"Reconstructing a human body using dragon flesh is perfectly safe", she said. "It's just like using cow or pig", she said.
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"...oh no. Did you remember those watches Scooby and Scrappy were wearing?"
Carl the Animator: “Yup, got 'em in the next scene."
Ted the Animator: “Phew! Thanks. Great continuity."
Carl the Animator: “C'mon, why wouldn't I have remembered?"
Ted the Animator: “Well, only Shaggy ever really has one, and just occasionally…"
Ted the Animator: “...so when they do their little 'synchronizing watches' bit…"
Ted the Animator: “…I mean, it's not exactly a commonplace detail."
Carl the Animator: “You underestimate me, Ted. I was never one to forget a dog watch."
Ted the Animator: “Apparently so! At any rate, let's move on to–"
Carl the Animator: “..."
Ted the Animator: “..."
Carl the Animator: “...are you... looking at Shaggy's lack of a watch?"
Ted the Animator: “..."
Carl the Animator: “...or his sausage fingers, or th–"
Ted the Animator: “Everything."
Carl the Animator: “...that's fair too."
Ted the Animator: “There's nothing in this I'm not looking at. Nothing."
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X-Men ‘97 (2024) Marvel Studios - Season 1 / Episode 3 “Fire Made Flesh”
Director: Emi Yonemura
Writers: Beau DeMayo / Charley Feldman
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X-MEN
Call me a jumper on the bandwagon, but X-Men '97 has proved another way for big corporations to take advantage of my nostalgia. Hence I redrew and coloured my old X-Men sketch, making some alterations, putting in Morph and Bishop. redrawing some faces.
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Peter Frederiksen Dramatizes the Dark Humor of Classic Cartoons in His Cropped Embroideries
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"i liked [cartoon made for television] but the first season felt really slow tbh" valid opinion, but that's not the fault of the writers.
back in the early 2010s, the western animation industry was just starting to delve into more plot-heavy cartoons, and it's pretty hard to do when whatever company you have to be the "new format" for wants more episodic content. so, the best you can do is add hints to something bigger and hope that people stay invested once those hints come into play.
luckily, this format of "lighthearted and episodic to begin with, but it gets darker as the show continues" worked well with audiences, and obviously became more popular. adventure time, gravity falls, steven universe, amphibia, and the owl house are all fairly popular cartoons and all utilize this format well.
but here's the main issue- these are all cartoons that were made for a television format, with one or two episodes a week. so while i, someone who grew up watching these shows, would wake up every saturday to catch the latest episodes, people today just need to have whatever streaming service theyre on to watch the full show in one sitting.
tl/dr, the first season of some shows arent actually "slow," it's just meant to be watched one or two episodes a week rather than watched all at once.
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I know a lot of Dungeon Meshi comic readers are annoyed that the fifth permanent member of our merry band probably isn't even going to join the team until like episode 20 at the rate things are going, but think about all the show-only fans who are going to discover their new favourite character in a few weeks' time, then four episodes later the season ends with no ETA on the next instalment. Imagine their pain.
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Thundercats opening (1985), this one always got me hyped and jumping up and down on the couch
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