#not khr related

LIVE

nicbraun:

what is everyone’s media property that they think is good but would get their pretentious card revoked. like i’m talking no irony you think this property is genuinely brilliant and deserves critical acclaim. i will go first. this is us nbc

stinkyhat:

inniter:

indie blogger: 400 or under

blogger: 500-999

corporate blogger: 1k-4k

elon musk: 5k

wecametobealonetogether:

There is something so special about teen superhero team dynamics, from Power Rangers to magical girls and everything in between.

I help you fight evil. I let you sleep on my lap when we get back home. I know everything about you, things your parents never will. We’ve almost died together. We study for tests together. We are discovering ourselves. I hope I still know you in ten years. You turned evil once. I still got you a birthday present.

brett-writes:

darkalinas:

yall DO realize that when tags on ao3 are like “abusive relationships” “homophobia” “racism” “consent issues/r*pe” they are there to protect you, right? you do realize that those tags being there lets you know that an author RECOGNIZES when something is wrong and is explicitly tagging that because it’s a story that discusses those things right? you do realize that the author is not *shudders* condoning those things, right?

This at all the people who say, “well they shouldn’t be there in the first place!!!!” Wait until I tell you about public libraries.

fieldbears:

bemusedlybespectacled:

it occurs to me that people might not know this (as far as I know, this is only a Beta option right now) but this is helpful for anyone who uses image ID. since I figured this out, I’ve started preemptively doing this to every picture I upload, though of course that means that the image’s description isn’t visibly in the post/caption which means no one realizes I’ve actually already described the thing but anyway

so here I am uploading a photo onto tumblr, as you do

A screenshot of a Tumblr post being created. The uploaded picture is an oil painting called "The Christian Martyr" by Edward Armitage. Having clicked on the meatball menu in the bottom right corner of the image, an option has popped down that says "update image description."

I’m going to click on the little dots in the bottom right hand corner, which pulls up “update image description,” which pulls up a box.

A screenshot of a Tumblr post. This time the image description box is visible, labelled "Image Description" with the subheader "By adding an image description to your post, you are making it more accessible for screen reader users." You can see that I've started to describe the oil painting.

And now I can put my description in the box.

Benefits include:

  • Having the description actually attached to the image, so the image description isn’t out of order in a post
  • Actually being part of Tumblr’s code instead of an ad hoc thing added to a post
  • Making Tumblr more accessible!

YES FINALLY

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