Lydia Hosek's paintings, drawings, and assorted reblogs. About me: Christian, female, born 1991, United States. Please no unsolicited art requests - other asks welcome
Ok, but what if Gear Station tried to do those kid safety videos and someone decided they should make them with puppets? Emmet and Ingo would wholeheartedly enjoy it, and thus lead to the series cancelation.
The producers never got the puppets back. On occasion the Submas bring them out for jokes and pranks knowing very well how creepy they are and their own meme.
I used to think this scar marked me – the mark of the banished prince, cursed to chase the Avatar forever. But lately, I’ve realized I’m free to determine my own destiny, even if I’ll never be free of my mark.
Prince Zuko became so much more than his father expected.
just hear me out, I don’t think the atla kids would curse as much as people think sometimes
with aang it’s more obvious. the monks taught him to use his words wisely and to avoid aggressive or offensive language. aang also believes in the ability to create peace via communication. curses don’t really fit into that mindset.
sokka and katara were raised in a mostly male-led society, where girls were probably raised not to use foul language, and boys were taught not to curse around women, children, and the elderly (ie the people sokka and katara spent many of their formative years around). when they begin their travels, they’ve spent most of their lives with people who never really incorporated cursing into their diction, so it just never became a habit for them.
zuko and azula were raised among royalty, and were taught that true leadership is something innate. your speech should reflect your class and status. to curse would be to admit that you need expletives in order for others to listen to you, or that you don’t know how to speak like a proper member of the royal family. when zuko gets older, he’s also probably very cautious with his words, and does his best to make sure he’s speaking clearly and fairly and not coming off too aggressively like his father.
If Caroline had been introduced to Pleasant Company as a historical character a little earlier than 2012, she might have had a cookbook as part of her collection. I did a bit of editing to come up with what the cover might have looked like. It uses a lot of her signature color of medium pink, and the image of Caroline holding the bread comes from her paper dolls & play scenes set. The bushel of apples and jar of preserves is from Felicity’s paper dolls.
For the contents of the cookbook, I hunted through Caroline’s central series carefully to find any mentions of food. Following the standard layout of all the other six Pleasant Company character cookbooks, here’s what some of the recipes could have been:
**For the purposes of this poll, "vacation" is travel away from home for the purpose of leisure, so a routine trip just to visit Grandma probably wouldn't count**
Feel free to reblog with your answer and specific denomination.