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DuangkaeW

@theduangkaew-blog / theduangkaew-blog.tumblr.com

chun | she/her | 17 | thai | UNDERTALE | Funamusea fandom |
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Top 10 Worst Funamusea Characters

10. They

9. Are

8. All

7. Amazing

6. And

5. Deserve

4. To

3. Be

2. Loved

1. Siralos

😂😂😂

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okay but the screenwriter for Thor: Ragnarok is obviously intimately aware of what it’s like to have siblings because like…the snake scene? Bickering at every opportunity? Throwing things at each other for no real reason? “You know this guy?” “I have no idea who this person is”? Smirking when your sibling does something cool because ‘nothing but respect for MY sibling’ and then turning around and punching each other in the face right afterward? Stabbing each other for fun and then going ‘oh come on you big baby, that didn’t even hurt’? The fucking ‘Get Help’ scene? Like bruh…that is some Truth in Hollywood right there

In honor of this post reaching 10K notes, I have more examples of Siblinghood Done Right in Ragnarok:

  • *parent leaves the area* “THIS IS ALL YOUR FAULT!”
  • “You’re just…the worst.”
  • *internally* bitch I am the only one that gets to kill my sibling back off!
  • That little conciliatory pat on the back Loki gives to Thor after Thor says “Jane and I dumped each other”
  • “I swear I left it right here”
  • *casually talking to each other about something mundane with the underlying threat of violence everpresent in both of your voices*
  • casual jibes and banter about the way each other dresses (“Why would I do that? I’m not a witch.” “Then why do you dress like one?”)
  • “YES! THAT’S WHAT THAT FEELS LIKE!”
  • but also the concealed worry about your sibling getting actually hurt, even though you know they’ll probably be fine
  • Loki’s extremely obvious eyerolling when those girls approach Thor in public and ask for a selfie
  • *sibling walks in while you’re trying to cause trouble and enjoy yourself* “oh shit”

this bit

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archatlas

Gateway Arch Grounds and Museum 

It’s one of the most recognizable structures in the world and a national historic landmark, yet the true vision for the Gateway Arch in St. Louis was never fully realized. Eero Saarinen’s simple but brilliant design created a breathtaking stainless-steel catenary arch that soars 630 feet above the Mississippi River, but the final scheme at ground level left much to be desired. Saarinen died long before the project was completed in 1967.

MVVA’s scheme, developed with Cooper Robertson and James Carpenter Design Associates, is not about big gestures. Instead, its moves are subtle but very deliberate. Most discernibly, it sets up an east–west axis—previously implied but sliced by the highway—running through the center point of the Arch. A new land bridge straddles the highway, organically connecting visitors to the project from downtown. In order to ride the tram to the top, one must now enter the Arch through the newly expanded museum, which appears unobtrusively at grade in the form of a circular steel and glass canopy, the main architectural component and centerpiece of the project. That axial progression continues in the opposite direction as well, with the bridge connecting to the previously sunken and now redesigned Luther Ely Smith Park, which fronts both the historic Old Courthouse building on the edge of downtown and a series of landscaped plazas lined up to the west, designed as part of the City Beautiful movement a century ago. “We reinvented the choreography of how you enter this place,” says MVVA principal Gullivar Shepard.

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zombie-frisk

Hi there! I made you this! hope you like it <3

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@prismafarmer Oh no this is super rad! Ahh the animation is so cool! Thank you so so much, friend, it’s amazing! <3

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