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Let me guess, you take it black

@once-a-polecat / once-a-polecat.tumblr.com

🤤 sad 🦆 scribe ✍ i will stab death ☕️

About Me

  • I am over 40. This is not an admission of wrongdoing, it's a warning sign over the door. Please don't follow me if you're underaged.
  • I am genderfluid, bi and queer. I am a gymrat. I drink protein shakes and use "dude" as a gender neutral term of affection.
  • This blog is currently infected with Locked Tomb brainrot. If you don't want to see such content, please blacklist "The Locked Tomb," I do tag fairly rigorously.
  • Non-fandom things I love: Fiber arts, native plants, cats, fragrance geekery. Probably some other things I'm forgetting about.
  • I keep meaning to make a page with my writing, but in the meantime have a link to my AO3 (please heed all tags).

TODAY IS THE DAYY!!!!

FIRST DAY OF COMMENT FEST HAS BEGUN! TODAY'S THEME IS OLD FICS/NEW FICS! STOP SORTING BY KUDOS ANS INSTEAD GO CHECK OUT THE OLDEST AND NEWEST FICS YOUR FANDOM HAS TO OFFER AND #JUST LEAVE A COMMENT!!!!

When I’m out with Deaf friends, I put my hearing aid in my purse. It removes any ability to hear, but far more importantly, it removes the ambiguity that often haunts me.

In a restaurant, we point to the menu and gesture with the wait staff. The servers taking the order respond with gestures too. They pantomime “drinks?” and tell us they learned a bit of signs in kindergarten. Looking a little embarrassed, they sign “Rain, rain, go away, come again another day” in the middle of asking our salad dressing choice. We smile and gently redirect them to the menu. My friends are pros at this routine and ordering is easy ― delightful even. The contrast with how it feels to be out with my hearing husband is stunning.

Once my friends and I have ordered, we sign up a storm, talking about everything and shy about nothing. What would be the point? People are staring anyway. Our language is lavish, our faces alive. My friends discuss the food, but for me, the food is unimportant. I’m feasting on the smorgasbord of communication ― the luxury of chatting in a language that I not only understand 100% but that is a pleasure in and of itself. Taking nothing for granted, I bask in it all, and everything goes swimmingly.

Until I accidentally say the word “soup” out loud.

Pointing at the menu, I let the word slip out to the server. And our delightful meal goes straight downhill. Suddenly, the wait staff’s mouths start flapping; the beautiful, reaching, visual parts of their brains go dead, as if switched off.

“Whadda payu dictorom danu?” the server’s mouth seems to say. “Buddica taluca mariney?”

“No, I’m Deaf,” I say. A friend taps the server and, pointing to her coffee, pantomimes milking a cow. But the damage is done. The server has moved to stand next to me and, with laser-focus, looks only at me. Her pen at the ready, her mouth moves like a fish. With stunning speed, the beauty of the previous interactions ― the pantomiming, the pointing, the cooperative taking of our order ― has disappeared. “Duwanaa disser wida coffee anmik? Or widabeeaw fayuh-mow?”

Austin “Awti” Andrews (who’s a child of Deaf adults, often written as CODA) describes a similar situation.

“Everything was going so well,” he says. “The waiter was gesturing, it was terrific. And then I just said one word, and pow!! It’s like a bullet of stupidity shot straight into the waiter’s head,” he explains by signing a bullet in slow motion, zipping through the air and hitting the waiter’s forehead. Powwwww.

Hearing people might be shocked by this, but Deaf people laugh uproariously, cathartically.

“Damn! All I did was say one word!” I say to my friends. “But why do you do that?” they ask, looking at me with consternation and pity. “Why don’t you just turn your voice off, for once and for all?” they say.

Hearing people would probably think I’m the lucky one ― the success story ― because I can talk. But I agree with my friends.

I also have to just get out here and say: I HATE the term "content creator," it gives me the ick.

SERIOUSLY. Especially when it comes to Tumblr. I've been a style blogger... I have had many a side gig "creating content"... yet when I'm on Tumblr, I'm at play. And my play involves words, images, and nerding out. You could say that "content is created" as I play. But it's not the same chilly motivation that I feel as I deal with my stack of keywords as a "content creator". It's a busting-out creative flow.

See, when I think of myself as a "creator" I think of making physical things with my hands. Not making weird jokes on the internet.

Also "content" fucking sucks.

I also have to just get out here and say: I HATE the term "content creator," it gives me the ick.

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Tumblr’s Core Product Strategy

Here at Tumblr, we’ve been working hard on reorganizing how we work in a bid to gain more users. A larger user base means a more sustainable company, and means we get to stick around and do this thing with you all a bit longer. What follows is the strategy we're using to accomplish the goal of user growth. The @labs group has published a bit already, but this is bigger. We’re publishing it publicly for the first time, in an effort to work more transparently with all of you in the Tumblr community. This strategy provides guidance amid limited resources, allowing our teams to focus on specific key areas to ensure Tumblr’s future.

The Diagnosis

In order for Tumblr to grow, we need to fix the core experience that makes Tumblr a useful place for users. The underlying problem is that Tumblr is not easy to use. Historically, we have expected users to curate their feeds and lean into curating their experience. But this expectation introduces friction to the user experience and only serves a small portion of our audience. 

Tumblr’s competitive advantage lies in its unique content and vibrant communities. As the forerunner of internet culture, Tumblr encompasses a wide range of interests, such as entertainment, art, gaming, fandom, fashion, and music. People come to Tumblr to immerse themselves in this culture, making it essential for us to ensure a seamless connection between people and content. 

To guarantee Tumblr’s continued success, we’ve got to prioritize fostering that seamless connection between people and content. This involves attracting and retaining new users and creators, nurturing their growth, and encouraging frequent engagement with the platform.

Our Guiding Principles

To enhance Tumblr’s usability, we must address these core guiding principles.

  1. Expand the ways new users can discover and sign up for Tumblr.
  2. Provide high-quality content with every app launch.
  3. Facilitate easier user participation in conversations.
  4. Retain and grow our creator base.
  5. Create patterns that encourage users to keep returning to Tumblr.
  6. Improve the platform’s performance, stability, and quality.

Below is a deep dive into each of these principles.

If you change the chronological feed in the name of creators, I'm hunting your dumb asses for sport. This is one of the only websites that isn't actively pumped full of infuriating algorithm bullshit.

This slate of changes is moronically out of touch with how people actually use this website, and what makes it popular.

Users have been telling you idiots what they want out of this website for years. All you have to do is not shoot yourself in the foot while every other major website collapses around you.

I cannot stress this enough: adding an algorithm will make this website LESS friendly to me as content creator. Do not fuck this up.

DO NOT MAKE AN ALGORITHM

like have you learned nothing? @staff

tumblr has issues, the lack of an algorithm isn't one of them

So, I have a slightly different take on this.

I don't give a shit if there's an algorithm, as long as I can turn it off!

@staff you guys have a chance to do something revolutionary here. You have a chance to put your users in charge of whether or not they choose to implement these features. You can provide those features as the default to soft-onboard new users and help them find a place, but you should always allow power users & experienced users the ability to shut off the algorithmic recommendations, to maintain a chronological feed, to shut off tumblr live etc... One of the biggest problems I have with modern social media sites is that all of that control is completely taken away from me as a user.

The more control that users have over additional features the more likely you are to hold onto your current core userbase, while adding new users.

Thinking about how it's @justleaveacommentfest and how AO3 is down today, made me feel like sharing a little something.

When I bind my own fanfics into book form, at the end of the book I include the comments. If someday there is no longer an AO3 (or the more likely scenario, that in a spell of depression I delete everything again), I can still go back to the book and see that other people read my stories, and felt moved enough to share something with me.

I looove the book-report-style long ones, but one of my favorite comments is just seven words long. While writing the chapters, I would always go back to it and hope that one particular reader was still following along. When I posted the final chapter, they left a very satisfying comment - exactly two words. 🤭

That's how important a comment is. 💖

women are fucking trapped we are all so goddamn brainwashed its so depressing im about to kms. if you don't have a fb/want to watch this is a short reel that starts with a video of a pregnant woman in a shower covered in shaving cream and using a razor with the caption "my first pregnancy: shaving every single hair before labor like a classy woman so the nurses aren't grossed out" then it cuts to her walking into the hospital with the caption "my fifth pregnancy: not giving af and showing up like sasquatch and an 80s bush." i so despise living in a society that conditions women so strongly to believe that what our bodies do naturally is in fact MORE disgusting than CHILD BIRTH. and all of the comments on the tiktok version of this video were like "haha i did the same thing!"

Miracle Workers: End Times premiering tonight!

I know I've talked up this show once or twice, but it really is super fun (and dumb fun). The final season is Mad Max/Apocalypse themed, and apparently has a Death Guild cameo.

If you haven't watched the other seasons, each season is a stand-alone, so you can go back and watch them later. But from the reviews... [slight spoiler]

I can’t really post it as a poll bc it’s more of an Essay Question, but I’m curious:

What was the first queer fictional character you can remember seeing or reading about? If you can’t remember the first, then just think back as far as you can. For me I think it was Captain Jack Harkness.

A portrait of two punk survivors! Apparently, this shot represents the first reunion between 65-year-old Siouxsie Sioux and 67-year-old Billy Idol – two original members of the early Sex Pistols fanatics dubbed “The Bromley Contingent” – in 32 years. Two words: Punk. Royalty! This was taken in Los Angeles, where Sioux is due to perform in the Cruel World festival. Via the Louderthanwar website.

this video does more in 10 seconds than your fave’s entire filmography

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For everyone who’s confused

I feel like im watching a wedding ceremony from a country i didnt know existed. Like, I have no idea how all this stuff is important but good for you?????

This is hella interesting.

btw she gave him a single which can be made in a matter of minute depending on pattern and size but he gave her a giant cuff which can take hours or even more than a day to complete based on just how complex the design and materials are. she wanted to trade something small and simple and he gave her a massive token of his love and respect for her as a fellow raver (and possibly his junior in the scene)