Be utterly selfish bestie god put you on this earth to let you put your blorbo into Glorb media DO IT DOITNOOWSEEES
Please draw your oc x canon please be unashamedly loud about it please post it without embarrassment please make dramatic emotional edits of them please indulge yourself
Went to a con!
Bought some stuff too
Blacked out face is me
Found some lovely cosplayers as well!
Can’t wait to go to another in a few months :)
True.
Support all creations, big or small.
Support all creators, popular or new.
Fandom: God there’s like NO content anymore. I wish we could get more art and fanfics :(((
Someone: Hey, I can’t draw anything digitally, because I can’t afford a tablet, but here’s a pen on paper drawing that I spent a lot of time and hard work on. Also, I took a shot at my first fanfic and I’d really like some feedback or at least some kudos if you enjoyed it :)
Fandom: Oh... yeah sorry no... not you. We actually meant writers that are already well known and popular to produce MORE content... I mean, if a popular blog shares your work then maybe. And we don’t really like pen to paper art. We just don’t think it’s professional or even looks good :/
WAITERR I NEED MORE OF THEM CHAOTIC UNCLE-NIECE BOND PLEASEE‼️
Non-LMK post, im into The Gaslight District atm. I'm a sucker for horror-tim burton style, their animation style and character design are a cheff kisses.
Commissioned my oc’s to be drawn by the lovely @krisha-228
From left to right: Theo, Crane, Louisiana, Shayy
I can feel this sometimes.
Go walk for a bit, do something you can do without thinking, any simple task to let yourself brainstorm if you’re stuck.
So peak
A Gravity Falls x Bobs Burgers crossover au idea.
The Belchers are on a road trip and currently driving through Oregon. The trip has been okay so far, Tina hasn't puked more than once and to Louise's delight they've stopped at some of the locations she's recommended.
Gene enjoys changing the songs on the radio and Linda mostly sleeps. Bob however can't relax. He's too worried that something is going to go wrong.
Linda tells him to not think about it, that everything has been going smoothly and theres nothing to worry about. However as they pass the big "Welcome to Gravity Falls" sign, Bob feels uneasy. The woods surround the car and the wind whistles through the trees.
Bob thinks he can hear whispering out the open window but tries to ignore it. As he drives deeper into the town he can hear the car start to sound weird. It's making a dragging sound and he can feel the pang of anxiety in his stomach.
Before he can reach over to wake Linda the car jerks forward. As she jolts awake Bob pulls over to inspect the damage. He mumbles about how he was right, how he knew their luck wouldn't last for long and how now they were stuck in a small, creepy, town.
Linda calls a tow truck as Bob tries to not get into his head and think about how the rest of the trip would be terrible after this. Linda reassures him after her phone call and at the shop they search for motels to stay in.
Bob lands on a cheap, old, motel a mile down the road from them. Linda is hesitant to agree, as the place gives her the creeps. Bob mentally agrees with her but argues that there’s no where else to stay.
With a heavy sigh and a long moment of silence, Linda gives in and calls a car. As they drive to the motel Linda can feel a sense of unease settle in her.
The kids were too exhausted to notice, Louise was curled up next to Bob, Gene laid with his head on his mothers shoulder and Tina laid like a ragdoll in the middle, dead asleep.
And as the driver pulled in Linda considered telling Bob to re-consider. To maybe search for a different place. However she knows how exhausted her family is and how much Bob needs rest.
She swallows hard as she wakes the kids and climbs out of the car. Normally she would go inside to check in while Bob grabs their stuff.
Now however, she waits, one arm wrapped around Louise‘s small body to keep her warm, feeling the light weight of the little girl leaning into her and the other arm around Gene, playing with his hair and keeping him close to her.
Tina leans back into her mother with her hands in her pockets as Linda blocks her from the wind. As Bob finishes unloading their luggage Linda herds the kids to the doors.
She lets Bob in first and follows him in, slipping her hand into Louise’s. The motel looks even older on the inside and Linda starts to wish she had asked Bob to change his mind on the place.
Hauling the luggage up the stairs was the nail in the coffin for Bob. Driving had tired him out enough, but worrying about the car and their trip and then having to carry their luggage to their room made him feel dead.
The kids didn’t bother changing, they tore off their coats and climbed into bed, piling over each other and it wasn’t long before Bob and Linda could hear their soft snores and see Tina’s twitching under the blankets.
Linda would’ve loved nothing more than to crawl into bed at that moment but sleeping in her clothes made her cringe. So as she changed in the bathroom Bob flipped through the channels on the tv, ultimately landing on an old black and white movie.
Linda joined him in bed when she was finished, noticing he had quickly and lazily threw on his own pajamas. His shirt was inside out and part of it was stuck in the waist band of his sweats.
Bob knew but didn’t care. And while still very creeped out by the town and the motel he knew rationally that there was nothing scary about it.
He needed to let it go, and he figured sleeping would help him shake off the feeling.
However in Gravity Falls, the things that go bump in the night aren’t just the house settling, or your pets running around after bed time, or your roommate up making a late dinner.
The things that go bump in the night are real.
They aren’t even just passed on beings who like to fool with the living, or are angry you‘re in their space.
They‘re so much worse.
And Bob soon wished he listened to his gut before passing the big wooden sign that read:
Gravity Falls, Oregon.
The psychic gave the reporter a scoop—she saw the story coming a mile away Clair Voyance was once a household name, the precocious child star of “Clair-ity,” a 1970s television program that capitalized on her eerie intuition and unsettlingly accurate predictions. Decades later, she still wears the mystique like a second skin. Now in her forties, Clair is a real psychic—elegant, enigmatic, and deeply withdrawn from the spotlight that once adored her. She carries herself with an air of mystery, her aloofness giving her a somewhat unapproachable demeanor, though for good reason. Her past has left her guarded, perhaps jaded, but she still feels the pull of fate and responsibility. Clair is more attuned to the spirit world than she’d like to admit, and though she keeps her distance from most people, she holds a quiet respect for Dean and those like him (though she believes he has potential for more).
Justin Time is a paranormal journalist with the energy of a game show host and the stubbornness of a dog with a bone. He’s got a tendency to speak before he thinks and believes wholeheartedly in things most people laugh at—ghosts, cryptids, psychic powers, and ancient curses. Though his methods may be questionable—he has a habit of showing up uninvited and is incredibly nosy—his heart is always in the right place. He genuinely wants to uncover the mysteries of the unknown, not just for fame, but because he believes. In Dean, he sees a goldmine of stories, and in Clair, a living legend. He’s relentless, talkative, and occasionally foolish, but his earnestness gives him an unexpected charm.