Drawthread
Drawthread
Other urls found in this thread:
rule34.xxx
rule34.xxx
twitter.com
I need more angel
I'm gonna break it down for you simpletons.
Yas Forums drawthreads are shit. Seldom do drawfags come here. The only people that really populate these threads are retarded spergs, requesters, roleplayers for fuck sake, and avatarfags that pretend that they're drawfags. You can largely blame the latter for the state of these threads. They see this place as a chatroom where they draw reaction images of their avatars, not a place for requesting and creative drawing. Avatarfags actively scare off drawfags when they do happen across these threads, whether through excessive attention whoring, forced namefagging, or shitting all over them because "they did the wrong request." Not to mention you have to deal with them pretending like they know anything about art.
All other boards' drawthreads have a clean format that encourages deliveries and creativity. Even /trash/ drawthreads are in a better state than Yas Forums drawthreads, and honestly, that's fucking sad. Avatarfagging lands you a ban, and namefagging is extremely minimal. All drawfags are thanked greatly for their work by the requester and other anons. Good deliveries get the honor of being included in the next drawthread OP. Some of them even offer critiques and constructive criticism when warranted by other drawfags.
In brief, Yas Forums drawthreads focus around the individuals that FORCE identification on its posters. All other board's drawthreads focus around the content in the threads.
The root of the problem is the avatarfags. They're the ones that force the identification, not only on themselves but on other posters. They only care about the persona. Take away the avatarfags and you lose this corrupted culture. Things will return to the norm that is traditional imageboard culture, the focus on content rather than the user.
You can naysay all you like, but it doesn't change the fact of the matter.
>Take away the avatarfags and you lose this corrupted culture. Things will return to the norm that is traditional imageboard culture, the focus on content rather than the user.
Lol you really believe in this fairy tale bullshit? As long as drawthreads are on Yas Forums and mods don't ban anyone, drawthreads will be corrupted permanently. Give up.
Toon Link giving a buttjob in the cowgirl position while wearing any of these costumes, or wearing white stockings and a thong only while saying "Gay over"
Position examples: rule34.xxx
rule34.xxx
Requesting Timmy Turner in a threesome with these 2 women.
I want to fuck Mrs. Cuddles but I don't have any sexy ideas. Can you Anons give me some?
Requesting Ruri getting lovingly knotted and impregnated by a dog
So far this thread is shit
just looking for feedback on my color
is the belly too big?
does stitch look... okay?
wait, are lilo's eyes blue? idk, they look good blue tho
Brown I believe
>Angel
Fuck off
yeah, she's an islander so brown... but I like my blues -.-
Huh? Im not angel
bump
Requesting a female version of Odea (left) getting raped and impregnated by Tsumuri
requesting art of this guy in ur art style
Fuck off
Based
Damn ,that's rad. Who is he?
Requesting her chugging her alcohol
Requesting a conjoinment of Boa and Nami like in the reference
Late one February evening in 2005, Kerri Rawson went online and listened to a recording of the BTK killer from 1977. It was a 911 call, a chilling dispatch in which the caller casually reported a homicide he had just committed to the police. Seized by fear and disgust, Rawson realized she recognized the voice. “I knew right away it was my dad,” she says.
Earlier that day, when an FBI agent had knocked on her door and informed her that her father had been identified as the BTK killer and arrested for murder, Rawson insisted it was all a mistake. She knew her father, Dennis Rader, as normal, law-abiding, kind: a 59-year-old compliance officer in Park City, Kansas. He had even risen to become president of his church council.
Fuck off
It was not a mistake. In his secret life as “BTK”—short for “bind, torture, kill,” the sick nickname summarizing his methods—Rader had murdered 10 people in the Wichita area between 1974 and 1991. By the time Rawson was born in 1978, her father had already committed seven murders, including a family of four. (The Otero family, with two young children, became his first victims in 1974.) Between attacks, Rader courted infamy by mailing rambling letters to local media and police. It was his habit of taunting the police that led to his capture in 2005, 14 years after his last murder. (He is now serving 10 life sentences in prison.)
Shut up pigeon boy
>Hail Satan
For Rawson, there is life before Feb. 25, 2005, and life after. Her harrowing memoir, A Serial Killer’s Daughter: My Story of Faith, Love, and Overcoming, chronicles her struggle to reconcile the father she grew up with—supportive, kind, devoted to his family despite occasional frightening flashes of temper—with the man who murdered women and indulged in sadistic sexual fantasies. Rawson, now 40, has battled post-traumatic stress disorder and found solace in Christian faith since her father’s arrest. For years, she hid from the intense media interest in her family. Her book is the culmination of a growing comfort with speaking out publicly and part of her desire to help other victims of trauma. In a recent Skype conversation, Rawson talked about grappling with her father’s crimes. This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.
Zach Schonfeld: Has writing this memoir helped you heal from the trauma of learning who your father was?
Kerri Rawson: Yeah. I’ve said it’s like pulling out shards of glass. I would come up to these things and not want to write them, and I would have to force myself to do it. It felt like I was pulling something out inside of me. I did that probably a thousand times.
I sort of equate it to, like, hell. Like going to Mordor, if you’ve seen Lord of the Rings.
just him smiling with or without his tounge out
My understanding is that you haven’t been in touch with your father while writing the book.