Interview With The Vampire community



BEING THE ELITE 10TH ANNIVERSARY EVENT
february 18, 2026 marks the 10th year anniversary of bte! šš in collab with @finndoesntwantthis, whose bte anniversary posts can be foundhere, we are running a 3-day event to celebrate the show that was pivotal in the formation and launch of aew. starting on MONDAY FEB 16 until WEDNESDAY FEB 18, we invite everyone to participate in this event by posting gifs, edits, art, and videos with the prompt of the day. show your creativity as you wish! you can create several posts per prompt or only make something for one day.
ā make sure to tag all of your creations as #bte10years and #aewedit so we can find your posts!
happy editing/giffing/bte anniversary š





KennyOmegamanX: Incredibly happy to announce that I’ve done some big mocap work as Alex in Street Fighter 6. Can’t wait for you all to see more, he’s my favorite character in Street Fighter š
I don't think I mentioned getting a new phone last month. I very much enjoyed my tiny Jelly Star for a long time: it was very good for making it unsatisfying to scroll while out and about, and instead listen to more music and pay more attention to where I was. But eventually it started to be actually annoying and I did some thinking and looking at different phones, and ended up with a Motorola Razr folding phone. Still small by default! Still easy to prioritise music over scrolling! But much easier to do messaging, emails, etc when I need to.
As a surprise bonus, I have found that having a decent camera and a screen I can clearly see the results on means I'm taking more photos. It also has a neat timer function, and the folding phone is easy to set up to take photos at distances longer than my arm.
Here is a result taken this morning: me wearing another new possession, my CUIHC fleece. It is soft and cozy and I adore it, I've had it since Monday and love it unreasonably. I want to wear it all the time.
Age: 30+
I mostly post about: A smorgasboard of things! Lots of book reviews, discussion and chatter about different fandoms, links to interesting things I've read or looked at on the internet, recipes I've cooked and whether I liked them, writing memes, and I'm trying to get more into posting short life anecdotes.
My hobbies are: I write both original work and fanfic, I'm playing more videogames these days, and I'm easing my way back into doing art and being outdoorsy. I like working out, going for walks, and listening to crickets, moving water, and birdsong. I'm athletic and specifically enjoy swimming, weightlifting, yoga, and spinning. I was into dwrp for a long time and still enjoy doing private storylines with friends. I love trying new things and will do almost anything once!
My fandoms are: Attack on Titan (I do not like the ending or think it was well-written, and because you can find those types in this fandom: I do not think Eren was right), Animorphs, Naruto, TWEWY, Tanith Lee's books esp the Unicorn Triology, Gravity Falls, Eyeshield 21, Blade of the Immortal, Dungeon Meshi, D.Gray-man, Lilo & Stitch. If I liked something once, I will probably have a soft spot for it just about forever.
I'm looking to meet people who: are chill and kind and value being kind to others. Nerdy types who like writing and book talk. Thoughtful people. Shared fandoms are far from necessary; I don't fanpost that much. I enjoy getting a small window into lives different from mine and my goal is to make friendly connections with others and be kind c:
My posting schedule tends to be: sporadic. I check my reading list regularly and do try to comment.
When I add people, my dealbreakers are:
No:
Before adding me, you should know: I will probably not grant you access for a long time if we follow each other. It's not personal, I just like to know a person well and know that we mesh before I grant access. You won't be missing a whole lot as I don't post under access filters often.
The Australian governmentās legislation seeking to ban access to social media for people under 16 has received plenty of attention in International media, mostly leading with the governmentās that 4.7 million accounts were banned or deactivated when the legislation came into effect. Rather less attention has been paid to discussion of the outcome within Australia, where the consensus is that there has been very little effect for most. With most kids still active, the minority who have been caught by the ban have suffered feelings of ostracism and exclusion When discussing the issue on my own social media (which had few if any teenage readers to begin with) Iāve only had one parent report their kids being thrown off.
Before coming to the real issues, Iāll point out that the 4.7 million figure is almost certainly bogus. Depending on guesses about the age range of those affected, this would imply between two and four accounts per kid. For reasons best known to themselves, the government gave specific numbers for Meta, but for no one else. Of the ten platforms subject to the ban, Meta had three – Facebook, Instagram and Threads which together issued 0.5 million bans, of which Instagram accounted for 330 000. That leaves 4.4 million for the remaining seven, including niche sites like Twitch and Kick, along with X, which is not very teen-oriented. It appears that the largest ābanā may involve nothing more than YouTube cancelling kidsā accounts (all that was required by the law) and shifting them on to the (much worse) public feed.
The ban was rushed through parliament a year or so ago. I wrote a series of posts criticising it at the time
The posts are here , here, here and here
I wonāt recap them except to complain again the role of my bete noire, all-round charlatan Jonathan Haidt, who has been the subject of lengthy critiques on Crooked Timber for many years, long before he became an instant expert on kids and social media
Before it was implemented, the ban had strong, but not universal, support among parents of teens. However, it applied to all teens whether or not their families supported it. In this context, Albaneseās claim that āāThis is families taking back controlā is somewhat dishonest. The government was attempting to take control from families, though it has largely failed.
From reports Iāve seen around, a third of kids got their parentsā support to dodge the ban. In many other cases, the ban was ineffective and parents either didnāt know or couldnāt do much about it. But there was a significant remaining group of families where parents hoped that the law would give them an ace to play in the eternal dispute over screen time. The hope (which Iāve seen expressed quite literally) was that they could tell the kids āget off your phone, itās the lawā. Of course, the law says nothing of the sort, since it only binds social media companies.
For families where the kids lost accounts and parents have sought to enforce the ban, the result has often been intensified conflict, along the usual lines of such conflicts. The kids want to do what all their friends are doing, and fear isolation and exclusion, while the parents see themselves as protectors. Inevitably, parents will lose most of these fights well before their kids turn 16.
I have an almost unique perspective on this, having been born in 1956, the year TV came to Australia. As a result, I was a participant on both sides of the TV era of the screen wars, first as kid and then as parent. I was also exposed to the continuous denunciations of the āidiot boxā by writers like Neil Postman (amusing ourselves to death) and Newton Minow (a vast wasteland). Itās startling to read supporters of the ban (canāt find the link now) reminiscing nostalgically about spending Saturday morning lying around watching cartoons.
Where to from here? It appears that we will see some before-and-after studies both official and independent, which will provide some kind of reality check on the claims and counterclaims. Regardless, the Albanese government, having passed some hastily drafted laws (see hate speech) will declare victory and move on.
Meanwhile, the big problems of social media – the toxicity of X/Twitter, algorithmic feeds, information harvesting, the distortions produced by reliance on social media – will remain. Dealing with them would require tackling powerful US interests, which is much harder than announcing restrictions on teenagers.
How are you doing?
I am OK
11 (73.3%)
I am not OK, but don't need help right now
4 (26.7%)
I could use some help
0 (0.0%)
How many other humans live with you?
I am living single
5 (33.3%)
One other person
5 (33.3%)
More than one other person
5 (33.3%)
The Last Bite live weekend special: Saturday night, the Community Case Files segment. Drinks before dinner - Kush has made Bloody Marys and given them a ridiculous name. Ben unfastens his bow tie. James has an emotional revelation.
Heated Rivalry is on this year's Canada Reads longlist.