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#cfs!jughead
ao3feed-jarchie · 10 months
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I want to live
read it on the AO3 at https://ift.tt/pFIekMJ
by Ace_Fanboy0405
Jughead had a normal life. Yes, usually when he had a cold it crushed him for weeks but they didn't think much about it.
When he got diagnosed with cystic fibrosis at the age of thirteen — and his mother left at the same time — his life turned.
Suddenly he wasn't allowed to leave to go to most school trips. Suddenly, as soon as he developed a fever, it was another month in the hospital. Suddenly he missed more school days than he was there and most of his friend eventually turned their backs.
He couldn't miss out on his senior trip though. He just couldn't, even if he still had a fever and technically might have run away from the hospital.
Words: 1770, Chapters: 1/1, Language: English
Series: Part 51 of Jughead x Archie works
Fandoms: Riverdale (TV 2017)
Rating: Mature
Warnings: Graphic Depictions Of Violence, No Archive Warnings Apply
Categories: M/M
Characters: Jughead Jones, Archie Andrews, FP Jones II, Jellybean Jones, Ethel Muggs, Coach Harry Clayton (Archie Comics)
Relationships: Archie Andrews & Jughead Jones, Archie Andrews/Jughead Jones, Jellybean Jones & Jughead Jones
Additional Tags: Fluff and Angst, Jughead Jones has CF
read it on the AO3 at https://ift.tt/pFIekMJ
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So I watched Five Feet Apart….
I really loved this movie! Cole Sprouse was soo good in this and I actually think this was better than what he did in Riverdale as much as I love Jughead as a character. Will was really great as a love interest and for once I can actually say I understand why he’s such a good love interest ( a lot of YA love interests just miss something for me, the only other YA couple I’ve completely loved was Percy and Annabeth and Alaska and Pudge). I thought the portrayal of cystic fibrosis was respectful and would bring more awareness to CF. Poe was great as well, and the part where he passes had me so emotional. The ending with Will and Stella literally made me cry and I barely ever cry( few movies and really only my sisters keeper and tfios have made me cry). I actually see a lot of similarities between these three and especially tfios. I like this a bit more however, because I don’t find Will quite as pretentious as Augustus(I loved Augustus, but I’ve always felt John Green’s style of thinking fit more in Looking for Alaska than tfios). I also felt like there was more emotion in the fact that they couldn’t touch until Stella almost died at the end and him leaving her after the transplant impacted me far more than a death . Overall I give this movie a 8/10! I want to read the book even more now.
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Out of curiosity, what do you feel Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Jughead?
okay i am like 90% sure i’ve had this thought before because it totally makes sense so thank you for reminding me of it (and i’m a sucker for literally any hc with my disabilities) okay gonna ramble about it for a minute:
first some basics: so we don’t know what causes chronic fatigue syndrome or CFS, but there are contributing factors like stress, hormonal imbalances, a viral infection, or genetics. 
main symptoms are extreme fatigue, chronic insomnia, fatigue is not improved by rest, mental/physical activity worsens fatigue, etc
jughead is a known insomniac it’s been shown many times. the first page of the 2015 comic is them staying up all night. when you have chronic fatigue you just kind of have to work with it, some times you physically can’t sleep for days, and others you can’t stop sleeping. 
jug gets very fatigued from doing physical activity and avoids doing it a lot 
jughead is always described as being lazy and that’s something a lot of people with cfs get told
napping can sometimes help people with cfs get through the day when they are having really bad fatigue or had a bad night sleep (which are frequent with cfs) 
jughead is shown as a frequent napper sometimes even shown to nap everyday especially after doing things 
cfs can also cause dizziness or lightheadedness when standing, sitting up, etc. which has been shown to happen to jughead 
also here are some Jug quotes that have big CFS vibes (i could definitely find a lot more but i just looked through a few comics):
“I move so little and eat so much, I no longer need to sleep to feel rejuvenated.” to this Archie says, “You know that’s not how bodies work.” and Jug says, “I just told you, my body doesn’t work. That’s how I stay awake.”
“Sleeping is way better than running at least...”
“A day like this is just made for a nap.” to which Archie replies, “For you, every day is just made for a nap.”
Jughead buys a grabber arm tool and picks up a remote with it saying, “But see how easily the grabber removes one of life’s obstacles!” to this Archie says, “Moving two feet is an obstacle?”
later on, Jughead is showing Veronica their grabber arm and says, “With this little beauty, I no longer have to exert myself!”
“I’m no acrobat! I get dizzy looking down to tie my shoes!”
disability headcanons definitely don’t need to be supported by canon because screw canon and there is so little rep (especially good rep) we have to make our own. but cfs!jughead has a strong canon base and that was so awesome to look into and discover!
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riverdaleisbae · 7 years
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Here, atleast, in this booth, we were safe.
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thetaoofbetty · 3 years
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People need to cut Cole/Jughead some slack. Cole has stated on more than one occasion he is a method actor. His mom has also stated in one of her IG rants that she trained those boys in method acting. Cole lost a significant amount of weight to play a CF patient. Who’s to say he didn’t embrace method with his weight gain and appearance change to present Jughead as a down on his luck drunk. It would seem strange to me if Jughead came back looking 18 again. He is the only one that made his age seem to match the storyline.
i...have said nothing about cole or his weight? i also have nothing to say about it. it’s not really my business. if he says he gained it for riverdale, cool. if he gained it because we’re working with pandemic issues (i’ve gained a couple of pounds myself, truthfully. because i walk a lot less than i used to. it turns out never leaving your house means less walking, who knew? okay and also there was a lot of christmas candy going on in the last tragic month of 2020) also cool. 
i have nothing to say about his weight because that’s what i’d want people to say about mine. or anyone’s tbh. 
i do, however, have something to say about the struggle stubble. which is, pls god i hope it goes away soon. 
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riverdale-retread · 3 years
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Riverdale Season 1 Finale!
Every kind of spoiler!
- This an episode when the kids all act like kids. It's touching.
Jughead makes a terrible juvenile pun about Clifford Blossom's cliffhanging suicide by hanging, but also continues to call him MISTER Blossom. Kid logic also prevails in the sentiment: All my dad did was dispose of the body and cover up a murder! That's nothing!
And of course, Jughead's terrified, IS THAT YOUR MOM?! is immortal.
Veronica standing up all tense at the cafeteria table to announce her relationship to Betty. Aww sweetie!
Cheryl wailing Mommy! at Penelope.
Archie running, literally, to talk to FP about Jughead instead of doing his typical Something Someone Should Do.
Betty crying in her mom's arms because her boyfriend is transferring to a different school.
- Mayor McCoy is both glamorous and menacing and I still say they missed an opportunity to make more of her as a villain.
- The Blossom curse!! First mention! Oh and of course the Blossom funeral outfits are - ahem- killer. Those veils, those brooches, the tailoring on those jackets!
- Why o why does Archie have to do the thing of pining after Betty ~now~?? He has Veronica!
- JOSIE with the long blue braids! She looks amazing! If it's anyone Archie should be suddenly smitten with it's her! Oh wait. They get together sort of later. Wow. So dumbass Archie gets to be with 2/3 Pussycats? And the Jubilee outfits!!! I am a huge fan. Plus Valerie is such a professional and doesn't act childishly about Varchie.
- One of the many pleasures of this show is how beautifully it's shot. Bughead in the snow. When Betty confronts Alice about secrets, there's a mirror image of Alice also looking at Betty, a sort of True Alice and False Alice jointly taking in what Betty says. Varchie in super sensual silhouette.
- Cheryl sends the cry- for-help note to Mama V like a smart girl. And once again- how beautiful is Cheryl? Even half drowned she looks like a fairytale mermaid. Setting her house on fire, she looks like a goddess!
- Betty's speech. Once again - How big is Riverdale? Absolutely everyone knows who Kevin Keller is or Jughead Jones?
Jughead The Stealth Protagonist
- Gladys told the social worker she is "over extended." Screw you, Gladys.
- Veronica says You and I have a lot in common! and Jughead immediately flips out and I feel extremely validated, though I entirely forgot this exchange ever happened.
- I cancel what I said about Jughead forgiving Cheryl for the pummeling in a saintly way. And mea culpa to Cheryl for forgetting that she both apologized and paid damages to Jughead.
- Jughead's first day at Southside High! How or why is he liked immediately?? But it doesn't last, does it? Is it because Archie invaded this space?
- That gentle conversation with FP in the prison, which is suddenly bathed in warm yellow light rather than the chilly blue it normally is. FP / Jughead might be my favorite scenes in this series.
- Jughead has learned some things about harmonious home decor from Alice Cooper and Mary Andrews. I forgot that he redecorated his family trailer to his liking after his dad was jailed.
- And I continue to be moved by High Functioning Teen Jughead, who knows he should make his home look nice before he brings his ladyfriend over for a good time (see cf. his hitting on Tabitha in the bunker in S 5 E. 10).
- The putting on the Serpent jacket scene is of course absolutely delicious. This sort of high is why we watch serialized television!
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Have you seen Five Feet Apart yet??
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harris-coopers · 5 years
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Cole Sprouse talks Five Feet Apart, singing on-screen and Riverdale season 4
PopBuzz: One thing that surprised me about the film was how it’s so heartbreaking and yet so hopeful at the same time. It felt so different to other films that fit in the same genre. Was that something you guys wanted to make sure you got across? To show the light?
Cole Sprouse: Yeah I mean, first off, I think Justin's mission statement, our director, was always one of hope and the job for Haley and I was to try and shave off the natural romanticising that takes place within that genre into something that felt a little more grounded and honest for the characters. But the interpretive ending allowed us to have the audience sort of decide what they felt happened to the characters. I think Justin was in the mind that if you're gonna do a movie that hopefully is going to be viewed by the cystic fibrosis community, then the message we wanna give to them is one of hope, not necessarily one that felt on the darker side of that narrative.
PB: This is the first movie you’ve done in a long time. What was it about this film, and the role of Will in particular, that drew you back in?
CS: Well, I was pretty hesitant at first. And I think that's because this genre has the potential to do a lot of damage if it's sort of represented incorrectly. At the end of the day, it was really after I met with Justin and finding out how passionate he was about the cystic fibrosis community and the mission statement being one of hope that that kind of put all my trepidations to rest. In terms of career trajectory? To be honest, I've had that question a lot and I wish I'd been thinking about it. I wanted to work during the hiatus on Riverdale and this lined up perfectly with it. It just seemed like a good move at the time.
PB: I know you’ve spoken about the immense responsibility of telling the story of such a heavily underrepresented community, how much preparation did you undergo for the role? I know you said that physically it was a challenge for you as well.
CS: Yeah, we had the luxury of about a month and a half of prep and research, alongside the advice of actual patients with cystic fibrosis and medical professionals. With their advice, I had a physical regimen to get me into the kind of shape or image of a cystic fibrosis patient. And then of course they gave us a lot of time to understand the psychology of grappling with your mortality at a very young age and how that effects social foundation and relationship building.
PB: The reaction to the film on social media has been incredible so far. Has anyone from the community reached out to you about it yet? And what did they say?
CS: We got a lot of really really positive feedback from the CF community, it's very validating. Ultimately, you know, they're why we made the movie so their acceptance is the currency of the success in my opinion and I think that's been really reassuring. Before the movie had come out, there was a lot of fear that it would misrepresent the community or would do damage to the representation through the sheer notion of romance or encourage a dangerous sort of connection. But the community has been really really responsive to the representation that we have. Yeah, so really reassuring.
PB: That's amazing to hear. The film has such an incredible cast with Haley - who is brilliant - and of course, your little Disney Channel reunion with Moises Arias. How was it working with the two of them? You guys seemed to have such a great dynamic on-screen.
CS: Yeah, I think Haley and I kind of had the same idea of how we wanted to play the characters, which was way more grounded in realism than what could have been the kind of overacting that often comes within that genre. And we got along really well! It's one of those things were you roll the dice, you can have chemistry and you can try to do as much as possible, but you don't really know how the work environment is going to be alongside your co-stars until you're there. And we were lucky enough to have gotten a good roll on the dice and really get along quite well! Haley's talented, she's also a very giving actress - and I act in a very similar way. So, we both cared a lot. Considering the kind of content we were grappling with, we were able to validate one another.
PB: Well, speaking about the emotional heaviness of the script and the subject, how did you guys combat that on set? I just saw that you and Haley went on a strip club tour... which is amazing.
CS: We did!
PB: How else did you keep your spirits up?
CS: To be quite honest, when we were on set, there was a responsibility and an emotional continuity that we needed to keep in order to stay in it. And I'm of the mind that it's better not to take from that. Toward the end of production, we were able to loosen up a little bit after the more emotional scenes had taken place and we had finished those and moved onto the last week of the production cycle. We were able to let go a little bit. In terms of levity, we really didn't allow ourselves to fall into too much levity. To be honest, it felt kind of inappropriate to detach from that. But New Orleans is an incredibly vibrant and wonderful city with wonderful food and great drinking. A really great nightlife! And more bachelor and bachelorette parties than I have ever seen in my life.
PB: I bet!
CS: So it was fun to kind of get lost in that crowd.
PB: One of my favourite parts of the film is the scene where Will sings to Stella and it’s so great that I get to talk to you now because of course, in the musical episode of Riverdale,you sing! And it's incredible!
CS: Thanks!
PB: Previously, you said that it would take a lot for someone to get you to sing and now you’ve sung twice. What made you finally say, “yeah, I’m gonna do it”?
CS: To be honest, I think I was mis-quoted the first time I said that. What I actually said when I said I wouldn't sing is that, Disney Channel was asking me and my brother to drop an album for very many years. And that's what we didn't wanna do. I mean, I've sung on The Suite Life, I've sung on a couple other projects and you know, when it's in character, it's not a problem for me. When it's 'Cole Sprouse singing,' it becomes very strange and vulnerable. It's just a matter of making sense for the character in the moment. For Will, it was a matter of comforting Stella in the same way that she had been comforted and trying to bring a little joy to something incredibly frightening - like surgery. And for Jughead, it was a moment of incredible vulnerability and really a tragedy that kind of fit perfectly to the narrative.
PB: Yeah. Like you just said, it depends on the character but let’s say Jughead decided to let it all go for a night and get involved with karaoke at La Bonne Nuit... What’s the one song you do think he would get up and sing?
CS: Oh, man... you know that angsty emo kid would sing some Avenged Sevenfold or Panic! At The Disco. Something incredibly emo.
PB: Maybe a slam poetry version?!
CS: Oh, of course! He'd be the guy in like, the top hat and all the bracelets looking like an amateur musician doing slam poetry.
PB: Love it! So what's happening next for you? Hiatus is coming up, you're still working on Riverdale now, you've got your photography, anything else lined up? Any other acting gigs?
CS: Yeah! I have one little project that I can't speak too much about lined up for the hiatus. I'd like to manoeuvre my way through the film thing where I'd like to do at least one film a year and it be of a more artistic calibre than a kind of commercial one. I've done Five Feet Apart and it was a commercial project, Riverdale is such a mainstream project that I'd like to live within the independent life for a bit. And then, a lot of photography! Honestly, I haven't stopped working for the last 3 years. So in the event I just sit on the couch for the whole time, I think that would be a welcome relaxation at this point.
PB: Absolutely! My last question, I hope you don’t mind, it’s about Riverdale…
CS: Sure!
PB: We’re winding down toward the end of season 3, there's been some huge shockwaves being sent through Jughead’s home life with his mum right now. Where do you want to see Jughead’s story go in season 4? Because he's changed so much. What do you think is ahead for him?
CS: I think when Riverdale is at its strongest it's about the characters, their dynamics, their personal narratives and their relationships with one another. And I think Jughead asking himself how his family has affected him is what I'd kind of like to see. But I also think I'd love to see a Jughead that feels kind of like a season one Jughead, which is much more of a quiet sort of monologue side. I think there's a lot of potential and a lot of interesting narratives this season in the form of FP and Jughead teaming up and playing the True Detective crime investigator father/son duo. I think there's something really enjoyable about Jughead being the brain and FP being the brawn of that investigation. That's something I'd personally like to see going into season 4.
PB: And I mean, seeing as you’re finally showing off those vocals how about a lead in the next musical episode?
CS: Ha! Oh man, I'm not trying to trying to grease any wheels on that - if it makes sense for the character, it makes sense for the character. But I could spent the rest of my life not singing on screen and being totally content with that.
PB: You were fantastic in the musical episode!
CS: Oh, I appreciate that.
PB: It really was a lovely moment between Betty and Jughead, and so nice to watch.
CS: Yeah, I think that's a really pretty scene and I'm glad it turned out that way.
Source: Popbuzz
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twentyfoursevenfilm · 5 years
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Review - Five Feet Apart
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While some young actors appear suddenly, blindingly, on the screen, others take a more measured approach, steadily ascending role by role until one day, you realize what you've been witnessing was brilliance all along. Haley Lu Richardson is one of those actors and Five Feet Apart may very well be her last step on the way to major stardom. The film, directed by “Jane the Virgin”'s Justin Baldoni, comes five years after “The Fault in Our Stars” shifted the YA tides against Dystopian fare and ushered in the new "sick teens in love" sub-genre. Adaptations of popular novels including “Me, Earl, and the Dying Girl” (2015) and “Everything, Everything” (2017) have followed. Five Feet Apart obviously lends itself to this history, but thankfully, it also adds something new: realism. Or at least, a genuine attempt. 
Five Feet Apart stars Richardson as Stella, a 17-year-old girl suffering from Cystic Fibrosis, a "CF-er," as they call themselves. A professional patient, she's positive, smiley, and not just a little OCD. A relapse of sorts has put her back in the hospital, where a dorm-room like environment of posters and Urban Outfitters home decor illustrate that this is, in fact, her life. She spends her time doing normal teenager things: studying, writing code for her app, FaceTiming friends, and...meticulously organizing her med cart. In a timely twist, she also makes YouTube videos educating people about CF. Her daily companions include her best friend Poe (Moises Arias) a fellow CF-er, and her longtime nurse Barb (Kimberly Hebert Gregory). In the midst of her organized, sterile life appears Will (Cole Sprouse), who's taking part in an experimental drug trial to stave off his more lethal strain of CF. He's surly (of course), sarcastic (naturally), and irresistible in that floppy haired way teenage boys so often are. However, since people with CF are at a high risk of catching each other’s infections, they must stay six feet apart at all times. Stella and Will quickly clash over his fatalistic outlook. Stella wants Will to stick to his treatments, so she soon decides the only way for that to happen is for them to do the treatments together. The unlikely courtship inspires a bit of hope in Will, and eventually inspires Stella to "take something back" from CF in the form of one inch of space closer to Will. (A more memorable performance by a pool cue is unlikely to be witnessed anytime soon.) They make the most of their situation with forbidden hospital dates, surprise dinners, and hand drawn comics (Will is, of course, an artist). However, they're constantly reminded of their limitations and the closer they (figuratively) get, the more they're (literally) pulled apart.
Baldoni has previous experience exploring CF, with the docuseries “My Last Days.” The subject of that film, Claire Wineland, was largely his inspiration for this one. Contrary to popular belief, the novel, written by Rachael Lippincott, was adapted from the script of the film. It makes sense, considering that Stella and Will don’t seem like the kind of characters who would jump off the page. Freed from these literary shackles, Baldoni takes a more realistic approach to the story, set almost entirely in a hospital. He stages it almost like a city, all the amenities, an entire world in one building, when his protagonists and their real life counterparts are confined. When Stella and Will wander past the automatic doors, it’s like their in another country. It’s a novel approach, complemented by the more ugly and inconvenient parts of sickness portrayed. The film isn’t overly quippy or gimmicky. It's not gritty by any means, but it reminds us that there are people who live their lives this way. For a young director he made some inspired choices. Especially when he's been given a challenge in which his romantic leads can't touch. Stella and Will on their own as characters experience impressive growth as well.
The cracks start to show in the final third, an overbearing reliance on super dramatic twists. A surprise party scene in particular seems especially unnecessary and unbelievable. However, you these misgivings and genre trappings forgivable when rewarded by the performances that follow. There are a few scenes in particular in which Richardson and Sprouse, with little to no dialogue, convey an avalanche of longing and heartache. The impossible nature of their relationship is palpable. Baldoni gracefully illustrated how painful their situation is, the near-touch, the tension, the danger a split-second slip up could inflict.
Through the copious melodrama, Richardson gives a sledgehammer of a performance, graceful in both its subtlety and extremism. Every twitch, every eye-roll, every laugh, every grimace, you feel everything she's feeling. It's like she's reaching out beyond the screen and into your soul. It's a magnetic performance, extraordinary in it's very ordinary-ness. Most of her previous roles have been in a similar vein: “Columbus”, “Edge of Seventeen”, “Support the Girls”. But here she's finally been given enough material to show what she's made of and truly carry a film on her shoulders. If nothing else, this film is worth it for her performance. Without her it wouldn't have worked. Cole Sprouse is mostly doing his “Riverdale” thing; Will is a more soulful, serious Jughead. The script doesn't give him as many opportunities for heavy lifting but there are a few late in the film that have a glimmer of great depth. Here's hoping some indie director decides to break him out of YA jail.
You know what you're getting with a film like “Five Feet Apart”. Cheesiness is inevitable. Tears will be shed. Tropes will be had. It's inherent in these stories, but the performances are what have the power to elevate. Richardson and Sprouse achieve this handily, despite the occasional over abundance of sentimentality. They make you feel their pain, and show that there’s life beyond the rules.
Grade: B 
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zelda-ffitzgerald · 3 years
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Didn't they also originally write Jughead as deaf? So Cole would have been cool playing deaf and also played someone with CF. Lili played someone who becomes disabled, and while minimal, there were scenes of pre-accident. We all know the movie wouldn't have been made without her. You don't have to agree with it, but if you have that energy for her, sorry, goes for Cole, too.
I don't remember there were ever plans to make Jughead deaf. There were plans/rumors that JH would be asexual, but obviously that didn't happen.
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cdc1345711 · 6 years
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Top 10 Other Cartoon Teams
There have been tons of members of the Cartoon-Force so it makes sense if other members create their own smaller groups so here is the Top 10 Other Cartoon Teams
10.West Beach Cartoon-Force-A group of D-list cartoon heroes who decided to form their own team but without permission of the originals,members consist of Jughead,Goop(Ben 10 Alien Force),Beezy J Heinous(Jimmy Two-Shoes),Grim(Billy and Mandy),though they have disbanded sometimes but have since remained together
9.A-Squad-A group of Anime(and some other cartoons)who are like the X-men fight covert missions too insane for the Cartoon-Force basically a personal kill squad,members consist of Senketsu(Kill La Kill),Mike Chilton(Motorcity),Jasper(Jewelpets),Rheasus 2(Captain Simian and the Space Monkeys),Saitama(One Punch Man),Colossal Titan(Attack on Titan)
8.Bland-Force-Basically carbon copies of the Cartoon-Force who were cloned to be a powerful group of Beards’ body guards but are more comic relief-members Charlie Colburn,Eed,Jayr Jayr,Dededa,Lightly Dark Oak,EX,Artie,Heck-Boy ,Jerry-ome and a few others
7.Monster-Force-Monster versions of the Cartoon-Force from Cartoon World 666(yes I know haha)which consist of Charles the Were-Wolf,Monster Ed,Mummy Jar Jar,FrankenDan,Fright Knight,Vampire Jerome,Zombie Judge Fudge
6.OC-Team-A group of Original characters made by me
5.USA-Force-Team of Cartoon Heroes who fight for the United States of America
4.The Do Syndicate-Cartoon Heroes made when the Cartoon-Force briefly disbanded whose roster included Charles,Jughead,Goop,Leon(Squirrel Boy),Sonny Bridges(Class of 3000),004,Eric,Orlando Bloo and Skips
3.Extreme-Cartoon-Force-The most bad-ass members of the CF taking on CIA type missions for Charles-Members,Jerome,Eric,004,Ozzy Jones,Black Dynamite,Talon and Orly Bloo
2.Weapon T-Weapon T is a secret Gov’t funded group that houses either clone soldiers,B.U.F.Fs,Symbiote wearers and siblings of the Cartoon-Force taught or made by the smartest Geneticists of the Cartoon World
1.Agents of K.N.U.M.B.S.K.U.L.L.-Ed’s small term team with the most comic relief cartoons ever-the roster besides Ed and Billy are Patrick Star,Cinnamon Bun,Mr.Scatterbrain,Red Menace,Waffle and Duck
So there is the top 10 Other Cartoon Teams-you know the drill 5 likes and there will be a part 2
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theao3feed-bughead · 5 years
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How to know when to let go
read it on the AO3 at http://bit.ly/2wBBf46
by Time_2466
Betty and Jughead are in love but they both have cystic fibrosis Cheryl has cf and Toni is in love with her Veronica is the best friend you could ask for
Words: 293, Chapters: 1/1, Language: English
Fandoms: Riverdale (TV 2017)
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: Creator Chose Not To Use Archive Warnings
Categories: F/F, F/M
Characters: Cheryl Blossom, Veronica Lodge, Kevin Keller, Jughead Jones, Betty Cooper, Toni Topaz, Jellybean Jones, FP Jones, Gladys Jones, Alice Cooper, Polly Cooper, Juniper Blossom, Dagwood Blossom, Juniper and Dagwood, Sweetpea
Relationships: Cheryl Blossom/Toni Topaz, Cheryl Blossom & Toni Topaz, Jughead Jones/Betty Cooper, Betty Cooper & Jughead Jones, Jughead Jones & Veronica Lodge, Cheryl Blossom & Jughead Jones, Jellybean Jones & Jughead Jones, Betty Cooper & Veronica Lodge, Betty Cooper & Kevin Keller, Cheryl Blossom & Betty Cooper, SweetVee - Relationship
Additional Tags: cystic fibrosis, Riverdale, Jughead has cf, Betty has cf, Cheryl has cf
read it on the AO3 at http://bit.ly/2wBBf46
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Jughead crashes at pops after having an insomniac streak, Veronica asks about this and Archie’s only response is
“Yeah they kinda just do that”
YES!! yes i love this.
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riverdaleisbae · 7 years
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The Core Four
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richmeganews · 5 years
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Cole Sprouse Explains Why Filming 'Five Feet Apart' Changed his Life
Cole Sprouse isn't new to the public eye, though this is his first lead role in a feature film. His most dedicated fans may remember his rise to fame as one of the twins on Suite Life of Zack and Cody. But he wasn't sure he would return to performing—he took a hiatus from his acting career to attend NYU before ultimately returning to television as Jughead Jones on Netflix's popular drama, Riverdale.
In Five Feet Apart, Sprouse plays Will, a young cystic fibrosis (CF) patient who has contracted burkholderia cepacia—a particularly aggressive and lethal bacterial infection. Cystic fibrosis is a genetic disorder that impacts the lungs and pancreas, affecting 30,000 people in the United States. While in the hospital, Will falls in love with Stella (Haley Lu Richardson), a fellow CFer. In order to avoid contracting one another's lung infections, the two must remain six feet apart at all times, and don protective gloves and face masks. On the phone, Sprouse opens up about his preparation for the role, and his friendships with the cystic fibrosis patients and activists who helped make the film:
VICE: Why was this film important to you, and what inspired you to take this role? Cole Sprouse: I don’t think it was a difficult choice. I liked the script, I thought it would be a really good opportunity to bring representation to a community. And really it was the director—he is so familiar with cystic fibrosis, and had a web of connections that he was going to put us in touch with. Really the most important factor to me was making cystic fibrosis something much more prevalent and in the forefront of public discussion.
VICE: How did you prepare? Justin has spoken at length about working with the cystic fibrosis community, including the late activist Claire Wineland to whom the film is dedicated. Sprouse: We had a medical professional—a CF nurse for over 10 years—who was present on set with us every day to make sure that everything, in terms of the treatment we were recreating on set, was as accurate and up to date as possible. And thanks to Justin's connections to patients—people living with cystic fibrosis, like Claire. Once Haley and I got to sit down and talk to patients, that was the next step. [We asked] a series of questions about how it affects someone psychologically, how it affects how patients with cystic fibrosis might form friendships or romantic relationships, what it’s like to grapple with one’s own mortality, even during youth. What it’s like to be consistently responsible for your own treatment and care. We really dissected everything. Really, the first five weeks of pre-production were spent diving in headfirst and asking questions, and getting on a nutritional regimen.
VICE: I happened to be sitting next to someone with cystic fibrosis during the film screening, and afterwards he told me me the movie made him feel seen thanks to its accurate portrayal of medical details like the Afflovest [a vest that encourages the lungs to expel mucus].
Sprouse: Oh, wow. Thank you for telling me that. Honestly the YA genre in general can be oversaturated, especially right now, and it can also be an incendiary place to host this kind of discussion.
VICE: Definitely. And there was also mixed reception of the Five Feet Apart trailer—people were worried it might romanticize chronic illness, like other YA films. Sprouse: Of course, and that’s being informed by films like The Fault in Our Stars. So, really, our job was to try and create as accurately as possible, a sensitive dialogue around the subject without over-romanticizing the nature of cystic fibrosis. I think, you know, this is still Hollywood. At the end of the day as actors we don’t really have as much control as other facets of the studio or post production cycle. But really, the acceptance of cystic fibrosis patients is what we were looking for—or at least that I was looking for. Because it means that we’re reaching the audience that I wanted to reach. Justin, Haley, and I, our mission statement from the beginning was to bring light to cystic fibrosis and represent it with accuracy and passion and care.
VICE: In the film, Will uses cartooning and drawing as a huge outlet. I know Caesar Meadows was the cartoonist you all worked with, and I was wondering if you personally had input in those drawings. Sprouse: Yeah, actually. We’d gone through a couple artist ideas and Caesar was the one that we landed on. Caesar’s work kind of felt—or at least the portfolio that he had sent—it felt very much like political commentary. It had these beautiful borders and it seemed like if Will were a kind of cynical CF patient in his hospital room all day, that he would be reading and researching everything on the internet, and he’d have the free time to sort of draw. And one of the lines in the movie is that he takes cartooning seriously, and that it can be a wonderful outlet for social criticism. So it seemed like an appropriate aisle of comic book artistry to match with where Will was at.
VICE: Not to take us too far from this film—I noticed you had a piece of bread in your pocket during the red carpet premier. And you've been caught with bread in your pocket before. Do you always have bread in your pocket when you’re on the red carpet? Sprouse: [Laughing] You know, I was on James Corden last night, and he had brought up a photo of me when I had bread in my pocket and a fan had photographed it in the past. But he dared me to put bread in my pocket, and I’m not really one to shy away from a dare. For Corden’s sake I took the fall and put some bread in my pocket.
VICE: What were the most challenging parts of playing Will? Sprouse: I think the cystic fibrosis patients that we worked with, like Claire, who are no longer with us. It was certainly something we all took really hard, but it was thanks to people like herself, and some other friends of ours that the movie could even happen. There is a heavy adoption of mortality that comes alongside becoming good friends with people with cystic fibrosis, because the average lifespan is quite young. It means making friends and working alongside people that, in Claire’s case, may not ever see the end of the movie. Just learning how a cystic fibrosis patient approaches mortality as a concept is really heavy. Especially during these quintessential youthful years, which oftentimes in most cases, outside of cystic fibrosis, translate to a kind of immortal youthfulness that we all feel, like, "yeah, yeah I can do anything."
Listening to the psychology behind it, and the dark humor, and grappling with that—and the social formations that came with that was challenging. It’s challenging to try to maintain levity on a set of this kind. One, because you must consistently have respect for the nature of what you’re trying to recreate, and two, because the content is heavy. Emotionally heavy. That was still probably the most challenging part about it, and something that changed my life—changed all of our lives. Getting to know people like Claire and knowing, hearing, that the end was near. And knowing that they were responsible for all this work that they may never see.
VICE: I remember reading Haley's interviews where she describes Claire's perspective of either being a person who "lives for treatments" or being someone who "does treatments in order to live." And this became such a pivotal part of the film. Sprouse: Yeah, that’s actually Claire’s line. Claire had said that to us and it was so powerful, I think that line alone is the question that the movie asks. It became the centerpiece.
This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.
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Cole Sprouse Reveals the Most Romantic Thing He's Ever Done for Lili Reinhart
Cole Sprouse is about to make you cry so much this weekend. His movie Five Feet Apart hits theaters today, March 15, and it's more intense than all the Riverdale season finales combined. It centers on Stella (Haley Lu Richardson), a high school teenager living in a hospital with cystic fibrosis. She turns her sterile room into a sanctuary, and the nurses and other CF patients into a family. But things turn upside down when she meets a new CF patient living in the ward: Will, played by Sprouse. An attraction soon blossoms—which is a huge problem, because the nurses recommend CF patients avoid all physical contact with each other.
The movie is one part The Fault in Our Stars, two parts Everything, Everything, and all parts weepy. So Cole Sprouse called us up on his way to the airport to talk about romance, pop-culture, and what personally makes him weep. Read our conversation, below.
Glamour: This movie is going to make a lot of people cry. What movie never fails to make you cry?
Cole Sprouse: Up. The first 10 minutes of Up is seriously one of the greatest romances ever. It just really pulls on your heartstrings. The other one that never fails to make me cry is Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind. I just think it's beautiful. The narrative that two people were so in love, but it ended up going so poorly toward the end that they were willing to erase their memories and live in this blissful ignorance, is really powerful. The movie's extremely well-done. I'm a huge fan of Jim Carrey. Those two movies really hit me hard.
Is there a song that makes you cry?
CS: It's "Claire de Lune." That was a song that meant a lot to me in my first love. During that breakup, I ended up having so many unreconciled emotions I put into that song. It always still gets me to that place.
In the movie, Stella throws Will a pretty epic surprise birthday party. What was your best birthday?
CS: I hired three clowns to come and drink around L.A. with me when I was 22. Laughy Pants, Golden Tulips, and Rex the Impossible were the clowns. My buddies and I basically just drank with clowns with the one criteria that none of us, all night, could acknowledge they were clowns. It just ended up being a really great time. All of us had so much fun, including the clowns. They didn't even charge us at the end of the night because we all had such a blast. It was a really strange, off-the-wall, split-second decision that ended up being one of the greatest, most memorable nights I've ever had.
There's a scene toward the end of the film that's quite romantic. What's the grandest romantic gesture you've ever done?
CS: I really like the road trip date. I took my girlfriend [Riverdaleco-star Lili Reinhart] on a date where we drove to this location deep into Canada, and I surprised her with a big hot air balloonadventure, which was quite a bit of fun. I like traveling quite a bit. I like road-tripping. Those grand experiences always end up yielding the greatest memories—and the greatest romances.
If you're planning a date, what would be on the agenda?
CS: My language of love is quality time. I'm not really the type of person that likes going to a movie and sitting in silence. Maybe a little breaking and entering! Some photography! Who knows?
Stella and Will feel like they could become a classic teen movie couple. What's your favorite movie couple of all time?
CS: I'd say Casablanca. That was, to me, one of the greatest romances ever in the history of film—and so conflicting between Ingrid [Bergman] and Humphrey [Bogart]. I was such a big fan of Casablanca. I was always rooting for them, but in the end it doesn't really work out. Here's to you, kid. Here's looking at you. What can you do?
What movie would you recommend watching right after Five Feet Apart?
CS: Ratatouille or something. Maybe not a movie, but watch Hoarders or Dr. Pimple Popper to really just go the exact opposite direction and completely take you out of your sniffly fit.
You play a teenager both in this movie and on Riverdale. What's the number-one thing you don't miss about teen life?
CS: Feeling so disenfranchised from everyone else. The quintessential puberty experience is feeling like you are alone. You're such an outsider. I think that's the one thing I don't miss. I felt like quite a black sheep when I was a teenager, and I don't feel that way nearly as much anymore.
If you could tell your 17-year-old self one thing, what would it be?
CS: Don't be afraid of college. You're gonna love it. College was a blast. Some of the best years of my life.
Who would you rather be stuck inside an elevator with: Jughead or Will?
CS: Jughead. He has the craftiness to get us out the situation and the resources and the skills. He's a pretty cerebral kid. I feel like he would be a good ally in that situation.
Source: Glamour
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