let’s get burgers 21 “happy place”
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supernatural episode A: "sam.... we can't work together anymore, you... are my weakness. maybe we should just kill ourselves instead of living this horrible life. dad would say something fucked up rn but hes not here because he died, hes dead sammy"
supernatural episode B: "dude guess what! the ghost of Abranham Lincoln shot a guy 😂😂😂 yeah like the president with the big ass hat i am laughing my ass off fr man this supernatural shit is goofy as fuck."
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Most dpxdc fics say that in the alternate timeline where Danny becomes Dan, Dan is ridiculously overpowered killed the entire JL. The problem is that idea only works if you ignore Batman entirely. Batman has a contingency plan for everyone. You could say that Dan caught him off gaurd, but tbh that’s kinda boring.
The only universes where someone managed to kill Batman, he was either killed by another Batman or by one of his children. Other Batman’s managed to kill him bc it’s a Batman v Batman battle and they’re evenly matched. For the other universes? Batman wasn’t fighting back all the ways he could.
Because here’s the thing about Batman: he has contingency plans upon contingency plans for Superman, for his rogues, for the entire JL. Superman goes evil in about 50% of the universes he’s in, and even with his friends he isn’t willing to let sentiment get in the way of saving the world from a potential threat.
But for his family? Batman doesn’t make contingency plans for his family. Even when he arguably should, even in universes where it leads to his death, Batman never makes a single contingency plan for any of his children.
What I’m saying is this, the only universe where Dan could successfully kill Batman is a universe where Dan is Bruce’s son.
And that, my friends, is a far more interesting story to tell.
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let’s get burgers 2 “friends 2″
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tma aus where they work at like a fast food joint or something but the fears are still showing up are so funny to me like
Jon gets promoted to general manager but he's basically just a glorified crew member with more work to do and he Still does not get paid enough to deal with the weird customers that for some reason want to tell him their horrible life stories
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this is a little bit censored XD
I want to keep the surprise
This is of course for @boblinweek and I'm actually using this amazing event as a kinda excuse to make this drawing (sorry babs)
This drawing if you recognize is a remake (re do? do it in your style?) of one of my favorite and one of the first drawings I saw when I entered the fandom
sadly cause of the quality I don't know whose drawing this is, but I love it
I've always wanted to re draw it so Idecided to go for it, though I just been doing like the first half, cause you know, I'm lazy and pretty slow at drawing 😅
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I just rewatched Logan's episodes, and is it just me or is it weird that he seems to reset every episode he's in? Even when he and the Belchers end an episode off on good terms by the next ep he's in, he's right back to being hostile.
Thank you for sending! My power was knocked out in a storm, so this was a nice distraction 💕
It could have to do with the nature of a sitcom. Bob’s Burgers is an episodic situational comedy where the characters stay the same while we watch them react to situations. It’s more typical for the world to reset with a loose continuity, so we get to have multiple holiday episodes without the Belchers aging in tandem, Tina sometimes has stage fright and sometimes doesn’t, and characters we thought learned their lesson don’t.
Hostile is an interesting word to use, though to your point Logan refers to his own feelings as hostility in Large Brother. I think you might get more mileage out of “antagonistic” in a conversation analyzing his behavior because it coincides with his role.
Because Logan’s role in the sitcom is to be an antagonist, he will act antagonistically. In serial storytelling (where the plot builds on itself and usually has a more linear timeline), he might learn or grow over time, but in our current canon unless one of the writers wants to give him a permanent heel-face-turn then he’ll likely remain the antagonist.
Take how the Belchers acted in season one for example. In seasons three and four, we see them flip from this slightly edgier, aggressive tone to one that’s more lighthearted. This isn’t because the characters grew but because the show and writing team shifted directions. Fan-favorite characters like Fischoeder and Zeke appear more because of audience perception and in turn their personalities are more palatable to the Belchers than in their first introduction to explain their continued presence.
If you want to hear me talk an annoying amount about Logan’s character and his role in the show, you can read here or check out my presentation here (I….. yeah), though it’s not updated with Jade in the Shade info just yet.
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