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Justice for Lexa

@swear-fealty-to-heda-leksa

Cis woman, 27, Queer, femslash fanatic, hates JRoth forever, Zelda/Pokemon/LoK/Elder Scrolls obsessed, feminist
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@blarkes

you drag clexas for being white lesbians. which i am. i will not deny that. but the majority of my fandom is not. almost every clexa blog i follow is bi, another sexuality, POC, or any of the above. i asked all of my “big” mutuals to come up with a big white lesbian clexa blog and they could not.

you want to drag white lesbian clexas? drag me. but leave my POC sisters, my bi sisters, my ace sisters, my LGBTQ* sisters alone.

drag me instead.

love, 

your problematic white lesbian clexa.

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slaydees

thank u to cw’s hundred for teaching young girls good lessons

• if boy is angry and irrationally blames u for his anger always apologise

• even if u r strong, no nonsense space warrior as soon as boy has hurt feelings u need 2 become emotional punching bag

• if you are a girl don’t like another girl you will both only suffer,,

• u aren’t allowed to feel emotion apart from a few 0.2 sec scenes bc girls + feelings = gross

• love is weakness

moral of the story: b mindless zombie housewife to ur husband and pray the gay away‼️

Yep that’s the show

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blaqpanther

“For a few weeks now season three of The 100 has been on the upswing, gaining momentum by ignoring the muddled motivations and shaky storytelling from early on and forging ahead with a new vision. That new vision involves a complete A.L.I.E. takeover, aided by Jaha and now Ontari, who are gathering everyone they can find and giving them the Key to the City Of Light. Part of the success of the recent episodes is the fact that the City Of Light storyline embodies a lot of what’s great about The 100. It’s mysterious, fun, and constantly engaging with interesting themes of autonomy and morality. Unfortunately, the goodwill the show had been building comes to an end this week with “Join Or Die,” an episode that at times struggles to define its emotional core while also delving into disingenuous, unearned character work.

The red flags are there right from the beginning. As Kane and a shackled Pike finally find their way to Polis, things are looking a little different. This isn’t the Polis Kane saw when Lexa was the Commander. This one, under the reign of Ontari, is brutal and violent. Blood literally runs through the streets and crucified men linger above the sidewalks. “About what I expected,” mutters Pike, and he’s right. This is exactly what he was worried about, and in that confirmation of his worst beliefs is the seed of a problem that spreads its roots throughout all of “Join Or Die.” The moment doesn’t feel like Pike just happening to have his opinions of the Grounders confirmed, but rather the show itself justifying his actions. It feels like The 100 is forcing Pike’s perceived reality into the mix in order to make him more of a sympathetic character, and that’s a huge problem considering everything he’s done throughout this season.

If “Join Or Die” had left it at that one misstep though, things would have been fine. There’s a lot in this episode to love, from Octavia’s urgent need to give Lincoln’s death purpose and meaning, to Kane’s emotional journey alongside “chipped” Jaha and Abby. The 100 isn’t content with leaving it there though. Instead, the show flashes back six months, to two weeks before the 100 were sent to earth. Now don’t get me wrong, exploring life pre-drop is a great idea. There’s still a lot of backstory to be unearthed, but choosing what to unearth is important. In “Join Or Die,” the flashbacks serve a single purpose: they cast Pike in a more sympathetic and even noble light.

Essentially, when Jaha, Abby, and Kane make the decision to send the teenage prisoners to earth, Pike is commissioned to teach an Earth Skills class to them, involving lessons on making fire, hunting, and farming. The catch is that Pike can’t inform them about their impending departure; so, keeping the kids focused is an issue. They all assume they’ll never need these skills. Plus, Murphy is in the class, so there are plenty of distractions. So, with a reluctant class and probable death on the horizon, Pike is forced to be the only one worried about the lives of these kids, culminating in a “graduation” scene of tough love that teaches the kids to survive at all costs.

Portraying pre-drop Pike as a man of principle and empathy isn’t necessarily a bad thing, but it is when it comes during the 13th episode of the season and after the man has committed countless atrocities and straight-up executed one of the show’s most moral and noble characters. The attempt to slightly redeem Pike, or at least give him another shade of personality beyond “murderous villain” ends up coming across as disingenuous, as a way to correct the shoddy storytelling from earlier this season. It just doesn’t work. “Join Or Die” aims to complicate the character of Pike, which in itself is a worthy goal; in fact, presenting complex characters that have justifications for doing good andbad things is The 100‘s bread and butter. But with Pike the potential complication doesn’t hit the mark. Instead, it feels unearned. Pike has been a caricature up until this point, a monster with very little justification for his actions, so the fact that The 100 spends most of “Join Or Die” painting him as sympathetic is off-putting to say the least.

It’s not just Pike though; unearned emotional developments are peppered throughout the episode. As Bellamy, Clarke, Jasper, and Octavia find their way to the spot in Lincoln’s journal and discover a way to signal for passage to Luna, things continue to boil over between Bellamy and Octavia. Again, The 100seems to be trying to course-correct the decisions it made in earlier episodes. Here, Bellamy is lashing out at Octavia for not accepting his apology and refusing to let him back into her life emotionally. He even goes so far as to tell her that had she trusted him maybe Lincoln wouldn’t have died. He doesn’t outright say the “Lincoln wouldn’t have died” part, but that’s the implication. I get that both of these characters are experiencing intense emotions and are prone to saying things they’ll regret, but the way in which the show is positioning Bellamy as sympathetic, just like Pike, is disingenuous and removed from his character arc this season.

So much of “Join Or Die” is focused on redeeming characters who either shouldn’t be redeemed or can’t be just yet.The 100 put itself in a tough spot by having Bellamy betray his people and side with Pike, but changing course doesn’t fix that. Instead, it’s simply jarring. When Clarke tells Bellamy that Octavia will eventually forgive him, but that he first needs to learn to forgive himself, it’s hard not to roll your eyes because it’s just not that simple, not after everything that’s happened. “Join or Die” wants to present Bellamy and Pike as complex characters who have made mistakes, but it hasn’t earned the right just yet.”

Aka, greatest drag of all time

ahhhhh i love the sound of everyone collectively hating this show 

Just reading this made me absolutely cringe

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Okay, apologies. I rushed to share when @aatkaw shared this with me and the earlier version was unfinished.

Well, here’s the final product and I have to say I like both versions <3

Thank you again for doing this.

Also do check out their Tumblr and maybe commission them cause their art is totally awesome <3 You won’t regret it!

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woahspace
Anonymous asked:

So according to Jrot, Lexa was always meant to die since the pauna episode to showcase the reincarnation. More than a year has passed since then and they still choose to write the fuckery that is 307? It sickens me that all the interactions with us between then and now is a big fat lie. This betrayal can never be forgiven.

When did he say that??

Even if she always was meant to die, there’s no way they had planned that AI plot beforehand. That was pulled straight out of his ass as he went along. Too many plot holes. Too predictable.

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If lexa was always meant to die why tf did they play up the fact that they had a lgbt character on the show. So they were queerbaiting from the start?!

I believe Jason had no idea what he was getting into. He had an idea of a Commander and she was supposed to be a child initially–I read this somewhere. But they went with Alycia because he wanted to get her from the start. Clexa wasn’t even his idea, it wasn’t meant to become romantic. I think it was pitched in by Kim or some writers and they went with it. Didn’t see the hurricane it would create. Jason is a desperate dickhead, he knew Clexa would save the damned show so he pushed Clexa and strung us all along to get what he wanted: season 4. He already knows how to end the series in 4 seasons, this has been his plan all along. That’s what happened. They just did the most horrible and cruel queerbaiting ever done in tv history.

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What is happening

Can someone please explain to me how B@mon moved up from 33% to 41% on the zimbio poll in the last couple hours??

For anyone else who is wondering…

Pass this shit around and inform Zimbio they need to be disqualified for this

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clexabrasil

BAMON FANS ARE CHEATING - SIGNAL BOOST!

We got tagged on a Tweet with the following photos:

SIGNAL BOOST!

BAMONS ARE USING SOFTWARES TO WIN THIS POLL!

I CALL UPON THE ARMY OF ALL FANDOMS! 

BAMON IS CHEATING!

GO NOW TO @ZIMBIO AND FLOOD THEIR TWITTER WITH THIS!

We are also going to trend right now: BAMON FANS ARE CHEATING and tag @zimbo 

Pass on this information! We have been voting like crazy and they are cheating! SPREAD! SPEAK OUT! THIS WAS OUR CHANCE! OUR INTERVIEW!

DON’T LET THEM TAKE THIS AWAY FROM US TOO!

WE ARE GOING TO TREND RIGHT NOW! COME JOIN US!

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