

BEEF_the_artiste
459 posts

@bb_artiste_
Level: 26 (They/them) Artist, Writer, Actor; Current Projects- Mystery of Love: a GF Dating sim Reanimateds: - Sock Opera - Tale of 2 Stans






🌼 ꒱ Interactive Have you ever cosplayed your f/o ?


I love wrong dialogue optios in ace attorney😭



Artists, what’s the most important advice/lesson that you’d give to beginner artists?

I love it

This bill could change everything for American Creators and our Freedom of Expression, but it has gotten so little attention. H.R. 4678 The Restoring Artistic Protection Act, introduced by Rep. Hank Johnson (D-GA), would create a strong legal presumption that creative works cannot be used as evidence in federal criminal or civil cases. It covers all creative expression, including: • Video Games • Comics & Animation • Movies & TV Shows • Books & Literature • Visual Art & Scripts Fictional storylines, characters, dialogue, artwork, and gameplay would be presumed inadmissible. Prosecutors could only overcome this with a pretrial hearing and clear and convincing evidence that it’s directly relevant, not just character assassination. No more treating art as confession. This would give game devs, comic artists, animators, and filmmakers real breathing room to create bold, edgy, and unfiltered content without lawsuit chill. It currently has 21 Democrat cosponsors, but something this important needs bipartisan support and hearings in Judiciary. Similar protections have already passed in Georgia, Louisiana, and Missouri with Republican backing. After 15+ years, Americans are tired of watching their sanitized culture wither away while other countries continue to make great works for the world to enjoy, we want to have pride in the art that our country produces, and it is high time that American creators were able to build freely and without fear again. @JudiciaryGOP @Jim_Jordan @RepThomasMassie @RepChipRoy @RepAndyBiggsAZ @RepMcClintock @RepTroyNehls @repdarrellissa



ADHD people screenshotting and bookmarking everything because they're afraid of losing ideas, only to never look at them again because the archive is now its own overwhelming problem.