#Jon Proctor
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Preview: The Wrong Earth: We Could Be Heroes #1
The Wrong Earth: We Could Be Heroes #1 preview. New heroes emerge—but can they prevail? #comics #comicbooks
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#ahoy comics#comic books#Comics#jamal igle#jon proctor#juan castro#the wrong earth#the wrong earth: we could be heroes#tom peyer
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Giochi di guerra: Un epico crossover che scuote il Bat-Universe
Nel 2004, la DC Comics ci ha regalato uno dei crossover più epici e coinvolgenti dedicati al Cavaliere Oscuro e alla sua Bat-Family: Giochi di guerra. Questa saga travolgente ci ha trasportati in un tour de force attraverso le strade oscure e pericolose di Gotham City, coinvolgendo diverse testate e introducendo un formidabile villain, Maschera Nera. Un’opera di talentuosi scrittori e artisti che…
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#Bat-family#Batgirl#Batman#Batman Giochi di Guerra#batman gotham knights#Catwoman#comics#dc comics#detective comics#fumetti#Giuseppe Camuncoli#Gotham Central#Gotham City#Jon Proctor#Legends of the Dark Knight#Maschera nera#Mike Huddleston#Nightwing#Robin#Sean Phillips#Spoiler
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Bad movie I have Happily Never After
#Happily Never After#animation#George Carlin#John DiMaggio#Andy Dick#Sarah Michelle Gellar#Lisa Kaplan#Jill Talley#Tom Kenny#Tress MacNeille#Michael McShane#Rob Paulsen#Jon Polito#Freddie Prinze Jr.#Phil Proctor#Wallace Shawn#Kath Soucie#Patrick Warburton#Sigourney Weaver#Lee Arenberg#Bob Bergen#John Cygan#Jennifer Darling#Debi Derryberry#Patti Deutsch#Shae D'lyn#Andrew Dolan#Bill Farmer#Jack Fletcher#Roger Jackson
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Please note that a character currently needs at least 3 submissions to make it into the poll
That said:
Has 3 Submissions or more:
Has 2 Submissions:
Achilles - The Iliad
Arthur Pendragon - BBC Merlin
Bloom Peters - Winx Club
Claire - Ship It
Daphne Bridgerton - Bridgerton
Dawson Leery - Dawson’s Creek
Dr. Heinrich Faust - Goethes Faust
Duck Dodgers - Duck Dodgers in the 24 1/2 century
Elizabeth - Bioshock Burial at Sea
Elric of Melniborne - The Elric Saga
Emiya Shirou - Fate Stay Night
Eren Jaegar - Shingeki no Kyojin
Ezra Bridger - Star Wars Rebels
Feyre Archeron - A Court of Thorns and Roses
Frasier Crane - Frasier
James Bond - James Bond
Jaune Arc - RWBY
Joker - Persona 5
Kohaku - Dr. Stone
Makoto Itou - School Days
Netsa Archeron - A Court of Thorns and Roses
Odysseus - The Odyssey
Piper - Orange is the new Black
Quentin Coldwater - The Magicians (books)
Riley Matthews - Girl Meets World
Shen Qingqiu (Shen Yuan) - Scum Villain’s Self Saving System
Tom Paris - Star Trek: vVyager
Wade Watts - Ready Player One
William Afton - FNaF Ultimate Custom Night
Yukitero "Yukki" Amano - Future Diary
Zack Morris - Saved by the Bell
Has 1 Submission
Adrien Agreste - Miraculous Ladybug
Ahsoka - Ahsoka Disney+
Akiyama Shun - Ryu Ga Gotoku/Yakuza
Alexander Hamilton - Hamilton
Animal Crossing New Horizons' Player Character - Animal Crossing New Horizons
Aragorn - Lord of the Rings
Arek - So This Is Ever After
Ataru Moroboshi - Urusei Yatsura
August Landry - One Last Stop
Ayin - Lobotomy Corporation
Bakugou Katsuki - My Hero Academia
BEOWULF - BEOWULF
Betty Cooper - Riverdale
Bill Dickey - The Eltingville Club/Welcome to Eltingville
Billy Buddy/Dr. Horrible - Dr. Horrible's Sing Along
Billy Hatcher - Billy Hatcher and the giant egg
Blake - Pokemon Adventures Black 2 and White 2
Blitzo - Helluva Boss
Bubsy - Bubsy 3D
Caleb Widogast - Critical Role
Charley Pollard - Doctor Who
Choromatsu Matsuno - Osomatsu-san
Claire Fraser - Outlander
Clear Sky/Skystar - Warrior Cats
Colin Bridgerton - Bridgerton
Corrin - Fire Emblem Fates
Cory Matthews - Boy Meets World
Dal - Star Trek Prodigy
Damian Wayne - DC
Data - Star Trek The Next Generation
Dorrigo Evans - The Narrow Road to the Deep North book
Dr. Hanna Heath - People of the Book
Ellison Oswalt - Sinister
Emma Nelson - Degrassi: The Next Generation
Equality 7-2521 - Anthem
Galadriel Higgins - The Scholomance Trilogy
Geralt of Rivia - The Last Wish, The Witcher books
Go Siwon - A Guy Like You
Haruyuki Arita - Accel World
Hermione Granger - Harry Potter
Homer Simpson - The Simpson
Howard Roark - The Fountainhead
Humbert Humbert - Lolita
James Bond - The Sean Connery James Bond Movies
James Holden - The Expanse book series
Jaypaw - Warrior Cats
Jean-Luc Picard - Star Trek The Next Generation
Jeff Winger - Community
Jim Hopper - Stranger Things
JJ - Cocomelon
Joaquin Monegro - Abel Sánchez
John Proctor - The Crucible
Jon Snow - ASoIaF
Jotaro Kujo - Jojo's Bizarre Adventure
Joy - Inside Out
Jughead Jones - Riverdale
Kade - Down to Earth Webtoon
Kai - The Witch King
Kang Jinha - A Guy Like You
Katara - Avatar the Last Airbender
Katnis - Hunger Games
Kaz Kaan - Neo Yokio
Keiichi Maebara - Higurashi when they cry
Khai - Theory of Love - Thai BL Show
King Arthur - King Arthur: Legend of the Sword (2017)
Korra - Avatar: Legend of Korra
Koyomi Araragi - The Monogatari series
Kun-chan - Mirai
Lelouch Lamperouge - Code Geass
Leroy Jethro Gibbs - NCIS
Lionblaze - Warriors (Power of Three and Omen of the Stars)
Luna - Retro
Luffy - One Piece
Lyn - Fire Emblem
Makoto Naegi - Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc
Mal - Firefly
Manaow - Love Senior
Mark Watney - The Martian
Mary Poppins - Walt Disney's Mary Poppins
Merlin - BBC Merlin
Meursault - The Stranger
Mia - La La Land
Michael Burnham - Star Trek: Discovery
Mike Wheeler - Stranger Things
Miyo Sasaki - A Whisker Away
Mordecai - Regular Show
Navier - Remarried Princess
Nessa - Acotar (Later Book)
Nick Carraway - The Great Gatsby
Nicole - Class of 09
Nightheart - Warrior Cats
North Italy - Hetalia
Okajima ""Rock"" Rokuro - Black Lagoon (Anime)
Otis Milburn - Sex Education
Patrick Bateman - American Psycho
Peppa Pig - Peppa Pig
Piper McLean - Heroes of Olympus
Pippa Fitz-Amobi - A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder
Ramona Flowers - Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World
Ramsey Snow - Game of Thrones
Rebecca Bunch - Crazy Ex-Girlfriend (TV show)
Robert Langdon - The Da Vinci Code
Rodion Raskolnikov - Crime and Punishment
Rorschach - Watchmen
Ruby - Max & Ruby
Ryo Saeba - City Hunter
Sabrina Spellman - Chilling Adventures of Sabrina
Sami Reese - Little White Lie
Sasuke - Naruto
Satou Kazuma - Konosuba
Senku Ishigami - Doctor Stone
Shiori - Six Crimson Cranes
Shrek - Shrek
Snow Villiers - Final Fantasy 13
Spike Witwicky - Transformers IDW comics
Star Butterfly - Star vs The Forces of Evil
Stiles Stilinski - Teen Wolf
Sydney Atherton - The Beetle
Tai Kamiya - Digimon Adventure
Takao - Garden of Words
Tara Webster - Dance Academy
Tarl Cabot - The Gor Chronicles
Teriella Rufeon - My Husband Changes Every Night
The Beheaded - Dead Cells
Tom Wachowski - The Sonic Movies
Vanellope von Schweetz - Ralph Breaks the internet
Violetta - Disney's Violetta
Wolverine - X-Men
Wreck it Ralph - Ralph Breaks the Internet
Yu/Ai - Final Fantasy Unlimited
Yuri Zhivago - Doctor Zhivago
Yuusaku Godai - Maison Ikkoku
Available for Resubmission (needs at least 1 resubmission to participate)
Aang - Avatar: The Last Airbender
Alex Eagleston - YIIK
Anakin Skywalker - Star Wars
Aquamarin Hoshino - Oshi No Ko
Ash Ketchum - Pokemon
Atsuko Kagiri/Akko - Little Witch Academia
Batman - DC
Beca Mitchell - Pitch Perfect
Brambleclaw - Warrior Cats
Charlie Morningstar - Hazbin Hotel
Clary Fray/Fairchild - Shadowhunters
Coriolanus Snow - The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes
Dean Winchester - Supernatural
Ebony Darkness Dementia Raven Way - My Immortal
Elena Gilbert - Vampire Diaries
Eragon - Eragon/Inheritance Cycle
Erika Shinohara - Ookami shoujo to kuro ouji
Frank Reagan - Blue Bloods
Gray Wing - Warrior Cats
Gregory - FNaF Security Breach
Harry Dresden - The Dresden Files
Harry DuBois - Disco Elysium
Holden Caulfield - The Catcher in the Rye
Izuku (Deku) Midoriya - Boku no Hero Academia
Katarina Claes - My Next Life as a Villainess
Kiris - On the Emperor's Lap
Kirito - Sword Art Online
Kvothe - The Kingkiller Chronicles
Kyouya Sata - Ookami shoujo to kuro ouji
Mal - Descendants
Naofumi Iwatani - The Rising of the Shield Hero
Peter Pan - Peter Pan
Pucca - Pucca
Rand al'Thor - Wheel of Time
Rey - Star Wars
Rintaro Okabe - Steins;Gate
Scott McCall - Teen Wolf
Scott Pilgrim - Scott Pilgrim
Skullduggery Pleasant - Skullduggery Pleasant
Sophie Foster - Keeper of the Lost Cities
Stolas - Helluva Boss
Stuart Little - Stuart Little
The Tenth Doctor - Doctor Who
Tim Jackson Drake - DC
Tori Vega - Victorious
Wanda Maximoff - MCU
Wei (Ying) Wuxian - Mo Dao Zu Shi
Xander Harris - Buffy the Vampire Slayer
Y/N - Fanfiction
Currently unavailable for a new Round:
Aelin Ashryver Galathynius/Celaena Sardothien - Throne of Glass
Artemis Fowl - Artemis Fowl
Bella Swan - Twilight
Bloom Peters - Fate: The Winx Saga
Bojack Horseman - Bojack Horseman
Caillou - Caillou
Dr Gregory House - House MD
Elsa - Frozen
Evan Hansen - Dear Evan Hansen
Ferris Bueller - Ferris Bueller's Day off
Harry Potter - Harry Potter
Heywood Floyd - Space Odyssey
Kazuya Kinoshita - Rent-a-Girlfriend
Light Yagami - Death Note
Marinette Dupain-Cheng - Miraculous Ladybug
Meliodas - Seven Deadly Sins
Oscar - Shark Tale
Owen Grady - Jurassic World
Peter Griffin - Family Guy
Rachel Berry - Glee
Richard Rahl - Seeker of Truth/Legend of the Seeker
Robin - Teen Titans Go
Ross Geller - Friends
Ted Mosby - How I Met Your Mother
Tony Stark - MCU
Velma - Velma
Victor Frankenstein - Frankenstein, or the Modern Prometheus
Walter White - Breaking Bad
Zoey Redbird - The House of Night
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So the Bill Willingham Steph post crossed my dash again and got me wondering... if you're a writer, what IS the best way to respond to fans (singular or group) that publicly call out your writing at a con? Obviously you shouldn't wish violence on them but since it's not like you can un-write the story, do you ignore them? Change the subject? Argue back?
I mean, I can't pretend to know the BEST way to handle a volatile question in a public space, when saying nothing is not an option.
But I also want to challenge the idea that fans were "calling out [Willingham's] writing," because that wasn't what they were doing. Sure, plenty of people said he was a hack online. But at cons, what they were asking was "Why doesn't Steph have a memorial case?"
I always hammer that point home because it's so astonishing to me now. We didn't want them to bring Steph back from the dead. We just wanted them to memorialize her fairly. We were asking for crumbs, and it infuriated Willingham and DC Editorial. To the point that when they did bring Steph back by revealing Leslie Thompson had faked Steph's death, Tim goes "So that's why she didn't have a memorial case!" They would rather have her alive than give a bunch of (mostly) female fans the tiny bit of fairness they had been asking for. It's just mind-boggling to me now how little we were willing to settle for and how angry it still made DC.
Anyway, the decision to kill Steph was editorially mandated, and the decision not to give her a case was also editorially mandated - neither of those were Willingham's decision to make. (The other objection fans had, the sexualized depiction of Black Mask torturing Steph, was also not Willingham's fault - that was artist Jon Proctor.) Now, obviously Willingham couldn't just say "Not my fault, ask DC" because throwing his employer under the bus would not have been good for his career. But DC also shouldn't have hung him out to dry.
I think ideally with any controversial storyline, the publisher should have a discussion with the creators about the best way to handle questions so that everyone is on the same page. But what happens instead is that creators (underpaid freelancers who are almost all in precarious financial circumstances) bear the full brunt of any anger, blame, or harassment, and the publishers (massive corporations*) get to ignore it.
Of course, in Willingham's case, he was not harassed, but asked a polite question ("Why doesn't Steph have a memorial case?") that he probably could have easily said was up to DC without getting in trouble. But instead he chose to publicly fantasize about committing violence against real women, because he was annoyed. So that's DEFINITELY not the answer.
So in conclusion: in general publishers should step up more, in specific Willingham is a fucking douche.
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*When I say "massive corporations" I'm talking specifically about DC and Marvel, who are owned by Warner Bros and Disney respectively. Image is not a massive corporation. Also, DC Comics and Marvel Comics are in tricky positions because they are actually small, weirdly ramshackle legacy publishers who in a lot of ways still operate like they did when Marvel had two (2) actual employees, Stan Lee and his secretary Flo Steinberg. They operate on tiny margins, everyone who works there is criminally underpaid, their HR is a fucking joke... So like, none of this excuses editors for repeatedly not supporting their creators during times of controversy (THE FUCKING MOCKINGBIRD COVER, Chelsea Cain is a TERF but that shit was ridiculous), but I think it's also important to remember that when we're talking about the people editing these books on a monthly basis, we're not talking about Bog Iger or David Zaslav - we're talking about someone living in NYC or Burbank working 60 hour weeks on a $45K salary so that Disney has enough IP to make Guardians of the Galaxy 9 or whatever. It's complicated.
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Horizon An American Saga cast and characters
Kevin Costner as Hayes Ellison
Sienna Miller as Frances Kittredge
Sam Worthington as First Lt. Trent Gephardt
Giovanni Ribisi as Roland Bailey
Danny Huston as Colonel Houghton
Michael Rooker as Sgt. Major Riordan
Jena Malone as Ellen/Lucy
Michael Angarano as Walter Childs
Abbey Lee as Marigold
Jamie Campbell Bower as Caleb Sykes
Jon Beavers as Junior Sykes
Owen Crow Shoe as Pionsenay
Tatanka Means as Taklishim
Wasé Chief as Liluye
Luke Wilson as Matthew Van Weyden
Ella Hunt as Juliette Chesney
Tom Payne as Hugh Proctor
Will Patton as Owen Kittredge
Isabelle Fuhrman as Diamond Kittredge
Chapters 1 scheduled to be theatrically released in the United States on June 28, 2024.
#jamie campbell bower#jamie bower#horizon#caleb sykes#horizon an american saga#horizon media#character names & describe#horizon cast#sam worthington#kevin costner#giovanni ribisi#Michael Rooker#Luke Wilson#ella hunt
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No. 15 - PSA (Pacific Southwest Airlines)
Thank you to @lobstersinmyhouse for requesting PSA! And, in all honesty, this is exactly my feelings too. Pack it up, post over.
...okay, no. I am going to write a post, but I make no secret of loving PSA's airplanes. After all, one is even my icon.
image: Piergiuliano Chesi
There was never an airline like it before PSA sprang up in 1949, and there has never been an airline like it since. Decades after its demise I still feel a real sense of grief about the fact that it's gone. Pacific Southwest Airlines hasn't existed for longer than its entire time in operation and it mostly only operated in a single state, but it remains one of the most beloved airlines ever to exist. I'm certainly far from immune to catching their smile. So I'm very, very excited to cover the iconic grinningbirds, one of the best-known airline liveries of all time even 40 years after the regional carrier which wore it ceased existing.
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PSA officially stands for Pacific Southwest Airlines. Unofficially, it was the Poor Sailor's Airline. According to a button they put out, it was this.
image: psa-history.org
But really, it can stand for anything you want. I think it stands for Pretty Smiling Airplanes.
You see, PSA's marketing leaned into the fun and casual as much as it was possible for an airline to do. They called themselves "The World's Friendliest Airline". Their branding was all bright, colorful, delightful. One aspect of it is particularly well known.
image: Piergiuliano Chesi
The name "grinningbird" is literal. PSA's fleet was lovingly painted with massive smiles directly under their noses. Their advertisements encouraged people to "catch our smile" across the state of California.
A preserved DC-3 in original Pacific Southwest livery
PSA was started as a single leased DC-3 hopping from San Diego to Oakland. Apparently their ticket office was literally a refitted military surplus latrine where they weighed passenger baggage on a bathroom scale. When they expanded with DC-4s they painted rectangles around the windows to make them look more like DC-6s. This was in 1955. And then, by the early 60s, they were taking off.
A pre-smile PSA Electra. The L-188 Electra is, of course, my favorite jet plane. image: Jon Proctor
It was in the 60s that their planes stopped saying 'Pacific Southwest Airlines' and started just being PSA, and it was in the 60s when they caught their smiles. This was the point when PSA became PSA, transforming from just another intrastate airline in the pre-deregulation era to a turning point in aviation history.
a 1972 promotional button image: psa-history.org
While the smiley faces are the most significant historical fact about PSA, also notable is the fact that they were the first low-cost carrier in history. Although PSA's routes were limited to Southern California, they charged $9.99 for a ticket other airlines would charge $13.50 or $22.05 for - and keep in mind that in today's money that's a difference of hundreds of dollars. Free of federal fare taxes and operating frequently, PSA grew at an intense pace with its new fleet of Lockheed L-188 Electras.
I love the L-188 Electra (not to be confused with the earlier L-10 Electra best known for Amelia Earhart reasons). Although Lockheed has long since moved over to exclusively making weapons for killing people, back when they were in the civil airliner market they made the most incredible planes which somehow ended up commercially flopping time after time. The Electra, for instance, was all but killed immediately by two early crashes caused by a sneaky design flaw. These were fixed, but the type's reputation had already been sullied. (Interestingly, similar early design flaws with far less prompt responses failed to kill either the DC-6 or the DC-10, despite the latter causing the deadliest crash in history at the time and the former having had the serious potential to give us a timeline where the President of the United States was killed because his presidential transport had a design flaw which encouraged going up in flames midair.) Ironically, the Electra is actually an insanely reliable and sturdy plane, and the example pictured is still in service as an air tanker under the registration C-GZCF, still doing her thing at just 63 years young. (Another Electra in Air Spray's fleet is a similar age but also survived being bisected across the belly by her own detached propeller, and she literally flew two days ago. These planes are on a level only shared with Nokia cell phones, especially for their size.)
That paragraph became about the Lockheed L-188 Electra. I did not mean for it to be, but I am leaving it in, because I love this plane. Looks great with the smile, too. The roundness of the nose gives the distinct appearance of something like a teddy bear snout.
From this point things only grew quicker. PSA continued to be PSA, acquiring more aircraft to fly more passengers. They did expand routes eventually, and once the 1978 Deregulation Act allowed they flew to some other states and even Mexico. Despite this, they remained an icon in their home state, and are often called "the unofficial flag carrier of California".
PSA stewardesses. I can't find an original source for either of these pictures, which have been widely spread without context or credit - although significant effort has been made to archive PSA's promotional content, a lot of it is, sadly, free-floating orphaned bits.
PSA's stewardesses wore bright pink and orange uniforms of miniskirts, hot pants, and go-go boots. They were encouraged to joke around with passengers, and so were the pilots. Other airlines at the time were still only slowly losing the unapproachable aura they had cultivated of stiff, sterile luxury and gravitas. PSA would get you where you needed to go without any fuss and they'd charge you half as much for it. And they weren't sloppy, either. Despite their low fares, PSA was incredibly safe, having one fatal accident in a span of time where American Airlines had 16, and even though nostalgia is obviously a factor I've only ever heard glowingly positive accounts of PSA, its service, and its staff.
image: Bill Larkins
PSA's fleet was...eclectic. Though they operated a few very popular models, like the Boeing 727 and McDonnell Douglas MD-80 series, a lot of their offerings were somewhat uncommon. The plane in my profile picture is one of their two L-1011 TriStars, another of Lockheed's underappreciated airliners and by far the most advanced wide-body aircraft of its time. PSA was unique in that it operated a jumbo jet, their "Mother Grinningbird", on a route that was not just domestic, but intrastate. They also apparently operated a single Bell 206 helicopter, which I can find no additional clarification on. Lastly, they flew one of the oddest airliners ever built in both function and appearance, the British Aerospace 146.
Just your regular high-wing jet. No thrust reversers necessary. Western-made but rocking the Il-76 wing anhedral. Super quiet because the powerplants are based off what you'd put on a helicopter. Seats less people than a 737-200 - six-across layout for maximum discomfort - and flies exclusively puddle jumps...yeah, I think four sounds like the right number of engines. image: Ted Quackenbush
Across all these planes, they found a livery that worked and they kept going with it. The reason this post is so long is to give context to just how important this livery is. The grinningbirds were what started low-cost carriers, paving the way for the silly names of jetBlue airplanes in a future its founders couldn't even have imagined. The shift to approachability over prestige in airline marketing was PSA's lasting gift to aviation, as were the low fares and the knowledge that a 'budget' airline didn't have to be dodgy or unpleasant - they just had to charge less than TWA and Western.
image: Piergiuliano Chesi
PSA's colorscheme was incredibly vibrant. The red and orange colors feel warm and tropical, complementing the California sunshine in which these planes spent their time. Earlier liveries also had a shocking hot pink shade above both, though it was eventually painted over due to issues with paint fading - I think the livery is vastly improved with its presence, but I suppose needs must. Despite the airline serving commuters more than vacationers it puts one in mind of things like beaches and ice cream stands - warm, high-energy things. The sorts of things one might smile about, if they like those things. I hate those things, but these planes make me like the idea of them, because they're just so darn happy to take me there!
The design of the fuselage is incredibly bold despite not using much more paint than any other airline of the day. While the striking colors definitely contribute to the overall look being more than the sum of its parts, I think there's also a few bits of clever design that really elevate the design of the plane.
The tail has a design almost like an inverse hockey-stick. Instead of following the cheatlines for maximum sleekness it chooses to diverge from it, creating a sharp angle that keeps the aerodynamic feeling while feeling fresh from similar designs of the time. By having the thin line from the tail trailing down towards the fuselage it prevents the block of empty space on a regular hockey-stick livery, where the forward portion of the empennage is fully unpainted, and creates a feeling of continuous color and excitement while keeping some staccato punch.
Similarly subtle yet effective are the stripes themselves. They aren't of an equal width - rather, the red stripe is thinner than the orange one, and in planes with the additional pink stripe this one is even wider. It feels a lot more dynamic than simple even-width stripes, feeling almost as if you can see the colors start to mix into each other. The 'mixing' feeling is helped by the fact that the cheatlines wrap under the nose instead of simply ending where they meet. The small painted white line under the main colored ones, above the unpainted metal of the underbelly, creates basically an extra two stripes for the price of one despite being so subtle many people probably didn't notice it.
On its own, the design of the bodies of PSA planes is already good, but it practically ceases to matter when you get to the face.
The way the top line of color wraps around the back of the cockpit windows makes it look almost like the plane is wearing sunglasses. And then there's the little painted black nose and, of course, the huge ear-to-ear grin. I don't really know what else to say about this because it's all been said time and time again.
I genuinely don't know how else to express it. PSA's livery was gorgeous and it was perfect for PSA. In all honesty, I don't think it's possible to improve it at all. My one slight criticism is that the actual PSA wordmark, though designed well, is a bit small and out of the way, but to be totally honest it's barely necessary. You see the smile and you know exactly who that plane is flying for.
PSA gets a PSA+.
So what happened to PSA, if they were so successful? Did an economic shift catch them off-guard? Did some demographic evolution rob them of their old customer-base? Did a change of management result in a new owner running the airline into the ground? Did it have anything to do with the fact that the one time they were involved in an accident it spent eight months as the deadliest crash in US history?
Nope. They got bought out by USAir because they wanted more routes on the West Coast.
Yeah. That's the story. Neither a bang nor a whimper. They left one morning and didn't come back. That was the end of PSA, the first-ever low-cost carrier, California's most beloved airline, and one of the best-designed liveries in airline history if not the very best.
There is, however, one final twist. USAir eventually was sucked into the gaping maw of American Airlines. With this merger American Airlines also inherited the rights to PSA's IP. In classic fashion, they created a wholly-owned subsidiary by the name of PSA Airlines, just to make sure nobody else could get the trademark.
Under the iron fist of first US Airways (USAir's eventual rebrand) and later American Airlines, we were allowed one last grinningbird - an Airbus A319-100 registered N742PS. It's strange, seeing the PSA livery on a model of airplane they never operated. It's a rare example of the design on airframes that have that rather distinct 'default' modern empennage, all sharp and tall with no t-tail or third engine. The implementation could take some notes and the colors look bizarrely plastic, but I will never stop loving her no matter how much they take from her. How could I not, with that smile?
Unfortunately, in April of this year she was re-painted to a standard American Airlines livery. Although the Allegheny and Piedmont heritage liveries were removed at the same time, I almost don't even notice their absence because of the loss of our very last holdout from a much more colorful time and place. Part of me feels a sort of ripping-the-bandaid-off relief at it. American Airlines shouldn't get to parade around the skin of a much better livery worn by a much better airline. That isn't theirs; they didn't earn it. And there's no way to rebuild PSA now that times have changed and the industry is unrecognizable from the days when a ticket from San Diego to Burbank cost $9.99. All the same, the loss of yet another smile hurts. There's no way it wouldn't. And at the end of the day it makes me feel a little dead inside just imagining the mindset of the American Airlines executive who walked by her in the hangar and instead of smiling back gave the order to paint her white. And that day, the sky got a little less colorful and a lot sadder.
Maybe, in a strange sense, the way it happened is better. Nobody ran PSA into the ground. They did not cause some sort of reputation-ruining accident through willful negligence. Their customer service did not decline until they were widely grumbled about. They didn't die infamous for poor safety and loose morals like Pan Am, or splitting at the seams and betraying their reputation like Chalk's Ocean Airways. No, I don't think an organic shriveled going-under would have held any more dignity than this. I think the ending PSA got is as graceful as the ending to something like PSA could be. There is no end to the glory days which forces itself into our memories. There is no decline. No sunset to fly off into. There is a loss to mourn, but no accompanying moment to curse. Lost at sea, ship never found, nothing to imply a terrible fate; all we know is the poor sailors aren't here anymore.
Maybe it's not universally known to people who aren't interested in subjects that bring them close to it, but to those of us who love planes PSA is truly special. Its quiet apotheosis has made it synonymous with the very best an airline could be. The joy of a time where a regular person could finally afford their first plane ticket and be greeted by colorful people who talk to them like friends, where even the planes are smiling, is encoded into the DNA of PSA's remnants, into every anecdote told by an aging former stewardess and into every Polaroid taken of one of those smiling planes parked on a sunny California tarmac. It was there, and then it was a distant echo of warm breezes and idle chatter that feels almost close enough to reach out and touch. PSA never died. One day it was flying passengers to their destinations, planes smiling their same smiles. The next day it was fond memory, already graduated to the distant sunny shores of nostalgia.
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#tarmac fashion week#grade: a+#region: north america#region: united states#era: 1960s#era: 1970s#era: 1980s#pacific southwest airlines#requests#defunct airlines#regional airlines#double sunrise#long haul#galley gala
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Let's look at that list from Geeks for Harris:
Starring (in alphabetical order):
Andy 'Brak' Merrill, Anthony Rapp, Bill Nye, Bill Prady, Chace Crawford, Corey Booker, Curtis Armstrong, Danneel Ackles, Dave Foley, Dave Hill, Dru Levasseur, Elie Mystal, Eric Kripke, Erin Moriary, Felicia Day, Frank Conniff, Gail Simone, Garrett Reisman, George Takei, Gloria Steinem, Hal Sparks, Jack Quaid, Jacqueline Emerson, Jamia Wilson, Jennifer Taub, Jensen Ackles, Jeri Ryan, Jessica Carter Altman, Jim Beaver, Jody Hamilton, John Fugelsang, John Grunsfeld, Jon Cryer, Jonathan Frakes, Kaela Joseph, Karen Fukuhara, Kevin Woo, Kim Rhodes, Laz Alonso, LeVar Burton, Lindy Li, Lynda Carter, Mae Jemison, Mark Hamill, Mark Sheppard, Mary Trump, Matthew Modine, Megan Smith, Misha Collins, Mona Sinha, Nancy Altman, Nia Bentall, Patty Jenkins, Paul Booth, Rachel Miner, Rep. Robert Garcia, Rep. Andy Kim, Rep. Wiley Nickel, Richard Speight, Rob Benedict, Robert Picardo, Ruth Connell, Sean Astin, Sian Proctor, Stacey Abrams, Tammy Duckworth, Tanya Cook, Tim Russ, Valorie Curry, Wajahat Ali, Waseem Daher Wheatus, Wil Wheaton, Yvette Nicole Brown, Zakiya Thomas.
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Hypothetical titles for season 24 of 88.
Concord. Season premiere. Part one. Andy accompanies Abigail back to her hometown in Massachusetts to confront her husband and his grandmother. First appearance of Adam DiMarco as Jansen Mordaunt and Sharon Horgan as Annabelle Mordaunt.
Just do it. Season premiere. Part two. Findlay runs afoul of Annabelle when she and Sidney go to Concord to aid Andy which results in a case of sadistic hypnotism leading to them finding out who Annabelle really is
Sisters and brothers. While the team tries to figure out what to do about Anne Boleyn, Alabaster gets an unwelcome surprise when he finds out that Devon and Lucia have a son together. First guest appearance of Ed Oxenbould as Charlie Christensen.
Hootenanny. It’s David’s birthday. And in an effort to make it perfect for him. Clyde and Tina accidentally transport half the party to the actual old west.
Wive it wealthily in Padua. In this flashback episode told through shadow puppetry and marionettes. Abigail Mordaunt’s hellish life is revealed
The family plot. After a particularly pathetic prank. Findlay locks Skipper and Zoey in the families mausoleum where they get an earful from an unexpected source. Guest starring Keke Palmer as the ghost of the young Winifred Mulligan.
Disco inferno. Boleyn ups the ante by setting fire to a roller disco in Concord just when Abigail is about to serve Jansen with divorce papers.
Don’t panic. Andy and Jacob work on calming Abigail down before divorce proceedings begin. Elsewhere. Captain Birch liaises a sting operation on Mordaunt Manor.
Divorced beheaded died. Part one. Boleyn and Jansen play mind games with Concord PD during their interrogation forcing Findlay to step in and organise a transfer to New York State.
Divorced beheaded survived. Part two. Back in the precinct. Birch and the rest of the team get ready for the inmates arrival. But Boleyn has other plans. Final appearance of Sharon Horgan as Anne Boleyn, Adam DiMarco as Jansen Mordaunt and Lucy Hale as Abigail Mordaunt.
A goodbye to strong Australian arms. Findlay’s relief at Jonah breaking up with Jack Hughes is short lived when he tells her that he’s decided to date Butterball.
The area. Midseason finale. Part one. An email meant for Findlay leads her and Drummond to Area 51 a week before Christmas. Guest starring Jake Abel as Director Michael Leonowens and Peter Capaldi as Alien X,
The perimeter. Midseason premiere. Part two. With X’s deception exposed, Director Leonowens calls upon his parents and the rest of Findlay’s team for assistance. Guest starring Brenda Strong and Jon Cryer as Melissa and Josiah Leonowens and Jodie Whitaker as the reformed Alien X
The dinner. At Drummond and Barnaby’s insistence, Findlay holds a dinner party to welcome Butterball as Jonah’s new boyfriend.
Replacement captain. Captain Birch and Jacob go on a much needed vacation with Odessa, Lucia, Alabaster and Charlie, leaving the rest of the team to contend with a potentially unstable substitute captain who has issues with how the precinct is run. Guest starring Jayma Mays as substitute Captain Cornelia Linley.
Cue cards. The team tries to make best of it when Linley introduces a step by step guide to dealing with crime. Something they have been dealing with for over twenty years. So Findlay is sure of one thing and one thing only. Linley had got to go.
Kids today. Skipper and Oswald turn to Drummond and Odessa for help Theo develops an interest in girls. Which is something they are in no way prepared for.
Mothers ruin. Part one. In her capacity as head of the Fifth Avenue council, Findlay needs to choose the next heads of the Magistrate. And one woman is determined not to have her children chosen. Guest starring Calista Flockhart as Penelope Proctor and Matthew Daddario and Alexandra Daddario as her children Porter and Portia Proctor.
Head councillors choice. Part two. The final choice for the heads of the Magistrate comes down to either the Proctor siblings or Warren Christensen and his wife Ida. Guest starring Chris Wood and Melissa Benoist.
Manufactured amnesia. King Ruben and Queen Chantelle approach Findlay with a surprising proposal to stitch the royal fsmily back together. Guest starring Dev Patel as Ruben Burton , Naomi Scott as Chantelle Burton, Chris Pratt as Emerson Davenport, Auli’i Cravalho as Aimee Davenport and Rhianne Barreto as Rani Burton.
The taking of grand central 456. Findlay has her work cut out for her when she has to contend with trousers and a possible terrorist threat to grand central station.
Moving on up. Feeling that she isn’t cut out for the Fifth Avenue Council, Zoey nominates Ethan to replace her. Something which Findlay and Sidney wholeheartedly endorse and Jacob and Deucalion wholeheartedly oppose.
A tale of two genies. Season finale. Part one. A tungsten alloy sarcophagus is fished out from the Hudson River. And the contents means tough times ahead for Drummond and Odessa.
The time travellers boyfriend. Season finale. Part two. With 48 hours to go until Odessa’s disappearance, the team works desperately to find a solution to a problem that cannot be easily solved.
#mine#copyright me#modern fantasy#adam dimarco#sharon horgan#ed oxenbould#keke palmer#hugh jackman#lucy hale#jake abel#peter capaldi#jodie whittaker#brenda strong#jon cryer#jayma mays#calista flockhart#matthew daddario#alexandra daddario#chris wood#melissa benoist#dev patel#naomi scott#chris pratt#auli'i cravalho#rhianne barreto
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Okay well I might as well release the list now I guess. In no particular order, our contestants are:
Johnny Appleseed
Jon Arbuckle
Jonathan Archer
John Bender
Johnny Bravo
Jonathan Byers
Johnny C. (Johnny the Homicidal Maniac)
Johnny Cade
Jonathan Carnahan (The Mummy (1999))
John Connor (The Terminator)
John Constantine
Blaine "John Deaux" DeBeers (iZombie)
John Dillermand
John Doe (Batman: The Enemy Within)
John Doe (Malevolent Podcast)
John Doe (Roblox)
John Doggett
John Dough (John Dough and the Cherub)
Don Juan (The Trickster of Seville and the Stone Guest)
Jonny D’ville
John Egbert
Johnny English
John Freeman (Half-Life: Full Life Consequences)
Johnny Frost (iZombie)
John Gaius
Johnny Ghost & Johnny Toast
Johnny Grillo (The Four of Them)
John O. Guardian (The Vampire Dies In No Time)
John Hammond
Jonathan Harker
Jack Harkness
J. Jonah Jameson
Johnny Joestar
Johnathan Joestar
John Keating
Johnathon Kingsley (ROSE, Sorta Crashing)
John "Jack" Arjuna Korrapati
John Kramer
Kyon (The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya)
Little John (Robin Hood)
Jonathan U. Loughran
John Marston
John McClane
"Trapper" John McIntyre
"Father" John Patrick Francis Mulcahy
Jonathan Morris
John Watson (BBC Sherlock)
John Watson (any other rendition of Sherlock Holmes)
John Wick
John Jacob Jingleheimer Schmidt (Song)
John 'Jack' Seward
John Shadow & Shaun (Shadows House)
Commander John Shepard
Jonathan Sims
John Smith (Doctor Who)
Jon Snow
John Stalvern (DOOM: Repercussions of Evil)
Jonathan Strange
Johnny Test
John (The Adventure Zone: Balance)
John Thomas Ward
John Peters (Welcome to Night Vale)
Prince John (Robin Hood (1973))
John Proctor (The Crucible)
John Winchester
Johnny 13
#some semblance of alphabetization. whatever#& means they're a duo#some sources are included for like clarification. i can give the source of all of them if needed#also: you are only allowed to get mad at me for jack harkness. to which i say i allow myself one nepotism nomination#66 is a weird bracket but whatever
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AHOY Comics celebrates 5 years with new series, specials, and Grant Morrison
AHOY Comics celebrates 5 years with new series, specials, and Grant Morrison #comics #comicbooks
In addition to top-quality story and art, AHOY Comics has become known for the short prose extras that run in the back of every title. Now, as part of the publisher’s gala fifth anniversary, a baker’s dozen of the comics industry’s finest prose writers have combined to craft an epic serial that will run through the AHOY line this fall. THE ALL-STAR ANNUALLY CONVENING COZY DETECTIVES CLUB in…
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#ahoy comics#alex segura#audrey ryer#bryce ingman#captain ginger: the last feeder#carol lay#carrie harris#comic books#Comics#deadweights#grant morrison#hanna bahedry#jon proctor#kek-w#kirk vanderbeek#lisa jonte#mark russell#partially naked came the corpse#project cryptid#stuart moore#the wrong earth: we can be heroes#torunn gronbekk
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The story of Richard and Mildred Loving, an interracial couple, whose challenge of their anti-miscegenation arrest for their marriage in Virginia led to a legal battle that would end at the US Supreme Court. Credits: TheMovieDb. Film Cast: Richard Loving: Joel Edgerton Mildred Loving: Ruth Negga Grey Villet: Michael Shannon Sheriff Brooks: Marton Csokas Bernie Cohen: Nick Kroll Frank Beazley: Bill Camp Lola Loving: Sharon Blackwood Raymond Green: Alano Miller Garnet Jetter: Terri Abney Judge Bazile: David Jensen Phil Hirschkop: Jon Bass Theoliver Jeter: Christopher Mann Musiel Byrd-Jeter: Winter-Lee Holland Deputy: Michael Abbott Jr. Percy Fortune: Chris Greene Virgil: Will Dalton Chet Antieau: Matt Malloy Laura: Andrene Ward-Hammond Alex: D.L. Hopkins Hope Ryden: Jennifer Joyner Cousin Davis: Lance Lemon Cousin Gerald: Marquis Adonis Hazelwood Older Sydney: Brenan Young Older Donald: Dalyn Cleckley Older Peggy: Quinn McPherson Middle Sidney: Jevin Crochrell Middle Donald: Jordan Williams Jr. Middle Peggy: Georgia Crawford Toddler Sydney: Micah Claiborne Baby Sydney: Devin Cleckley Infant Sydney: Pryor Ferguson Clara – Cashier: Karen Vicks Reporter #1: Scott Wichmann Construction Worker: Benjamin Loeh Court Secretary: Bridget Gethins Store Pedestrian: Mark Huber Drag Race Spectator: James Matthew Poole Secretary: Coley Campany Secretary: Sheri Lahris Construction Worker: Jordan Dickey Telephone Man: Coby Batty Drag Race Spectator / Bar Patron: Chris Condetti Richard’s Racing Crew: Logan J. Woolfolk County Clerk: Robert Haulbrook Bricklayer: Keith Tyree Spectator: James Nevins Prisoner: W. Keith Scott Photojournalist: Tom Lancaster Street Walker: Lonnie M. Henderson Court Audience Member: Brian Thomas Wise Drag Race Spectator: Ken Holliday Antieau’s Secretary: Terry Menefee Gau Driver: Marc Anthony Lowe Racetrack Spectator: Jay SanGiovanni D.C Teen: Tyrell Ford Baby Boy #1: James Atticus Abebayehu Phil’s Dad: Jim D. Johnston …: Derick Newson Boarding House Boy: Miles Hopkins Construction Worker: Kenneth William Clarke Reporter: Robert Furner Secretary: Victoria Chavatel Jimison Field Hand / Drag Strip Attendee / Shot Gun Shack Attendee (uncredited): Darrick Claiborne Courtroom Spectator (uncredited): Raymond H. Johnson Drag Race Driver: Dean Mumford Pregnant Girl: Rebecca Turner Magistrate: Mike Shiflett County Jailer: Greg Cooper Supreme Court Reporter: A. Smith Harrison Press Conference Reporter: Keith Flippen Soundman: Jason Alan Cook Courtroom Spectator (uncredited): Lucas N. Hall Film Crew: Director: Jeff Nichols Editor: Julie Monroe Producer: Peter Saraf Executive Producer: Jack Turner Executive Producer: Jared Ian Goldman Executive Producer: Brian Kavanaugh-Jones Unit Production Manager: Sarah Green Art Direction: Jonathan Guggenheim Casting: Francine Maisler Production Design: Chad Keith Storyboard: Nancy Buirski Associate Producer: Oge Egbuono Producer: Colin Firth Producer: Marc Turtletaub Set Decoration: Adam Willis Producer: Ged Doherty Unit Production Manager: Will Greenfield Costume Design: Erin Benach Music Supervisor: Lauren Mikus Original Music Composer: David Wingo Still Photographer: Ben Rothstein Director of Photography: Adam Stone Script Supervisor: Jean-Paul Chreky Special Effects Coordinator: Gary Pilkinton Special Effects Technician: Trevor Smithson Property Master: A. Patrick Storey First Assistant Director: Cas Donovan Second Assistant Director: Tommy Martin Stunt Driver: Dean Mumford Key Makeup Artist: Katie Middleton Second Second Assistant Director: Ben LeDoux Construction Buyer: Roslyn Blankenship Assistant Property Master: Hannah Ross Dialogue Editor: Brandon Proctor Genetator Operator: Maxwel Fisher Post Production Supervisor: Susan E. Novick Boom Operator: Proctor Trivette Leadman: Stephen G. Shifflette Second Assistant “A” Camera: Stephen McBride Sound Effects Editor: David Grimaldi Foley Mixer: Judy Kirschner Makeup Department Head: Julia Lallas Hairstylist: Brian Morton Sound Effects Editor: Joel Dougherty ADR Mixer: Chris Navarro Sound Effects Editor: P.K. Hooker ...
#biography#civil rights#court#interracial couple#interracial marriage#interracial relationship#Marriage#supreme court#Top Rated Movies#virginia
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Things I have very annoyingly told my friends are TMA references (an incomplete list):
accidently capitalism the word "See" or variations thereof
being incredibly overworked by a workload
drinking tea (as someone who has AT LEAST one cup of tea a day, I still think "Martincore" every. single. time.)
Britain
Any sad, wet cat of a man (including, but not limited to; Bruno Madrigal from Encanto, John Proctor from The Crucible, and Ballister from Nimona)
doodling spirals
doodling eyes
feeling lonely
fog
Britain
The countryside, specifically with cows
A very mysterious looking vase (probably was homophobic)
Archives/archiving as a job
Talking about my feelings (I'm giving a statement)
British people
Various London landmarks
A slightly creepy butchers shop
Skydiving
British accents
Tunnels
The panopticon
Tape recorders/cassettes
Mildly unsettling children's books
Changing my pen name CONSTANTLY (i FELT the "martin blackwood" to "m blackwood" to "m.k. blackwood" to "martin k. blackwood" to "m.k.b." pipeline on a spiritual level)
Wearing knit sweaters
Wearing wire-frame glasses
Having to stop for bathroom breaks on a long drive (I feel Martin's pain at constantly having to stop so Jon could make statements. And it's always at the worst place/time???)
Me being mistaken for a ghost (it's a LONG story)
Sisyphus
This isn't even the half of it.
Seeing is just a TMA reference. That's so beholding. Going to the library, TMA reference. Meat? Meat. Need I say more?
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Spurning inspiration
Lo Bosworth's mediaeval lower leg
Scott Baio's smothered thigh
Jon Lester's winningest finger
David Copperfield's vegetative cheek
Bryce Dallas Howard's eroded tongue
Russell Crowe's hissy bottom
Pete Wentz's Proctor toe
Simon Cowell's economical forehead
Rachel Bilson's mixed eyelash
Justin Trudeau's dropped belly
Lisa Edelstein's inert belly
Jamie Campbell Bower's discovered cheek
Jennifer Aniston's faltering ankle
Brandy Norwood's feathered buttocks
Natasha Richardson's permissible finger
Ali Fedotowsky's everlasting lip
Josh Duhamel's brawling tooth
Evangeline Lilly's vegetative toe
Paris Hilton's swinging nose
Conan O'Brien's livid foot
Bret Michaels's wheeled eyelash
Anderson Cooper's rustling shoulder
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What If: Wolverine #1, February 2006, written by Daniel Way, penciled by Jon Proctor
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