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Your friendly neighborhood detective.

@maris-solstice

She/They, formerly actualborossoldier, Founder of the Cult of Elspeth. That's it, I'm moving to Bant! I love my tall wife.
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lovely-v

Every time Sean Astin makes a statement on whether or not Sam and Frodo were indeed gay for each other in lord of the rings heโ€™s always like โ€œwell we have to acknowledge that attitudes around sexuality have changed dramatically over the past several decades and since authorial intent is only up to speculation, the story is open to multiple readings, some of which might have different significances for different groups of people also they kiss on the lips because I said soโ€

at the rose city comic con panel this month a fan asked them (sean and elijah) if sam and frodo were in love and they said

Sean: .....yes. absolutely

Elijah: 100 percent.

Sean: dont tell rosie

Rosie: "This is my husband Sam, and that's his husband, Frodo. Frodo is my husband-in-law. I'm not into him, he's he's a bit too 'elfy' for my taste, but Sam likes him, and that's fine with me. As far as I know, Frodo can't give Sam children, but Frodo looks after ours all the same, so I don't mind sharing Sam if it means another pair of eyes on the wee ones. In all honesty, our family tree is right simple compared to some hobbits. Yes, I'm referrin' to you Lobelia, over there pretendin' you ain't eavesdroppin'. Still bitter you ain't got either of my boys or their house, eh?"

Tbh it's canon that Frodo invited Sam and Rosie to move in to Bag End after their wedding and they all lived there for a couple of years until Frodo went to Valinor, so yeah. Running with it.

And once Rosie dies, Sam says his goodbyes and disappears after him.

whatโ€™s funny is people assuming that rosie would somehow be too dim or naive to KNOW that sam loved frodo, instead of looking at a guy who would loyally follow a beloved friend to hell and then help carry him home again, and not be like โ€˜oh i canโ€™t not fuck that.โ€™

Polyamory, specifically polyandry, would be an interesting solution to the oddball population of the Shire.

The Shire is excellent farming country, with consistently good weather, and only one tough winter in living memory; hobbits like to produce large families; theyโ€™re resistant to disease, rarely violent, and encounter few dangers. It is usual for hobbits to produce many children, so that (for example) Bilbo and Frodo are unusual in both being only children, with no siblings, and not having children of their own. All of this should point to a population that increases every generation if not doubling outright. Young people (and their ideologies!) should rapidly outnumber the old with an ever-increasing effect and impact on society. However, the Shire has a surprisingly stable history; it never seems to increase or decrease greatly in population, and the bell curve of age seemsโ€ฆ demographically balanced? There certainly isnโ€™t a conflict from rising young bloods challenging the middle-aged reactionaries; thereโ€™s no unemployment; there are no housing crises or waves of emigration, or even a tendency for young people leaving home to marry. Meanwhile, not only does the Shire not suffer from internal pressures, but it remains obscure and hardly noticed in global politics.

What makes sense here is that adult hobbits form a loose group. Four parents in a polycule, between them all, may produce four children. All four parents claim to have four children. An outsider would assume this meant the adults had eight children.

Hobbits therefore are not especially fertile or fecund. They simply have large families. Much of their interest in genealogy is due to the complex relationships of blood-kin, hearth-kin, love-kin and pledge-kin, who must all be carefully tracked and measured - not just because you need to make sure that you donโ€™t climb into bed with an un-permitted degree of blood-kin, but to track family alliances and carefully quantify the precise level of thoughtfulness to put into the proper present to gift your fatherโ€™s loverโ€™s lover (too much implies a degree of intimacy that might upset the polycule.)

Thus, while a hobbit matron may tell a startled dwarf that she has seven sons, she might only have borne five of them herself, and have one hearth-son by her wife, and a pledge-son of her first husbandโ€™s. There are between three and four fathers involved at various stages of production, from conception to pledge-duty, but there is debate about the precise number of fathers, as one child was festival-conceived and therefore provisionally pledged to the Brandybucks until more distinctive paternal traits should materialise. Itโ€™s expected that four of the sons will be uninterested in women, and their contribution to family life will be in raising hearth-children and pledge-duty. However, this level of detail is normally negotiated later in conversation, as a mutual overture of friendship. So sheโ€™s just clear and simple: yes, certainly, she has seven sons. Yes, theyโ€™re all hers. Yes, thatโ€™s fairly normal - yes, hobbits like big families. How big? Thatโ€™s really hard to say! Well, about thirteen hobbits live in her houseโ€ฆ er, she has forty-three nieces and nephews. Yes! She has nine siblings, thatโ€™s correct, but some of them are still babies themselves..

In this way, a bewildered dwarf might assume that hobbits are absurdly fertile, producing an average of seven children per couple, at an absurd pace.

When in fact, with about half of hobbits never bearing biological children, the population of hobbits is pretty much always the same.

Tl:dr, hobbit population works perfectly well, both internally and in the perceptions of outsiders, if the majority of the Shire is gay, theyโ€™re all polyamorous, and they all firmly claim to be parents of high numbers of children. Of course Frodo fathered Samโ€™s kids - he named them! They were pledge-kin but not hearth-kin, as Frodo needed a lot of quiet and stability in the home.

No outsider ever parses hobbit genealogy well enough to understand this except for Gandalf, who never explains anything either.

Okay, reblogged this too quickly out of enthusiasm.

This makes so much sense in the worldbuilding, actually???

Like, consider: Elves don't understand hobbit families, but hobbits are also baffled by elf families. You have exactly one partner ever? And it's considered wildly inappropriate to take another even if that partner straight up dies? And they only raise their own children, usually three maximum? Most hobbits would be convinced that elves were cold, unfeeling and anti-social.

Bilbo is percieved as oddly elf-ish when he comes back from his adventure at least in part because he only takes on one hearth-child, and even then quite late in his life. Like sure dude, you don't have to have romantic or sexual partners but no children????? Very strange. Here. Take a Frodo. Maybe he'll fix whatever is wrong with your brain.

And this also explains why hobbits get on better with Elrond than most other elves. Because Elrond has a weird af family by elf standards and takes in foster children all the time. He seems much warmer by comparison. Basically, when Bilbo comes to stay at the Last Homely House and he's doing his writing Elrond would be thrown by how comfortable Bilbo is with his family.

Elrond: My apologies, I know this must be quite confusing for you.

Bilbo: No no I understand perfectly. You have two blood-parents (Elwing and Earendil), two hearth-parents (Maglor and Maedhros), one blood-brother (Elros), and one pledge-brother (Gil-galad). Certainly a bit unconventional due to the kinslaying and all, and a bit on the small side, but other than that...

Elrond, who has never in his life had his family called 'small': ...

You get it

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not having the courtesy to send rejection letters should count against your reputation as a company and iโ€™m so serious about that

itโ€™s the rock-bottom bare minimum. โ€œyou didnโ€™t get the job, sorry, donโ€™t expect any more correspondence from us.โ€ jobhunting is already so user-hostile and companies are getting way too comfortable showing that they donโ€™t give a fuck

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xanaxfarts

Celestial Seasonings: Iconic Artworks

Lori Anzalone: Bengal Spice (2007)
Mike Wimmer: Candy Cane Lane (2004)
Robert Giusti: Tension Tamer (1991)
Braldt Bralds: Mint Magic (1986)
Tom Newsom: Red Zinger (2004)
Beth Underwood: Sleepytime (1973)
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prokopetz

About two pages into the example scenario for Silk & Dagger thinking "this had better not fucking be what I think it is".

It is.

What, the title didn't give it away?

Believe it or not, I have encountered the phrase "unforgettable [type of meal]" in more than one context.

@antioch-actus replied:

please explain

The sample scenario is short enough that it wouldn't be out of the question to just download a copy and read it yourself, but in brief:

  1. The scenario casts the player characters as a drow mistress and her servants, preparing to host an "unforgettable banquet" for her peers, having recently come into possession of a cache of rare delicacies imported from the surface.
  2. However, because the player character mistress isn't terribly influential or well-respected, only one of her peers actually bothers to show up.
  3. Coincidentally, just as your singular guest arrives, the player character mistress' palace suffers a catastrophic cave-in, which leaves the dining room intact, but completely destroys the kitchen.
  4. The remainder of the scenario concerns the player character mistress and her servants attempting to salvage the banquet without allowing their guest to realise anything unusual is going on; as satisfactory replacements for the promised surface delicacies are unlikely to be available, they must also devise some means of convincing their guest that conventional subterranean fare is actually some exotic surface food they've never heard of.
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tritoch

man papalymo's fucking crazy. 5 years ago louisoix fucking died and this THIRTY SEVEN YEAR OLD MAN was like, oh, leading the circle of knowing? no, i'm much too busy helping this 20-year-old war orphan poorly pretend to be her decade older sister in the world's most fucked up grieving process that none of you are allowed to comment on. i think we should all follow the young woman whose dad thancred killed and make her feel like the weight of the whole realm rests on her shoulders. i'm thirty-seven years old and i think this is a good idea.

okay well that went poorly and now far down the line we've all reunited. tragically the young woman we made our leader has disappeared due to complicated magic. now we don't know who will lead us. luckily this 16-year-old suggested we become a horizontal organization and i happily accepted. anyways now that this meeting's over i have to kill myself in front of you all and scar my student forever, just like louisoix did to us. peace!

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