30 in 30: Marvel X-Men

Nov. 27th, 2025 11:19 am
senmut: a bright blue tribal seahorse (General: Tribal Seahorse)
[personal profile] senmut
AO3 Link | Ladies to the Rescue (150 words) by Merfilly
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: X-Men [Comics]
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Characters: Rogue [X-Men], Jubilation Lee | Jubilee, Katherine Anne "Kitty" Pryde, Laura Kinney, James "Logan" Howlett | Wolverine
Additional Tags: Drabble and a Half
Summary:

Wolvie needs a rescue






Rogue looked away as Jubilee set off a light show in the dark of the power going out. Kitty had definitely delivered on that, and everyone they were facing was dazzled. They had waited just long enough for the night vision goggles to go on, after all.

Rogue let loose, drawing all attention to herself, letting Kitty have time to get back — and their fourth member to sniff out where the man they'd come for actually was.

No one had to guess when X-23 found him, as father and daughter cut a path back to this point.

"You look like hell, sugah," Rogue called to her long-time friend.

"You look like the cavalry," he said, before shorting out the one robotic enemy with a well-placed claw-punch.

"Time to exit!" Jubilee called out, and while the few standing tried to stop them, they were no match for Wolvie and his girls.
glitteryv: (Default)
[personal profile] glitteryv
Fallen Angel

A 1945 movie from 20th Century Fox that was directed by Otto Preminger. It's based on the novel Fallen Angel by Marty Holland.

Eric Stanton (played by Dana Andrews) is a swindler on a losing streak. Unable to pay the rest of his bus ticket to San Francisco, he's dropped off at the small town of Walton, CA. He ends up in a cafe, mulling on what he's gonna do next. While there, he notices Stella (played by Linda Darnell), a beautiful waitress, and goes gaga for her.

After pulling a small con and despite being invited to continue the scam in another town, Eric decides to stay cuz he's THAT gone for Stella. After starting to date her, he realizes that he's gonna need a lot of dough.

AT THE SAME TIME, he meets Clara (played by Anne Revere) and June (played by Alice Faye), two sisters who are v. wealthy. A plan begins to form . . .


Everyone's acting is on the level. Linda Darnell was LUMINOUS. I loved her every second she was on the screen. The story is pretty interesting and the directing is fine.

Fun fact: this was a reunion of sorts between Otto Preminger and Dana Andrews as they'd both worked together in 1941's Laura.


Do I have any criticisms?

Oh, do I!

The first thing is that pacing is a little off. For a movie that's an hour and 37 mins, the first 25 or so minutes are tedious. There were a few moments when I got close to quit watching. Though, thankfully, the movie made a fascianting turn at the 30-min mark and I was IN.

Also I was unable to warm up to June. Alice Faye did as good of a job as she could with such a wishy-washy role.


Which is related to a BIG SPOILER

Eric and June eventually get married and it's a v. strange relationship. He does woo her in a v. specific way that's also playful. It contrasts nicely with how lustful and turbulent his relationship with Stella is. And yet, after Eric and June get married, he resents having to go thru with his plan. As a result he takes it out on June. He becomes distant and brusque with her both in private AND public.

All this time, June is going alone with the mistreatment. She doesn't push back in any way. As a matter of fact, the one (1) time she yells at him is to let him know that she's his ride or die and she doesn't care who knows it. Her one goal in life now that she's his wife is to stick with him no matter what and no matter whatever it takes to protect him.

AND SHE'S DOING THIS FOR NO REASON OTHER THAN BEING IN LOVE WITH HIM!

Watching her become a doormat was irritating, NGL. It's clear that she's got a gentle personality from the moment they meet, but seeing her go all out for this guy was O__o. Even worse is that her yelling at him abt how much she loves him is what makes HIM realize that maybe June is a good person to be married to?!

I'd like to think that, in June's interior world, she was flattered that Eric married her. It was also a little unclear as to how much June wanted to gain some kind of independence from her older sister (they do care for each other, btw), IDK.

FWIW, I really didn't like June and Eric together.

Adding to that, I was never sure WHAT KIND OF CHARACTER Eric was? Not a good guy, not a villain, not an antihero . . . and yet, as the credits roll, he's REDEEMED by a woman's love because said woman never gave up on him or something. Especially given how poorly he treated her after they got married. 🤢


And that's what got me to lower the ranking by two full points. *Hands*


Do I recommend it?

I do? With the caveat that you HAVE to sit thru a full 30 mins for the movie to really kick in. OTOH, I'm SO at odds with this movie, NGL. On paper, it had a lot going for it: Otto Preminger in the director's chair, good actors like Linda Darnell and Dana Andrews, etc and yet, things never quite gelled this time around!

OTOH, it's not a trash movie. To me it's a C-level noir in my heart of hearts. Per what I know, you can find it streaming somewhere. I'm giving it a 2 out of 5.


Queerness level:

A whole lotta nothin'

thanks, I guess

Nov. 27th, 2025 08:49 am
calimac: (Default)
[personal profile] calimac
I suppose I should feel thankful for this outcome. Instead, it's just irritating.

Wednesday afternoon I came home from a long series of errands and took out my wallet to balance my sales receipts against my bank statement which had just come. It was then that I realized my mobile phone was not in the same pocket, where it belongs. Uh-oh. It must have fallen out of the pocket somewhere, which it has done before.

Not in the car. I hopped in and dashed back to all of the shops and libraries I'd been to. No luck. One shop had already closed for the holiday, which I'd known they would, but there were people inside, which I'd hoped there would be. I rapped at the glass door. They pointed towards the hours sign and made "we're closed" gestures. I nodded - "I know" - and kept rapping until someone came to the door and I could shout through it at her.

I came home dejected. Thursday is no good; Friday I'll have to go out and try to find another of those quaint flip-top phones I prefer and then get it set up. Which I last had to do a year and a half ago, so it's not unprecedented. I changed into my house trousers, the flannel ones that cinch up and don't require suspenders.

It was then I discovered that I'd never taken my phone out of the pocket from when I'd been wearing them that morning.

This is why I don't usually take anything out of the trousers I'm using until I'm ready to change them for another pair. Wallet, phone, keys, other impedimentia stay in the pockets where usually I can find them. But that morning I'd been expecting the possibility of a call, so I took the phone and then afterwards completely forgot I'd done so.

Speaking of which, I still haven't found the computer glasses I know I set down in an unusual spot a couple weeks ago, I just can't remember what the spot was.

In other nuisances, I want to watch something on Disney+ on my computer, but the sound doesn't work. AI is no help: it keeps telling me to check the sound settings on my system, even though I keep telling it there's nothing wrong with that, sound works fine for other apps, it's just Disney+.

don't worry I don't have a concussion

Nov. 27th, 2025 09:55 am
adrian_turtle: (Default)
[personal profile] adrian_turtle
I am just thinking about concussions in a general family sort of way. I have a lot of experience of them, and also a lot of experience of downplaying my own head injuries. I thought that was just a matter of not wanting to use up my whining points when I might need them for dealing with migraine or motion-sickness or something else that could be dealt with more usefully. When modern concussion awareness programs started treating injuries like concussions if people were not unconscious for very long, I started reassessing a lot of the falls in my memory.

(That led to weird conversations with neurologists.
"Have you ever had a concussion?"
"Yes."
"How many?"
"I don't know." This can't be that unusual for people with seizures, even non-convulsive seizures like mine are fall risks. But he looked so very surprised.)

For quite a while I looked back on it thought it was just exhausting to deal with my parents' approach to medical emergencies. So I had years of solidly motivated reasoning to convince myself that any head impact I could walk away from must not be a concussion. Then I remembered it wasn't just the kind of exhausting as their, "Oh no! A child has a bad cut! Let us all run around in a panic and shout at everyone who can possibly be shouted at until the ER doctor stitches it up!" (Which is exhausting, and not what the first aid manual means by applying pressure.) It's that AND their belief that people with suspected concussion ought not be allowed to sleep.

A few decades ago, when I was feeling oddly wistful about young athletes growing up with the modern concussion awareness programs, I thought how great it was that they were prescribing more rest as well as diagnosing concussion based on less severe symptoms. Oh well, too bad we didn't know about that back in the 1970s, isn't modern medicine great? It turns out that my mom still believes people with suspected concussion should not fall asleep. She fell and hit her head a few days ago. She didn't want to drive herself to urgent care because she felt dizzy and her vision was kind of blurry, and she didn't want to sit in an uncomfortable waiting room with a terrible headache. But she suspected she might have a concussion so she had to stay awake for 24 hours. After doing so, she called me and said she was fine and I shouldn't worry. I told her that modern best practice was to get some rest after a head injury, ("But this might have been a concussion! I had to stay awake to make sure it wasn't a concussion!") but first phone the doctor to ask if you have one of the symptoms that would need the ER. ("Why should I go to the ER? If they tell me it's a concussion they would just tell me to stay awake for 24 hours and if I do that at home at least it won't hurt my back.")

I'm not sure how I feel about this.
muccamukk: Héloïse's faceless portrait in the hearth, a real flame rising from her painted heart. (Lady on Fire: Burning Art)
[personal profile] muccamukk


(When I saw her in concert, she was very pleased with that line).

(Video has a thread of a butch teen being socially pressured to feminise. But there's a happy ending.)

Happy Wanksgiving!

Nov. 27th, 2025 11:04 am
petra: Barbara Gordon smiling knowingly (Default)
[personal profile] petra
I posted 10 drabbles to the Wanksgiving fest, which is currently anonymous. If you didn't get me to write for you, and you spot something in there that you think was me, leave me a comment with an "I think you wrote this!" and a request and I will follow up with you when I am not mid-giving-thanks.
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[personal profile] bloodygranuaile
In what is quickly becoming my favorite way to read 19th-century literature, earlier in the year I discovered and subscribed to Dickens Daily, which had just started reading A Tale of Two Cities. In another move that is very on-brand for me, I had been carrying a battered Signet Classics paperback of A Tale of Two Cities from apartment to apartment for well upwards of a decade and hadn’t ever gotten around to reading it. Clearly, it was time to do the readalong, but to read along in hard copy so that I don’t have to read more emails than necessary. Also, about a fifth of the way in I decided to buy a Peebles Classic Library hardcover version off eBay or Etsy or one of those e-sites and put the long-suffering paperback in a sidewalk library. I yam who I yam.

Anyway! Enough about my personal journey with The Book As Object. A Tale of Two Cities is possibly Dickens’ most classic classic after A Christmas Carol! Many cool and respectable people name it as their favorite Dickens or even as their favorite novel.

Going into this one, I was aware of a few of the most famous lines and phrases, although I did not necessarily know they were all from this book. I knew the famous opening lines were; I had not realized that this was where the also famous closing lines came from. I was familiar with the bit about telling the wind and the fire because I have also spent a decade sitting on a copy of Sarah Rees Brennan’s Tell the Wind and Fire, a YA retelling of this book that I’ve been putting off reading until I read the original so that I can be properly judgmental.

I also knew that the two cities were London and Paris, but I couldn’t have told you what about London and Paris, other than that I knew it happened when Paris was having a revolution.

One thing that was fun about this is that it was a piece of historical fiction at the time it was written. Dickens wrote it in the 1850s (it was first published in 1859) but it takes place mainly in the 1780s, which was a good 75 years previously and thus makes it a period piece, but since the 1850s are also now historical times to modern readers (indeed, they are a good 175 years previously to now, which is longer ago than the French Revolution was to this book’s publication date), it’s extremely funny and charming to read the amount of “BACK IN THOSE DAYS…” stuff Dickens writes. Like, it’s well handled, and it hasn’t aged poorly, and I think it’s probably good for a lot of modern readers to be reminded that the 1780s and the 1850s were actually quite different times. There is a bit where one character says something to the effect of “I think one day General George Washington will be even more famous than [whoever the fuck was running England at the time]” and all the other Englishmen are Very Offended, which is just as good a joke now as it was then. A lot of the other historical fiction place-setting involves stressing just how much everybody drank at the time, which is an interesting peek into the history of English drinking culture.

Anyway. The plot! This story mainly revolves around three French people who, at various times and for various reasons, are living in England. One of them is an old doctor who was for many years imprisoned at the Bastille, and is eventually quietly released and spirited away to England, a transaction handled largely on the French end by a wine-shop owner named Defarge and on the English end by a representative of the doctor’s bank, Tellson’s. The representative, Mr. Lorry, is clearly fond of the doctor and his English-raised (but definitely actually French) daughter Lucie Manette, but has a lot of emotional constipation about it and keeps insisting that it is Just Business as he is a Man of Business, and generally sounding like Sam Eagle as Headmaster Hutchinson in A Muppet Christmas Carol.

The Doctor and Lucie cross paths with another French emigre, who goes by the name of Charles Darnay, although this is an alias because, as our noble hero, Darnay is actually a French aristocrat who has left France in disgust at the general behaviors of the aristocratic class and also because he uhh may have murdered his uncle the Marquis. Don’t worry, the Marquis deserved it. All the Marquises deserved it. It’s when La Guillotine starts getting fed with people who aren’t just unrepentant Marquises but basically anyone that has ever had any kind of tie to any of the Marquises or complains about anything that things go really off the rails. But that is later. For a while, things are reasonably nice in England! Charles Darnay is put on trial for being a spy for bullshit reasons, but gets off on an almost equally bullshit reason, which is that he looks so suspiciously like a useless drunken English lawyer named Sydney Carton that the witnesses can’t actually be sure that the person they definitely saw doing definitely spy stuff was Charles Darnay at all. Darnay then marries Lucie, and Carton periodically visits them in between bouts of drinking his feelings about it.

Over in France, things are bad. Mr and Mrs Defarge, along with their friends The Vengeance, Jacques, Jacques, and Jacques, storm the Bastille and inaugurate a revolution. This is all very understandable given the situation France was in, but eventually some people who didn’t really do anything all that wrong get caught up in the peasantry’s fervor for guillotining all traces of the old regime away, and Charles Darnay has to put on his real name and go to France to try to fish somebody out of prison. This, as you might imagine, risks going poorly for him, and he ends up being followed by eventually all of our England-based characters–the Doctor, Lucie, their children, Mr. Lorry, Lucie’s old governess Miss Pross, Mr. Lorry’s odd-jobs-man Mr. Cruncher, and eventually even Sydney Carton–all at at least some risk to their lives, since France isn’t really super into letting anyone either in or out at this point. It is here that all sorts of further horrifying old secrets of aristocratic France are revealed, all pointing toward the same question: Is our noble, heroic Charles going to have to pay for the sins of his ancestors with his life?

I’m not going to answer that for you, but if you know how stories work you may be able to guess part of where this is going!

I ended up really loving this book and getting super excited every time I saw a chapter land in my inbox. The secondary characters are classic Dickens, very silly but in a way that doesn’t detract from the gravity of the story, and never are they sillier than when they are being clumsily, obstinately heroic. The Defarges are genuinely sinister but also sympathetic. The heroes are a little boring because they are nineteenth-century heroes, but everything else makes up for it. The language is really fun–you can roll around in the long nineteenth-century sentences, the descriptive language and the outdated eye-dialect, but it’s not all that dense or difficult to get through except for a handful of nineteenth-century pop culture references I had to look up (“Who is the Cock-lane ghost? Am I supposed to know this? Am I going to get porn if I Google it?”). The use of repetition is really, really good, giving the book both a poetic quality and, at times, reflecting various sinister motifs like Madame Defarge’s knitting. It makes me wish I had read this in school so that I could have dug deeper.

We are on to Bleak House in March, which I am excited for even though I know it will be, as the title implies, a downer. It’s also seeming to me like Dickens had a bit of a preoccupation with courts and legal systems, and after our forays into both the revolutionary tribunals and the Old Bailey in this volume, I’m excited to explore the stifling bureaucracy of Chancery Court next.

Community Recs Post!

Nov. 27th, 2025 10:45 am
glitteryv: (Default)
[personal profile] glitteryv posting in [community profile] recthething
Every Thursday, we have a community post, just like this one, where you can drop a rec or five in the comments.

This works great if you only have one rec and don't want to make a whole post for it, or if you don't have a DW account, or if you're shy. ;)

(But don't forget: you can deffo make posts of your own seven days a week. ;D!)

So what cool fics/fancrafts/fanvids/fanart/podfics/other kinds of fanworks have we discovered this week? Drop it in the comments below. Anon comment is enabled.

BTW, AI fanworks are not eligible for reccing at recthething. If you aware that a fanwork is AI-generated, please do not rec it here

Bad News for Anime Subtitles.

Nov. 27th, 2025 02:22 pm
[syndicated profile] languagehat_feed

Posted by languagehat

Via chavenet’s MetaFilter post, Daiz’s indignant Crunchyroll is destroying its subtitles for no good reason:

Since the beginning of the Fall 2025 anime season, a major change has started taking place on the anime streaming service Crunchyroll: the presentation quality for translations of on-screen text has taken a total nosedive compared to what has been on offer for many years, all the way up until the previous Summer 2025 season. […]

In these new subtitles, translations for dialogue and on-screen text aren’t even separated to different sides of the screen – everything is just bunched up together at either the top or the bottom with only capitalization to distinguish what’s what, leading to poor readability. In addition, lots of on-screen text is just left straight up untranslated.

If you care about these things, you’ll want to click through for the details and the very enlightening screenshots; I agree with the MeFi commenter who said “The Kill la Kill fan subs shown in the article are both amazing from a technical point of view, and beautiful to look at.” (We discussed fansubbing in 2021 and earlier this year.)

And happy Thanksgiving to those who celebrate it! I’ll be away feasting at my sister-in-law’s for much of the day, so try not to wreck the furniture while I’m gone.

thisaintbc: C6D Big Bang Art (oil painting). An image of an explosion in the shape of a maple leaf against a dark background, bracketed by text which reads "dS C6D Big Bang". (c6d big bang (explosion))
[personal profile] thisaintbc posting in [community profile] ds_c6d_bigbang
The 2025 due South/Canadian Six Degrees Big Bang collection is now revealed! Go and check out the fanworks on AO3, and leave comments and kudos for the creators \o/

Congratulations to all our lovely primary and complementary creators, and thanks to everyone who chatted and beta'ed along the way. And thanks to everyone for waiting an extra month to see what wonderful works our fandom has produced this year!

A special shout-out to our creators who submitted their works by an earlier deadline than they had to, who we decided to recognize with little digital merit badges. Keep an eye out for the Dief pawprint of proper preparation approval! 

Books - November 2025

Nov. 27th, 2025 01:21 pm
smallhobbit: (Book pile)
[personal profile] smallhobbit
Another 7 books read this month, bringing my yearly total to 74 - up on last year, but it all depends on length of book etc.

Maisie Dobbs by Jacqueline Winspear
The runner up for the Shedunnit book club read of historical novel by modern author.  It looked interesting, and the time period of just after WWI should have been of interest, but the book spent a lot of time showing Maisie Dobbs' background in great detail, which, together with some very clunky explanations, put me off.  The actual mystery was interesting and well solved, but not worth all the pages that needed reading.

The Retired Assassin's Guide to Country Gardening by Naomi Kuttner
I forget who recommended this, but it was excellent.  Great fun, with a well plotted mystery.  There's a retired assassin, ghosts, and a cat, together with several other plot twists.  And it's set in Aotearoa New Zealand.  Not serious but definitely fun!

Brueghel - the Complete Paintings by Jurgen Muller
My review is here

Unseen Academicals by Terry Pratchett
The wizards need to create a football team, with the usual confusion and creativity.  The Librarian plays in goal.  I've enjoyed reading several Discworld novels this year, and this one was a good way to finish.

N or M? by Agatha Christie
More of a spy thriller than a straight murder mystery.  Tommy and Tuppence are deemed too old to make a useful contribution to the war (the book was written in 1941), but then Tommy is asked to help seek out a spy, and Tuppence gets herself involved.  Christie's prejudices, which are greater than I think the war justified, are very apparent.  And I guessed one of the plot points.

Crime in the City: The 2002 Crime Writers' Association Anthology edited by Martin Edwards
This year I bought a number of anthologies cheap, which I shall be reading over the coming year.  This was the first.  It does make me wonder how many of these writers will still be read in another 20 years.

Life in Secrets: The Story of Vera Atkins and the Lost Agents of SOE by Sarah Helm
The role of the SOE agents in France and the discovery of their fates was interesting, although the unnecessary loss of life was appalling.  Vera Atkins turned out to be an unappealing character and I really wasn't interested in her background, especially given her share in the responsibility for the deaths, which she doesn't appeared to have accepted.

In addition, but not counted in the total, I read (twice):
Always Remember: The Boy, the Mole, the Fox, the Horse and the Storm by Charlie Mackesy
I remain the Mole!

Writing Sprints November 28-30

Nov. 27th, 2025 07:33 am
treefrogie84: (wwm)
[personal profile] treefrogie84 posting in [community profile] weekendwritingmarathon


what’s a 1k1h?|| time zone converter || 1k1h Calendar

All sprints are run on Discord only. You can find our Discord server here.


Friday ( time zone converter)

5am PT/ 8am ET/ 1pm UTC Mrsimoshen

8am PT/ 11am ET/ 4pm UTC Max

11am PT/ 2pm ET/ 7pm UTC LittleMissTPK

1pm PT/ 4pm ET/ 9pm UTC LittleMissTPK

5pm PT/ 8pm ET/ 1am Sat UTC Treefrogie84

7pm PT/ 10pm ET/ 3am Sat UTC Alec


Saturday ( time zone converter)


Super Sprint Saturday! 24 hours of sprints starting at Midnight Eastern!

Sunday ( time zone converter

4am PT/ 7am ET/ 12pm UTC PreciousAnon

7am PT/ 10am ET/ 3pm UTC Treefrogie84

9am PT/ 12pm ET/ 5pm UTC Treefrogie84

11am PT/ 2pm ET/ 7pm UTC PreciousAnon 

1pm PT/ 4pm ET/ 9pm UTC Treefrogie

5pm PT/ 8pm ET/ 1am Mon UTC Treefrogie

7pm PT/ 10pm ET/ 2am Mon UTC Joe



How Are You? (in Haiku)

Nov. 27th, 2025 06:32 am
jjhunter: Watercolor sketch of self-satisfied corvid winking with flaming phoenix feather in its beak (corvid with phoenix feather)
[personal profile] jjhunter
Pick a thing or two that sums up how you're doing today, this week, in general, and tell me about it in the 5-7-5 syllables of a haiku.

=

Signal-boosting much appreciated!

day 27: THANKSGIVING CHECK-IN

Nov. 27th, 2025 06:11 am
marcicat: (rainbow giraffes)
[personal profile] marcicat
*I'M TAKING THIS LOOP OFF

*THE ONE SENTENCE I WROTE, WHICH IS ALL I'M ASKING MYSELF TO WRITE TODAY: "You think I have it with me all the time?"

Pluribus 1.05

Nov. 27th, 2025 11:43 am
selenak: (Jimmy and Kim)
[personal profile] selenak
In which the Hive just needs space, okay?

Figures it would use the voice of Howard Hamlin to demand it… )
tamaranth: me, in the sun (Default)
[personal profile] tamaranth
2025/189: Breed to Come — Andre Norton
There had always been Puttis -- round and soft, made for children. She had kept hers because it was the last thing her mother had made... Puttis were four-legged and tailed. Their heads were round, with shining eyes made of buttons or beads, upstanding ears, whiskers above the small mouth. Puttis were loved, played with, adored in the child world; their origin was those brought by children on the First Ships. [loc. 2219]

This was the first science fiction book I remember reading, from Rochford Library, probably pre-1975. I don't think I've read it since, though I did briefly own a paperback copy. Apparently the blurbs of newer editions mention 'university complex' and 'epidemic virus': aged <10, I was hooked by the cat on the front.

Read more... )
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Navigation: Rules/General Info | AO3 Collection | Posting Guidelines | Medium Rulesets | Google Forms (Defaulting, Extensions, Assignment Summary Requests) | Mod Contact: ficinaboxmod@gmail.com OR Screened Mod Contact Post

Pinch hits are participants who are without creators; pinch hitting is the practice of volunteering to make a gift for a pinch hit. These pinch hits are all due on December 5th at 10:00 PM EST.

Fic In A Box has a very unusual set of assignment requirements: everyone is owed (and is asking for) 10k of fanfiction, which by default can be given as one 10k+ fic or several 1k+ fics. Participants have also had the option to opt-in to other minimum lengths or to other formats of fanwork. The other fanwork mediums are given word count equivalents, which you can view on the medium ruleset post.

Additionally:

  • Fic In A Box creators may default after partially filling their assignment—say, if they discover that they can only write 9k of fic—and PHs can be picked up in 1k increments!
  • You may always swap all or part of your assignment for a PH, just let us know that's what you're doing when you post to claim the PH.

In order to pick up a pinch hit you need to either email us or comment on this post (comments are screened) with:

  • The amount of wordcount you would like to claim (even if you're going to do fanart or some other non-fic opt-in medium! If you aren't sure what the equivalent would be, we'd be happy to help you convert it!)
  • The exact username of the AO3 account you will be posting your fill(s) from (if you post from a different account from the one you give us, we won't be able to count the PH as filled unless you update us!)
  • An email where we can reach you (you might not be getting the AO3 assignment when you pick up a PH, so we need to know where to send the assignment!)

PH 12 - 6k - 鹿鼎記 - 金庸 | The Deer and the Cauldron - Louis Cha, 鹿鼎記 | The Duke of Mount Deer (Hong Kong 1984), 老洞 | The Old Miao Myth (TV), 神鵰俠侶 | The Return of the Condor Heroes (TV 1983) )

PH 101 - 4k - 少年歌行 | The Blood of Youth (Live Action TV), 少年白马醉春风 | Dashing Youth (Live Action TV), Six of Crows Series - Leigh Bardugo, Kuroko no Basuke | Kuroko's Basketball )

PH 129 - 3k - 괴담에 떨어져도 출근을 해야 하는구나 - 백덕수 | Even If I Fall Into a Ghost Story I Still Have to Go to Work - Baek Deoksoo, 내가 키운 S급들 - 근서 | S-Classes that I Raised - Geunseo, 전지적 독자 시점 - 싱숑 | Omniscient Reader - Sing-Shong (Novel), Omniscient Reader - singNsong & UMI & Sleepy-C (Webtoon), 내가 키운 S급들 | The S-Classes That I Raised (Webcomic) )

PH 134 - 6k - InuYasha - A Feudal Fairy Tale, Dragonriders of Pern - Anne McCaffrey, Raya and the Last Dragon (2021) )

PH 138 - 5k - Given (Anime), 呪術廻戦 | Jujutsu Kaisen (Anime), Given (Manga), Wind Breaker (Anime), 呪術廻戦 | Jujutsu Kaisen (Manga) )

1 Week Delay To December 6th

Nov. 27th, 2025 12:54 am
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Navigation: Rules/General Info | AO3 Collection | Posting Guidelines | Medium Rulesets | Google Forms (Defaulting, Extensions, Assignment Summary Requests) | Mod Contact: ficinaboxmod@gmail.com OR Screened Mod Contact Post

One Week Delay!

The reveals date is being delayed one week to December 6th at 10 PM EST (countdown) to allow time for pinch hits to be finished! Updates on the posted schedules and a new PH post will be put up shortly!

All currently assigned pinch hits have been updated to a due date of November 28th at 10 PM EST unless they were already due that day. You may ask for an additional extension to December 3rd!

Pinch Hits picked up from this point will have a due date of December 5th at 10 PM EST.

If at any point you don't believe you can complete a PH, please default immediately. If you do end up being able to complete the PH you can always pick it back up later!

If you're looking for people to treat, don't forget to check the comments of the pinch hitter post (link)! These are pinch hitters who aren't signed up to the exchange, and it would be lovely if some (or all!) of them got treats!

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cyphomandra

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