#birds of prey

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Pairing: Harley Quinn x Reader

Characters: Harley Quinn

Warnings: Mentions of Abusive Relationships

Request: Wattpad- This one’s been in my mind for a while, it’s where the reader was the joker’s first every partner before they both got caught and put into prison, but joker never came back for the reader. After the reader gets out or breaks out they meet up with Harley and the others and the reader and Harley end up getting along really well. I’m not sure about the rest tho

Word Count: 705

Author: Charlotte

Growing up, you never imagined that you would be the villain in life, but love forced you to do the wildest things. You had fallen in love with a man that went by the name The Joker, which should have been your first warning sign but you overlooked the weird name and appearance because your heart told you so. You agreed to do terrible things and be an evil sidekick as it was for the man you loved, and you believed that he would do anything for you. Everyone knew about the two of you in Gotham and it seemed that you would stay side by side forever but when you were caught by the police, he easily dismissed you and moved onto another sad girl that felt like she needed a man.

At the time it felt as though your life was over, losing the man you loved and your freedom, you didn’t know how to cope but soon your life turned around and things ended up better for you. The Joker now had a new girlfriend Harley, and you had managed to go back to school and become a registered nurse, granted with a bit of working around. You loved being able to make up for the damage you did and trying to offer some good back into the world.

You now had a job and a house and everything seemed to be perfect, but you should have known that nothing could be that simple as when your door knocked, you never expected to see Harley, The Joker’s new girlfriend on your doorstep.

Her intense eye makeup was smeared and running with her tears and she looked a bit of a mess compared to what you had seen her looking like normally.

“You’re Y/N/N,” she stated using the old nickname that the Joker had once used for you, sniffling to try and fight her tears.

“What’s it to you?”

“I need your help,” she whispered. “I know you don’t want me here, but I don’t know who else to turn to.”

She was in quite a state and you couldn’t help but feel bad. Going against your better judgement, you let her into your house, leading her to the living room to sit down with her.

“Pudding left me,” she croaked. “I don’t know what to do without him.”

“The Joker?” You asked.

Harley nodded her head. “How did you handle it when he left you?”

You let out a chuckle, thinking back to the atrocious breakup that you had experienced years before.

“Well I was in a prison at the time, where he left me. I made a bit of a fool of myself assuring everyone in there that my man was going to come and get me. He sent one of his goons to tell me about you, not long after. I took my anger out on other inmate and guards and then cried a lot. I was put on a lot of medications to help my breakdown, but I talked with a therapist and friends I made on the inside and realised the truth of the Joker.”

She cocked an eyebrow at you. “What’s the truth?”

You shrugged your shoulders. You couldn’t understand the man fully, no one could. He was a complex mess of a human, but you didn’t need to waste your time on him anymore.

“He will never be capable of love. I know it feels like you are his world and he really is yours, but he doesn’t care about you, only what you can offer him,” you stated. “And it’s important to realise you have a future without him and believe me it will be better than any life you had with him.”

She looked completely confused with your words. “But it feels like everything is over. What am I meant to be without him?”

“Harley freaking Quinn,” you said with conviction. “You are a strong woman, if you’ve put up with his crap this long, then you must be. It may feel like the end but this is your beginning.”

Harley took a moment thinking it over before nodding and offering you a gentle smile.

“And it is going to be an amazing beginning.”

harley quinn’s evolution in the DCEU is everything i needed and more

dcladies:Jurnee Smollett as Dinah LanceBirds of Prey (2020)dcladies:Jurnee Smollett as Dinah LanceBirds of Prey (2020)dcladies:Jurnee Smollett as Dinah LanceBirds of Prey (2020)dcladies:Jurnee Smollett as Dinah LanceBirds of Prey (2020)dcladies:Jurnee Smollett as Dinah LanceBirds of Prey (2020)dcladies:Jurnee Smollett as Dinah LanceBirds of Prey (2020)

dcladies:

Jurnee Smollett as Dinah Lance
Birds of Prey (2020)


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joyce-byers:WONDER WOMAN (2017) dir. Patty Jenkins BIRDS OF PREY (2020) dir. Cathy Yanjoyce-byers:WONDER WOMAN (2017) dir. Patty Jenkins BIRDS OF PREY (2020) dir. Cathy Yanjoyce-byers:WONDER WOMAN (2017) dir. Patty Jenkins BIRDS OF PREY (2020) dir. Cathy Yanjoyce-byers:WONDER WOMAN (2017) dir. Patty Jenkins BIRDS OF PREY (2020) dir. Cathy Yanjoyce-byers:WONDER WOMAN (2017) dir. Patty Jenkins BIRDS OF PREY (2020) dir. Cathy Yanjoyce-byers:WONDER WOMAN (2017) dir. Patty Jenkins BIRDS OF PREY (2020) dir. Cathy Yan

joyce-byers:

WONDER WOMAN (2017)dir. Patty Jenkins
BIRDS OF PREY (2020)
dir. Cathy Yan


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Birds of Prey (And the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn), (2020). It was the closure I nBirds of Prey (And the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn), (2020). It was the closure I nBirds of Prey (And the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn), (2020). It was the closure I nBirds of Prey (And the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn), (2020). It was the closure I nBirds of Prey (And the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn), (2020). It was the closure I nBirds of Prey (And the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn), (2020). It was the closure I nBirds of Prey (And the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn), (2020). It was the closure I nBirds of Prey (And the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn), (2020). It was the closure I nBirds of Prey (And the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn), (2020). It was the closure I nBirds of Prey (And the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn), (2020). It was the closure I n

Birds of Prey (And the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn), (2020)

It was the closure I needed. I wanted a fresh start. The chance to by my own woman… But I wasn’t the only dame in Gotham looking for emancipation.


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Suzanne’s Favorite Things of 20201. Cotopaxi Bataan Del Dia Fanny Pack. My first clue that 2020 was

Suzanne’s Favorite Things of 2020

1. Cotopaxi Bataan Del Dia Fanny Pack. My first clue that 2020 was going to be weird should have been when I coveted my wife’s fanny pack.Was I really giving a second look to the fashion staple of the 80s that I was certain I would never sport around my waist? I was. But let’s face it, when you’re going for a long walk (and there were many of those in 2020) and your pockets can only hold so much, a fanny pack is the perfect accessory for your phone, a bottle of water, and keys. I like to say that my wife, who neither she nor I would label as fashion-forward or clothes-minded, makes roughly three to five style decisions each year. This year she hit the jackpot by looking back at what I thought was a relic of the past, an artifact only to be found in photos of tourists waiting in line at Disney, and gave life to my new favorite old accessory. Thank you, Erin.

2. Red-tailed Hawks. The world was sad this year. At times, March, April and May especially, it seemed like we all had our heads down. I was no exception. What the pandemic took from my calendar it paid back in extra servings of anxiety, worry, and uncertainty. My head was down, too. But on days when I went outside and into nature, I tried to remember to look up, to search the trees - bare and brown in the beginning, but robust and bursting with delicate green leaves by June - and I’d always see a red-tailed hawk patiently perched, effortlessly camouflaged, poised for flight without warning. Sometimes I’d even spot them soaring the skies above the treetops, gliding without so much as a feather flap of their kite-like wings. The hawks, like other animals have shown me at low moments in life, became a mainstay of my time outside in 2020. I watched out for them daily and they were always there, giving me a reason to look up.

3. Schitt’s Creek. In the dark, uncertain first weeks of the coronavirus pandemic, and through the periods of lockdown and quarantine that followed, Schitt’s Creek was my entertainment oasis, my welcomed interruption from the daily infection numbers that news anchors reported from behind their makeshift home offices. Despite being a lifelong Catherine O’Hara fan and walking past oversized show posters plastered to subway station walls for two years, it took decamping to Connecticut for me to invest in watching the lives of Johnny, Moira, David, and Alexis unfold in their adopted and ambiguously-located town of Schitt’s Creek. I started with a binge, speeding through the first two seasons, but by season three I paced myself for fear of landing on the final season too soon. I cried during “Life Is a Cabaret”, and then re-watched some especially hilarious episodes until I reached the inevitable end of the streaming rainbow. In a time of such immense suffering and crippling uncertainty, this show was more than just 20-something minutes of comedy. It was a reason to laugh when there seemingly was none.

Also Check Out: Some of my very favorite Schitt’s Creek episodes include “The Hospies”, “Allez-Vous”, and “Wine and Roses”.  

4. Portrait of a Lady on Fire. It’s no surprise that a film about a gay love affair set in a time when there were no words for a same sex romance made it onto this list: it’s a plot line that, for me, never dulls with each unique reincarnation. And while I believe the world needs to see, hear, and read more LGBTQ love stories, “Portrait of a Lady on Fire” surpassed this simple aspiration and rightfully earned its place on this list for an equally simple reason: it’s a quietly beautiful and visually stunning film with dialogue that strikes just the right balance between superfluous and stark. The main characters (Marianne and Heloise) are two 18th century women way ahead of their time by standards of self-actualization and emotional awareness, which was enough to send my “oh this is not going to end well” meter into overdrive. From their first meeting on the shores of a windswept island off the Brittany coast, it’s obvious that whatever spark exists between them will be bright, but brief, exquisite, but tragic, as I suspect many gay romances were in the late 1700s. “Portrait of a Lady On Fire” unfolds slowly at first, using side glances and nuances to reveal Marianne and Heloise to each other in a way that feels secretive and special. We all know how this story will end, but we can’t look away and we hope that love will win hundreds of years before its time.  

Also worth checking out: “Becoming”, the Michelle Obama documentary, provided a wonderful portrait of our most dynamic, modern, and interesting First Lady while giving me hope for a return to decency in the White House in 2021.

5. Audm. I like to think that despite the protests, the deepening divides in the U.S., the unprecedented devastation, and the tumult that defined 2020, it was a year of listening. Public health officials, demonstrators, world leaders, and politicians all spoke louder than ever in 2020, and we listened even if we didn’t like what they said. As the COVID-19 fatalities rose and health inequity became increasingly more apparent in our communities, we heard ourselves echoed in the country’s collective conversations about race, health, and injustice. Through the noise of the year, I did a lot of listening via Audm, an app that narrates longform journalism from dozens of sources, including Vanity Fair,The New Republic,The Atlantic, Rolling Stone and many more. Having access to myriad articles and news outlets I would never have the time to sit down and enjoy was one of my first discoveries of the pandemic, and it’s one that I’ll continue to rely on long after these dark days are behind us. Whether it was on long walks, car rides to escape the monotony of home, or just a lazy afternoon outside, Audm made it possible to listen more in a year that was filled with so much noise.

Honorable mention: “The Daily”, the podcast from the New York Times continues to be at the top of my essential must-listen-list. Each episode renews my love for journalism and storytelling.  

6. Chili Crisp. Is it called chili crisp or chili crunch? I’ll leave the debate to informed foodies to settle. Either way, this delicious chili-infused oil was a late addition to the 2020 Favorite Things list, but no less deserving of its spot here. Made with crunchy bits of peppercorns, garlic, shallots, and other assorted ingredients depending on your recipe of choice, this condiment is perfect on eggs, toast, sandwiches, vegetables and just about anything else that needs a boost of flavor. So is it crisp or is it crunch? It doesn’t matter. Just eat it.

7. Yellow Lentil Dal. I love spicy food, I crave spicy food, and every few weeks I need to re-expose my taste buds to dishes that either take me to another part of the world or introduce me to a new culinary world while gently knocking my socks off. I knew this about myself before the pandemic, but in the weeks of quarantine, and avoiding take-out, my need for spice intensified. Moving from New York City to Connecticut - not exactly a culinary mecca overflowing with a diversity of ethnic food options – presented another challenge. The solution was found in “Flavorwalla”, a cookbook by Floyd Cardoz, the late Indian-American chef we tragically lost this year. His 344-page book contains recipes for every palate and preference, and a variety of occasions, from cooking for two to special dinner parties. And yes, there are pictures, too. My favorite Flavorwalla dish that I made twice within a two-week span is a Cardoz’s yellow lentil dal. With just 12 simple ingredients, it’s a super quick meal that cooks in one pot and satisfies my need for spice, if only for a few days.

Honorable mention: The cookbook “Alpine Cooking” by Meredith Erickson is also worth checking out for its incredible photography and descriptions of a the cozy mountain towns of Italy, Austria, Switzerland, and France.

8. David’s Ankles. With the help of the Audm app (#5 on this list), I consumed a lot of great journalism this year.The unwieldy and dark life of Doris Duke; the state of genetic testing in Denmark; the conspiracy theory behind Britney Spears’ Instagram posts; a love story told 72 years later; the staying power of Cher and so many morearticles lifted me up, brought me to tears, and left me happy, confused, angry or inspired. But one article took me back in time to 2001 when, as a very young traveler, I stood in front of Michelangelo’s 17-foot statue of Davidand didn’t look away for what could have been hours.Written by Sam Anderson and published by the New York Times, the article goes deep into the long, flawed history of the marble slab that eventually became “the Giant” as David is known in Florence, its three-year journey down the side of an Italian mountain before Michelangelo’s birth, decades of neglect that followed, years surrounding the statue’s plagued creation, and the nearly four troubled centuries that David spent watching Italy evolve around his massive feet while enduring the brutality of mother nature (wind, sun, rain, and pigeon feces) and human nature (desecration, abuse, and dismemberment). Supporting the art history lesson, Anderson masterfully weaves in the personal narrative of his obsession with David, his compulsion to mimic the sculpture’s perfection in the decades following their first encounter and the hairline cracks that are slowly coursing their way beneath the surface of David’s fragile ankles today – a reminder that nothing, even the most impeccable specimen of human creation – lasts forever. 

In a year when boarding an airplane was considered reckless and dangerous,I ping-ponged between Connecticut and New York by car and put my long distance travel dreams aside, save for the brief period in August when an author and his article transported me back in time to my 21-year old self meeting Davidfor the first time.

9. Peloton. In 2014 I added spinning to my annual round-up list, citing that it encompassed a few of my favorite things: sweating profusely, loud music, spandex outfits, and getting yelled at by a live instructor. Six years later, my love for spinning has only grown stronger, as I’ve continued to get it all out on the bike in my tight pants with house music and clever remixes making my legs move faster faster faster with each class. This year, like so many of my fellow riders, I ditched the live studio experience, clipped into the Peloton community from the narrow seat of my own bike, and dug deep to keep the positive vibes pumping. I don’t miss the live classes in the company of others (the pandemic has, perhaps, made me more of an introvert), and I know the Peloton instructors to turn to when I want to be pushed just a little harder.

10. Taste the Nation. Padma Lakshmi: ever heard of her? I, of course, knew her as the host of “Top Chef”, but without ever watching more than 30 seconds of the reality show, she was just another famous person to me. That changed in June when I watched her Hulu show “Taste the Nation.” As an immigrant herself, Padma (we’re on a first name basis now) explores American cuisine by diving deep into the various immigrant groups who shaped what we know today as American food. Part travelogue, but largely a candid and forthright scouring of the untold history of food in this country, the show (and Padma) uncover the origins of burritos, hot dogs, chop suey, pad thai, poke, and more. In a year when I was not traveling anywhere outside of the tri-state area, but dying to see something new, “Taste the Nation” took me across the country, introduced me to new people, provided culinary history lessons, and gave me a new friend in Padma.  


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Roman Sionis (Birds Of Prey) ♟ @anon

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⚜️||♣️||

‘I gravitate towards monochromes. I always sort of either wear white or black or cream. I really lik‘I gravitate towards monochromes. I always sort of either wear white or black or cream. I really lik

‘I gravitate towards monochromes. I always sort of either wear white or black or cream. I really like wearing colorful things as well, but I’m a sucker for cream-colored.’


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Birds of Prey | Sentence Prompts

feel free to change words and pronouns as needed.

  • “Oh, hey, you’re that singer no one listens to.”
  • “Oh, hey, you’re the asshole no one likes.”
  • “I’m not shopping at this store. I’m robbing this store.”
  • “Psychologically speaking, vengeance rarely brings the catharsis we hope for.”
  • “Unless we all want to die very unpleasant deaths, we’re going to have to work together.”
  • “What the hell is up with this bow and arrow shit?”
  • “I love this chick. She’s got rage issues.”
  • “Your protection is based on the fact that people are scared of you.”
  • “You made me want to be a less terrible person.”
  • “If you want boys to respect you, show them you’re serious.”
  • “Nothing gets a guy’s attention like violence.”
  • “I underestimated you and I’m sorry.”
  • “I’m used to it.”
  • “I’m sorry, (name), I’m just a terrible person I guess.”
  • “So… we broke up.”
  • “She stole my fucking car!”
  • “That is childhood trauma right there.”
  • “Fine. But if you try to run, I will kill you.”
  • “I’m not proud of what I did.”
  • “I had to find a new identity. A new me. It wasn’t easy.”
  • “I guess all good things have to come to an end.”
  • “So, we broke up. I handled it real mature.”
  • “The inflection in your voice, the way you can’t hold eye contact, and the fact that you’re a filthy little thief, all suggest that you do.”
  • “Well, sounds like a dick.”
  • “You’re so tiresome! If you want my mercy, shut that hole in the middle of your face and listen.”
  • “(Name) is gone, but it’s just a matter of time before some other asshole tries to finish what he started.”
  • “You’re a filthy fucking rat.”
  • “That’s why he needs me to look out for him. That’s why he needs me to take care of him.”
  • “Still a work in progress.”
dcbicki: 9K CELEBRATION➤ anon sent: timestamp roulette + Birds of Prey (and the Fantabulous Emancipadcbicki: 9K CELEBRATION➤ anon sent: timestamp roulette + Birds of Prey (and the Fantabulous Emancipadcbicki: 9K CELEBRATION➤ anon sent: timestamp roulette + Birds of Prey (and the Fantabulous Emancipadcbicki: 9K CELEBRATION➤ anon sent: timestamp roulette + Birds of Prey (and the Fantabulous Emancipadcbicki: 9K CELEBRATION➤ anon sent: timestamp roulette + Birds of Prey (and the Fantabulous Emancipadcbicki: 9K CELEBRATION➤ anon sent: timestamp roulette + Birds of Prey (and the Fantabulous Emancipadcbicki: 9K CELEBRATION➤ anon sent: timestamp roulette + Birds of Prey (and the Fantabulous Emancipadcbicki: 9K CELEBRATION➤ anon sent: timestamp roulette + Birds of Prey (and the Fantabulous Emancipa

dcbicki:

9KCELEBRATION
➤ anon sent: timestamp roulette + BirdsofPrey(andtheFantabulousEmancipationofOneHarleyQuinn)

Isn’t this fun? It’s just like a sleepover. We should order pizza, make Cosmos…

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dcbicki:HARLEY QUINN + flagsRick is Harley’s walking green flag and you cannot convince medcbicki:HARLEY QUINN + flagsRick is Harley’s walking green flag and you cannot convince medcbicki:HARLEY QUINN + flagsRick is Harley’s walking green flag and you cannot convince me

dcbicki:

HARLEY QUINN+flags

Rick is Harley’s walking green flag and you cannot convince me otherwise


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So I want to write some practice essays as preparation for uni next year. I want to be serious about this but I also want to have fun with it. So I thought it’d be fun to write some essays on DC comics!

I’m asking for topic suggestions. They can either be serious (e.g. an in-depth analysis of Bruce Wayne’s character) or not (e.g. an essay on which Justice League member would make the best roomate). Have fun with it! 

I’ll do topics on any character, family or anything related to DC comics, really. And I’ll do persuasive, compare and contrast, and close analysis. Either give me the easiest topics or give me a challenge, it’s up to you! Additiionally, it’d be really helpful if you would also suggest what comics, show or movie to watch in order to research into the topic before writing the essay. You don’t have to! But it’d be helpful

dcmultiverse: Birds of Preydir. Cathy Yan | 2020dcmultiverse: Birds of Preydir. Cathy Yan | 2020dcmultiverse: Birds of Preydir. Cathy Yan | 2020dcmultiverse: Birds of Preydir. Cathy Yan | 2020dcmultiverse: Birds of Preydir. Cathy Yan | 2020dcmultiverse: Birds of Preydir. Cathy Yan | 2020dcmultiverse: Birds of Preydir. Cathy Yan | 2020

dcmultiverse:

Birds of Prey
dir. Cathy Yan | 2020


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dcmultiverse: Birds of Preydir. Cathy Yan | 2020dcmultiverse: Birds of Preydir. Cathy Yan | 2020dcmultiverse: Birds of Preydir. Cathy Yan | 2020dcmultiverse: Birds of Preydir. Cathy Yan | 2020dcmultiverse: Birds of Preydir. Cathy Yan | 2020dcmultiverse: Birds of Preydir. Cathy Yan | 2020dcmultiverse: Birds of Preydir. Cathy Yan | 2020

dcmultiverse:

Birds of Prey
dir. Cathy Yan | 2020


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dcbicki: HARLEY QUINN + flags dcbicki: HARLEY QUINN + flags dcbicki: HARLEY QUINN + flags

dcbicki:

HARLEY QUINN+flags


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A Peregrine FeathursdayThe Peregrine Falcon (Falco peregrinus) has made a remarkable comeback here iA Peregrine FeathursdayThe Peregrine Falcon (Falco peregrinus) has made a remarkable comeback here iA Peregrine FeathursdayThe Peregrine Falcon (Falco peregrinus) has made a remarkable comeback here iA Peregrine FeathursdayThe Peregrine Falcon (Falco peregrinus) has made a remarkable comeback here iA Peregrine FeathursdayThe Peregrine Falcon (Falco peregrinus) has made a remarkable comeback here iA Peregrine FeathursdayThe Peregrine Falcon (Falco peregrinus) has made a remarkable comeback here iA Peregrine FeathursdayThe Peregrine Falcon (Falco peregrinus) has made a remarkable comeback here i

A Peregrine Feathursday

ThePeregrine Falcon (Falco peregrinus) has made a remarkable comeback here in Wisconsin since its precipitous decline starting in the 1950s. While they are still endangered, they are gracing our skies in slowly increasing numbers every year, and they are no longer an uncommon neighbor. In Milwaukee we have several mating pairs and our tall city structures provide excellent nesting sites, including here at UWM on top of our Engineering and Math Science Building, which has its own falconcam to observe nesting behavior, but not much is happening this season yet. The city also offers an abundance of prey, so Peregrines are quite at home here.

The drawings and the painting presented here are from our folio volume Birds, The Paintings of Terance James Bond, by British bird artist Terance James Bond, published in Cambridge, England, by the Lutterworth Press in 1988. Of his painting of the Peregrine, Bond writes:

The bird shown in my painting is an adult male … calling from what could be a potential nesting site. As can be seen, various shades of grey are the predominant colours in the picture, but I felt this worked well. The high points of the painting are, of course the bird’s head and feet. Apart from being the most important part of a Falcon’s equipment, they also lend a note of relief to the painting by being bright yellow. The branches of the Scots pine introduce an extra colour and a different element in the form of foliage and help soften what is otherwise a very strong composition.

View moreposts with paintings by Terance James Bond.

Viewmore Feathursday posts.


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