rionaleonhart: final fantasy x-2: the sun is rising, yuna looks to the future. (hope is all we have)
Yesterday, we hosted an informal karaoke afternoon at our house to celebrate Tem's birthday. It was a lot of fun!

The great thing about holding your own karaoke session is that you can sing all the weird, obscure songs that you wouldn't find at an actual karaoke place. In this post, I will be linking to some of the songs mentioned and not linking to others, with no apparent rhyme or reason.

Tem and I kicked off the event with 'Where Is the Justice?' from Death Note: The Musical, which is a very intense first song for an afternoon of karaoke. I was shaking the whole time I sang Light's part (with the outrage and injustice of it all, naturally), which, I'll admit, probably did not improve my singing voice. There were mildly horrified exclamations from the room at the lyrics, and then laughter when I got too warm halfway through and shrugged off my hoodie, revealing the Death Note T-shirt beneath.

Tem and I performed so many songs from Death Note: The Musical, in fact, that we started having to introduce them with a brief 'previously on Death Note' rundown. After we collaborated on 'Where Is the Justice', Tem performed 'Hurricane' and 'Kira', I sang 'The Way Things Are', and then we both gave our all for 'Playing His Game'.

'Playing His Game' is a fantastically homoerotic duet, and I don't think the room was entirely prepared for it. At the line 'what does he do late at night when the world is sleeping?', people gasped. As Light and L, we got closer and closer over the course of the song and ended up belting out our determination to defeat each other with our arms around each other's shoulders.

I was Light, naturally. When Tem and I sing Death Note duets, I have to be Light and Tem has to be L; it's the law.

'I feel like we should make out,' Tem said at the end of 'Playing His Game', and frankly I'd also found myself thinking 'it feels like, for the performance, we should kiss, but for the sake of our relationship we probably shouldn't'. Seems very apt to be internally going 'what's the correct course of action here??' while singing as Light and L.

'I've been dating you for six years, and that's the gayest thing I've ever seen you do,' Rei informed Tem as we sat back down.

One of the most delightful aspects of the afternoon, in fact, was watching Tem have sexual tension with everyone in the room in turn: 'Playing His Game' with me, 'My Dead Gay Son' from Heathers with Rei, 'Barbie Girl' with one of our guests (who had done a surprise costume change in the bathroom and emerged dressed fully as Ken, wig and all).

My other song choices were 'Something's Always Wrong' by Toad the Wet Sprocket, 'How You Remind Me' by Nickelback, and 'Chop Away at My Heart' by lumberjack boyband the Lumberzacks from Milo Murphy's Law. I sang the last of these with Rei, and the room cracked up every time Rei called 'Timber!'

I also hugely enjoyed Rei and Tem's passionate duet of 'The Ballad of Sara Berry' from 35MM: A Musical Exhibition, Tem's intense BABYMETAL performances ('Headbanger' in particular looked exhausting), and a guest's troublingly dedicated version of 'Tubthumping' by Chumbawamba, in which she actually threw herself onto the floor at every occurrence of the line 'I get knocked down'.

A great time! Sorry to everyone we forcibly introduced to the concept of Death Note. (I am not actually sorry.)
rionaleonhart: top gear: the start button on a bugatti veyron. (going down tonight)
When I watch things with my housemates, I don't always write about it on here because, well, you can't really pause episodes to scribble down your thoughts while other people are watching them with you. I thought I'd try to pull together a few lines each about some of the things we've watched over the last couple of years, though. Here we go!


Gargoyles (1994): Rei remembered this cartoon fondly from their childhood, but I had never seen it before. It was an interesting watch! Darker and more complex than I tend to expect from nineties Western cartoons, and Elisa and Xanatos are great characters; I'd have loved to see the two of them interact more. I'm annoyed by the 'Macbeth was just misunderstood' plotline, though; don't take away everything that makes Macbeth interesting as a character!

Cowboy Bebop (1998): This was an interesting anime, very stylishly directed, but it felt a bit like two different shows clumsily jammed together. I think it could have benefitted from cutting most of the 'bounty hunting procedural' aspect and becoming a shorter, more focused series. Spike is a fascinating character who feels severely underused, which is perplexing, given that he's the protagonist.

Wynonna Earp (2016): This was fun! It felt a bit like a version of Supernatural from an alternate universe; if Supernatural had been created by women and had female lead actors, I suspect it might look a bit like Wynonna Earp. Wynonna, in particular, feels very like a female equivalent to Dean Winchester; she's a wisecracking disaster who's incapable of coping with anything healthily. She's great. I love her.

Milo Murphy's Law (2016): A cartoon by the creators of Phineas and Ferb, about a boy who's plagued by misfortune. I loved this! In particular, I find Milo himself very endearing; I like his resourceful nature and positive attitude in the face of the certainty that everything's going to go wrong around him. Also, lumberjack-themed boy band song 'Chop Away at My Heart' is a banger.

Trinkets (2019): I'm a little sad that, although the ending was beautiful and perfect, the rest of the show wasn't quite good enough for me to run around recommending it. It's about three girls who meet at a programme for recovering shoplifters. Their friendship is great and I had a lot of feelings about it, but the show as a whole is so Constant Teen Drama that it's slightly exhausting. The finale was wonderful! I cried! The show as a whole is okay.

Batwoman (2019): We only watched the first series of this (and, in fact, I can't remember whether we finished that series). I really enjoyed what a catastrophe Kate Kane was, and her love-hate relationship with Alice was delightfully intense and messy; I feel it's a sort of relationship you don't often get to see between female antagonists! The show felt relentlessly miserable in a way that wasn't that fun to watch, though. We didn't make an active decision to stop watching it, but we drifted away.

The Owl House (2020): I really enjoyed this! Very cute and fun; very Gravity Falls vibes, which makes sense, given that it was created by Alex Hirsch's partner. It does seem like a disproportionate number of the episodes focus on teaching Luz that she shouldn't lie to impress people, though; if your protagonist learns the same lesson in half the episodes of your cartoon, I think you have to accept that she's never going to internalise the lesson! King is very reminiscent of our cat Zuko, who is a beautiful, perfect boy with absolutely no brain.

We Are Lady Parts (2021): A sitcom about an all-girl Muslim punk band. I got much more emotionally invested than I was prepared for; I thought this was just going to be a silly comedy! But then I met angry, self-sabotaging disaster Saira, and obviously I was doomed to love her.

Arcane (2021): A fantasy series based on League of Legends, a game I know absolutely nothing about. This is the most engaging show I've watched in a very long time. It genuinely surprised me on multiple occasions; I quickly gave up trying to predict what would happen in it, because I clearly had no idea! Every character is a disaster and it's great. An excellent series if you enjoy characters screwing up and tearing themselves apart over it. Gorgeously animated, too.

Queer Eye Germany (2022): A heads-up for anyone who enjoys Queer Eye: the German version is just as delightful! Ayan, the interior design guy, is my favourite of the Fab Fünf; he's extremely earnest and sweet.
rionaleonhart: final fantasy viii: found a draw point! no one can draw... (you're a terrible artist)
[personal profile] pict demanded to know all my ambitious fic ideas, which reminded me of something I've been thinking about doing for a while: archiving the fic ideas I've been scribbling down in my diaries.

Every year, I buy the same style of diary, which has a couple of blank pages at the back. I've been using these blank pages to note down fic concepts since 2013. Some of these get written! Many of them don't.

If I type up the unwritten concepts, maybe one of them will inspire me? (Or indeed inspire someone else? Feel free to let me know if you're interested in writing any of these!) At the very least, they'll no longer be languishing in old diaries I rarely look back at.

These are sorted in alphabetical order by fandom; the notes under any particular fandom may contain spoilers for the canon. Some ideas are extremely vague; some are very specific. Crossovers are filed haphazardly under whichever fandom feels right in the moment. The tags on this entry should give you an idea of which fandoms are represented, if you're wondering whether anything you know is in here!


A huge pile of unwritten fanfiction ideas. )


I'm not sure this exercise has actually sparked any inspiration, but it's good to have all these ideas in one place. If any of these would particularly interest you, let me know!