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fuckyeahgoodomens

lothiriel84 asked:

Hello, I was wondering if you could help me make sense of the following exchange. After watching that scene where Crowley tries drowning his grief in whiskey, I tweeted "The Talisker Talisker!" (which happens to be a reference to the BCC Radio 4 show Cabin Pressure), and was a little confused when Douglas Mackinnon retweeted it with the following comment: "Look out for the ridge outside the window in heaven!" What do you think he meant?

fuckyeahgoodomens answered:

Hiya.

Talisker is the reference to The Isle of Skye:

Mackinnon is very proud of being from Scotland’s Isle of Skye, and inserted references to his home area wherever he could. An Isle of Skye shop is near Aziraphale’s Soho bookshop, called Skye Suits. Crowley’s drink of choice to drown his sorrows in Episode 5 is the Isle of Skye’s most famous brand, Talisker Whisky. When turning on the radio in his Bentley, Crowley hears the “Just a Minute” host present an upcoming topic, the Isle of Skye, before a demon hijacks the broadcast. And so on. (x)

This is the Heaven:

image

And this is in all likelihood the Isle of Skye :)

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terrypratchettappreciation
july-19th-club

“Is one less than fifty-one?” said P’Tang-P’Tang.

“It’s the same,” said Om, firmly. He eyed the back of the Tsortean God’s head.

“But you have thousands,” said the Newt God. “You fight for thousands.”

Om rubbed his forehead. I spent too long down there, he thought. I can’t stop thinking at ground level.

“I think,” he said, “I think, if you want thousands, you have to fight for one.”

- Terry Pratchett, Small Gods

gnu terry pratchett pterry
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halyorke-vampiredisaster asked:

Relating to crowley and aziraphale being written as a love story in the tv show - does it necessarily have to be interpreted as a romantic one? Because I too noticed their relationship being much more in the focus of the show than the book and LOVED IT but - probably since I'm asexual myself - perceived it to be a fascinating and deep friendship/platonic love. How do you feel about that?

neil-gaiman answered:

Absolutely fine. 

I wrote the relationship in the TV show, as David and Michael and Douglas and I have been cheerfully explaining to people for a long time now, as a love story, between an angel (mostly male-presenting but at one point sharing a female body) and a demon (mostly male-presenting except when he’s a nanny).

I have, for the last thirty years, believed firmly that anything anybody wants to bring to their Aziraphale and Crowley (and Anathema and Newt and Beelzebub etc) headcanon is good with me (dating back to the days before Ineffable Husbands and Air Conditioning, to the distant past when people told me they were writing Crowley and Aziraphale Slash). That’s the joy of fanfiction, the joy of fandom, the joy of headcanons. It makes me disappointed when people feel that I’m being mean by not endorsing their particular headcanon as the Only Truth, but as far as I’m concerned, what’s on the page or on the screen is the Only Truth, and anything imagined beyond that is headcanon, so at best I’d just be telling you what I (half a book author, whole TV series author) happen to think. 

Does that help?

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