I'm Brazilian. Christian.
I love X-Files and both Mulder and Scully. I think they have the most beautiful love on tv and Chris Carter is a genius!
I love House and I don't care for ships on this show, except for Hilson in a friendship level.
I ship Kurt and Blaine HARD! And I'm also completely in love for Blaine Anderson.
I'm now a little obsessed for Darren Criss... he's kind of amazing and lighten up my days like a motherfucker lamp.
Shows I'm watching now: X-Files, House, Once Upon a Time, Chuck, Glee (next season maybe I'll be moving to klaine-edits... This show... I s2g), Supernatural, White Collar, Bones, The Office...
I blog about all this and anything that catches my attention.
My english sucks and you can correct me anytime if you want to... I'll love you forever.
For more go to my "about me".
Catching Elephant is a theme by Andy Taylor
Extraordinary Merry Christmas
(Source: jesshambys)
I can confirm that this method is 100% effective
(Source: unfortunateplottwist)
Glee failure: Making Kurt comfort Rachel after she lost
(submitted by: klainestix)
Mod note: I’m publishing this not because I think there’s anything wrong with Kurt being a gracious winner and comforting his friend, but because the conclusion of Diva is another example of a bad pattern in the writing of this friendship: Kurt has some sort of success (getting his NYADA letter in Michael, a great NYADA audition, winning Midnight Madness), which is immediately followed by some sort of failure/disappointment/anxiety of Rachel’s (worry about her NYADA letter, choking on her audition, losing Midnight Madness), and the resulting focus is never on Kurt’s triumph, but always on Rachel’s unhappiness. What this does is deny Kurt the chance to enjoy his success within the narrative, and makes it apparent that Kurt’s achievements are actually not about Kurt, but about Rachel, as they are always in juxtaposition to her failures, which get all the focus. In contrast, when Kurt has a failure, like being rejected from NYADA, and Rachel has a success at the same time, like being accepted to NYADA, the narrative focus still remains on Rachel, to the point where we don’t even see Kurt react to the disappointment. This narrative pattern makes their friendship appear very unbalanced and highlights how Kurt has become largely a support for Rachel’s stories.
And let’s not forget that when Kurt didn’t get into NYADA, we never saw him reacting to this (nothing more than his shocked face). Instead, we saw him waving cheerfully to Rachel when she was forced into that train by Finn going to NY. Oh, and when he lost the elections, we saw her struggling with her guilty because she cheated for him.
(Source: klainberries)
(Source: blainedevon)
(Source: blainedevon)