Photoset reblogged from ZAVOCADO: Traversing the Galaxy! with 2,143 notes
Kurt + his mom
Source: hummel-colfer
Photoset reblogged from mardie186 with 3,195 notes
I think this is the summation of the reasons why I love Darren Criss.
Works for me! :D
Source: ifyouwannaviewparadise
Quote reblogged from mardie186 with 1,732 notes
Glee has been credited with creating groundbreaking television, and that’s largely thanks to Kurt and Blaine’s relationship. The Fox show didn’t make its teenage gay characters marginalized outcasts or peripheral best friends; Kurt and Blaine are front and center with their own romantic storyline, one with all the on-and-off-again, all the ups and downs, and all the drama and sweetness expected of any TV couple.
Initially, Kurt Hummel worried that he’d never find love or anything close to it as long as he was in Lima, Ohio. As far as he knew, there wasn’t another openly gay person his age in his entire town. But one town away was Blaine Anderson, who was sent to spy on Blaine’s a cappella group, the Warblers, but eventually called Kurt “the love of my life” after he transfered to Dalton Academy to get away from the bullies of McKinley High and became a Warbler himself.
Their love story can largely be traced through songs, from “When I Get You Alone” to “Blackbird,” where Blaine — who had earlier told Kurt he wanted to be just friends — realized he’d fallen for his fellow Warbler. As Kurt crooned, “All your life, you were only waiting for this moment to arise,” plenty of fans echoed the sentiment. There was the first kiss, the first “I love you,” and even the first time.
But then came the first break-up. They had tried the long-distance thing, but when Blaine visited Kurt in the Big Apple, he confessed he hooked up with someone else in Lima. But Glee has made it clear that these two haven’t been able to move on yet, perhaps most touchingly in the recent episode “Girls (and Boys) on Film,” when a movie night at Rachel and Kurt’s New York loft yielded the choice of Moulin Rouge!, which got Kurt daydreaming about singing “Come What May” — the film’s soaring love theme that Blaine and Kurt once said they’d like to sing to each other at their wedding.
Darren Criss, who plays Blaine, has said that Klaine are Glee’s Ross and Rachel. They complement one another perfectly, and it’s not just because Blaine’s tenor and Kurt’s countertenor make for some music magic. They both come off confident, but they both have their moments of doubt and fear. In those moments, they always know how to hold each other up. So the seasons are still changing for this sweet but strong pair, but we’re confident they’ll be able to work things out, come what may.
Source: tirpse
Post reblogged from Happiness Personified with 184 notes
Click here to vote for clean shaven and here to vote for scruff
Post reblogged from Happiness Personified with 1,168 notes
Click here to vote for clean shaven and here to vote for beard
Link reblogged from mardie186 with 5,067 notes
He gave Kurt a real first kiss.
He gave Kurt strength to return.
He gave Kurt someone to depend on.
He gave Kurt his entirety.
He gave Kurt support.
He gave Kurt compliments.
He gave Kurt his attention.
He gave Kurt his mornings.
He gave Kurt his afternoons.
He gave Kurt his evenings.
He gave Kurt forgiveness.
He gave Kurt his virginity.
He gave Kurt fun.
He gave Kurt romance.
He gave Kurt a hand to hold.
He gave Kurt honesty.
He gave Kurt the push he needed to follow his dreams.
He gave Kurt a promise.
He gave Kurt a reason to doubt.
And he will give Kurt a reason to trust.
OMG CRYING <3
Source: aglassofgleeblesplease
Post reblogged from emmablackery with 56,491 notes
if you’re ever sad just be thankful you arent
The human equivalent of Moon Moon.
The human equivalent of Moon Moon.
Source: egberts
Quote reblogged from ZAVOCADO: Traversing the Galaxy! with 2,310 notes
With Glee, for example, Murphy came into a recent meeting and declared, “I’m obsessed with ‘At the Ballet’ from A Chorus Line, and I want Sarah Jessica Parker to sing it during some kind of blackout, where the kids get back to basics.” Then it was up to the writing staff to figure out how to make that work. Sometimes Murphy’s plot instructions are a little more esoteric; he’s been known to come into a room and say things like, “I’m obsessed with the color orange right now. Figure out a way we can do a tribute to orange.
out magazine, in which we learn that glee is meticulously planned and everything that happens is deeply meaningful and thought-out!!! (via icedwhitemocha)
oh my fucking god
(via daenerystorm-born)
And that is why Glee is the way it is.
(via badwolftemperance)
Source: icedwhitemocha
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