firebatvillain: Drawing of a hand in darkness, holding a ball of fire. (Default)
firebatvillain ([personal profile] firebatvillain) wrote in [community profile] bitesizedfandomsex2026-04-12 02:01 am
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Unmatchable Email Sent

Hi all, we sent an email just now to one participant who is unmatchable currently - if your AO3 username begins with the letter A, please check the email associated with your AO3 account to see if you got this email!
delphi: An illustrated crow kicks a little ball of snow with a contemplative expression. (Default)
Delphi (they/them) ([personal profile] delphi) wrote2026-04-11 09:58 pm

What's Making Me Happy Today: Dimension 20 City Council of Darkness

The first episode of the newest Dimension 20 campaign premiered on Wednesday, and I am so on board for this one.

City Council of Darkness is in the world of Vampire: The Masquerade, the tabletop roleplaying game most commonly set in the modern day, where vampires belonging to various clans and bloodlines engage politically in their home cities while trying to manage their own bestial urges, avoid the vampire hunters of the Second Inquisition, and above all keep the existence of vampires secret from humanity at large. City Council of Darkness is about what happens when a group of ambitious San Francisco vampires' bid for attention from the vampiric elite goes comically wrong, resulting in them being banished to the town of Purpee, Oregon, and forbidden to leave until they establish vampiric dominion there.

So far, it's been supremely silly in the best of ways, well-paced and plotted, full of mayhem, with characters and relationships that I'm looking forward to learning more about and an important reminder that the real monsters of San Francisco are Silicon Valley billionaires. I especially can't wait to see more of the friendship between Ventrue finance hustlers LaVonte Worthy and H.J. Wingstreet (joining Kingston Brown & Pete Conlan and Montgomery LaMontgommery & Olethra MacLeod as characters played by Lou Wilson and Ally Beardsley whose dynamic immediately grabbed me) and whatever the deal is between chaotic '80s(?) Brujah childe Zaeth Bondana and his respectable sire Koschei Severov.



The series as a whole is exclusive to Dropout.tv or through Youtube membership, but I'm pretty sure that in the tradition of Dimension 20, the first episode of the campaign will go up for free on the Youtube channel's Season Premieres playlist.
m_findlow: (Ianto sad)
m_findlow ([personal profile] m_findlow) wrote in [community profile] fandomweekly2026-04-12 03:18 pm

[#296] BEHIND CLOSED DOORS (TORCHWOOD)

Theme Prompt: #296 - Locked door
Title: Behind closed doors
Fandom: Torchwood
Rating/Warnings: PG.
Bonus: Yes
Word Count: 1,000 words
Summary: Ianto has found the perfect place to begin his task in earnest.

Read more... )
ranunculus: (Default)
ranunculus ([personal profile] ranunculus) wrote2026-04-11 09:26 pm
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Orchids

M has been taking really good care of the four orchids that live in the house. Two are now blooming and a third will be soon.
Pics )

ranunculus: (Default)
ranunculus ([personal profile] ranunculus) wrote2026-04-11 08:44 pm

Conversation with Firefly

It is a wet, nasty evening, just getting dark.
Read more... )
 


littlefics: Three miniature books standing on an open normal-sized book. (Default)
littlefics ([personal profile] littlefics) wrote in [community profile] seasonsofdrabbles2026-04-11 11:37 pm
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Signups closing in 1 day!

You have 24 hours, as of this post, before both signups and nominations close on Sunday, April 12 @ 11:59pm Eastern Daylight time (Countdown).

As usual, there will be a 12-hour grace period after signups close during which you can ask us to add tags to your requests/offers.
oliviacirce: (due north//jai)
Olivia ([personal profile] oliviacirce) wrote2026-04-11 09:59 pm

o moon

Just a little late-night one, tonight, but it sings.

The way I must enter )
vivdunstan: A vibrantly coloured comic cover image of Peter Capaldi's Doctor, viewed side on, facing to the left, looking thoughtful (twelfth doctor)
vivdunstan ([personal profile] vivdunstan) wrote2026-04-12 03:56 am

Rewatching Doctor Who: The Magician's Apprentice / The Witch's Familiar

Was worried that I was going to run out of title characters to fit that lot in!

Continuing my rewatch of the Peter Capaldi era with this opening two parter from New Who series 9. And going to put my discussion into spoiler space.

spoilers )
settiai: (AO3 -- stultiloquentia)
Lynn | Settiai ([personal profile] settiai) wrote2026-04-11 09:24 pm

AO3

Nothing makes you feel old like looking at your AO3 profile, glancing at your user ID, and suddenly remembering that it's a really fucking small number because you technically joined before they were even in open beta. By, like, a day. But still. I remember the length of the queues back then.



Seriously, I was still living in Tennessee when I made that account. That's terrifying.
sartorias: (Default)
sartorias ([personal profile] sartorias) wrote2026-04-11 06:16 pm

Here

I just reupped my Dreamwidth blog for another year, though I realize I don't post much. I think of blog topics when away from my computer, then realize I'm reluctant to clog the constant stream Out There with my socially awkward and clueless maunderings.

But briefly: writing a lot, reading some. Of late, Katherine Arden's The Unicorn Hunters, which I really enjoyed a lot. Also going, Emily Tesh's The Incandescende, which is dark academia from the faculty POV, and the worldbuilding actually makes sense. Tesh thought about what magic in the world would be like. This is my walking book (audiobook).

Speaking of: it's dog walking time, which means some more Incandescence!
petra: A photo of lilac flowers with the text "How do they rise" from Pratchett's Night Watch (Pratchett - How do they rise)
petra ([personal profile] petra) wrote2026-04-11 08:45 pm
Entry tags:

Ny | Rubynye | MinoanMiss | browngirl's memorial online tomorrow

The online memorial for [personal profile] minoanmiss will take place tomorrow - Sunday, April 12, 1:00PM EDT (GMT -4).

Zoom link

Meeting ID: 836 1509 1699
Passcode: Right here )
watersword: We are the granddaughters of the witches you weren't able to burn. (Stock: protest)
Elizabeth Perry ([personal profile] watersword) wrote2026-04-11 08:37 pm

I'm vilifying you, for God's sake — pay attention!

Okay, dream cast, The Lion in Winter, Broadway/West End. Important caveat: must be currently working actors (no Marlon Brando, no Philip Seymour Hoffman, no Bette Davis).

Go!

hannah: (Marilyn Monroe - mycrime)
hannah ([personal profile] hannah) wrote2026-04-11 07:56 pm

Dancing in the beauty.

You know it's a good concert when you need two days to recover. I didn't do a lot of dancing because it got pretty packed at the end, but I did my share. At first, there was some worry about it filling up, but then I found out there were two opening acts and it made more sense. I didn't give up my spot right up front at the stage, though. There wasn't any taking me away from that.

I was the twelfth person in line about 15 minutes before doors opened. I chatted some with the people in front of me and the person behind me about things like subway lines, the last round of Voxtrot concerts about three years ago, the round about 16 years before that, how the average age of Bruce Springsteen fans stays consistent because he keeps getting new fans, stuff like that. I had to pass through a metal detector and said, "No pockets, no problem." Waiting for the floor to open, several people ahead of me got their phones scanned, but somehow I got skipped over. I waited for it and then was told we could walk right in. So I went up front row center, if there were rows. Center stage, certainly. Right in the middle.

I took pictures of people on request and kept chatting. One of the women to my left kept checking social media and I had to ask her, "Does it spark joy?" One of the men to my right was glad I reminded him of the Artemis splashdown, which was why during the first songs of the first opening act, on a cell phone propped up against a speaker, we watched the last four minutes of the mission, every parachute accounted for. It had me feeling a lot of things, and I still need to sit with it.

The first opening act was a four-person jam band, kind of like Explosions in the Sky meets Bon Iver. The second opening act was one man with a guitar, and because I was right up front, when he mentioned how nobody knew where Halifax was, he heard me when I exclaimed, "The Maritimes!"

There was some waiting. There was judging on when to go to the bathroom, the etiquette of saving spots, the general vibe of everyone being there for the same reason. There was some chatting about travel plans and museums and software engineering and public transportation infrastructure. I saw someone put out the setlists and didn't look on purpose so I'd be surprised. I chatted some more to keep myself distracted, and then I saw Voxtrot come out. I'd seen the first two opening acts come in and go out through a side door to the stage so I knew where to look. I kept checking, and I saw some light coming through.

And I saw the silhouette of a man whose work I've loved for years.

He introduced himself and his band. He talked about playing the same location about 20 years ago. I looked behind myself to take in the audience in the soft blue-white light, just a glimpse of all the happy faces behind me, around me, surrounding me on the dance floor and the flanking wings and the mezzanine. Then I looked at the stage and didn't look away. There wasn't anywhere else to look.

We all sang along. We all knew the words and more than a few times, I realized I was hearing the crowd just as much as the lead singer. I sang and shouted, I swayed, I moved a bit, and then I started dancing as much as I could on a packed floor. Jumping up and down, rocking my arms, pumping my fists in the air, not a lot of stuff moving back and forth or forward and back, but in the unit of space I had, I made the most of it. A few times I wondered if I was given more space because of my braid swinging around. Then I stopped wondering and kept on dancing. Having the stage to brace myself against meant I could seriously jump. Being so close meant I could see everything as it was happening, and it was a thrill to be so close I could feel the music just as much as I heard it.

They played some new songs and a bunch of old ones. They went pretty far back, going all the way to the first song on their first EP to the last song on the latest album, so they really ran through everything. They played the hits and they played the songs they'd come around to knowing were hits all along - all killer no filler, as the saying goes. The energy was carefully cultivated, building everyone up to make sure that when they ended on a party note, a big-sound song for dancing, we would go home with spirits running high. They talked about where songs had been written, how the tunes developed, and one of the best things about live bands is seeing how it's all done. Hearing a specific set of notes and seeing the guitarist or the bassist or the drummer make those notes as I watch, looking at their hands on their instruments and putting it all together that yes, it's human hands all along.

The band danced up on stage, jumping around or simply grooving to it. There were a couple songs where the singer conducted the audience's clapping along, and it was clear all five of them meant everything they were doing. They were having a grand time up there and played in both senses, the musical and the fun.

I didn't get a chance to print the ticket, so after the encore, I grabbed a setlist. I made it back just before midnight, grabbing pizza to eat with ice cream to get my body to slow down some and some high proof bourbon I've had saved for a very special occasion because I couldn't think of an occasion more special than seeing Voxtrot.
aethel: (killjoys the girl [by askpoison])
aethel ([personal profile] aethel) wrote2026-04-11 08:12 pm
Entry tags:

the spirit is willing

1. I visited an art museum today, and now I need a nap.

2. More sorting games!

3. Books finished: I was skeptical about whether I'd enjoy Star Shipped, given that it was a contemporary romance. I was perhaps less interested in the main pairing than in how the novel incorporated fandom activity for the fictional show and how I've definitely read slashfic with the same gimmick before. I also recently finished Sorcery and Small Magics, a fantasy/romance (romantasy?) with an interesting magic system and enjoyable forest adventures. The only thing that bothered me was that it seemed to have the aesthetics of pre-Industrial England, but inconsistently modern sensibilities in terms of gender and sexuality. Of course, it's a fantasy world and not actually imperial Britain. I also fell asleep multiple times listening to the audiobook and may have missed an explanation about the setting. In any event, I'm looking forward to the sequel, because the romance part is still unresolved, argh!

4. Currently reading: Still Hitler, the Germans, and the Final Solution, mainly because I keep picking up other books that are on more pleasant topics and have larger font sizes. I'm also listening to the audiobooks for Cinder House (Cinderella retelling, with ghosts) and Between Two Rivers: Ancient Mesopotamia and the Birth of History.