#Dr. Miranda
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
southernneurology · 5 months ago
Text
Dr. Miranda: Your Neurology Specialist
Dr. Miranda is dedicated to providing high-quality neurological care tailored to your unique needs. As an experienced neurologist, Dr. Miranda offers thorough evaluations and effective treatment plans for various neurological issues. From the initial consultation to ongoing management, you will receive compassionate support every step of the way. Don’t let neurological symptoms hold you back—reach out to Dr. Miranda for expert care today!
0 notes
thee-rat-king · 3 months ago
Text
The inherent homoeroticism of knowing exactly what someone else needs, and when they need it. The feeling of two lives being entirely intertwined by necessity, a squire serving their knight. Shaping your life around helping someone greater then you, and then in turn them seeing you, needing you, carving a space in their heart for you. Just because you cared. The symbiotic love between an assistant the master they serve.
In The Devil Wears Prada (2006) and Sonic The Hedgehog (2020) we can see these themes obviously paralleled. In this essay I will
421 notes · View notes
turiancalibrationcoil · 3 months ago
Text
mass effect community... i need more mutuals... please hear my pleas 🙏 i am so into this game. i'm a big fan of garrus (same as everyone else) and turians in general. also a big legion, liara, and tali fan!!! if you have any questions or concerns please contact me at 1-800-SHAKARIAN or visit www.shiara.com. also dming me or my question box thing will work too
109 notes · View notes
mosstrades · 10 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
been rewatching a pretty good series
198 notes · View notes
s00fia666 · 3 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Can´t believe this is actually canon in House MD
62 notes · View notes
ivegotdaddyissues · 3 months ago
Text
Hot take: Hugh Laurie as King George III and Robert Sean Leonard as Samuel Seabury
34 notes · View notes
parkersmarker · 3 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
my brother keeps texting me pictures of House. help
46 notes · View notes
lichqueenlibrarian · 3 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Despite Kirk and McCoy’s constant griping, I don’t think the dress uniforms are ACTUALLY harmful, Spock.
21 notes · View notes
an-unrecognizable-face · 4 months ago
Text
literally just started s6 of house and i have already seen the most gutwrenching, heartbreaking, tear inducing scene with NO SURPRISES BY RADIOHEAD as the song, lin manuel miranda appears, house said something racist, and all of this is before the 6 minutes mark. i might just die now.
36 notes · View notes
cola-canine · 8 months ago
Text
I liked that part in season six where Dr. House starts beating the shit out of Lin-Manuel Miranda and then it cuts to a Family Guy episode. Cinema.
37 notes · View notes
lonelywretchjervistetch · 3 months ago
Text
My DC Cinematic Universe - Creature Commandos: Part II
Tumblr media
Chapter Two: Weird War Tales
To start talking about the Creature Commandos, both the television show and the original comics, we should establish a bit of background. And that's more complicated than you may know. The Creature Commandos are one of those classic weird comic book ideas that turned into a cult classic, adapted more than you'd expect, and brought back in comics time and time again. As of me writing this essay, there have been four major incarnations of the Commandos in the comics, often composed of the same members, but switching it up every once in a while.
Before I launch into the comic book history, Id like to make something known: I am not a purist when it comes to adaptations. I see a HELL of a lot of merit in adaptations, and care more about faithfulness and informed decisions and adjustments. If the change makes sense, great. If it's a change that improves things, even better. If it's a change that actively detracts from the character or story, and betrays the original character concept...yeah, not ideal. I just need to say that because, with all of the shit I'm about to throw your direction, dear Reader, I want you to know that I KNOW it's crazy, and I understand that it couldn't really be kept as written.
Tumblr media
Second thing I want to say here is that I'll be approaching this as I did my world-famous Superman essay series, which is to say that I'll be talking about characters from the comics, how they've been adapted, and how I would adapt them personally. It's also to say that I'll be thinking of my iteration of the Creature Commandos as a part of my personal DC Cinematic Universe, so this will share a continuity with my version of Superman. I'll also treat this as if I'm making an animated series based on the Creature Commandos of my very own, because I do think that's a good idea!
Last thing I'll say is this: I'll be giving two pitches and approaches for this hypothetical series: purist and adapted. Yeah, that "wolf" analogy was foreshadowing for this point. As I said, some material needs to be adapted. So, as I go along, I'll address whether or not a character should be adapted in a straight fashion or not, as well as applying that to this hypothetical series as a whole. So, yeah, that's what you're in for. Up ahead, I'll start just by talking about the original Creature Commandos. And to do that, we'll have to talk about something else: World War II.
Tumblr media
I will, Tom Hanks, sir. I will. The Creature Commandos were introduced to the DC Comics universe in 1980, well after World War II, when comic books were at peak popularity. However, they were introduced in the classic comic book series Weird War Tales, written at the time by legendary comic book writer J. M. DeMatteis, who was inspired by the very concept of a book called "Weird War Tales." Lemme describe this series before anything else, because it's one in a long tradition of anthology series in DC Comics.
Originally launched in 1971, Weird War Tales told war stories from across history, incorporating horror story beats whenever possible. Understand, this was during the time of the tyrannical Comics Code Authority, which was meant to establish a conservative censorship in comics in response to backlash during the 1950s, thanks to a moral panic taking place at the time. Before then, comics were allowed to incorporate horror, unfettered violence, a little bit of sexuality, and all the stuff that makes stories fun to read. In other words, it created the Silver Age of Comic Books, forcing DC into the wacky, weird, and nonsensical. I mean, hell, it was so restrictive that author Marv Wolfman almost had to change his name because it was too scawy. Ridiculous.
Tumblr media
However, when the '70s rolled around, the moral panic was coming to an end in the USA (to a certain degree), and changes to the code where made in 1971. In fact, comics were now being seen as a way to connect with the youth of America, leading to a number of stories about drugs and violence, meant to act as warnings and cautionary tales. This led to legendary stories in Marvel and DC, but also incidentally led to new opportunities for stories, including the return of horror comics. DC, formerly one of the kings of the genre (second, arguably, to the now dead EC Comics that created Tales from the Crypt), brought back multiple titles, like House of Mystery. In the process, they also created a new title: Weird War Tales.
The way these books worked, by the way, was that you would have a narrator introduce the book, maybe going through their own side story or drama at the moment, then would launch into a few stories, sometimes with a theme, and sometimes without. Said narrator was usually a creepy keeper of tales. The original Tales from the Crypt, of course, had the legendary Cryptkeeper. House of Mystery had Cain, who would be used to great acclaim and legacy by...an author who used to be prevalent on this platform, but has since been disgraced by certain allegations...and Weird War Tales, soon after it launched...had Death. And, no, not the one from that author's famous comic book series, I mean stereotypical Death.
Tumblr media
Spoopy.
The above iteration of Death, who changes appearance issue-to-issue, is seen in Issue #93 of Weird War Tales, in which he introduces "the weirdest warriors of all": the Creature Commandos! Yup, the titular characters finally make their appearance in this post. So, let's talk about them. If you're reading this essay, you've likely seen, or at least heard of the recent animated series and its now-beloved characters, so I don't really need to introduce them. But, hey, I'm a talker, so I will anyway:
Lt. Matthew Shrieve: an intelligence agent for the U.S. Army, Shrieve is the fully-human, unaltered member of the group, acting as their liaison with the government, and commanding them on the European front of World War II. However, he's the face of the operation. The person creating these monsters is...
Dr. Mazursky (never given a first name): The brilliant biochemist who developed various methods to turn men into monsters, in order to take advantage of the archetypes within the collective unconscious to frighten the enemy off the battlefield with real monsters! Kind of. With Shireve, he leads Project M...for Monster!
Tumblr media
Private Warren Griffith AKA Wolfpack: A kid from Oklahoma who was denied from the military, due to his psychological disorder that makes him think he's a werewolf. However, Project M offered him the ability to serve his country, and actually turn into a werewolf! Kind of! Elective surgeries and chemical treatments grant him the ability to turn into a werewolf, independent of the lunar cycle, but still uncontrolled. Hence, he takes the codename Wolfpack!
Sergeant Vincent Velcoro (or Velcro, depending on the run): A suspected spy and information leak, Velcoro is given a choice: go to prison for 30 years, or get turned into an artificial vampire. He chooses the Morbius route, and becomes...Vincent Velcoro! He never gets an actual alias in the comics.
Private Elliot "Lucky"Taylor AKA Patchwork: A Marine private in the Pacific campaign of World War II, who accidentally steps on a land mine and gets blown to bits. Doctors go Frankenstein on him for weeks, putting him back together (without vocal cords) as the monstrous-but-mute Patchwork, a real Frankenstein's monster!
Dr. Myrra Rhodes, AKA Medusa: A later addition to the group, this plastic surgeon was transformed by mistake (and a mixture of spilled mysterious chemicals - remember OSHA guidelines for a safe disposal area, kids), with her hair transforming into snakes...and that's it. Um. Yeah. Medusa? Look, even the nostalgia can't save this one, this was a dumb one, not gonna lie. A group of chemicals, random-ass, medical-grade chemicals, turned her hair into snakes? No wonder Gunn didn't use this one.
...Oh, right! I assume the joke is through at this point, and we can acknowledge that NONE of these characters make an appearance in Gunn's Creature Commandos, except kind of one in the form of Mazursky, and even then...not really. But there is one more character, which we'll get to a bit later.
youtube
But yeah, obviously, this group is completely ignored by Gunn's iteration of the team. And this isn't without precedence, because this is just the FIRST version of these characters in the comics. If you would like to see this version in other media, though, feel free to check out either the two DC Nation shorts I've posted just above (which are kid-friendly translations of the characters), or the episode "Four-Star Spectacular" from Batman: The Brave and the Bold, which features the original team in one segment. There's also a DC Showcase with the team, Sgt. Rock, but I can't find that thing ANYWHERE. So, good luck looking for that one.
Either way, adapting the original Creature Commandos wouldn't be impossible, but would be tough. To be uber-faithful, you'd have to make it a period piece, set during World War II. Which, honestly, could be very cool! At the very least, I like the idea of the Creature Commandos and Project M existing in the DC Universe during World War II, and acting as inspiration for the modern group.
Tumblr media
Speaking of, let's talk about the modernization really quick. The original team was rebooted after Crisis on Infinite Earths, in the year 2000. This iteration of the group added three members: Aten, the mummy with healing powers; Bogman, a...kind of generic version of the Creature of the Black Lagoon, honestly; and Gunner McKay, a World War II soldier resurrected by Mazursky (who's STILL ALIVE) as a cyborg. Now led in the field by Captain Lucius Hunter, the grandson of famous Korean and Vietnam War heroes, the team operates in the modern day (2000) for Project M, fighting against supernatural threats like Tazzala and Lord Saturna and Simon Magus and what's that?
Sorry? Nobody cares, you say? Only 7 issues, you say? Almost completely forgotten, you say? So completely forgotten that DC's officially placed it in a separate part of the multiverse meant specifically for failed reboots of Pre-Crisis characters, and still, nobody cares at all, even DC, because they forgot they did that and still brought the characters back for a cameo 10 years later?
Tumblr media
Hopefully now, you can see why Gunn opted not to use these characters for his Creature Commandos. However, that still doesn't address where each of those characters he chose DO come from. I won't go into that yet, but three major characters from the show's iteration come from the third attempt to reboot the Creature Commandos, as a part of the New 52. For those in the know, your mental "yikes" is understood. To be fair, the characters associated with the team both predate the reboot, and are also a direct product of it. And I'll make that make sense in a moment.
The way that the DC Universe was rebooted was, notoriously, Flashpoint. Flash fans and comic book fans alike know this as the tine Barry Allen travelled back in time to save his mom, only for Eobard Thawne to fuck with everything, and make the timeline reboot into a nightmare reality where Batman's dad lived and kills people, Superman landed in government custody and has never seen the sun, and a war between Themyscira and Atlantis has enveloped the entire world. Oh, and Barry's mom is alive. Yaaaaaaaaaaay.
Tumblr media
In this new timeline, Frankenstein's Monster (yes, like the one from the novel) is revived in 1942, and works together with Myron Mazursky's Project M. He works together with Matthew Shrieve, Vincent Velcoro, Warren "Wolfpack" Griffith...and Mazursky's adopted daughter, Nina "Mermaid" Mazursky. Yeah, Nina comes from Flashpoint originally. The team, known as the Creature Commandos, fights against Nazi Germany, with the sword-wielding Frankenstein stabbing Hitler through the chest in his bunker! Oh, don't worry, I will get to the incredible character that is Frankenstein, and the ABSOLUTE BULLSHIT THAT GUNN DID TO HIM. It's honestly one of the greatest sins of this show.
Anyway, the Creature Commandos is disbanded in 1945, by which I mean they're tricked into going into a stasis chamber, and trapped there for 65 years. In the modern day, they find the remnants of Myron Mazursky's work, and find out that Matthew Shrieve tried to replace them in the modern day with Solomon Grundy, Man-Bat, and...Doctor Phosphorus. Starting to see what's happening now? Well, we aren't done yet. After the group revives, they're chased by Shrieve's granddaughter, Miranda Shrieve, who hates monsters because the new group killed her grandfather. However, they're saved by the new government organization, S.H.A.D.E., and one of their top agents: the Bride of Frankenstein.
Tumblr media
S.H.A.D.E., headed by a body-changing mystery-man named Father Time, sends its agents and scientific freaks against metahuman threats and supernatural disasters. She tells Miranda that her grandfather was actually killed by General Sam Lane (yes, Lois Lane's dad; Flashpoint be crazy), and she joins them to fight against Lane and his new agent: G.I. Robot. After G.I. Robot is destroyed, they find out that somehow, FUCKING SOMEHOW, Myron Mazursky is still alive after 65 YEARS, and they defeat Lane and his forces, while reuniting Nina with her father. Which, after watching Gunn's series, feels...bad. It feels bad. After all of that, the Creature Commandos disbands, and we go back to the story of Flashpoint.
And THEN...we get to the New 52.
Tumblr media
Written by Jeff Lemire (yes, THAT Jeff Lemire), this series follows Frankenstein and his wife a agents of S.H.A.D.E. in the rebooted DC Universe, with a squad consisting of, yes, Wolfpack, Velcoro, Khalis (new version of Aten the Mummy), and Nina Mazursky. And yes, in case you didn't know, the Bride DOES have four arms in the comics, and it IS cool as shit, and I'm not completely goddamn crushed that that was apparently TOO HARD TO ANIMATE. Anyway, this group lasted for 16 issues, and then just...vanished. Like many of the first 52 titles of the New 52, this was a failed series financially, and ended suddenly. DC wasn't done with Frankenstein, 'cause he's rad as shit, but they were done with the Creature Commandos.
Well...these ones, anyway. Because hey, hey, they're back! Yeah, out of NOWHERE, and seemingly completely ignoring the iteration that already existed in a New 52 world, there is now a Rebirth iteration of the team as of this year. Written by David Dastmalchian (yes, Polka Dot Man himself), the team features Vincent Velcoro, Wanda "Wolfpack" Griffith, the return of Mina "Medusa" Rhodes and Elliot "Patchwork" Taylor, led by Dr. Barbara West (new character, got something mysterious going on) and Matthew Shrieve, just as much of an asshole as he usually is in the comics, and commissioned by General Wade Eiling (notorious Justice League opponent known as the General), who's working for...Brainiac? Yeah, this series is a mystery, but we're only 4 issues in, so we'll wee how it goes!
Tumblr media
The Creature Commandos, true to form, have never died in concept, and the characters from the original team keep getting resurrected. Which is why it's absolutely insane that Gunn's lineup comes almost entirely from an alternate universe version of the team. Take a look again, and you'll see that I'm right. The only character not introduced as a part of that group is Weasel, and he's only in Gunn's Commandos because he loves the character so much from The Suicide Squad (and to take the place as the werewolf of the group). It's just such an odd choice for this iconic team to feature...none of them. Why not apply that Gunn philosophy of changing characters and improving blank slates onto these guys? And hell, as much as most of us would hate it...you could easily kill some of them and replace them with other characters. I dunno, this seems like completely ignored potential to me. And I'll keep it in mind for my own version of the group.
Oh, almost forgot to mention this. G.I. Robot was invented in the 1950s, LONG before the Creature Commandos was even conceptualized. However, when Weird War Tales was getting written with the Commandos, who else would get pulled into that but one of the weirder characters of World War II comics, G.I. Robot? So, yes, G.I. Robot has long been considered a Creature Commando, making him a great candidate for this series. No complaints, and he was one of my favorite characters. Cheers for the Tin Man, baby.
Tumblr media
So, now what? We've seen the history of the group, but where do we go from here? Well, obviously, Gunn put together his group, then threw them into a story. Cool, I'll do the same. The major question here is, who are my Creature Commandos? Well, as said, I have two approaches to consider: purist and creative. I can either go by the comic book team, as written with few changes to the roster, or I can come up with a new team that's inspired by the comics and the original, but with a priority being in telling a good story. Now, that said, this post is getting...long. And, to be honest, I'm still nailing down by favorite choices for the Creature Commandos. So, methinks this is a good place to pause until the next essay.
Next time, we'll look at the first episode of the series, and consider what makes a good set-up for the Creature Commandos and Project M. We'll also answer the most important question: do we really need to put Amanda Waller in here, especially because she's just straight-up not good at her job? At all? Like, a literal zero success rate, let's be honest here?
Tumblr media
See you next time (maybe, no pressure)!
Part One: Introduction and Adaptation Part Two: The Original Creature Commandos Part Three: Amanda Waller and Rick Flag, Sr. Part Four: The Frankensteins Part Five: G.I. RobotPart Six: Weasel Part Seven: Doctor Phosphorus
17 notes · View notes
danielhenneygoogle · 21 days ago
Text
Daniel Henney as Dr. David Lee in Three Rivers
1.02 - "Ryan's First Day"
11 notes · View notes
housetzuyu · 9 months ago
Text
just finished watching s6 eps broken pt 1 and pt 2 🥹 i'm so so so happy for house he finally got a chance in life after suffering so much like thats my BABY over there omg...i can't believe everything will go downhill again...
Tumblr media
26 notes · View notes
maliciatweedy901 · 3 days ago
Text
It would make my day if she looked at me like that
9 notes · View notes
margaux-saltel · 3 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
If you are following me on Twitch, you know that I’m watching Grey’s anatomy (we are currently season 10, so no spoil thanks). So in my little serie of fav characters that I’m drawing, I had to draw the best one: Dr Miranda Bailey 💜
10 notes · View notes
thechildofmythal · 3 months ago
Text
I’m replaying the Mass Effect series after a long break - I bought the Legendary Edition in the sales.
Jane Shepard is a celebrated war hero, a loyal Alliance soldier, and in my case, always on the side of the people, doing the difficult humane choices. A Paragon.
In ME1 the team makes sense, even the aliens. They have a common goal and they work together towards that goal. There’s trust, respect and even friendship among that group.
In ME2 I feel like there’s way too many companions and most of them don’t make any sense. Half of them feel like they have been made controversial in the way producers want weird controversial people in reality TV shows - for the drama. This is a paramilitary operation, we ain’t got room for drama!
Jane Shepard, who’s been on her own two feet for like a week and absolutely not recovered from hearing that she’s died and been brought back to life after two years by Cerberus. That her old team has moved on, that her beloved Kaidan is unreachable and also moved on. That she’s apparently bound to fucking Cerberus now??
She reads the dossiers The Illusive Man has given her. A renegade looney (Archangel), a bounty hunter (Zaeed), a dangerous convicted criminal in actual prison (Jack), another criminal (Kasumi), and so on. Not to mention Miranda who’s a real haughty bitch holding the Cerberus whip.
Luckily there’s Jacob, who’s past, morals and work ethic are in line with Shepard’s. Luckily there’s Joker who is the only one who can make her smile and laugh in the first weeks. Luckily there’s Dr. Karin Chakwas. Jane gets misty eyed and nostalgic drunk with her and ends up crying alone and drunk in her bunk.
Shepard also goes alone to the Normandy SR1 crash site, closes her radio and weeps alone, trying to come to terms with what she has lost and what she has become.
Luckily Shepard goes for Archangel and finds her old mate Garrus. She’s so relieved to get that jackass back in her team. Her bestie.
Luckily there’s Mordin Solus, whose recruitment makes actual sense, and whose expertise Shepard can respect and whose ramblings she enjoys, even if they don’t always agree on everything. That doesn’t matter because Mordin is military trained and Shepard does not need to worry about him disobeying orders.
But Zaeed? Jack? Kasumi? Even Grunt? Their recruitment makes absolutely no sense.
I think Shepard should have thrown those dossiers to the bin.
(I lowkey love Jack, btw, and Zaeed fills a role Bioware always has, but still. I’m also not there yet with Samara and the others in my current playthrough.)
12 notes · View notes