited to neighborhoods, food, clothes, etc.  The cultural history of Brooklyn is very much tied to Jewish culture, and I welcome anyone reading this to reblog or comment to add their own information, suggestions, resources, etc.

micdotcom:

the-movemnt:

Dear Donald Trump,

I’m a firm believer that politics should be kept out of our military and that our military should be kept out of politics. However, over the last week, a line was crossed not just between politics and our military but between personal ideology and human decency.

You recently told a crowd of your supporters, upon receiving a replica Purple Heart, that you’d, “always wanted to get the Purple Heart. This was much easier.”

Mr. Trump, I’m not a campaign manager. I can’t tell you how to run this race. But I say this as someone who knows you. I’ve met you before and you seemed as though you genuinely cared about my service and sacrifice. I wonder which version is the real you.

I am a proud post-9/11 U.S. Army veteran and Purple Heart recipient. When I first joined the military, like many other service members, I had dreams of serving valiantly and one day receiving many military accolades in service of our great nation.

In April 2003, the humvee I was driving outside of Karbala, Iraq, ran over a roadside bomb. The passengers were immediately ejected as a result of the blast, but I was trapped inside the burning vehicle for five minutes. I can tell you without equivocation that the one award I did not want to receive was a Purple Heart, but I got one anyway. And I’ll tell you now, I didn’t get mine the easy way.

I came home to my mother with third-degree burns over 33% of my body. I have had 30-plus surgeries to repair the skin grafts and tissue expanders since 2003. I came home a Purple Heart recipient, but my mother knew that we were only a few heartbeats away from giving her a new designation — a Gold Star.

So far you seem to have denigrated a prisoner of war, disparaged a four-star general who devoted his life to service, and disrespected the faith and the grief of a Gold Star family.  Any one of these actions alone would otherwise disqualify a person auditioning for the role of our commander in chief.

I cannot understand why you have continually attempted to dishonor the memory of Army Captain Humayun Khan. You have repeatedly attempted to link him and his family to radical Islamic terrorism by even bringing their names up in the same sentence.

You say that you support our military, but your actions tell a different story. You assert that you have made sacrifices on par with the Khan family. I must ask you; do you truly understand the fundamental difference between investments and sacrifice?

Your reaction to his family’s emotional statement has shown me two things: First, you have a difficult time picking your battles. In the military, this is an important lesson that soldiers learn. You attended a military academy in your childhood and you are a businessman, so I know you understand this strategy.

If your response to this family had simply been to acknowledge their ultimate sacrifice and to say that as Americans, they are constitutionally entitled to their opinions, that would have been enough. You chose a different tactic. You chose to stay in the news cycle with your increasingly outrageous statements of condemnation of a family who, by all accounts, should absolutely be off limits.

How can we trust our military in the hands of a commander in chief who we can’t even trust to comfort the parents of a fallen soldier?

Second, your reaction also tells me that since you have difficulty dealing with the opinions of a private citizen of this country, you will almost certainly have a harder time in the world of global politics.  

My 4-year-old daughter has a better sense of human empathy around this subject. When I take her to the park and other children stare at the scars that cover my face and arms, she takes my hand and encourages me to talk to those young children and explain why I look the way I look.

My hope is that your actions and words do not continue to erode our civil discourse. I pray that good people in this country continue to be shocked by your rhetoric because that means they agree that your words and actions have no place in society, much less in the Oval Office.

You have stated that all press is good press. It’s an interesting strategy that has thus far worked for you. But this, the memory of our fallen soldiers, their families, former POWs, and the proud recipients of the Purple Heart honor. This is not the position from which you should be getting your press. This is off-limits.

Please remember that the people you are speaking about, our brave men and women of the armed forces make up less than 1% of the population. However, if you become commander in chief, they will be the people who are going to fight for you regardless of personal politics. These are the people who will defend you. These are their families you are talking about. These are not the people you want to continue to carry out your petty grievances and personal attacks with.

I respectfully suggest you get a primer on the word sacrifice, as well as a lesson in human decency.

– J.R. Martinez (x) | follow @the-movemnt

it’s long, but please read this

Fun Youtube Documentaries

copperbadge:

During our recent tenure in TogetherTube land, I sought out a lot of my favorite documentaries (which I own) on YouTube. I figured I’d share a list of links to cool documentaries people may want to watch.

Secrets Of The Viking Sword

Cuttlefish: Kings of Camouflage 

Russia’s Lost Princesses Part 1 and Part 2

Honey Badgers: Masters of Mayhem

BBC Cat Watch (only part one, it was all I could find)

Into Eternity (about nuclear waste)

Our Guy In Latvia (tiny enthusiastic daredevil Guy Martin seeks his roots)

atlinmerrick:

thehoneyedmoon:

uss-edsall:

While sailing in the Mediterranean sea, in 1962, the American aircraft carrier USS Independence (CV-62) flashed the Italian Amerigo Vespucci with light signal asking «Who are you?», the full rigged ship answered «Training ship Amerigo Vespucci, Italian Navy». The US ship replied «You are the most beautiful ship in the world».

Great, now I ship actual ships.

You are the most beautiful ship in the world.

Dear god, I’m in love with two ships in love. (Everything is wonderful and nothing hurts.)

violent-darts:

nyininkalikela:

katerinasgranger:

ARE YOU FUCKKIINGGG KIDDING ME HE LITERALLY JUST STEPS IN FRONT OF THE CAR THAT IS ON FIRE AND COULD CRUSH HIS BODY AND NONCHALANTLY MOVES ASIDE LIKE ITS NOTHING I MEAN WHATS GOING THROUGH YOUR MIND BUCKY LIKE OH IM GONNA WAIT TILL THE LAST SECOND TO MOVE BC I FEEL LIKE BEING THEATRICAL

things that are both attractive and terrifying: people who are SO SURE of where they are and where everything else is such that they can do shit like this with zero chance of being crushed by a flaming SUV.

The longer he watches it head on, the better idea he has of exactly how it’s going to land, and how likely he is to have to take additional steps to make sure Fury is Actually Dead after it comes to rest. (Especially since from that position he can see THROUGH the front windshield and thus can see what’s happening to Fury in the seat.) 

alethiomancer:

jimandknuckles:

allthecanadianpolitics:

apatheticastronaut:

soycrates:

This might come as a surprise to some people, but Canada is not perfect. Some Canadians may want to say that not all cops are going to or even capable of harassing the public in the ways discussed above. “I know a good cop”, “my sister’s husband is a good cop”, “who do you think is going to help you if you’re a victim of a crime?” 

What is important, however, is that nearly every Canadian law officer understands how our society works, and understands that they hold privilege of preferential treatment above the law if they are to ever commit a violent or demoralizing act against another human being.

Canadian cops are treated like they embody the stereotype of the honest, polite Canadian that the worlds sees us as. But in reality, they are humans – and even sometimes, monsters.

I would very much like links to these articles.

Sources in order:

Agency was investigating whether Sgt. Russell Watson used excessive force against Orillia woman

Police document details gang sex assault allegations against cops

SIU Concludes Investigation into Oakville Shooting Death

Castlegar RCMP say man shot and killed at traffic stop

Man dies after being shot by police in northeast motel room

Ontario police officer found not guilty of sexual assault after trial

If you’re concerned about this, here are resources, and some context:

Toronto Police Accountability Coalition (co-founded by former mayor John Sewell)

Office of the Independent Police Review Directorate  (brought about in part by the LeSage Report, which was a response to criticism of police violence and accountability in Toronto, Ontario, and Canada)

Ontario Civilian Police Commission (as per their website, “…

an independent oversight agency tasked with ensuring that adequate and effective policing services are provided in a fair and accountable manner…”)

G20 Class Action lawsuit (when Toronto hosted the G20 Summit, police arrested protesters in what was the largest mass arrest in Canadian history)

ARCH Disability Law Centre’s submission to the Standing Committee on Justice Policy
on Bill 103, An Act to establish an Independent Police Review Director (this submission concerns both ARCH’s balliwick, accessibility concerns, and broader concerns about police accountability, as well as what ARCH sees as flaws in the Act)

Ontario Police Complaints System Public Forum (from 2013, hosted by Scadding Court Community Centre’s website)

I live in Toronto, and did some very limited activism around police accountability 15 years ago, which is why my awareness of this is focused on organizations like these.

You may also be interested in a little historical context as well: the LeSage Report was released in spring of 2005, as condemnation of police violence against protesters at big demonstrations faded (in no small part due to anti-war activism having leached energy from anti-globalization protests in the West, and in turn fading due to the increasing momentum of the War on Terror in Iraq and Afghanistan) from public discourse. However, it was still fresh enough that the public could recall easily enough the tear gas wafting into the sky above Quebec City in 2001, the young man shot to death by Italian police in Genoa, or the APEC protest in Vancouver in 1997 (see Nardwuar’s famous question to Prime Minister Jean Chretien about that and the PM’s infuriating response). Activists made public their research into the strong links between the actions of the police in these situations, and the actions of police regularly assaulting and terrorizing people of colour, the poor, sex workers, and First Nations members. The McGuinty government, confident in their 2003 mandate from Ontarians ending the Common Sense Revolution, were determined to address this issue. I think, given that Michael Bryant was the Attorney General at the time, they were more than just a smidgen earnest in this legislative act. (Bryant, for all his faults, seems to be a lower case liberal as well as a Liberal)

But 2005 was also the “Summer of the Gun” (see also Idil Burale’s Part II, and Spacing’s conclusion to the series) culminating in the Boxing Day shoot-out. Street gang violence had made headlines, and the government moved quickly to dramatically increase their efforts to combat it: the Toronto Anti-Violence Intervention Strategy, or TAVIS; hiring more police officers in Toronto (and later in other cities across the province); creating a Guns & Gangs Operations Centre; and increasing the number of Crown Attorneys, Judges, and other Justice staff. The focus of these efforts was and is on street gangs, organized crime, and outlaw motorcycle gangs, but it’s clear that the TAVIS raids and arrests of black and brown people in the Greater Toronto Area takes the spotlight. TAVIS, and TPS (Toronto Police Services) in general, “carded” a lot of black and brown people. Black and brown people have complained about TPS violence long before BLMTO.

The Ontario government strode forth bravely to reduce the violence its armed agents create in the administration of justice, by acting on the LeSage report. However, the government undermined this by the increase of its policing of black and brown bodies in their anti-Guns & Gangs operations. I feel it’s critical to complement the reporting of individual police officers acting violently by providing a background of how the government goes about supporting, funding, and legislating police activities. It’s also important to note that this doesn’t happen in a vacuum, either; violent crime in racialized communities has an effect on policy, and concomitant police violence in those communities.

YO CHECK THE ADDITIONS ^^^