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9 votes
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Mike Myers breaks down his most iconic characters
8 votes -
Elmo and the Gom Jabbar Test in Dune
10 votes -
Saving a corrupted Blastoise fifteen years later
8 votes -
The Faroe Islands commissioned a tombstone for Daniel Craig's James Bond – designed to mark his final turn as Bond in ‘No Time to Die’
5 votes -
While millions of children all over the world wait eagerly for Father Christmas or Santa Claus on Christmas Eve, youngsters in Iceland start receiving their presents on Dec. 11th
3 votes -
When Jimmy Stewart played the villain
4 votes -
Phoebe Spengler – The ultimate autistic hero
7 votes -
When Harry met Santa – Christmas commercial (long version) for Posten Norway
5 votes -
'Sesame Street' makes history as it adds first Asian American Muppet to cast
10 votes -
In celebration of No Time To Die releasing next week, what are your favorite Bond books?
No Time To Die recently had it's world premiere. This concludes the Daniel Craig saga. I have liked the majority of these films. I have never read any of the Bond books, and I kind of want to read...
No Time To Die recently had it's world premiere. This concludes the Daniel Craig saga. I have liked the majority of these films. I have never read any of the Bond books, and I kind of want to read some of them. Which ones are your favorites?
8 votes -
Super Smash Bros.™ Ultimate – Battling with Sora – Nintendo Switch
12 votes -
Birds of Prey: Looking at Harley Quinn
10 votes -
About one out of three men prefer playing female characters. Rethinking the importance of female protagonists in video games.
16 votes -
Tuvix will never die
10 votes -
No Scooby-Doo or Mystery Van in Mindy Kaling's Velma adult animated comedy
7 votes -
Queer readings of The Lord of the Rings are not accidents
12 votes -
Homosexuality in the Batman franchise
6 votes -
Reevaluating The Little Mermaid before Disney horks up another live action remake
12 votes -
The protagonist problem
13 votes -
Sonic Central - Upcoming projects, partnerships, and events to celebrate Sonic the Hedgehog's 30th anniversary
7 votes -
Creating a likeable video game villain
4 votes -
Behind Warner Bros.’ search for a Black Superman
8 votes -
Twenty-five years ago, Star Trek: Voyager tackled one of its most infamous transporter questions
17 votes -
Turns out, Spock is kinda bad at logic
14 votes -
Oldest and fatherless: The terrible secret of Tom Bombadil
24 votes -
Witcher 3 fans built a new quest with perfect Geralt voice acting
8 votes -
The 100 best, worst, and strangest Sherlock Holmes portrayals of all-time, ranked
11 votes -
Dungeon & Dragons favorite character sheets?
I have started playing D&D basic with my family as a way to spend time together away from devices. I found the original character sheets:...
I have started playing D&D basic with my family as a way to spend time together away from devices.
I found the original character sheets:
http://www.ultanya.com/2015/10/throwback-thursday-character-sheets.htmlAnyone else have favorite character sheets for D&D?
6 votes -
Please just let women be villains
23 votes -
Best portrayals of children in anime?
A sizable part of my aversion to a lot of anime is probably related to the fact that the majority of titles in the past couple decades are centered on children or teens, and by and large cater to...
A sizable part of my aversion to a lot of anime is probably related to the fact that the majority of titles in the past couple decades are centered on children or teens, and by and large cater to that demographic. That in and of itself is fine, and some of the best anime explore the important themes of that stage of life, but the portrayals of kids in most shows are usually reductive, unrealistic, immature, shallow, or just plain stupid... and while most kids undoubtedly aren't quite ready to forge their own way in the world, I think children are more complex and often more savvy than they're popularly given credit for.
Having said that, what are some shows that do a good job of showcasing the depth of their young cast? Two have stood out to me:
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Hourou_Musuko / Wandering Son. If this series can't humanize the struggle of growing up trans to you, you're dead inside. It's only 12 episodes if you watch the two specials (necessary to get the full story, they were edited together into one of the main episodes), but pretty much every one gave me so much pause to reflect on my own childhood.
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Dennou Coil / Coil - A Circle of Children is the best depiction of children I've seen in anime. Creator and director Mitsuo Iso's respect for the characters, despite their age, is impressive, and I felt it captured the perspective of life at that age - the intra-group politics, the uncertainty, the courage, the discovery, the disappointments - very well. I think its strengths elevate what could have otherwise been a pretty straightforward adventure story with an interesting premise into something rather special.
9 votes -
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Texas Department of Public Safety issues amber alert for victim of horror doll Chucky
5 votes -
Star Wars characters as classical Japanese art
9 votes -
Empowering picture books with Black characters
5 votes -
Why are we so obsessed with characters being redeemed?
5 votes -
Spill your RPG character's secrets that the other party members don't know!
I'll start: the party knows my character is a veteran of the war between the elves and the humans, but they don't know that she was duped into helping develop a type of biological warfare and...
I'll start: the party knows my character is a veteran of the war between the elves and the humans, but they don't know that she was duped into helping develop a type of biological warfare and becoming an accessory to war crimes.
What are you hiding?
18 votes -
Ralf Wunderlich: ‘When FC Santa Claus called I didn't have to think a lot. Who wouldn't want to work for Santa Claus' official football club?’
6 votes -
How Overwatch conveys character in first person
7 votes -
It ain't easy being Sonic
7 votes -
Celeste: Is Madeline canonically trans?
21 votes -
Superman doesn’t need fixing because he’s more relevant than ever
9 votes -
Baldur's Gate 3 - Community update #8: Character creation
4 votes -
Samuel L. Jackson to play Nick Fury in new Marvel Disney Plus series
6 votes -
Hercule Poirot turns 100: The strange case of the Belgian detective
11 votes -
Star Trek: Discovery introduces first transgender and non-binary characters
7 votes -
Ben Affleck will return as Batman in The Flash
10 votes -
Signs you're a Black character written by a White author
23 votes -
My first DnD character died. What should I do next?
I've been playing a Tomb of Annihilation campaign with some friends the past few months, and we are all relatively new players (each of us having played about one campaign before). As far as I...
I've been playing a Tomb of Annihilation campaign with some friends the past few months, and we are all relatively new players (each of us having played about one campaign before). As far as I know this is the first time any of us have been in a campaign where a PC dies. My level 4 wizard was suddenly and violently killed by a flesh golem.
None of us are exactly sure how to proceed, and there's some disagreement. A few of the people in my party think that any new character should be a level or two behind the party in order to further dis-incentivize dying. I personally think that is too harsh, and luckily it seems like we are reaching a consensus that my new character should be the same level, but I shouldn't be able to play as the same race and class.
This seems more or less reasonable to me, although to be honest I really enjoyed playing as a wizard so I wouldn't have minded doing so again. I'm mainly curious to hear how you all handle character deaths, and any tips you might have for making a new character mid-campaign.
10 votes -
'The Simpsons' producers will 'no longer have white actors voice non-white characters'
9 votes -
Nick Carraway is gay and in love with Gatsby
23 votes