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Updates, musings and amusings from the folks at PopGurls.com

thatchris:

From EW…

“Patton Oswalt guest-stars on this week’s Parks & Recreation as a filibustering Pawnee citizen. The show has just released a nearly nine-minute video showing Oswalt improvising a pitch for Star Wars: Episode VII, and it is a prose-poem of geeky delight, which further burnishes Oswalt’s rep as a burgeoning national treasure. Among other things, the comedian makes a heartfelt and hilarious pitch for linking together the Star Wars and Avengers franchises — because Thanos has the Reality Gem! Don’t forget about the Reality Gem! — while also roadmapping some incredible new developments for Chewbacca. Also, Boba Fett. Also, Moon Knight.

There are so many twists and turns and remarkably off-the-cuff deep-cut references. In nerd terms, Oswalt’s crossover filibuster is like a J. J. Abrams sundae covered in Christopher Nolan sprinkles drowning in Grant Morrison chocolate syrup. Seriously, just watch the video now, and pray Disney signs Oswalt to a 10-picture deal immediately.”

This is AMAZING!!!

parks and recreation patton oswalt the avengers star wars
Reblogged from thatchris

stars-inthe-sky:

nickdrake:

Leia and Han.

Once, a fandom friend and I were discussing how Star Wars (the original trilogy, I mean) might have been received had the Internet existed. We started outlining the shipper wars between Leia/Luke and Leia/Han following the first movie or two, and we got as far as realizing the delicious satisfaction that the latter camp would have reveled in following the revelations in Return of the Jedi. Heh. 

Anyway, I always liked these two, even before I knew about shipping. Star Wars has plenty of gender issues, but Leia’s actually a pretty great character in my book. Yes, she’s pretty and titled, but she’s also a determined diplomat, skilled fighter, and an important leader to the Rebel Alliance, long before the guys show up in the Millennium Falcon. She has some impractical outfits, but she’s just as often shown in utilitarian clothes, and even in her more ridiculous outfits, her hair is usually up and out of the way, and she can still move to fire a gun and jump down a garbage chute. She can use weapons (including the guns on the Falcon), withstand torture, and befriend odd local species that turn out to be pivotal in the final battle. And the (in)famous Slave Leia costume? Yeah, she’s scantily-clad…and she uses that position and the literal chain around her neck to singlehandedly strangle to death one of the most notorious gangsters in the galaxy.

In fact, Han’s the one who has to do some growing up to get herIf only Padme Amidala’s standards had been so high.

(Source:nickdrake)
3,332 notes yes star wars princess leia princess leia: awesome lady and role model
Reblogged from stars-inthe-sky

lipstick-feminists:

In November of 2010, the international community of Star Wars fans rallied to defend my first-grade daughter Katie, who was being taunted by the boys at school because she was a girl who loved Star Wars, which was apparently “only for boys.” The support was instant and effusive, and Katie quickly regained her confidence as a Star-Wars-loving female. Some of the most vocal supporters came from the 501st Legion, a charitable organization that raises millions of dollars for charity. The members of the 501st each build intricate Star Wars costumes that are exact replicas of those worn by characters in the Star Wars movies.

And then, in September of 2012, nearly two years later, we came full circle, and it was our turn to stand up for the 501st Legion. The Star Wars fans as a group were hurt and outraged when they became the target of a taunting online slideshow featured on news websites. The slideshow featured pictures of people in costume attending Star Wars Celebration VI, a biennial convention. The captions were cruel, and many of the people in the photos were members of the 501st Legion. Katie and I were able to offer our support and encouragement to the very people who had been so kind to us. The Star Wars community is like that – we have each other’s backs.

In the wake of the September cyberbullying incident, Katie decided that she wanted to be a Stormtrooper for Halloween this year. This was how she could show her solidarity with the 501st Legion. I wanted to find her a costume that was a little more authentic than what the stores were offering, and I knew who to ask.

In August, Katie and I had met some members of the 501st Legion at the launch of my new book about bullying. Katie, who had been dubbed The Littlest Jedi when her story went viral, had a grand time that night romping around Barnes & Noble with professionally-costumed Star Wars characters. Remembering how kind everyone had been, I sent a message to one of the guys, asking if he had any suggestions for how we could make Katie a Stormtrooper costume.

What transpired next is nothing short of astonishing.

The 501st decided to make Katie her own set of custom Stormtrooper armor, built to the exact specifications from the original Star Wars movies in the ‘70’s. Two years ago, Katie became an unexpected symbol of geek pride and anti-bullying. Her story touched something deep in the core of the 501st — a desire to always stand up for what you believe in –and based on those strong feelings, the members of the 501st wanted to make her a Halloween costume that no other child could replicate. Katie would become a Stormtrooper, as if she had stepped onto the set of a LucasFilm movie.

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star wars 501st leigon badass girls
Reblogged from lipstick-feminists