Am I about to break my state of perpetually-lurking-never-commenting/posting-on-this-website over the discourse going on about Wilbur from Meet the Robinson's date of birth? That is an excellent question. Anyhow,
Point 1.
I think it would be fitting for a time traveler character, specially one responsible for as many paradoxes as he helped create in the film, to have the most inconsistent date in the calendar, that comes and goes every couple of years, as a birthday.
Point 2.
2024 is a leap year, so it is plausible.
Point 3.
Look at this child. Look at this menace to society and tell me he has a normal day for a birthday. I dare you.
Point 4.
I thought I had more points.
I don't know, the idea of him being a leap year baby just makes sense to me for some reason.
Whatever the case, happy birth year(?) to Wilbur Robinson.
Damn, I'm old.
285 notes
·
View notes
In👏🏻der👏🏻Zentrale👏🏻hängt👏🏻eine👏🏻Pride👏🏻Flag👏🏻
86 notes
·
View notes
Aziraphale would without question tell Crowley to come into the bedroom because it's where the magic happens and then pull out a full deck of cards and proceed to do every trick egregiously wrong.
(The next day he'd tell Crowley to come to the back room and Crowley would sulk and roll his eyes and say, "oh is that also where the magic happens?" and Aziraphale would say "Yes! How did you know! 🤗" and then proceeds to rail Crowley within an inch of his life next to the Jane Austen collection like he'd just discovered food)
171 notes
·
View notes
Steve would so easily realize that Mike likes Will too. So he pulls him aside and tries to talk about it with him, tries to talk him through it. And it's a struggle but they do talk. It's a much needed talk that gets Mike really thinking about how he might be feeling for Will, really working through why he feels like that and how that effects his feelings / relationship with El. But halfway through Steve is like, wait a minute. I feel like this about Eddie... oh no.
446 notes
·
View notes
do you know what's the most hilarious thing about mdzs?
all of it, like literally all of it,
all the way from the fight beneath the moonlight to shijie's death,
to the betrayals and bloodsheds and rabbits and chickens and donkeys...
it ALL happened right in front of Jin Ling's uncle.
24 notes
·
View notes
if i stop talking about the world's prettiest brown eyes, assume i'm dead
8 notes
·
View notes
the reason kiyoshi is a class I and not higher is of homophobia btw
3 notes
·
View notes
aight, hear me out, StingBan
470 notes
·
View notes
So this is what happened, I ran into a couple of comics about Cosmo resenting Mom and Dad Turner, maybe you've seen them, the last one showed them going into actually emotionally abusive as Timmy grew into teenage; and I was like "they wouldn't do this, this is the flanderization", but what actually got me was one comment be like "If Cosmo and Wanda met them, they'd have words", "IF" there's no "if" because Cosmo and Wanda have met Mom and Dad Turner, twice and they were friends. Once in the season 4 episode "Fairy Friends & Neighbors!" in which Timmy wishes Cosmo and Wanda were Mom and Dad's friends because he feels bad that they don't have adult friends (btw, I believe this episode is what inspired Cosmo and Wanda having recurring human alteregos in the ANW), and again in the last episode of Season 8 "Meet the Oddparents", which I haven't watched but it's apparently about Mom and Dad finding out about Timmy's fairies, and they get along well apparently (btw Alpha Jay thinks this should have been the series finale)
And my problem isn't that an interpretation is "wrong" or whatever, I'm not the biggest fan of canon as a concept; it's that people are arguing but they don't know this, like if it was framed as "Cosmo and Wanda should've done this" but it was "If" there's no "If"
4 notes
·
View notes