Photo of Rhys on stage wearing a black RD shirt and tight jeans standing with his hands on his hips
Daily Darby
Photo of Rhys on stage wearing a black RD shirt and tight jeans standing with his hands on his hips
Daily Darby
doubles luge. one guy lays on his back on the luge sled and the second guy lays on his back on top of the first guy
been watching the olympics and i think i found a solution to the male loneliness crisis
😡🌴🌴😡
nothing 100k words of slowburn can’t fix
If Bilbo had Chat GPT
I wrote this song on Saturday, recorded it yesterday and released it to you today in response to the state terror being visited on the city of Minneapolis. It’s dedicated to the people of Minneapolis, our innocent immigrant neighbors and in memory of Alex Pretti and Renee Good.
Stay free
Edward Teach in season 2 episode 4 of Our Flag Means Death, wearing his Blackbeard leathers and pearls with cuts and bruises all over his face, standing in a forest at night and watching Stede out of frame with a fond expression
day 560 of posting a picture of edward teach every day until we save ofmd:
The love is tangible in this one.
Literally a publication for eight-year olds 40 years ago
😭😭💖 had anyone ever thought that about Stede before Ed came along?
A close up from a behind the scenes video of ofmd season 2 of taika smiling in ed costume
🤏🏼🤏🏼🤏🏼
#ofmdbts
A lesbian-protagonist sci-fi show is the most-watched Apple TV+ series of all time.
A gay hockey romance is #1 on HBO Max.
And a gay detective movie is #1 on Netflix. 🏳️🌈
Sounds like the woke and ghey stuff has an audience.
#ourflagmeansdeath season 3 lets go.
His face ❤️ he can't quite believe this is happening 😍🤯
Ed in the gravy basket looking just absolutely lovely (poor Ed)
I know we’ve talked a lot about how pretty Ed is in the gravy basket but truly what did we do to deserve this and how do we do it again
dumb people: taika obviously never even cared about ofmd
taika: spent 3 minutes of an a-list actor/producer panel gushing about how much the show and the way it normalizes queerness + makes so many people feel seen means to him
#TaikaTuesday
Ed and Stede holding hands in the moonlight on the deck of a pirate ship. Still from ofmd s2e5
This? Perfect. ❤️
#ofmd
Of course - he's thinking about Stede ❤️ So lovely to see him smiling.
Mine too, for a year. Can't quite bring myself to change it 🧜♂️ 🏴☠️
adhd ed teach my beloved
New favourite Ed photo 😍 ❤️🕊
Super cute, both of you!
the YEARNING 🥺😭
his name is ed
Edward Teach in season 1 episode 7 of Our Flag Means Death, wearing a purple t-shirt, a gold chain necklace, and Stede’s black cravat, leaning against a tree in a jungle in St. Augustine and looking at Lucius out of frame with a puzzled expression
day 501 of posting a picture of edward teach every day until we save ofmd:
what's your dream, rhys darby?
🥹❤️
#ofmd
This is very lovely indeed 🏍
But lo and behold! I found myself famous. Frankenstein had prodigious success as a drama, and was about to be repeated, for the twenty-third night, at the English Opera House. The play-bill amused me extremely, for, in the list of dramatis personce, came "———, by Mr. T. Cooke." This nameless mode of naming the unnameable is rather good. On Friday, 29th August, Jane, my Father, William, and I went to the theatre to see it. Wallack looked very well as Frankenstein. He is at the beginning full of hope and expectation. At the end of the first act the stage represents a room with a staircase leading to Frankenstein's workshop; he goes to it, and you see his light at a small window, through which a frightened servant peeps, who runs off in terror when Frankenstein exclaims "It lives!" Presently Frankenstein himself rushes in horror and trepidation from the room, and, while still expressing his agony and terror, "———" throws down the door of the laboratory, leaps the staircase, and presents his unearthly and monstrous person on the stage. The story is not well managed, but Cooke played ———'s part extremely well; his seeking, as it were, for support; his trying to grasp at the sounds he heard; all, indeed, he does was well imagined and executed. I was much amused, and it appeared to excite a breathless eagerness in the audience. It was a third piece, a scanty pit filled at half-price, and all stayed till it was over. They continue to play it even now.
For anyone who is like “the creature is also named Frankenstein”; Mary Shelley went to see a play version of Frankenstein and was tickled that they listed the creature as “———“ in the dramatis personae:
“this nameless mode of naming the unnameable is rather good”
www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/3...
I'm losing my mind over how many reviewers are like "GDT's Frankenstein makes you wonder who the real monster is." THAT'S THE STORY! That's the story Shelley wrote!