1. A better, more positive Tumblr

    staff:

    Since its founding in 2007, Tumblr has always been a place for wide open, creative self-expression at the heart of community and culture. To borrow from our founder David Karp, we’re proud to have inspired a generation of artists, writers, creators, curators, and crusaders to redefine our culture and to help empower individuality.

    Over the past several months, and inspired by our storied past, we’ve given serious thought to who we want to be to our community moving forward and have been hard at work laying the foundation for a better Tumblr. We’ve realized that in order to continue to fulfill our promise and place in culture, especially as it evolves, we must change. Some of that change began with fostering more constructive dialogue among our community members. Today, we’re taking another step by no longer allowing adult content, including explicit sexual content and nudity (with some exceptions).  

    Let’s first be unequivocal about something that should not be confused with today’s policy change: posting anything that is harmful to minors, including child pornography, is abhorrent and has no place in our community. We’ve always had and always will have a zero tolerance policy for this type of content. To this end, we continuously invest in the enforcement of this policy, including industry-standard machine monitoring, a growing team of human moderators, and user tools that make it easy to report abuse. We also closely partner with the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children and the Internet Watch Foundation, two invaluable organizations at the forefront of protecting our children from abuse, and through these partnerships we report violations of this policy to law enforcement authorities. We can never prevent all bad actors from attempting to abuse our platform, but we make it our highest priority to keep the community as safe as possible.

    So what is changing?

    Posts that contain adult content will no longer be allowed on Tumblr, and we’ve updated our Community Guidelines to reflect this policy change. We recognize Tumblr is also a place to speak freely about topics like art, sex positivity, your relationships, your sexuality, and your personal journey. We want to make sure that we continue to foster this type of diversity of expression in the community, so our new policy strives to strike a balance.

    Why are we doing this?

    It is our continued, humble aspiration that Tumblr be a safe place for creative expression, self-discovery, and a deep sense of community. As Tumblr continues to grow and evolve, and our understanding of our impact on our world becomes clearer, we have a responsibility to consider that impact across different age groups, demographics, cultures, and mindsets. We spent considerable time weighing the pros and cons of expression in the community that includes adult content. In doing so, it became clear that without this content we have the opportunity to create a place where more people feel comfortable expressing themselves.

    Bottom line: There are no shortage of sites on the internet that feature adult content. We will leave it to them and focus our efforts on creating the most welcoming environment possible for our community.

    So what’s next?

    Starting December 17, 2018, we will begin enforcing this new policy. Community members with content that is no longer permitted on Tumblr will get a heads up from us in advance and steps they can take to appeal or preserve their content outside the community if they so choose. All changes won’t happen overnight as something of this complexity takes time.

    Another thing, filtering this type of content versus say, a political protest with nudity or the statue of David, is not simple at scale. We’re relying on automated tools to identify adult content and humans to help train and keep our systems in check. We know there will be mistakes, but we’ve done our best to create and enforce a policy that acknowledges the breadth of expression we see in the community.

    Most importantly, we’re going to be as transparent as possible with you about the decisions we’re making and resources available to you, including more detailed information, product enhancements, and more content moderators to interface directly with the community and content.

    Like you, we love Tumblr and what it’s come to mean for millions of people around the world. Our actions are out of love and hope for our community. We won’t always get this right, especially in the beginning, but we are determined to make your experience a positive one.

    Jeff D’Onofrio
    CEO

    Goodbye Tumblr

     

  2. Anonymous asked: I would love your thoughts on something. When I was younger, I greatly preferred Tales from the Crypt over Goosebumps (books and shows). But as I get older, I feel as though I like Goosebumps way more. I feel like Tales from the Crypt had a cutting-edge significance but it feels dated and formulaic now whereas Goosebumps had an element of unpredictability and the kid-friendly restrictions made extra creativity absolutely necessary. Your thoughts?

    vintagegeekculture:

    image

    One of the most extraordinary developments in Geek Culture specifically, but also the culture more generally…is that we’ve become more okay with realizing that our guilty pleasures and ironic pleasures are our actual pleasures, and not to maintain a level of distance or disdain from something that has value not everyone sees.

    It felt like this happened in only the past 3 years, and is especially noticeable in the music world. I think people are starting to find that the boy bands that the edgy music scene folk got mad about in 2001 were extremely inoffensive and actually had many talented members. Likewise, every few months like clockwork, every music journal has a few “hot-take” articles about how saying that you hate Insane Clown Posse, Phish, and Nickelback is classist. I don’t care for Insane Clown Posse’s horror-core rap, but the idea that class plays a role in the fact their fans are looked down on? Well, it’s absolutely, inarguably true, and how we talk about them is extremely bound up in that, which partially explains the deeply raw and visceral reaction to them.

    image

    If there’s been a positive development of the past few years, it’s that fandom has learned to condemn a lot less, learned to be a lot less mean, and is unlearning the instinct to look down on things, and are more aware of how our reactions to things are centered on very unpleasant currents in society. If your reaction to something is intense, raw, and visceral, it’s good to look under the surface and see what’s driving it because it’s probably due to a current in society. For instance, one of the perennial punching bags of the past few years was Twilight, a harmless bunch of romance novels written by a goofball Mormon aimed at teenage girls that I can’t imagine getting anyone’s dander up. Now, obviously, I am as far from the target audience for a teen girl romance novel as one can get, but as a grown-ass man with a job, even in the early 2010s, the notion of getting raw and mad about them is just…absurd to me, and I am delighted more people are coming around to that way of thinking. Worst of all, I think a lot of people who hate Twilight get mad at it because they think young girls are silly and subhuman and their culture is the same way, the same reason they didn’t like the boy bands in the early 2000s.

    Saying you hate Twilight is the adult version of singing songs about how you want to kill Barney (…and by the way, what did Barney ever do?)

    image

    I think we’re seeing that quality is something that can be achieved regardless of form and audience, which is brings us to Goosebumps, which, within the limits of their audience and form, I remember them as being actually tight, effective little chillers. It’s harder to write a good short novel than a long one, and harder to write for kids than adults. R.L. Stine is a real person, and yes, he wrote nearly all of the books attached to his name with a productivity that is almost inhuman.

    R.L. Stine was always this way. He was an on-call series writer, and in that world, it’s more important to be a consummate professional who meets deadlines than to be a genius. It reminds me a lot of the pulps, actually…you’re more likely to see guys who can meet deadlines.  He wrote GI Joe tie in novels and knockoff choose your own adventures, and was a published author on call for a full decade before Goosebumps became a hit. These are series where you sometimes need to turn in a 25k kids’ novel in a single sleepless weekend in a hotel room.

    image

    I hate to “armchair quarterback,” but if I had to identify what kept Goosebumps from being a regular part of our lives and only linked to a specific moment in childhood (and a childhood at a specific time in the 90s, at that), where you put them down, never picked them up again, and 20 years later you rediscover them as “nostalgia,” it’s that Goosebumps never really “grew up with you.” The Harry Potter novels were smart in that they started light and funny, with the characters the same age as the (assumed) reader, only to have a book come out every few years where the heroes were the same age as the characters, where the stakes got higher and the heroes grew up. A more “teen oriented” Goosebumps line might have kept that audience. 

     
  3. museum-of-idiots:

    I have never identified with anyone as much as I do with this man

    (via owletz)

     
  4. atomic-crusader:

    thedurvin:

    Somebody figured kids always wind up sticking pencils in these things anyway, so they might as well be marketed as such, $6.49/12 under the trade name “Ugly Wugglies” but the molds have been around forever.

    I used to have some of these.

    I must have these to pass on to my children, for cheap toys they were suprisingly really fun to play with

    (via atomic-crusader)

     
  5. drawing-bored:

    preciousbeaan:

    handsomezack:

    acreaturecalledgreed:

    thatwassexual:

    The Scooby-Doo Project (1999)

    fun fact this special scared so many kids so fucking badly (b/c the blair witch aspect was played weirdly straight) that CN never aired it again 

    you’re telling me this is real and not a shitpost

    I seriously thought this shit was fake until I looked it up

    that one time a parody of a fake found footage film is believed to be fake until footage is found.

    (via owletz)

     

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  8. mekagojira3k:

    pokemon:

    Humans. Pokémon. Ryan Reynolds.

    Wait—Ryan Reynolds?!

    Get ready for a Pokémon adventure like you’ve never seen before, Trainers—POKÉMON Detective Pikachu hits theaters in Summer 2019!

    Holy fuck, this looks fun

    (via atomic-crusader)

     
     
  9. mekagojira3k:

    pokemon:

    Humans. Pokémon. Ryan Reynolds.

    Wait—Ryan Reynolds?!

    Get ready for a Pokémon adventure like you’ve never seen before, Trainers—POKÉMON Detective Pikachu hits theaters in Summer 2019!

    Holy fuck, this looks fun

    (via atomic-crusader)

     
     
  10. bunjywunjy:

    bogleech:

    dollsahoy:

    captainpoe:

    Ryan Reynolds as Detective Pikachu

    Here’s the full trailer.

    Wut.

    I wasn’t even a little kid for pokemon and the little kid in me is jumping up and down about this ridiculous super-american cg pokemon comedy.

    oh my god this looks like SO MUCH FUN

    (via ihititwithmyaxe)