Okay, but real talk: Wittebro was such a sweetheart, though. I mean, take one look at the Hollow Mind background memories and tell me that isn't the sweetest, most wholesome boy to ever exist. He just wanted to live a happy lil life with his brother n partner and carve some wood <3
And I guarantee you he named Flapjack after his favourite food. I mean, LOOK AT HIM and tell me his favourite food isn't pancakes. Tell me as a kid his parents weren't like "get up, boys, we made pancakes for breakfast" and he drags Philip out of bed, bolts downstairs, and bounces impatiently in his chair with the widest, sparkling eyes you've ever seen. I dare you. Look me in the eyes and deny it. That's right, you can't.
Everyone's like "What's your bird's name?" and thinks it's so childish it's Flapjack but it does not phase him. They're just missing out on how precious and adorable his lil birdie is. Everyone thinks he's this weird, goofy guy and his partner's just like "Yes and it's endearing <3 I want to kiss that stupid face."
And he'd joke about the name, too; he's sitting in his house at breakfast just like "Heyyy buddy~ I really hate to eat you but you just look so delicious -eats pancakes-" while Flapjack just sits there, unimpressed.
Just his two favourite things, flapjacks and Flapjack, other than his family ofc T-T You cannot convince me he wouldn't do literally anything for his brother and his wife, he loved them so much-
TL;DR stan Wittebro, kill Belos
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idk if anyones already said this but i think part of the reason hunters crush on willow is compelling is bc there’s kindness in her strength and it’s such a contrast to his prior understanding of strength, the kind of controlling forceful violent constructions of it that he’s grown up with
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✨ TOH spoilery analysis big old rant ahead ✨
ohh man, this is something I’ve always loved about TOH but it’s really hitting now... I’ve had a longstanding interest in the developmental history of gods, deities and their archetypes throughout human culture, and it fascinates me how, some cultures (talking about western culture here since I’m not a voice for anything else) have gods who are vast, powerful, otherworldly embodiments of the forces of nature here on Earth, and others have gods who embody the basic structures of civilization: agriculture, building, hunting, relationships, etc. in a lot of cases it’s a mix of both, and sometimes a transition from the former to the latter.
and you can observe the evolution of humanity’s shift from hunter-gatherer living to modern civilization through it - the shift in archetypal gods is a mirror to what we collectively prioritize and focus on for our survival throughout history. and in western cultures, particularly in Greek mythology which served as a basis for our philosophy and intellectual fixations, the natural gods tend to get demonized by the narratives: they were chaotic, ravenous, violent, emotionless, beastly things who ruled over the Earth in its early, primordial days, and had to be usurped, overthrown, and locked away - and literally referred to as titans in the terminology.
in essence, they were dethroned by the civilization gods, but I think the resentment towards the natural gods is more of a developed retrospective: it’s a lingering, psychological fear of what it was like to live as a part of nature, part of the food cycle - because being an animal living in the wild must have been fuckin terrifying, and being able to build houses and towns and farm longlasting food and forge families was like. a sigh of RELIEF. them civilization gods are pretty great from that angle. but the western mind tends to pathologize this: to portray natural gods as purely destructive forces, denying the fact that we worship them because they are gods of the Earth, forgers of the land, the givers of life.
because even now, the Titan’s dead, decomposed corpse is giving life to the people of the Boiling Isles - it’s the very land they live on. and it’s obvious that it cares for them, the same as King cares deeply for his family - it gives them magic, wants to communicate with them, and tries to protect them from. violent colonizers 😒 and the same self righteously invented propaganda that he uses against witches applies to nature, too, and the gods that embody that nature - the titan trappers describing titans as being endlessly hungry, monstrous, destructive, mindless beasts, is a similar energy to western culture labelling archaic, primordial titans as cruel gods who had to be imprisoned for the greater good.
and I just... really love The Owl House for diving further into this narrative. there are stories about how big, violent forces (capitalism, militarism, missionary Christianity, colonialism etc) target, destroy and exploit an element of nature that has been painted by them as evil or demonic, and TOH really adds to that conversation with how deep its story runs. and I love how deeply rooted in a desire for compassion for and connection with those natural forces it feels, because everything that has happened to the titans sounds like a fucking tragedy. the more I learn about the horrors the titan race have been through, the more I can see myself as a Boiling Isles citizen yearning for a world still in connection with them, thriving alongside them.
it’s a story of loss, and grief, and mourning a past way of life - an estranged bond with something bigger than us, that nurtured us and tended to us in that strange, amoral way nature does. and TOH points to exactly the kind of hateful groups and mentalities who have perpetrated this tragedy, reminding us that this way of life is not an inherent fault of humanity’s, nor is it a punishment for our ignorance, but rather the direct result of intentional, planned action made by those who sought to profit and gain power from it. but it really moves my little animal heart, too - it speaks to the part of us that are still wild, are still untamed, are still one with the terrifying masses of flesh and claws that are the titans: but are still worthy of being seen from multiple angles, and be celebrated and honoured, too. because even hurricanes can be forces of creation, and even volcanic eruptions create new land 🥺
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