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36 Things To Do With An Extra Second

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Live your leap second to the fullest.

Alanna Okun / BuzzFeed

1. Wink at your crush.
2. Like a picture of a dog on Instagram.
3. Text "Cool!" or "Great!" instead of "k."
4. Pluck that chin hair you always stroke thoughtfully throughout the day (don't worry, a new one will come along).
5. Do a good stretch.
6. Fart surreptitiously.
7. Flip your pillow to the cold side.

Alanna Okun / BuzzFeed

8. Take a deep breath (you'll only have time to inhale, exhale on your own time).
9. Look up from your phone.
10. Give yourself a hug.
11. Or a high-five.
12. Or BOTH AT THE SAME TIME.
13. Squeeze an avocado to make sure it's perfectly ripe.
14. Smell a book.
15. Do finger guns.
16. Take a one-second nap (known in some circles as "blinking").


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What's Your Literary Porn Star Name?

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Are you more of a Kurt Vonnebutt or an Edgar Allan Hoe?


The Ultimate Literary Guide To America

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Literary landmarks abound from sea to shining sea.

Maritsa Patrinos / BuzzFeed

From museums and historic homes to out-of-the-way bookstores and bars, your literary-themed summer roadtrip just got easier to plan.

The Northeast:

The Northeast:

Maritsa Patrinos / BuzzFeed

Sleepy Hollow, New York

Sleepy Hollow, New York

visitsleepyhollow.com


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Here's How To Unclog A Toilet Like A Goddamn Adult

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Take the plunge.

Alice Mongkongllite for BuzzFeed

First things first: minimize flooding.

First things first: minimize flooding.

fuckyeahhelgapataki.tumblr.com / Via cdn29.elitedaily.com

Shut the water supply off ASAP.

Shut the water supply off ASAP.

Julia Reinstein for BuzzFeed // reprehensible / CC BY-SA 2.0 / Via Flickr: reprehensible


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“Fun Home” Is Bringing Butch Lesbians Into The Mainstream

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Joan Marcus

I read Alison Bechdel’s graphic memoir Fun Home for the first time after my girlfriend gave it to me.

Here, you’ll love this. I know you will.

But my discovery could just as easily have been the result of some late night googling of “lesbian books” as a curious teenager tired of boy-induced heartache; it could have involved scouring into the carefully curated gay section of an independent bookstore; it could have been a gift from a mentor, or a friend. Whatever the case, finding Fun Home — for me, for so many of the other queer women I know — has been intentional. Almost ceremoniously so. The intentions have either been our own, or those of other queers who knew us and loved us. Fun Home is something sought; something bestowed; something tended; something really fucking special.

At the time it was first published in 2006, the book deservedly won a slew of awards and topped best-seller lists. Despite its literary success, and a readership that has expanded far wider than the typical indie queer comic, I always considered it first and foremost a story by, for, and about queers. It belonged to us.

Earlier this month, at the Tony Awards ceremony, Fun Home’s Broadway adaptation scored five awards, including the coveted Best Musical, but I still hadn’t seen the show yet — not in its earlier iteration at The Public or during its current run at Circle in the Square. Fun Home the musical is the story of Bechdel drawing Fun Home the book; the oldest of three Alison characters spends much of the hundred-minute show pacing around her desk, or watching from the wings, as her memories incarnate surround her in song. Now, bathed in Tonys success, Bechdel’s personal reckonings of her childhood — as Beth Malone playing oldest Alison summarizes, “My dad and I both grew up in the same small Pennsylvania town / and he was gay and I was gay / and he killed himself / and I became a lesbian cartoonist” — are being seen, and heard, and felt, and loved, by more people than we ever could have imagined.

This is what I’ve long since advocated for, personally and professionally — center-stage LGBT representation in popular media that defies tired tropes. Better yet, Fun Home features a lesbian protagonist who isn’t limited to her coming out narrative; overall, the show (like its source material) is about Bechdel’s fraught relationship with her father. It’s about memory, and loss, and connection, and growing up.

But even as I brimmed with joy in the days after the Tonys, thrilled that this gorgeous story is being celebrated and seen, a small part of me wondered if throwing a beloved piece of queer culture into the mainstream would cheapen it somehow.

I thought about this especially after reading an interview with Bechdel, when she put words to what had been my unnameable worry. “I feel wistful for the sense of being special,” she told the New York Times last month. “When gay people were rejected, there was this camaraderie and this sense of community that I don’t feel anymore. I miss that.”

She added that, despite her wistfulness, she would never want to “go back politically,” of course — who would? Countrywide support is at an all-time high, and will surely continue to climb in light of the Supreme Court's ruling in favor of marriage equality; it’s a good time in American history to be queer (all the more reason to be focusing contemporary LGBT efforts on uplifting transgender people, particularly trans women of color).

Even still — as we hurtle toward mainstream acceptance, what does queer culture stand to lose?

Though it’s an enormous question, when it comes to this one particular piece of queer culture, all I could do was see for myself.

Alison Bechdel and Sydney Lucas

Jemal Countess / Getty Images

On a Thursday night, I milled outside Circle in the Square with a sippy cup of chardonnay from the theater’s bar. There were, as expected, plenty of queer people in attendance: cosmopolitan New Yorkers; high school students with bad baby gay haircuts; old couples who walked to their seats leaning close, as if one half couldn’t stand without the other. But there were, as expected, plenty of other people too: the Broadway die-hards, swapping stories of past shows; tourists; parents and their children. Everyone excited. Everyone with something different to be excited for.

From the first few moments of the show, Beth Malone as oldest Alison, leaning against her drawing desk with pen in hand, left me breathless. Her performance of butch lesbianism is a triumph. Mainstream representations of masculine women are rare enough, let alone on Broadway (is there anyone else besides that one-liner punchline of a dyke in The Producers?). Whenever butch lesbians do come along, they’re often lacking — like Melora Hardin’s Tammy from the otherwise outstanding Amazon series Transparent, whose forced macho swagger always managed to make me uncomfortable. Malone’s butchness, on the contrary, was remarkable. The wide stance, the loose shoulders, the pitching slightly forward as she walked, the ease with which she wore the standby lesbian uniform of a T-shirt and loose-fitting jeans — I saw in her every movement the motions of the masculine women I’ve loved, who occupy space unthinkingly, taking up room, all strong and gentle limbs.

Sydney Lucas and Beth Malone

Theo Wargo / Getty Images

Beyond the beauty in the way Malone uses her body is the way she uses dry humor to do due diligence to Bechdel’s “family tragicomic” — a paradoxical categorization that the show tackles with grace. There’s hilarity in middle Alison singing that she’s “changing her major to sex with Joan,” the first woman she’s ever slept with; and then there’s heartache when, after her professed sexual awakening, her mother refuses to come to the phone when she calls home from college.

I saw myself in middle Alison’s tumultuous joys and sadnesses. As she romped around her room in tighty-whities, trying not to wake the girl asleep in her bed (“who needs dignity / 'cause this so much better”), I remembered with embarrassing clarity the high that accompanies that first threefold realization: a) sex is the best, b) sex with women is the best, and c) holy cow, I am SO gay, how could I possibly not have figured this out earlier?

It was sort of an extraordinary thing, to be an audience member of a renowned cultural phenomenon without having to suspend my own disbelief for once. I’ve been able to disregard hundreds of characters’ compulsive heterosexuality since I was little. Of course, whenever straight audiences are asked to identify with queer characters, they tend to find that they can do the exact same thing — queer needn’t be an impenetrable niche, no matter what nameless big-shot studio execs and literary editors might fear. As everyone crowding inside the theater listened with alternately swelling and breaking hearts all around me, their reactions affirmed that more and more creative decision-makers will continue greenlighting queer stories for the mainstream, because (obviously, banally, radically) queers are relatable, too. And for those of us starved for stories that reflect our own lives at our best and at our messiest, that’s plenty worth celebrating.

And yet, I still find that affirmation bittersweet.

Sydney Lucas and Michael Cerveris

Theo Wargo / Getty Images

One of oldest Alison’s most well-received lines is “Caption: My dad and I were everything alike / Caption: My dad and I were nothing alike.” It’s the show’s heartbeat. Both Alison and her dad are gay, though she will go on to thrive as a lesbian after he dies half-closeted and alone.

I can’t help but think of queer people and straight people falling into this binary too. We’re everything alike (plain old human beings) and nothing alike (too many examples to possibly name). Sometimes I feel like straight people are aliens. But of course, I adore a ton of them to the ends of the Earth and back — my aunts and uncles, my siblings, some of my best friends.

When I left the show, borne on a sea of rave review chatter up the escalator and out into the balmy summer night, I started messaging with an old friend from high school who works in theater about Jeanine Tesori and Lisa Kron’s astounding book and score. I didn’t mention that I was intermittently tearing up while standing alone on a busy block in Midtown Manhattan.

“Can you hear my heart saying hi?” she quoted to me with a smiley emoji. It’s a line from “Ring of Keys,” in which little Alison sees an old school butch at a luncheonette and feels a burst of connection with, and a longing to be, that kind of woman — one who “seem[s] OK with being strong.” It’s a song about desire. It’s a song about queerness that isn’t about sex, but about presentation, fulfillment, identification. Taking up room.

I wondered how my friend, a straight woman, thought about that line, and how it must mean something so different to her than it does to me. Had she ever seen queer desire in a child laid so bare before? Had I?

As I made my way to the subway, she messaged me her praises of the show: “Everyone can find something to relate to, gay or straight. It's about family and finding yourself and coming to terms with life. The Alisons of the world hopefully aren’t so mysterious after a show like this.”

I admitted to her that, in a way, I worry about that mystery disappearing. It’s such a bizarre worry: Of course I want to feel known, understood, and loved by broader culture; of course I want queerness demystified, inasmuch as that demystification would curb instances of intolerance and persecution against LGBT people. So why is the prospect of being perfectly and easily relatable to straight people making me feel as if I’m about to lose something important?

Maybe we need to lose a little to gain a whole lot more. The cost of equal recognition under the law, equal access to jobs and healthcare, and equal respect in our classrooms and boardrooms might just mean we’re a little less of a secret underground club, with all the cultural clout that affords. Fun Home probably shouldn’t belong to queer people alone, any more than it should belong to people who grew up in funeral homes. But queerness will always be its central, resounding tenant. That matters.

In the last song of the show, “Flying Away,” all three Alisons harmonize together, expressing their wants through the dizzying prism of change and memory. Little Alison wants to play airplane. Middle Alison, newly out in the world beyond rural Pennsylvania, wants to soar into her new life. Oldest Alison, looking back and through both of them, wants transcendence. It’s a refrain that every character in the family has cycled through, in one song or another: “I want, I want, I want.” Fun Home is about yearning. I can’t think of anything more human than that.

While sorting through my own messy wants, I’m trying to convince myself that straight people loving queer cultural touchstones like Fun Home doesn’t mean I’m forced to love them any less.

“I bet we watched very different shows,” my friend said. “And that’s the coolest part.”

We just love those touchstones differently, is all.


What Would Your Ultimate Hogwarts Experience Look Like?

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We’ll give you a name, school supplies, and a house, but the rest is up to your imagination.

Michelle Regna for BuzzFeed / Warner Bros

First, what's your witch name? You can re-roll up to ten times.

Or wizard name if you prefer?

Now, it's time to get Sorted. You only get one shot.


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Here's The One Thing JK Rowling Wants Everyone To Know About The New Harry Potter Play

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“It’s not a prequel. It really, really isn’t a prequel. Not a prequel. Not at all prequelly. It is an anti-prequel. #NotAPrequel” —J.K. Rowling


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What's Your Literary Pen Name?

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Would your bestseller be written by Lydia Rowbottom or Niles Archer?

commons.wikimedia.org


What's Your Favorite Song To Listen To While You Drive?

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♫ Life is a highway… ♫

Driving without music is the worst.

Driving without music is the worst.

Warner Bros. Pictures

Whether you're alone or with a friend, singing along to your favorite album just makes a road trip more fun.

Whether you're alone or with a friend, singing along to your favorite album just makes a road trip more fun.

CBS

So what do you listen to? What's your favorite song to play while you're in your car?

So what do you listen to? What's your favorite song to play while you're in your car?

Paramount Pictures

Perhaps it's a song that makes you sing so loud you almost lose your voice.

Perhaps it's a song that makes you sing so loud you almost lose your voice.

Paramount Pictures


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53 Of The Most Heartbreaking Sentences In Fantasy Books

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“Always.”

Suggested by Melanie Rainone, Facebook / Scott Cresswell CC / Via Flickr: scott-s_photos

2. "The Potters smiled and waved at Harry and he stared hungrily back at them, his hands pressed flat against the glass as though he was hoping to fall right through it and reach them."
—J.K. Rowing, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone
Suggested by Minjee Kim, Facebook

3. "Every atom of me and every atom of you...We'll live in birds and flowers and dragonflies and pine trees and in clouds and in those little specks of light you see floating in sunbeams...And when they use our atoms to make new lives, they won't just be able to take one, they'll have to take two, one of you and one of me, we'll be joined so tight..."
—Philip Pullman, The Amber Spyglass
Suggested by Annie Hedlund, Facebook

4. "You know nothing, Jon Snow," she sighed, dying.
—George R.R. Martin, A Storm of Swords
Suggested by Mario Sanz, Facebook

Suggested by Hannah Lawrence, Facebook / Manolo Blanco CC / Via Flickr: manoloblanco


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15 Flawless Tips For Maintaining Healthy Hair

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Hair game: Strong.

Pre-shampoo with apple cider vinegar.

"It can be applied as a pre-shampoo treatment to help break up product residue and also as a post-shampoo rinse for added shine." — Destinee Hanson-Miller

instagram.com

Only shampoo from your roots to the mid-shafts of your hair.

Only shampoo from your roots to the mid-shafts of your hair.

"When you rinse it out it'll cleanse the rest of the hair shaft." — Alexandria Anderson

Olive Bridge Entertainment


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17 Tricks To Help You Eat Healthy Without Even Trying

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One hour of food prep on Sunday = healthy eating so easy you don’t even think about it.

Jenny Chang / BuzzFeed

Excellent amazing news! You can eat healthy every day of the week without even really thinking about it, or trying that hard. It's true.

instagram.com

BuzzFeed Life reached out to Abby Langer, RD, a registered dietitian and owner of Abby Langer Nutrition. She heartily endorses this style of plan-ahead-to-be-lazy kind of healthy eating, and gave some suggestions that you might want to try out.

Chop celery and carrots into sticks, and create little hummus and veggie snack jars.

Chop celery and carrots into sticks, and create little hummus and veggie snack jars.

"Snacks! They're so important!" Langer says via email. Each weekend, "get everything for snacks together and make sure you replenish what you don't have."

For these cool little veggie snack jars, stash them in your fridge and grab one each morning on your way out. Hits the spot.

Sarah Rae Smith / Via thekitchn.com


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The Hardest "Game Of Thrones" Quiz You'll Ever Take

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What do we say to wrong answers? Not today! WARNING: SEASON 5 SPOILERS TO FOLLOW


7 Pictures Of Dumbledore Being Fabulous

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Brought to you by the powers of photoshop.

Dumbledore eating fro-yo.

Dumbledore eating fro-yo.

Warner Bros / Yogurtland / Shami Sivasubramanian

Dumbledore taking a selfie.

Dumbledore taking a selfie.

Warner Bros / Apple / Pink Sunsets / Shami Sivasubramanian

Dumbledore aligning his chakras.

Dumbledore aligning his chakras.

Warner Bros / Stonelea Yoga / Shami Sivasubramanian

Dumbledore baking a cake.

Dumbledore baking a cake.

Warner Bros / Martha Stewart / Shami Sivasubramanian


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What Would Your "Fifty Shades Of Grey" Name Be?

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Are you more of an Anastasia Silver or a Christian Charcoal?


35 Out-Of-This-World Ideas For A Space-Themed Nursery

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For future astronauts and little Martians alike.

Lauren Paul / BuzzFeed

Show them the world.

Show them the world.

This awesome star theater shows a view of the earth from space.

urbanoutfitters.com

Light up the night.

Light up the night.

These stick-on twinkly lights are mesmerizing.

yourdecoshop.com

Shout your baby's arrival to the stars.

Shout your baby's arrival to the stars.

With personalized space-themed birth stats.

etsy.com


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37 Insanely Adorable Crafts To Make With Kids

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Or with anyone.

Koala Stuffie

Koala Stuffie

A cute little koala friend, stitched up by hand.

Lia Griffith / Via kollabora.com

Party Animal Costumes

Party Animal Costumes

Dress 'em up as their favorite animals with a quick and easy nose and tail costume.

Thimble Studios / Via kollabora.com

Fabric Crown

Fabric Crown

Who doesn't want to be king (or queen) for a day?

Marta Duarte / Via kollabora.com

Felt Vegetable "Garden"

Felt Vegetable "Garden"

Stitch up sweet little felt veggies for your own "garden".

Lia Griffith / Via kollabora.com


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53 Books You Won't Be Able To Put Down

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What happens next? There’s only one way to find out.

Maritsa Patrinos / BuzzFeed

Vintage


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Which Jane Austen Hero Are You?

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It’s possible you’ll walk away from this knowing you’re a Darcy.


19 DIY Things To Do With Your Old Confederate Flag

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Tear it into handkerchiefs to use when you have swine flu?

1. Cut it into cute, colorful doggy poop bags.
2. Use it to line your cat's litter box.
3. Tear it into handkerchiefs to use when you have swine flu. Then burn the handkerchiefs immediately.
4. Cut it into strips to use as extra toilet paper in the powder room at your plantation.

Maritsa Patrinos / BuzzFeed

5. Keep one in the back of your toilet tank to reduce water usage.
6. Use it to clean your toilet so your hands don't get dirty.
7. Use it as a rag to clean up counters and surfaces after your "Ding Dong The Flag Is Gone" party.
8. Sew it into a Katniss Everdeen-style gown that catches on fire when you walk into a room.

Maritsa Patrinos / BuzzFeed


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25 Irresistibly Cute Sanrio Tattoos

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Helloooooo Kitty!

If you're a fan of small tattoos, this dainty Hello Kitty will do the trick.

instagram.com

Check out this perfect depiction of My Melody!

instagram.com

For the Hello Kitty fan who is also a bookworm.

instagram.com

Here's a cartoony Keroppi for all Sanrio frog lovers.

instagram.com


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17 Life Hacks From Tumblr That Are Actually Kinda Genius

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No seriously, there’s some great ones.

This motivational way to save money.

As well as this hugely handy travel hack.

This useful washing up hack.

If you struggle carrying all your groceries - struggle NO MORE.


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25 Instagram Tips Every Hipster Should Know

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Neither kale nor man buns are necessary.

VSCOcam (Free, iOS and Android) is a vintage hipster favorite (how appropriate) and has the best filters. Some hip favorites include the Aesthetic series and the Hype Beast series.

Afterlight ($0.99, iOS and Android) has super user friendly editing tools. It also lets you add hip, analog effects like "light leaks" and "dust".

Litely (Free, iOS) filters photos in a really subtle way. This is the app for bringing out the best in already-beautiful photos.

Instagram (free, iOS, Android), because duh.

fantasticwesanderson.tumblr.com

Tiffany Kim / BuzzFeed


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13 Amazing Book Plotlines That Never Made It To "Game Of Thrones"

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There’s not enough airtime in the world for Tyrion’s shenanigans alone.

While enslaved, Tyrion becomes part of a private menagerie owned by a Yunkish millionaire.

While enslaved, Tyrion becomes part of a private menagerie owned by a Yunkish millionaire.

•His dwarfism makes him a prized addition to Yezzan zo Qaggaz's "collection."
•His companions in slavery include Sweets, the only intersex character in A Song Of Ice And Fire, and Penny – a young woman dwarf who performed an insulting clown set at King Joffrey's wedding.
•After his master dies of the plague, Tyrion escapes slavery and joins a sellsword company.

HBO / Via reactiongifs.me

The Sand Snakes conspire to crown Princess Myrcella as Queen of the Seven Kingdoms based on a loophole in Westerosi law.

The Sand Snakes conspire to crown Princess Myrcella as Queen of the Seven Kingdoms based on a loophole in Westerosi law.

•When Dorne was absorbed into the seven kingdoms, it was under the condition that "Dornish law will always rule in Dorne."
•The Dornish practice absolute primogeniture, meaning that the order of succession is determined solely by birth order, not gender. The rest of the seven kingdoms places female offspring behind all male offspring, regardless of age.
•Because of these two rules, the Sand Snakes argue that Myrcella, being older than Tommen, is the legal and rightful queen of the Seven Kingdoms.
•They plan to spirit the "Queen" away from Sunspear but are caught. Princess Myrcella loses an ear in the process.

HBO / Via vanityfair.com

It's not explicitly stated in the show, but true men of the North cannot become knights.

It's not explicitly stated in the show, but true men of the North cannot become knights.

•Knighthood in the Seven Kingdoms is conferred by a holy anointing and is connected to the Faith of the Seven.
•Men who follow the religion of the First Men, or Weirwood worship, are excluded from the order, usually by choice.
•There are a few exceptions in the books, including Northern Knight Jorah Mormont, but in the books it's rare to find a Northern-born Knight at Winterfell or anywhere else.

HBO / Via giphy.com


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The Definitive Ranking Of Parents On "Game Of Thrones"

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From worst to best.

Stannis & Selyse Baratheon

Stannis & Selyse Baratheon

These two basically treated their daughter like livestock: Locked her in a cage for her entire life and then burned her at the stake as an offering to the Lord of Light.

HBO / Via google.com

Mr. & Mrs. Olly

Mr. & Mrs. Olly

If anyone should be burned at the stake, it's these two for releasing the demon spawn himself into this world.

HBO / Via youtube.com

Craster

Craster

"Crasternomics" - noun: Sustaining your stronghold by trading your sons to supernatural creatures for protection while creating an endless supply of children by marrying and impregnating all of your daughters.

HBO / Via google.com

Daenerys "Mother of Dragons" Targaryen

Daenerys "Mother of Dragons" Targaryen

Dany is that mom who has 18 different "MY KID IS AN HONOR STUDENT" bumper stickers on the back of her minivan despite her kids bullying the nerds into doing their homework. Her oldest child killed someone and ran away from home, so she chained the other two up in a dungeon instead of, you know, teaching them not to kill people.

HBO / Via google.com


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