As so eloquently put by Frogman.
Steam is a fantastic example of this. Big media really need to start thinking outside of the box, get with the times, and comprehend fully the changing landscape.
Creative media developers also need to realise that increasingly large numbers of what would once have been considered ‘lay people’ are now very much competent in the use of complex creative software, only they don’t have the budgets of professional studios to be able to afford the absurd price tags attached to products such as Photoshop and Macromedia software.
(via shadowy-antiquarian)
(via monkeyknifefight)
(via commanderspock)
Horror: an intense, painful feeling of repugnance and fear.
(Source: missavagardner)

The titles of all films watched in CTCS 469 Film Style Analysis: Alfred Hitchcock

schumannistic | xblair | thelatter | vianegativa
I’ve seen things you people wouldn’t believe. Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion. I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhauser gate. All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain. Time to die.
-Blade Runner

IT’S THE END OF THE WORLD AS WE KNOW IT; I FEEL FINE.
![likeadoll | missdorothykilgallen | swelldame | billyjane:
frenchtwist:In 1934 the MPAA voluntarily passed the Motion Picture Production Code, more generally known as the Hays Code, largely to avoid governmental regulation. The code prohibited certain plotlines and imagery from films and in publicity materials produced by the MPAA. Among others, there was to be no cleavage, no lace underthings, no drugs or drinking, no corpses, and no one shown getting away with a crime.
A.L. Shafer, the head of photography at Columbia, took a photo that intentionally incorporated all of the 10 banned items into one image.
The photograph was clandestinely passed around among photographers and publicists in Hollywood as a method of symbolic protest to the Hays Code. [ftp]](http://24.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_kxyibpyBL51qaxnilo1_500.jpg)
likeadoll | missdorothykilgallen | swelldame | billyjane:
frenchtwist:In 1934 the MPAA voluntarily passed the Motion Picture Production Code, more generally known as the Hays Code, largely to avoid governmental regulation. The code prohibited certain plotlines and imagery from films and in publicity materials produced by the MPAA. Among others, there was to be no cleavage, no lace underthings, no drugs or drinking, no corpses, and no one shown getting away with a crime.
A.L. Shafer, the head of photography at Columbia, took a photo that intentionally incorporated all of the 10 banned items into one image.
The photograph was clandestinely passed around among photographers and publicists in Hollywood as a method of symbolic protest to the Hays Code. [ftp]

Impressively calm camera crew records Jackie the Lion for MGM studio’s roaring lion production logo (1929) (via)

1910s-era movie theater etiquette Public Service Announcement
This reminds me of one time when I went to a concert and the guy sitting on a seat in front of me had a huuuge afro. I saw NOTHING. Thank God there were plenty of free seats so i just moved to another one.

deceptivecadences:piecesofserenity:aseriesofserendipities:break-the-cycle:livingreflection:straightandplain:(via lumieredelalune)
hahaha.
instant reblog