Radio Blue Heart is on the air!

Nov 26

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murrdercat:

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JAMIE LEE CURTIS as LAURIE STRODE

Halloween (1978) dir. John Carpenter

(via fanofspooky)

tonysopranobignaturals-deactiva:

evil hallmark movie where the girl comes back to her small hometown and hates it so she ends up overworking in the city on christmas

jabberwockypie:

seymour-butz-stuff:

bellybuttonblue2:

While this bill doesn’t require states to allow same-sex marriage, it does require them to recognize same-sex marriages performed in other states.

So anyone wanting to get married can travel to another state, get married, come back, and the state has to recognize their marriage as valid.

The new Respect for Marriage Act would also protect interracial marriages by requiring states to recognize legal marriages regardless of “sex, race, ethnicity, or national origin.“

(via dberl)

movieposters1:

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movieposters1:

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definitelynotcecelia:

definitelynotcecelia:

t-poserat:

Years later, don't let this shit go unnoticed.  The internet archive is home to: • many of Wikipedia's sources • many otherwise-lost pieces of media • THE ENTIRE WAYBACK MACHINE   The data loss if the Internet Archive went down would be comparable to the Library of Alexandria. https://t.co/oTEDFQdcdf  — 🐶 Camwoodstock 🌺 (@Camwoodstock) July 10, 2022ALT

If you can, please donate to the Internet archive, links in the description. The loss of the archive would be devastating for dozens of reasons.

I know the Library of Alexandria comment sounds like an exaggeration. It absolutely is not. As of May 7, 2022, the Internet Archive holds over 35 million books and texts, 7.9 million movies, videos and TV shows, 842 thousand software programs, 14 million audio files, 4 million images, 2.4 million TV clips, 237 thousand concerts, and over 682 billion web pages in the Wayback Machine. It’s been operating since 1996, the loss of knowledge would be impossible to ever completely come back from.

The lawsuit from Hachette Book Group, HarperCollins, John Wiley Sons, and Penguin Random House alleges there have been significant revenue losses because of their controlled digital lending program. For context, most libraries in the US also use CDL to distribute books to their patrons wherever they are but those programs are run through for profit companies and the libraries are often paying a very high fee to so their patrons can have access to digital books. The Internet Archive’s program is completely free but they have a policy of not digitizing and lending anything less than 5 years old.

The lawsuit goes on to note that authors often own larger shares of their revenue of digital vs. print copies of their books. So the publishing companies, seeing that they’re underpaying their authors, are essentially blaming a library for being free instead of bumping up what authors earn on print copies. The Internet Archive’s 5 year policy is designed to protect authors anyway as that’s when books typically make the most money.

Hey by the way The Internet Archive is also one of the most cited places on Wikipedia. If it goes down a good chunk of Wikipedia will go back to “citation needed” or citations will lead to dead links.

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