Growing Wings

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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
hyumjim
hyumjim

Actually I don’t blame people for shitting on Freud and not understanding his work I think it must have to do with the way people are teaching him especially in like high school psych classes. I’m pretty sure I used to feel this way about him too before I actually studied psychology at a more advanced level. I think that your average high school psych teacher (and probably some college professors too) is likely to talk about Freud like “yeah this guy is where it all began so we HAVE to talk about him but his ideas are mostly really outdated but I GUESS still important so you have to know this for your test. Let’s just get through this so we can talk about my personal favorite topic” (which in the case of schoolteachers is usually abnormal psych lol CRRAAAAZYY INSANE ASSYYYLLUMM)

and i just think people are not taught about Freud in a way that would actually communicate why his ideas might be interesting or important. We’re just told that they are important. For the test. So write this down and then never think about it again lol

But the actual reason to start a psych course with a discussion of Freud is because he founded modern psychoanalysis with his theory of the subconscious, which more than anything else is something we still use every day, not just in psychoanalysis but in art as well… He was really among the first to suggest that the mind is vast and mysterious and we don’t know the depths of everything that is in our own minds. This was a groundbreaking idea that also would have taken a lot of humility. Just because he was an analyst who wrote extensively about his patients doesn’t mean he was not applying these universal ideas to himself as well. He was saying: I don’t know my own mind. This was, and still is, a really destabilizing idea for a lot of people, and one that is really important to understand if we ever want to comprehend ourselves and each other!

vintagegeekculture
vintagegeekculture

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Before the original 1967 Planet of the Apes went into production, a test reel was made to prove to the studio the makeup intensive story could be told in a visually believable way. The original makeup test reel featured the original actor cast to be Dr. Zaius: Hollywood legend Edward G. Robinson, who ended up not appearing in the finished film.

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The chimpanzee makeup was tested by James Brolin (who's son with Barbara Streisand, Josh, is best known for his role in the Goonies) with Zira, Linda Harrison. Brolin, already an up and coming star, did not appear in the film, and Linda Harrison did not play Zira, but instead received the non-speaking role of the cave girl Nova. Angelique Pettyjohn, the green-haired warrior woman from the Star Trek episode, the "Gamesters of Triskelion," was runner up for the non-speaking role of Nova, as Linda Harrison was originally slated to play Zira.

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Fun fact: Linda Harrison is the first ever actress to ever play Wonder Woman in live action, as she appeared in the 1960s "Who's Afraid of Diana Prince" proof of concept short by producer WIlliam Dozier (creator of the original Batman series). Harrison was well known to Dozier as she appeared in a couple episodes of the 60s Batman series. The short did not end up going to series.

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planet of the apes wonder woman
sleepysebris
sleepysebris

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ml secret santa gift for @raindrops-on-the-roof ! ✨
sorry for being a week late i have this problem where i over-detail things that were meant to be simple. I wanted to do a silly lil love square comic and somehow get alya & nino in there, and at the time, elation was all i could think about! lol (this takes place in a reality where that was the last episode i watched)
Thank you @mlsecretsanta for hosting such a cool event 💙

miraculous ladybug