Gay single nerd hopeless romantic
Growing Up With Fred and Ginger
There are few things that had more of an impact on my adolescent intellect than that first time I saw Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers boogie together in The Gay Divorcee (1934). I caught it on Turner Classic Movies after institution one day, when I was around 8 or 9 years old, and I swear my backside must’ve gone numb from sitting on the floor for so lengthy without moving. I was transfixed. It made me roar. It made me swoon. And I immediately wanted to see it again.
So I waited. I scoured the newspaper every day to see when TCM would be playing the movie again. And it wasn’t until months later that they brought it back. I was ready. I had a VHS tape that I’d acquired from the bottomless pit that was our TV cupboard, with stacks upon stacks of VHS movies shoved inside. I posthaste taped over whatever was on the VHS, and probably got in trouble for it, so that I could have my retain copy of The Gay Divorcee and I watched it over and over and over. After school. On the weekends. Whenever I could.
There was something about the way Fred moved, even when he wasn’t dancing. And he was so charming, witty, smart. He was a dreamer. He was everything little me wanted,
Booksmart is a 2019 American coming-of-age comedy film directed by Olivia Wilde, from a screenplay by Emily Halpern, Sarah Haskins, Susanna Fogel, and Katie Silberman. It stars Beanie Feldstein and Kaitlyn Dever as two high school students, who on the last time of their school settle to have all the fun they missed out on throughout their teenage years because they were too fixated on entity goody-two shoes.
Now we contain had abundant teenage coming-of-age comedy films, with several young characters finding treasure in hopeless places and defeating their rivals in sports matches and transforming from the “nerd girl” to the “hot girl” by taking off their glasses and blah blah. Hollywood, for years, has had this formula position as default. They delivered on the same elderly cinema of boy meets girl, girl is timid, boy is cool, teen and boy go through transformations for each other and fall in affectionate and live happily ever after.
Every year there is a new iteration of high school drama with actors that do not look like teenagers playing teenagers, because the considerate of stuff they portray in these movies cannot be appropriate for teenage actors to perform. Additionally, most of the bizarre
Hopeless Romantic - Blog Posts
Ooooo! Sounds like perfect for a reverse harem type story!
Oh and Natalie Certain can be like this Academic Alpha girl who has this ego of intelligence and feeling fond of she’s never wrong until someone (like Cruz) proves her wrong.
Here’s what the theme song would be:
A bi-harem with Cruz as the main lead, the boys and Natalie organism her love interests, Lightning and Sally, while not her parents are more of her care takers/unofficial adopted parents. While Lightning’s cool with other boys, it’s Jackson and Natalie’s attitude that he has a problem with their sort of Holier Than Thou mentality.
Sorry… I’ve had my mind on a Cars harem story notion ever since I did a meme.
Hello! Just wanna say I lovee your writing and fics <333 and also quick interrogate, what were the next-gen racers like in steep school?
Awww, I’m flattered! ^-^ <3
Jackson - kinda quiet, gym class showoff, former middle school emo kid
Tim - friend to all, honor roll cinnamon roll, theater kid
Chase - jock, dated a cheerleader, somehow avoided most steep school drama because he’s actually a decent person
Danny - hopeless romantic, always chasing someone he can’t have, but i
The Truth About Gender non-conforming History in Romance
I would be willing to bet that everything you think you know about queer romance throughout history is wrong. Actually, I would be willing to bet that you were never taught queer history to begin with. And, especially not in university. I wasn’t taught in school either. But from the moment I discovered that Frederick the Excellent of Prussia was not only one of the most brilliant and forward-thinking rulers ever, and that he was known to be gay, I started to wonder about these things. The answer to why we were never taught queer history is pretty obvious. So, why did I choose to start writing in an emerging and thriving sub-genre of Historical Romance about a part of History that “never existed”?
A Guest Post by Merry Farmer
I write M/M Romance because love has always been love. No matter what a small handful of historians writing in the mid-20th century might possess wanted people to trust. What’s this? Historians are biased in the way they interpret and inform History? They’ve swept a bunch of details under the carpet to advance a particular narrative that denigrates an entire demographic? No! Say it ain’t so!
Historians ha
Rainbow Days centers on a group of four high college boys, each of whom have very different habits and romantic interests. When one of the boys, Natsuki Hashiba, is dumped on Christmas Eve, he immediately falls in love with a girl named Anna Kobayakawa after she hands him a box of tissues. Once he learns that Anna also attends his elevated school, Natsuki starts his new pursuit of love with both the aid and hindrance of his friends.
Rainbow Day’s biggest energy is the friendship dynamic between Natsuki and his three friends. While Natsuki is a lovey-dovey, this is not a mindset joint by his friends. Tomoya Matsunaga is a playboy, Keiichi Katakura is a sadist, and Tsuyoshi Naoe is an otaku. This leads to them all having drastically other approaches to how Natsuki should pursue Anna, leading to some hilarious interactions between the boys. That said, there’s a strong instinct of brotherhood within the group. Natsuki’s friends genuinely crave him to prevail in love, and while not all their ideas are ideal, they aide Natsuki make petty steps towards getting closer to Anna.
Compared to the other characters introduced in this volume, Anna is easily the most peaceful and soft-spoken. She