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hello

@thenextstarlord

21 | fem | syd
Anonymous asked:

How exactly do you make userboxes? :0

Great question anon! I actually did a ‘tutorial’ on this a while back but it was worded terribly, so I’m gonna make it again! Also I make these off my phone, so it will be based off that 🤠

1: Go to this website: http://www.yerich.net/userbox/

2: in the top bar, put this code:

3: Find a picture on google and copy the link

4: paste the link between the two quotation marks

5: Put your text in the bottom bar:

6: Choose the colour for your userbox by using either of these features: (I usually use both)

7: Screenshot your userbox and crop it in the gallery/whatever photo editor you use

8: enjoy your user box!!

I hope this helped!!

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in case ya missed it

also the part that was missed was when eureka was in Chicago the week before the episode she had a spat with the vixen during untucked. eureka wanted to meet with the vixen in Chicago but she wasn’t there at the time.

alright I'd like to never see that adam tots dudes art on my dash again he's a fuckin anti anti who thinks cartoon kids are a-okay to draw p*rn of

WHAT

He got called out for drawing p*rn of sonic whos like 15 and instead of you know. Admitting he shouldn't have he has been mocking everyone who calls him out and using the excuse that "its a cartoon"

Hedgehog lifespan is 2-5 years, making Sonic the oldest hedgehog in history. Hedgehogs reach adult maturity at 11 months. Also he’s a FUCKING BLUE CARTOON RODENT. You people have worms in your brain.

Also why is everyone ignoring the main issue, which is that Sonic somehow imgregnates Pikachu’s ass? Please focus on the real issues.

you really didn't have to come onto this post and somehow make your case worse and yet-

can we also point out regardless of age he drew literal porn and posted it somewhere where minors could access. like he literally provided an example here, thanks for handing the shovel to dig your digital grave bro

Wow adamtots really thought he came up with an epic clapback there.

@ adam, why are you posting porn on a safe for work account. like, if you want to post porn, fine by me, but at least have the dignity to post it on an nsfw account and not anywhere where minors could easily access it lmfao.

If you think this comic is porn, then I have some bad new for you babe

Me coming back to reblog this every hour just to keep the absolutely batshit discourse going a little longer

More adamtots shit

Transphobia (and a bit of fatphobia!):

Racism and appropriating AAVE

And a bit more pedophilia!

Oh look at that! Hes not only a pedophilic creep hes also a transphobic, fatphobic and racist creep!

1. Drag isn't transphobic, and also those comics were paid gigs for Logo and Viacom.

2. Those ~racist~ comics are adaptations of tweets made by black creators, which I asked permission to adapt.

3. Once again, Sonic is a blue rat, not a human child.

time to jump on the bandwagon

this? this isn’t fatphobia. simply insinuating that a fat person might lie to get more free food isn’t fatphobic. (i’m fat and i literally would if i weren’t afraid of getting kicked out of places.) if a skinny person were drawn in this comic, y’all wouldn’t jump on it. when it’s a fat person, y’all are so quick to jump to bogus claims of fatphobia. 

consider this: if you’re getting offended by a one-off comic that literally features a fat person in a slightly unflattering light and you’re going to rampage about it, then maybe you’re the one who should take a step back and reevaluate. 

fat people existing in a gross way isn’t fatphobic. 

Also, this was a paid comic for Logo. That’s Ginger Minj, a Drag Race contestant, in a challenge where they had to play different characters in the same sketch. It was made specifically for their Instagram, which was posting during the episode in question. Context matters, but I guess I can expect Tumblr to ever do research.

So I used to make fun of this guy for using the same face over and over. And you know what? Kudos on this made for actually taking the criticism and breaking out of his rut.

This is also terrifying and I hate it.

“Kudos for actually taking the criticism and breaking out of his rut.“

Except it wasn’t criticism, it was constant daily harassment. Look, I’ve been making comics for the internet for 10 years. I made comics for BuzzFeed for about two years, but people love to focus on those comics for some reason. They were simpler and quicker because I needed to publish at least one thing a day. And I loved it! I learned a lot!

At some point when I was getting really popular, Reddit and Tumblr decided they’d had enough and launched a targeted campaign against me. Tried to doxx me multiple times. Sent death threats. 4Chan threads started popping up for the sole purpose of spreading rumors that I’m a pedophile. All because I was making “lazy” comics and getting a salary for it.

Also, it’s always the same 10 or so comics that got posted as proof of my laziness. I made 1,008 comics at BuzzFeed (I counted). I worked really hard for my extremely mediocre salary.

Now that I’ve left BuzzFeed and don’t have deadlines anymore, I can spend more time on comics and only draw things I’m passionate about (like my dick). But make no mistake—if you like my stuff now, it’s because I pushed myself so hard as BuzzFeed. I’m not better now because of the “criticism” I got from trolls on the internet. Don’t fucking take credit for that.

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Is all criticism from trolls or is there any way of providing you with constructive criticism? Do you even care to hear it or would you prefer people keep it to themselves?

Not trying to be a troll myself, just curious. 

I will answer this question for you: No, unless you are someone who an artist knows well, is on friendly terms with and the artist has asked you specifically for advice.

Artists know other artists. If I'm having trouble with something specific, I can actively say "who do I know that does this really well?" and immediately come up with a shortlist of names belonging to people who I 1)trust to be honest and helpful and provide me with actual solutions to the problem I'm having, 2) know what they're talking about, 3) are at least somewhat familiar with my workload and process and 4) have time for my questions. If my issue is more involved, I will even offer to pay them for their time!

Most artists will not take unsolicited advice from random people on Tumblr or in their comments, and they shouldn't! You have no way of knowing if the person giving you critique has any experience, has any insight into what might work better, has any familiarity with anything about how you work, and so on. You also don't know anything about them personally, so you really can't trust that someone has genuinely good intentions towards you and isn't just fucking with you--that even if you did everything they said they wouldn't just move the goalposts until you finally realised that their goal wasn't to help you improve, it was to waste your time and jerk you around for as long as they could get away with.

Also, you never want to give people who consume your work the idea that they have power over the decisions you make, because then you set yourself up for caving to audience whim in a time and place where collective hate-reading is a thing that people do.

That's not to say that your readers shouldn't call you out if you say something shitty or racist or genuinely harmful, but that is an entirely different situation from constantly being hounded by a group of assholes who are all saying 'you're doing it wrong, do it a different way because I say so, and if you don't I'm going to tell everyone that you just can't take criticism!' Fuck that.

Good on Adam for having clear boundaries and being able to articulate them so succinctly.

This is what happened to me too. When I was on DeviantArt, I posted my comic “So, You’re A Cartoonist” on an almost daily basis. I got TONS of criticism, which I tried to listen to and follow. I was told my backgrounds were lacking, so I added more backgrounds even though the comics and jokes didn’t need them. I was told the format was too repetitive, despite the fact that a 4 panel structure made posting daily easier. I was told my jokes were too tame, so I tried making edgier jokes despite not being comfortable telling jokes like that.

Every time I adjusted my art to fit the needs of some random critic, more would just take it’s place. Nothing I did was EVER good enough, and I eventually ended up burning myself out trying to accommodate everyone. I was getting hundreds upon hundreds of comments a day, and what did I get for listening to the feedback? Branded as “unable to handle criticism” by those whom I missed or didn’t listen to. It didn’t matter that I listened to feedback, because the second I didn’t listen to one person or they felt slighted by me for whatever reason, it was all over 4chan and SomethingAwful and the trolling intensified. It’s physically impossible to listen to hundreds of criticism and adjust our work to them all equally, yet we’re treated like that’s a fundamental aspect of our job.

This doesn’t even begin to scratch the surface of why random criticism from online fans is kinda useless. The best type of criticism happens DURING the making of the work, when you still have time to change the art and adjust things easily. Once the work is completed and put out there, it’s not viable to go back and change things because you’re got other projects to work on and you can’t get hung up on what’s been done. There are deadlines to meet after all. But fans can only realistically comment on final works of art. They can’t usually comment on the behind the scenes process and influence the art in any meaningful way.

My longest paying gig was a 2 year stint drawing “the Brentalfloss Comic.” It was weekly, and I got scripts sent to me. I would draw up the comic, send it back, get notes on it, change things, and make adjustments. It was rough, but it worked because I was getting feedback BEFORE I finished making the comic. And it yielded some of the best work I’ve ever done. But when people criticize my work, they conveniently ignore those 378 comics. Strange...

Also, speaking personally here... the best type of feedback I could get is someone telling me what I did RIGHT. Not mindless “praise,” mind you... but what did you LIKE in my art? What did I do that you ENJOYED? I know what I did wrong. I drew it, after all. I don’t need the negative pointed out, because I know eventually I will overcome it. But I need positivity. I need people to tell me why I should keep making the art I do. If all an artist ever gets back is negativity and harsh criticism, they’ll quickly fall into depression and despair because they’ll feel their work is never good enough. So why bother? If every work of art is just going to spur more negativity, why bother making new work?

The biggest lie social media has instilled in us is that your ability to reach out and contact the creators of your favorite works is a “right.” It’s not. And if a creator doesn’t want your feedback or doesn’t listen to your criticisms, you are not being “censored.” Artists are not obligated to waste their precious time dealing with your personal beefs. Especially if you’re not paying them. lol

Stay outta my posts Andrew

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Saw a twitter thread that documents the niche meme community of “gay ford” and i can’t tell if these were made by homophobes or gay people