Now Playing Tracks

makosfirebutt:

queenchad:

disneyismyescape:

teensophie-draws:

we-are-fangirlsss:

justanotherrotgfreak:

redhead-archergirl:

For some reason this makes me so extremely sad. Because it’s kind of like Rapunzel is trying to recreate her hair not out of pure symbolism between the two, but because she genuinely misses her hair, and wishes that she will someday wake up and that she will have the golden hair she once possessed, that it will grow back, that she will have a  part of her she misses completely.

Why must you do this?……

I hate people

COULD YOU PLEASE STOP

((WHY WOULD YOU DO THIS TO ME))

Well it’s not like she had a choice in the matter of getting it cut. So she probably did miss it on some level. 

OR

disney was making a funny/ironic joke by making her train 70 feet long since thats her signature thing and you are reading too much into a childrens short

I think reading into it and seeing a deep symbolic meaning, even if unintentionally, is great. It shows that, while this is for kids, we as adults can still get something out of it. 

(Source: afairydream)

thatpointlessidiot:

krudman:

I thought to myself when I saw this, “no. This has to be some one being silly. This has to be something some one fabricated to make microsoft look worse and people just aren’t checking the source.”

NOPE. IT’S REAL.

AND IT GOT WORSE:

WHAT.

I want everyone to think long and hard on this information.

This means that you are not buying your games.  You are paying 60+ dollars to rent the games from Microsoft, and they can take their game back whenever they feel like it.

You will not own your game.  You will not own your console.  Essentially, Microsoft is saying “We can disable your games and cut you off from accessing your console whenever we choose to.”  Because a ban that locks your XBox Live account means that you will be locked out from all non-game functionality of the system, and by revoking your ‘licenses’ on all your games associated with your account, they can then disable each and every game you own for the system.  Leaving you with a five hundred dollar cable receiver.  Or, in the case of most users of the console, a five hundred dollar paperweight.

All because you accidentally walked into some online glitch and the rest of the players rage-report you for cheating.

This is unacceptable.  Buy any console but an XBox One.  Do not support Microsoft’s sudden belief that they own everything despite our purchase of it, and we have to prove we’re worthy of being shared with by paying exorbitant fees and jumping through constant hoops and hoping someone doesn’t report us for cheating because we made them mad in an online game.

Tell Microsoft ‘No,’ and do not give them your hard-earned money for what amounts to a video game subscription service with a $500 starting fee and $60+ dollar purchases.

(Source: voldey)

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