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Small and Cute and Ethnically Hard to Pin Down

@nerdgirlriot / gallifreygal.com

Multi-fandom blog. Introverted deviate. Run like hell because you always need to. Laugh at everything because it's always funny. Never be cruel, and never be cowardly. And if you are, always make amends.

There's a house on my way home that has one of those Home Depot 12 ft. skeletons and they haven't taken it down since Halloween, just dressed it up in holiday-appropriate wear and of course for June it's all about Pride so please allow your dash to be blessed by 12 ft. Pride Skeleton

EDIT: Oct. 2023 Apparently this house is now for sale. Godspeed Pride Skeleton.

EDIT: June 2024 the pride skeleton still lives!

EDIT: As of 11/14/2024 the pride skeleton is no longer on display

RIP pride skeleton you were enjoyed

libsoftiktok going after a beloved inventor furry for some reason

if you're wearing a fitbit, you're using spottacus's technology. be grateful.

This guy seems extremely fucking based

so it takes "inventing the technology behind FitBit" money to own that many fursuits.

This takes my โ€œmake yourself indispensable and you can wear anything you want to workโ€ to a whole new level.

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Considered the best episode of the animated Star Trek, "Yesteryear" by D.C. Fontana was about Spock going back in time to give his younger self wisdom.

However, Fontana, when writing for Land of the Lost reused this exact same premise in "Elsewhen," where a future, all grown up version of Holly goes back in time to advise her younger self in a key crisis. It's another example of how Land of the Lost (a much, much better show than Generation X's misleading cheesy collective memory of it would have you believe) was a sister show to the original Star Trek. Among other things, the pilot episodes of Land of the Lost were written by Next Generation co-creator and original series writer David Gerrold.

Erica Hagen played the grown-up Holly in this episode. Later, she would play a phantasm of Will and Holly's mother (in the only episode she is ever discussed), implying that Holly grows up to be physically identical to her mother.

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