Paulo Coelho (via wordsnquotes)
Jenna Coleman photographed by Jon Gorrigan for The Guardians (2016)
Daniel Radcliffe for GQ Style Brazil (Summer 2017)
It's been 2 weeks since Sherlock and there are hardly any Sherlock related posts on my dash
Martin being 4.3 years old during BOTFA press junket. (source, thanks to constantlyfreemaned)
I DONT UNDERSTAND QWHAT THIS IS
I WILL REBLOG THIS EVERY DAY OF MY LIFE
never forget when chris evans literally got in his tip toes so he could hug chris hemsworth while clinging on him.
same, evans, same.
Mad Lib Theater with Benedict Cumberbatch.
If the characters on screen (that is several different characters and often more than once per episode) bring it up and explicitly point it out, why aren’t we allowed?
^^that quote. That’s it, right there. If you want to make it platonic, maybe don’t write literally every other character on the show asking if it’s romantic.
the story of two men and their frankly ridiculous adventures …
jumping between s1 and s4 is. distressing
At least Sherlock got a tan at some point. Took a vacation, saw the beach, tried not to think about what a train wreck his life had become…
that’s not fair, poor sherlock is drugged up, distressed, malnourished and alone in s4 :’(
One of these days, Lizzy, someone will catch your eye and then you’ll have to watch your tongue.
What can you do, except do what you can do as best you know how?

INTO BATTLE I´m giving you ammo to counterattack BBC ´s outreageous answer
Reviews that mention Sherlock & John relationship as more than being friends:
As reviewer Monique Jones @moniqueblognet wrote in her review of The Final Problem for @COLORWebmag
“the seemingly dismissal of the fans by the creators is little irritating. You can’t bait the audience and then get mad when they don’t get what they were expecting. There is a reason Sherlock Holmes books and this show are at the center of queer media critique, and there should be a level of respect for that type of decades-long scholarship.”
INDIEWIRE: “we get clichés, queerbaiting and a modern adaptation that manages to feel more staid than the original.“
“The seeds of the idea that the Sherlock and John relationship could develop into a romantic one were steadily planted never to fully flourish. Subtextually the show referred heavily to The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes, a film that both Gatiss and Moffat rate as one of their favourite adaptations of the original stories – Gatiss going so far as to say to The Guardian that the screenplay formed a template for BBC’s Sherlock. In Private Life, Sherlock Holmes is depicted as a closeted gay man desperately, silently in love with John Watson, medicating with cocaine to hide his pain and guilt. Years after the film’s release, director Billy Wilder spoke of his great regret of never making the relationship explicit “I wanted to make Holmes a homosexual …”
(There’s also the issue of queerbaiting; Sherlock has done a tremendous amount of it, continually turning the issue of John and Sherlock’s friendship into a running, insulting gay joke. If that was never going to go anywhere, as both Moffat and Gatiss have repeatedly stated it would not, it’s hard to see it as anything but a homophobic running gag at the expense of actual queer identity — even though Gatiss, an openly gay man, has done his part to give us complicated queer characters before.)
What their relationship has turned into, instead, is an obnoxious and offensive joke throughout the series, with throwaway character quirks played for laughs. It is difficult for the audience to understand why Gatiss, an openly gay man, could write a perfectly complicated relationship that teases and hints at romantic entanglement, but is nothing more than an insulting running gag.
Here´s a link where you can find more examples about the queercoding of the series using typical romantic TV tropes (with pictures):
Moreover:
In Sherlock´s official Youtube account, the presenter uses the expression “the greatest love story never told” when talking in a video about Episode 2 The Lying Detective, at time code: 2 min 54 sec:
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