Oars has really inherited Luffy’s propensity for getting stuck at the most inconvenient times during big fights
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if adam driver and josh hartnett had a baby it would be enzo vogrincic
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I've been thinking....Aramis Knight as Kareem in Ms Marvel and Charles Gillespie as Luke in Julie and the Phantom...LOOK. SO. SIMILAR.
Just look:
(These are the most similar images I could find)
THEY COULD VERY WELL BE BROTHERS!!!
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Stolen from twt timeline, but it's too good to keep it just there
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throwback to that time when i was eight and a spider came out of fucking nowhere and attacked me in my bedroom. if this doesn't scream annabeth chase, then i don't know what does.
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THIS SHOW
Can we talk about how they are literally not wasting a single frame in the storytelling? It's short, but so damn effective.
I've talked before about how this is not just a story about individuals, but about existing within a fucked up system.
It's about how we get accustomed to terrible treatment, because we exist in a space where everyone sees it as normal.
And those who realize it's not normal, those who try to push back, don't tend to last.
But once they're gone, we realize how much they (and their ability to see the truth) were protecting us from things being the absolute worst.
How our acceptance of this kind of life and workplace perpetuates the cycle for the new people as they come in.
And though we think we are only martyring ourselves, it results in the sacrifice of others. Because in our choices for ourselves, we are helping to feed them to the machine.
But it's still so hard to walk away, because you become so numb to it all. Until you are sure that parts of you are permanently broken.
And you also know that these systems are everywhere, they are our society, so who's to say you could ever find anything better?
It's the slow crushing of the soul, that makes you feel like it all could just be so futile.
Which is why what Kai is doing is so brilliant here.
He's not denying the reality of the world they exist in. He's not being pushy or angry about Hiro's choices.
Instead Kai is utilizing temptation, showing that there are things, some of them quite simple, that can bring joy. That can break through the futility.
That prove that you can still feel.
But you have to choose them. Because like all things in this life, they are ephemeral.
The systems might not go anywhere in our lifetimes, but that doesn't mean the choices we make don't matter. For ourselves - and for those who see us do it.
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