#Ssason 3
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oldmanyaoibible · 8 months ago
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i still need to finish mob psycho season 3 after like a few months of starting and finishing the first 2 seasons but im TERRIFIED cus theres an episode called trauma. Horrified. I need them to be happy and joyful pls....
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mx-piggy · 11 months ago
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watched the first ep of Bridgerton season 3 and the fat little girl i used to be is healing. (i'm still fat, just not a girl, mostly)
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chebyshevptera · 2 months ago
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we’re so cooked when ndr ssason 3 releases it’s not even funny .
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jj-maybank-deserved-better · 3 months ago
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i don’t see the reality of a time skip unless it’s at the end. you’re telling me JJ died and the pogues waited 2-3 weeks before even doing anything?? plus she can’t run around that pregnant. And 10 ep ssason really cover about 2-3 weeks of the pogues actual life.
part of me is like maybe they’ll be a time skip towards the end of the season because I feel like they have to end on a happy note at least I would hope so!
There was the 18 month time skip between 3 and 4 but I agree there shouldn't be another time skip until like the very end of the last episode
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dpromophotospal-blog · 7 years ago
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#TheExpanse 3x13 "Abaddon's Gate" (Season Finale) Season 3 Episode 13 Promotional Photos & Synopsis 
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cooloddball · 4 years ago
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New photo of Jensen and Karl Urban. Why is no one talking about it? He's moving on 😭
Oh my Jack!!! I screamed. I love these three guys. Karl, Jack and Jensen.
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I believe Jensen and Karl will be such good friends. He's [Jensen] talked about how he equated Dean's character to Karl's and I think they have a lot to talk about. Ganking bad guys and blowing shit up on the show, lol.
I'm also glad Jensen is moving on to bigger better things instead of the shit show that is you know spn.
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t-auto · 5 years ago
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Fun fact:
I actually disliked season 1 and season 2 Soren. However, I absolutely fell in love with late season 2 and all of season 3 Soren.
Viren needs to go commit the dead.
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tsukishumai · 4 years ago
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Aww u rememberrr *tight hug* 🥺 and same WHEN WILL S5 COME OUT 😩 BTW do u think that the battle of the trash heap will be the whole of s5 (just like before in their previous seasons that 1 ssason is almost also equal to one important match??), then the timeskip will be s6?? Or all of those will be squished as the whole s5?? :{{
Speaking of sakusa, i stumbled upon this kiyoomi art and 😵
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OF COURSE I REMEMBER 🥺 *tighter hug*
IM REALLY HOPING IT COMES OUT THIS YEAR 😭😭 hmm but I think they’re going to do it like season 4 style, where it’s split into two parts, you know? There’s still quite a few things to cover between the battle of the trash heap and the time skip :3 like the kamomedai game omggg I’m so excited to see that. And then hopefully S6 will be the time skip?? We shall see 🤩🤩
Omggg that fan art!? The ONE AND ONLY time I will accept the lip bite 🥵 KIYOOMI IS SO FINE FOR WHAT???
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aion-rsa · 4 years ago
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Cobra Kai: How the Show Tackles Bullying in Season 3
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At its heart, The Karate Kid has always been about standing up to bullies. Actually, when it comes right down to it, almost every high school drama is about standing up to bullies. It’s just that The Karate Kid responds with a crane kick to the face. High school bully versus underdog stories are easy to tell, and they resonate with anyone who survived their teenage years. That first major pubescent dose of testosterone or estrogen makes us all want to assert ourselves, and in that search for identity, many find it in bullying. Whether it was Johnny Lawrence (William Zabka), Chozen (Yuji Okumoto), or even Terry Silver (Thomas Ian Griffith), they all bullied poor little Daniel-san (Ralph Macchio).
Or did they?
Cobra Kai has fleshed out Johnny’s character to new depths, redeeming his shallow portrayal in the original movies. Through the Netflix series, Johnny has had the rare opportunity to explain his odious actions. Everyone is the hero in their own story, and Johnny sees Daniel as the bad guy. In the eighth episode of season 1, “Molting,” Johnny tells Miguel (Xolo Maridueña) his side of the events in The Karate Kid. “Out of nowhere he sucker punches me,” whines Johnny about their first fight at the beach. 
And it’s true. Johnny pushed Daniel first, but Daniel caught him back with a sucker punch (Daniel relies heavily on sucker punches throughout the films). Daniel stole Johnny’s high school sweetheart Ali (Elisabeth Shue). Daniel drenched Johnny with water in the bathroom at the high school dance (as he was rolling a joint – something he omits from his retelling to Miguel). Daniel won the All-Valley Karate Tournament with an illegal kick to the face. In Johnny’s eyes, he’s the victim of Daniel’s bullying. And this is perpetuated in Cobra Kai. Daniel is now in the position of power, the head of a successful business and living in a mansion with his wife and kids. Johnny is now the underdog and must cope with some of Daniel’s microaggressions. 
It may seem far fetched to some, but the notion that Daniel as the bully isn’t new. Barney (Neil Patrick Harris) from How I Met Your Mother thought so too, and that was back in 2003. In the season 8 episode “Bro Mitzvah,” Barney’s dream was to have the hero of The Karate Kid attend his bachelor party. However, when his friends arrange for Ralph Macchio (playing himself in a hysterical cameo) appears, Barney is disappointed because to him, the real hero is Johnny for exactly the reasons that he outlined in “Molting.” It’s a standout episode with Zabka also making a cameo appearance as himself. And while Barney could be accused of being a bully in a manner of fashion too, this notion is upheld within a contingent of the Karate Kid fanbase who now feel validated by Cobra Kai’s take on it. 
Johnny’s story arc is one of the most engaging aspects of Cobra Kai. Over the course of the first two seasons, he has transformed from being a stubborn loser to a sympathetic antihero. Even though Johnny was raised as a privileged kid living in an Encino mansion, his stepfather Sid (Ed Asner) is horribly abusive. Johnny’s sins are the perpetuation of Sid’s bullying behavior, exacerbated by Kreese’s (Martin Kove) merciless Karate lessons. While Johnny’s backstory doesn’t redeem all his nefarious actions, it does provide some insight into his motivations. And in his heart of hearts, Johnny still wants to do the right thing. 
Cobra Kai has really shined in how it represents bullying. Bullying has become a global crisis, so much so that in 2018, the UNESCO Institute for Statistics released data showing that one third of young teens around the world have experienced bullying. In the United States, bullying is linked to low self-esteem, anxiety, and depression in childhood. And although bullying isn’t typically the sole cause, it can be contributing factor in teen suicide and school shootings. Undoubtedly, bullying has always been a social issue, however nowadays there are new factors to consider. Currently we live in a world of cyberbullying. Racism, exclusion, harassment, are all regular headlines of our daily newsfeeds. The youth of today face a more complex world, especially when it comes to bullying.
Cobra Kai has been engaging the high school bully trope from multiple perspectives well beyond the ongoing 30+ year feud between Johnny and Daniel. Back in the 80s, Johnny, Chozen, and Terry were the bullies. Now with Cobra Kai, it’s become far more complex. The new generation of teenage characters all grapple with their shifting social standings and relationships. Take Eli Moskowitz (Jacob Bertrand). At the beginning of the series, he’s a victim of bullying, picked on for his cleft lip scar. But as he becomes empowered through his Karate training, he heeds Johnny’s advice to ‘flip the script’ transforming into Hawk, a mohawked tattooed bully. But after seeing his character’s trials, is he really a bully at heart? 
“It’s kind of a loaded question,” says Bertrand of his character. “Honestly, I would say he’s more of a bully. I think everyone has the opportunity to make choices. And I think, yes, he definitely has been a victim in the past, but that doesn’t really excuse his actions for what’s transpired. Especially for Season 3 being under Kreese’s wing and having him leading Cobra Kai, I think that furthers some of his bad guy tendencies.”
Another leading villainess from season 2 is Tory Nichols (Peyton List). Tory is a troubled teen who comes from a poor family. According to Tory, her mom worked as a waitress but was fired for taking some discarded food to feed her family. Always looking out for number one, Tory’s background is a little mysterious because she has had some previous martial arts training, leading many fans to wonder if her previous sensei was a character from the original series, perhaps even Terry Silver. But is she a bully or a victim of circumstance?
“I think a victim,” says List hesitantly. “I mean… Yes. Both. 50/50. I have to admit, I justify everything she does. I don’t really like the victim mentality though, and I don’t think Tory would either. So I don’t think she would think of herself as a victim, but I do think after a certain amount of abuse and tearing down from the world, that it just gets wearing, and it’s easy to act out, but that is the easy route. 
“So it’s both. You see how conflicted I am?”
No matter how you slice it, the lineage of bullies traces back to one man – the founder of Cobra Kai, Sensei John Kreese. Kreese has always been a sociopath. He was a Green Beret during the Vietnam War who earned the rank of Captain, as well as a U.S. Army Karate championship title. In Ssason 2, Kreese tells some stories about serving in Operation: Desert Storm and other U.S. military actions, however Johnny’s top student Miguel (Xolo Maridueña) confidentially points out the errors in his tales to Johnny. It motivates Johnny to follow Kreese, only to discover that he’s been living in homeless shelters for the past decade or so. Kreese admits that he tried to re-enlist but was rejected, alluding that it might have been because of failing the psychiatric evaluation. The implication is that Kreese suffers from PTSD. 
Does this redeem Kreese’s heinous behavior? Not really. Kreese has been poisoning the minds of teenagers for three decades and that’s utterly unforgivable. As Daniel’s mom Lucille LaRusso (Randee Heller) once said about the Cobra Kai Dojo, “They’re nothing but a bunch of bullies,” and there’s no one to blame more for that than Kreese. But at least Cobra Kai gives it some reason for his mercilessness. Rumors have been circulating that there will be some sort of redemptive arc for Kreese in Season 3. But honestly, that’s going to take a lot of redeeming before Kreese gets any sort of pardon. 
What’s more, the season 3 trailer revealed that Chozen will be appearing in Cobra Kai. In The Karate Kid Part II, Chozen was a special kind of over-the-top psycho bully who went so far as to push Daniel-san into a death match over ‘honor.’ Might there be some redemption coming for Chozen too? No spoilers here. Wax on, wax off and tune in. 
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Cobra Kai season 3 premieres Jan. 1 on Netflix.
The post Cobra Kai: How the Show Tackles Bullying in Season 3 appeared first on Den of Geek.
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