arms race
so much for stardust
courtesy of carolsarreal's story
charm ideas i’ll maybe draw 4 real one day when i feel like doing an insane amount of work 👍
Fall out boy post on their ig page
(Why did they just now make a post )
LOVE FROM THE OTHER SIDE
✨ HAPPY BIRTHDAY, PATRIIIIICKKKKK!!!!! ✨ (it's still his birthday for twenty more minutes where i live so!! VICTORY.)
DISLOYAL ORDER OF WATER BUFFALOES
Fuck 🤣
It is I, Aardvark Biiiiinks, come to eat your flesh!
Hold Me Like A Grudge (Criterion Edition - Extended Cut Part 1)
I remember when I was first getting into this band and learning their ~~lore, and I was reading reviews of post-hiatus shows, and they were constantly saying that the band ended the set with their traditional song, "fan favorite" Saturday. Like, it was always described as a "fan favorite." And I just remember at the time, before I knew much about this band, being like, Awwwww, they have a song they always end with! And it's not their biggest hit! I love that! How sentimental of them! Why are they so tropey! That's what a fake fanfiction band would do!
And then.
AND THEN. I learned, like, WHAT SATURDAY ACTUALLY IS hahahaha. I learned how it is a song about *them.* How the lyrics are *literally about them.* They don't just have a standard last song, they have a standard last song *that is all about their relationship.* I learned that they consider it the first song they really, successfully wrote *together,* as the team they would eventually be. I learned how, when they sing it live, Patrick points to Pete when he sings, "Pete and I attacked the lost Astoria." Wherever they are on stage, he and Pete sing "more than an hour" to each other. I thought, the more I learned about this song, ...fan favorite? That is not an apt description. Regardless of how much their fans might love Saturday, the set ends with Saturday because it is *their* favorite.
When Patrick said, at the show last night, "It means more when we play this song here," like, yes, it ALWAYS means a lot to them when they play this song. They always end their sets with a song from their very beginning, and it has always killed me to know that, but it kills me even more to know so explicitly how much it means *to them.* They play the song they've been playing together for decades, and they play it in Chicago, at the Metro, together, and it means more. When Patrick sings "me and Pete," Pete sings along.