#any kind of engineering works honestly but I loved how she geeked out over the machine
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I know itâs controversial but I think Annabeth geeking out over the Hephaestus contraptions was adorable
#and yes architectural engineering is STILL on the table#any kind of engineering works honestly but I loved how she geeked out over the machine#annabeth chase#percy jackson#pjo#percy jackon and the olympians#percy jackson and the olympians#pjo tv show#percy jackson tv show#pjo spoilers#percy jackson the lightning thief#pjo series#annabeth pjo
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#pjo tv show#percy series#percy jackson tv show#pjo series#percy jackson tv series#grover underwood#percy jackson show#and yes architectural engineering is STILL on the table#any kind of engineering works honestly but I loved how she geeked out over the machine#annabeth chase#percy jackson#pjo#percy jackon and the olympians#percy jackson and the olympians#pjo spoilers#percy jackson the lightning thief#annabeth pjo#free iphone#free earning
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Superman & Lois Season 2: What to Expect When the Show Returns
https://ift.tt/3xZHqMm
This article contains Superman & Lois spoilers.
The first season of Superman & Lois has come to a close, and what an absolute joyride it was from start to finish. Are you left craving more? Do you need to spend more time in Smallville ASAP? Well, weâve got good news for you, because Superman & Lois Season 2 has already been confirmed by The CW, and the first episode has already been written!
We spoke with showrunner Todd Helbing to try and get some details about what to expect from Superman & Lois Season 2.
Superman & Lois Season 2 Villains
Superman & Lois has already given us multiple Kryptonians for Superman to have super-powered brawls and trade heat vision blasts with. Thereâs always an instinct to just give Supes someone he can hit, but the first season managed to do that while also telling a pretty nuanced, even tragic, story for its central villain. But that just means itâs going to be a little trickier to follow up Tal-Rho with someone equally compelling.
âFrom the earliest days that Greg Berlanti and I talked about this show, the question was always, âokay, if weâre going to do this, how are we going to make it different?ââ Helbing says. âAnd if you go through any of the movies, I think the natural tendency is, you have to have somebody as strong and powerful as Superman, or he would never lose. The story engine that we have though, and whatâs really important is the family of it. So once you become a father, once Superman became a father, he has weaknesses that he never had before, his thoughts about Lois, about the boys. That family aspect makes him a weaker in a lot of ways, because he loves more. But it also makes him a better hero, because he has something to fight for.â
It doesnât seem like Helbing thinks power levels are as important to building a Superman threat as others do.
âIt doesnât have to be somebody that can punch as hard as Superman,â Helbing says. âI think of the end of episode 14, when he came back and he had to tell his wife that he canât find Jordan. Thereâs a look on Tylerâs face, like he doesnât know what to do. Those are the situations we want to put Superman in. Because I think to all of us, writers, actors, producers, thatâs the most important and what really works on our show.â
Lex Luthor?
And everybody knows that if thereâs one villain who definitely canât âpunch as hard as Superman,â itâs Lex Luthor, who has been brought brilliantly to life on Supergirl over the last few seasons by Jon Cryer. But with Superman & Lois determined to forge its own path, it may be awhile before we get to see Lex show up in Smallville.
Read more
TV
Superman & Lois: Inside the Seasonâs Big Twists and that Finale Ending
By Mike Cecchini
Movies
Lex Luthor: Jerk Of All Trades
By Mike Cecchini
âLook, I think Jon was awesome as Lex, so Iâm certainly open to anything,â Helbing says. âI think weâd have to find the right story where it would work. Lex Luthor is such an iconic character, so it might be a bit, you know what I mean? There are some other characters that we want to explore. If weâre going to make our own stamp here and try to carve out our own story in Superman history, letâs tell some fresh new versions of this.â
Will There Be More Flashback Episodes?
One of the highlights of the season was the flashback episode, which told us big pieces of Lois and Clarkâs history together before the boys were born, and showed us Clarkâs first adventures in Metropolis as Superman (in that cool Fleischer-inspired costume).
âWeâre not going to make the show into Lost,â Helbing jokes. âWeâll certainly have flashbacks if itâs going to help tell the story and help the audience understand where a character is and where they came from so it really lands emotionally, then yeah, weâll do it.â
Still, that doesnât mean that a flashback episode is automatically baked into the plans for Superman & Lois Season 2 just yet.
âWe donât necessarily have a format that weâre trying to follow per episode,â Helbing says. âNot having the typical sort of heroic television formula is really, I think, allowed us to approach stories from a different point of view and aspect, and not maybe worry about stuff that I would have worried about on The Flash.â
Will There Be Crossovers With Other DC TV Arrowverse Shows?
The pandemic put the kibosh on all DC TV crossovers this year, although in fairness, those were always expected to be smaller in scale after the massive Crisis on Infinite Earths in 2019. As for what characters or shows Superman & Lois Season 2 could potentially crossover with, Helbing isnât talking yet.
âI think our sort of north star is just, itâs not any particular character, itâs just whatever benefits the story the best,â he says. âHonestly, it could be anybody right now. I think weâre under the assumption right now that things are going to kind of get back to how they were pre-pandemic, but Iâm still a little hesitant to do that. And not just me. I think everybody is a little cautious, and we just want to be safe first and make sure everybodyâs protected. Weâll see how it all plays out. Iâm optimistic. I would love to do what we can.âÂ
Helbing also teases more information about where Superman & Lois sits in relation to the other Arrowverse shows airing.
âThereâs been a lot of talk and questions about how all the shows interact now and are related post-Crisis,â he says. âI think in season two, the audience will get a lot more answers about that.â
Natalie Irons and Steel
Helbing is keeping quiet on all the implications about Natalie Irons arriving from her corner of the multiverse to surprise her father, John Henry Irons, and the Kent family.
âWe knew Nat was going to show up, and we knew we wanted her in the show, because we want to explore a new family dynamic,â he says. âIâll just say, in season two, thereâs a lot that everybody is dealing with, having to get used to new members of a family, Iâll just put it that way.â
Yes, we have to imagine she wonât be thrilled to see that her mother on this world is married to the man who murdered her on their world, for starters.
Will Reign of the Supermen Happen?
Look, you canât blame us for speculating on this. Superman & Lois introduced John Henry Irons, and even gave him his Steel armor and hammer. They introduced the Eradicator, both as a piece of Kryptonian tech and also as the living embodiment of that tech with a mission to make Earth more like Krypton.
And in a sense, it also gave us Superboy. No, not the half-clone of Superman who eventually adopts the moniker of Kon-El (and then Conner Kent) but the actual biological son of Clark Kent and Lois Lane, Jordan Kent. For Superman fans, this is 3/4ths of a set of âreplacement Supermen,â the heroes who rose after Supermanâs âdeathâ at the spiky hands of Doomsday in the famed Death and Return of Superman comic book story.
Helbing admits that theyâve talked about things, but certainly wonât commit to the possibility, either.
âWe talk,â he says. âWe kick all that stuff around, and itâs ⌠I wonât say no, but I wonât say yes either, because we already wrote the first episode of season two. Thereâs some really cool stuff coming.âÂ
And since Supergirl already did a version of Hank Henshaw, the infamous Cyborg Superman, and with all the other love for Superman comic book lore already on display in Superman & Lois, is any of this ever being discussed by the writers?
âI think one of the things that we want to do is we want to stay away from any of the villains that Supergirl did for the most part, unless weâre going to completely reinvent them like Morgan Edge. So weâre trying to find some deep dives and bring those stories out in our show. And I think so far, Iâm really excited about season two.â
Superman & Lois Season 2 Release Date
At the moment, all we know is that Superman & Lois Season 2 will arrive in early 2022. The first season arrived in February, so that might be a good spot to pencil in for now.
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What do you want to see from Superman & Lois Season 2? Let us know in the comments!
The post Superman & Lois Season 2: What to Expect When the Show Returns appeared first on Den of Geek.
from Den of Geek https://ift.tt/3zaX2ON
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PLEASE share your vld reboot ideas aja the show canon is garbage and your mind is so galaxy brain
OK OK ALRIGHT!!!!!!!!!! alright so idk what kind of. earth landscape this reboot occurs inâŚ. like yallve got this retro 80s/90s neon future verse going on but i didnt think my reboot version would fit into that so yall go wild with whatever hc for this earth reboot thing u want cuz im not creative and i didnt really think that far ahead
ALRIGHT here we go. this is so long i HAVE to put this under the cut but i hope yall enjoy the creations of my MINDâŚâŚ
- akeno âKEITHâ shirogane: (age: 19) [gay] hes japanese/black/galran. hes still half galra in this reboot bc i fuck with that honestly but hes got more visible galran traits. his bottom canines are larger than usual and poke out from his bottom lip so he wears a mask to cover his mouth and his eyes r still purple but instead of his sclera being yellow(tinted), hes just like. got some odd golden flecks in his eyes. he normally wears a dirty mechanics jumpsuit with the top half tied around his waist and a black or white tank top underneath (hes still a high school flunk out so he works full time at a car repair shop so hes able to buy food and shit at LEAST + hes still got his motorcycle to keep in shape). his casual clothes r just regular grey sweats, hoodies, and adidas or whatever brand is closest in their future lol. hes blood related to shiro who ill get to in a second.. shiros blood related to him as his uncle (brother of keiths dad) ALSO his hair isnt long in this reboot, hes got a short messy head of hair that he mostly just pulls back into a TINY little pony tail on his forehead (like in the game show ep) so it doesnt get in his face while hes working. he also has goggles bc thats the one thing from yalls reboot ideas i actually like (endgame lion: he momentarily pilots black during shiros disappearance but his permanent and stationary lion is red)
- falâallura âfala, ALLURAâ nagunaâephy: [lesbian] (age: 21 or close to that in alien standards) shes altean on her fathers side and teem (what weâre gonna call nymas race) on her mothers side. she bares more altean features except her eyes are solid yellow and shes only got four fingers on each hand. instead of crescent shaped facial markings, she has painted on red and golden lines across her nose and her upper lip. her hair (very dark purple with silver highlights and literal glowing, twinkling stars) is VERY long, brushing the floor as she walks except and (now bear with me cuz this might be hard to explain) her hair, the farther down u look kind of fades away? like it becomes semi to absolute transparent⌠idk how else to explain it but i hope u understandâŚ. she does wear a crown but its more like a headdress.. (imagine beyonces headdress).. she doesnt wear it often, usually only on diplomatic missions to greet other worldly rulers bc its heavy and it makes her neck hurt :/.. her dress! looks like this! but a little more spiffy .. u know.. her casual/training clothes are justâŚ. idk imagine a royal looking sports bra and leggings?? i guess ⌠ALSO ALSO ALSO she can still shape shift but instead of limiting her shifting to just the changing of skin tone and height, she can completely mimic different alien species but only humanoid races.. like she can have those indented looking knees and huge ass horns and all that but she cant like. turn into an earth lizard u know what im saying. also also also also she still speaks with an accent just⌠not a british oneâŚ.(endgame lion: no lion. she keeps leading and piloting the castle ship until destruction, where she leads and pilots the atlas)
- alejandro âLANCE, aleâ reyes-leon: (age: 19 ½) [bi] hes cuban/black/vietnamese. his dad is black and vietnamese and his mom is cuban! hes got longish afro textured hair he keeps back in a pony tail most of the time like this or a bun when training bc hes too lazy to put any actual effort into styling it. hes got a couple moles/freckles scattered across his face and hes got sectoral heterochromiaaround his left pupil so theres a little bit of blue in one of his other wise dark brown eyes (like this).. i havent really figured out what his clothing style is.. i thought about keeping his clothes close to vld canon like his jacket (bc that was a really good jacket) but im gonna go a little wild here so hold on. he wears one of those surfer type looking skin tight turtleneck shirts underneath his heavy bomber jacket.. he wears just regular ripped jeans and hightops like in canonâŚâŚ.. hmmâŚâŚ. he wears a pink bead necklace under his shirt that was made by his little cousin just a couple weeks before he was shot off into space and he hasnt taken it off sinceâŚâŚâŚâŚ. he also has a tiny stick and poke tattoo on his ankle he did when he was thirteen bc he thought it would look cool but it turned out kinda lop sided so he never takes his socks off in embarrassment (endgame lion: blue to red (during keiths reign as black paladin) then to black when shiro leaves voltron to lead the atlas alongside allura)
- takashi âSHIROâ shirogane: (age: 31) [gay] hes japanese/black. hes keiths uncle and the only family keith really has .. his design doesnt really change much except hes got long hair (like kuron) but its pulled up into a messy bun or pony tail.. in MY canon hes still gay and married to adam (whos name isnt adam i just cant think of a new name for him yet) (and adam lives dont worry) and theyre working on adopting a daughter before shiro has to leave for kerberos. shiro usually dresses in work out outfits so like. gym shorts⌠tank tops.. leggings.. imagine those white blonde dudes who always wear a man bun and only eat vegan and drink chai from starbucks bc thats exactly how shiro acts but ONLY ironically âŚâŚâŚ when shiros abducted on the galra freighter and forced to fight in the ring, his hair streaks white but instead of just a clean scar across his nose, he has multiple long scars scattered across his face from a one x one between his face and some debris thrown at him by a gladiator. his prosthetic looks and remains kinda the same i guess but this time its decked out with claws on the finger tips so it looks a little more galran yeah? (endgame lion: no endgame lion. he pilots the atlas alongside allura)
- francesca âfrannie, frankie, PIDGEâ eleonora: (age: 15) [trans girl lesbian] shes . just italian i guess. so anyway shes not gonna be an asshole bitch like canon pidge.. shes gonna be the caring sweet but KINDA mean little sister we always wished we had.. the little sister who would tell u, with all honesty, that ur winged eyeliner was smudged before u hit the town with the girls and made a fool of urselfâŚâŚ. ANYWAY shes still gonna be the âhackerâ/computer geek techno girl but not as much ykno? shes JUST a little girl so she just kinda does her own thing. i rlly like all the fanart i see of her wearing overalls and stuff SO thats her canon designâŚâŚ she wears faded overall jeans over a short sleeved pale pink tshirt w a dog one it and scuffed up chucks. she wears glasses but instead of just taking them from matt she has an actual prescription and is basically blind without them. i literally cannot stress this enough but shes such a nice girl like the team pretty much adopted her as their little sister the moment they boarded the castle ship. idk what else to add on to her!!!! i literally did not put any thought into pidge at all! (endgame lion: permanently green)
- opetaiaâHUNKâ tuitama: (age: 19 ž) [bi] hes samoan/black. hunk was adopted and has two moms and three other siblings, all of who are younger than him. im not sure about his fashion other than i KNOW deep down in my heart that he would wear cargo shortsâŚ. i cant find it in me to get rid of his bandana thing so i let him keep it except he uses it to tie his hair up instead of using it as a head band thingâŚ.. HUNK in my au is more of a tech freak/engineer than pidge so he handles most of that stuff with the occasional help from pidge (like wiring⌠she has tiny fingers that can grab the wires easier) hunk probably wears the crocs/sandals with socks combo but just because he loves hearing lance bitch about it whnever he struts into a room. hunk also looks good in his vest so im gonna let him keep that but it looks more modified⌠like it has a bunch of pockets and stuff to keep bolts and nuts and other stuff he needs to work with.. thats also why he wears cargo shorts; just for the pockets.. (endgame lion: permanently yellow)
also ur probably wondering âif lance is in black and keith is in red and allura doesnt pilot a lion, THEN WHOS PILOTING BLUE????â âŚâŚ.. heh⌠peep thisâŚâŚâŚ..
- ADAM elsammak-althani(thank u mal @fuckvld for ur gorgeous arabic adam hcs..): (age: 32) [gay] i dont have much to say about him other than read mals hc lists and that ADAM LIVES IN MY REBOOT and he also joins the voltron team and pilots the blue lion (i FIRMLY hc that hes a very free/wild spirit and just loves to make jokes and is just.. a really fun guy to be around and obviously blue would open up to him in a SECOND. dont even @ me) (endgame lion: BLUE!)
#VOLTRON#this is SO long im sorry mobile users :^(#ALSO..... HEH...... ill draw them soon...... someday... i promise..#also if i messed anything up just tell me and ill fix it.. muwah#Anonymous
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Rip - honour. Rip - intelligence. Rip - savvy. Rip - interactions. Rip - groups. Rip - pride, hubris, arrogance. Rip - resiliency. Rip - attraction. Rip - relationships (any/all kinds). Rip -privacy. Rip - secrets (both keeping them and being out of the loop). Rip - touch. Rip - respect. Rip - love (all of them). Rip - disaster. Rip - loneliness. Rip - leadership. Rip - ever be ready/willing to have a relationship again? Rip - relaxation. Rip - nemesis.
Rip - honour.Â
Hah, thatâs an interesting prompt because my gut instinct is that he is an honorable personâŚfor the most part.
And for a certain definition of âhonorâ.  (Sorry, American.  I have no time for an extra âuâ.)
I think he tries to follow a code of honor when he deals with the team, as much as possible. Â He lies to them, yes. Â But he also tends to be very open with the risks and their chances of success. Â For example, when he recruited them against Vandal Savage, he might not have told them the whole truth, but he never let them believe it was anything but a nearly-impossible quest. Â He always offered to take them home, and when Mick and Snart took him up on it, he didnât make any attempt to stop them.
But at the same time, I think that heâs used to working on a bit more of a grand scale, with stakes that make honor and fair play a bit less of a priority.
Certainly, as weâve seen, he isnât inclined to a fair fight. Â Heâs got that stunner for a reason. Â And while heâs a good hand-to-hand fighter, he does his best work via sneakiness and ambush. Â But heâs a scrawny man with no superpowers, so itâs debatable as to how fair some of these fights would be anyway, if he didnât cheat. Â :-P
In the end, I think heâs a pragmatist who wants to be honorable, and tries to be honorable to an extent, but is willing to push that honor aside when the stakes are high enough.
Rip - intelligence
I think Rip has a lot of ingrained assumptions and prejudices with regard to intelligence and/or education. Â I think that itâs a quality that he values very highly. Â And I think we can see that in the way he initially responds to the crew.
He seems to immediately find a common ground with Martin. Â They clash at times, but there was an immediate mutual respect. Â As bad as he often was as a leader, he was usually pretty decent at managing Ray. Â (And for that matter, in Fellowship, he seemed to be even a little better at keeping Nate in line than Sara usually is.) Â He seems to have a lot more patience with the kind of accidental insubordination of distracted geeks than he does with other folk.
He gets along reasonably well with folks like Sara and Jax, who may not have the fancy degrees, but have a lot of natural intelligence. Â He respects, although distrusts, Snart.
And it probably, subconsciously, fed into his issues with Mick at first. Â Mick is not stupid at all, but his intelligence is on a social/emotional level that the Time Masters arenât likely to value or even recognize. Â And I think Ripâs personal history adds some interesting layers to it.
Rip spent the first formative years of his life starving on the streets. Â We donât know much about that time, but Iâm inclined to think that if heâs so quick to stab an adult when feeling threatened, it probably wasnât particularly pleasant. Â I think we can probably hazard a guess that there wasnât much in the way of educational opportunities there either.
But that changed when he got recruited to the Time Masters. Â Suddenly, he was in this warm, safe, place, where he could eat his fill and no one could hurt him. Â It must have felt like a completely different world. Â And of course, the Time Masters didnât just give their orphans housing and an upbringing, but an education as well. Â (and a healthy dose of indoctrination).
So I tend to think somewhere in the unconscious part of Ripâs mind, he associates education/intelligence with all of the good things like food, comfort, safety. Â Basically civilization. Whereas the lack of education/intelligence ends up associated with the fear, cold, terror, hunger of his very early past.Â
I donât really think itâs the key reason he didnât like Mick at first. Â But I think itâs tied up in all sorts of other issues. Â Mick is a criminal. Â Mick is brutal. Â Mick is angry and uncontrollable and violent. Â Mick is uneducated. Â Somewhere in the back of Ripâs mind, Mick basically is associated with everything that Rip has been raised to hate about his pre-Time Master past. Â And of course, the odds are that street-kid Rip would have met people that, on surface level, seemed a lot like Mick. Â And those likely would not have been fun or positive experiences.
None of this, of course, is fair to Mick. Â (Fortunately, Rip seemed to realize that after the Chronos debacle, and their dynamic shifts significantly and positively in the second half of the season.)
Rip - savvy.Â
Okay, so I was going to type a lot about how I think Rip values shrewdness and practical knowledge, but thatâs boring and I just typed a lot about intelligence anyway. Â So instead, I will talk about pirates.
I think that Rip is secretly a big fan of pirate type media, and may have, at some point during rebellious adolescence considered running away and becoming a time pirate himself.
Gideon was always a little sad that he never followed through with it. Â His pirate dreams were a lot of fun, and she always thought sheâd make a good pirate ship.
Rip - interactions.Â
I think Rip has no idea how to interact with people on a normal, person-to-person basis, without some sort of great goal or mission in mind.
I mean, can you imagine the poor guy trying to engage in small talk?
Rip - groups
So, the most interesting thing about the JSA/Spear reveal in season two, to me (as a single-minded Rip fan) was that it showed that Rip has actually worked with a group before. Â And surprisingly enough, seemed to be really effective at it.
I suspect a lot of it comes from the fact that by the time Rip recruited the JSA, theyâd been working together for more than a decade. Â And even back in 1942, they were pretty calm, focused and disciplined. Â So it would have been pretty easy for Rip to present his case to them, and once theyâd agreed to help, they would have devoted that calm, focused, discipline to the pursuit of their mutual goals.
But as weâve seen: Time Masters tend to work alone. Â So I doubt he had any real appreciation of the work that goes into creating a team like that. Â Recruiting the Legends would have been a nasty surprise.
 Rip - pride, hubris, arrogance
I think that Rip does tend toward a certain arrogance.  I hesitate to call it hubris though, because I donât think he tends toward âexcessiveâ pride.  (I think Ripâs deadly sin is more wrath than pride, honestly.)
Ripâs arrogance comes from his abilities and experiences. Â Heâs a Time Master and heâs a damn good one. Â Heâs Captained the Waverider for twelve years. Â Heâs feared by time pirates. Â He has a shit ton of skills and training to back that up.
I donât however think heâs a snob. Â I donât think he has an innate sense of aristocracy, or the belief that heâs better than other people. Â He was pretty quick to treat his team as his equals. Â He respected Martinâs ability to use time equations, Jaxâs ability as shipâs engineer, Saraâs ability to fight and to lead. Â I think that his initial issues with the Rogues werenât so much feeling as though he was better than them, as they reminded him of an origin/life that he very much wanted to forget. Â Thereâs an interesting distinction there that might fuel its own blog post one day.
Ripâs secret keeping probably does have an element of pride, but I think itâs less about an inflated ego, and more a sense of âthis is MY responsibility, I canât put this on someone elseâs shoulders.â Â
Now the Time Masters on a whole? Â The epitome of hubris. Â Thereâs a reason that I think of them as the time-space Order of Hermes. Â They scheme, they manipulate, they control, and they tell themselves that itâs for the best. Â That theyâre the best people to make these decisions. Â And in the end, their machinations led to their own destruction.
Rip - resiliency
Rip is a survivor. Â He kind of has to be. Â Weâve seen the trauma list. Â But I wonder if maybe his resiliency hasnât met its match. Â Ripâs been different since Land of the Lost. Â More shaken, less certain. Â And I donât think itâs entirely about confusion over his place in the group. Â
Iâve described Rip as a festering knot of rage and sarcasm wrapped in a duster (a description that I am rightfully proud of), but we havenât seen any of that rage since Rip woke up.  Even when the poor guy was face to face with Eobard, all he managed was a tired sounding âin the brigâ.  Itâs worrisome.
Rip - attraction
Okay, so I mentioned before that I officially claim Rip Hunter as an asexual character. Â Dude fell in love with a disembodied AI, whose only visual image is a floating blue head. Â Heâs one of us.
That said, itâs clear that he has romantic attraction. Â We see that with Miranda, Jonah, and Gideon. Â Itâs not a very large sample size, Iâll grant you. Â But what can you do.
But based on those, I would say that Rip seems to be drawn toward passionate, somewhat domineering personalities (Gideonâs subtler about it, but itâs definitely there), with strong convictions. Â And he seems to especially like beings with a wild or uncontrollable streak. Â
So this is where I reiterate the headcanon that Rip is romantically in love with his entire damn team.
(I suspect he also may have a bit of an oedipal/electra complex.)
(Bonus, slightly disturbing thought: if you look at Jonah Hex and then you look at Mick Rory, then it starts to be possible that there may have been yet another element involved in Ripâs initial difficulty in dealing with Mick. Â Just saying.)
 Rip - relationships (any/all kind)
Hm. Â Well. Â For a Time Master, whose ethos specifically forbids most types of attachments, Rip seems to have collected a lot of them.
Miranda and Jonas are obvious, of course.
But thereâs also the team, who he loves so much that even when heâs amnesiac heâs trying to save them.
Thereâs mentor/father figure, Druce. Â Mary Xavier. Â Thereâs Gideon. Â The JSA (at least Heywood and McNider. Â Courtney seemed more distant.) Â Jonah.
Thereâs even that fucked up obsessed villain dynamic that he has with both Vandal Savage and Eobard Thawne.
I mean, really? Â Thatâs a lot of fucking relationships. Â Heâs really bad at the no-attachment thing, isnât he?
(Awkward crossover AU idea: Rip Hunter in the old Jedi Order.  or possibly  Rip Hunter, the galaxyâs worst accidental Sith ever.)
 Rip -privacy and Rip - secrets (both keeping them and being out of the loop)
I think privacy among the Time Masters must be a really interesting concept. Â They have AIs that monitor dreams. Â Councils that regulate romantic relationships. Â Devices to literally invade peopleâs minds.
Thatâs not a society that puts a lot of stock in privacy.
But Iâm reminded of something I read about Japan, when I was much younger, which discussed how even though physical personal space was very different there than in the United States (as anyone whoâs ever been crammed into a Japanese subway can attest), many Japanese people had other ways to establish personal boundaries and maintain some measure of distance from one another psychologically, even if it canât always happen physically.
And it makes me wonder if the Time Masters donât have their own ways of psychologically creating some measure of privacy for themselves.
It may explain why Rip finds it so difficult to open up to his crew. Â What do you keep for yourself in a society where even your dreams are monitored?
That said, to Ripâs credit, he isnât prone toward hypocrisy. Â He doesnât seem to have much of an issue when the crew keeps secrets from him too. Â (He was concerned about Saraâs bloodlust, but he didnât seem to be upset that she didnât tell him about it, for example.)
Rip - touch
I think this is one of the ways that the Time Masters really fucked Rip up royally from day one. Â Because Rip is so standoffish most of the time, so rigid and closed off, that he pretty much breathes âdonât touch meâ vibes.
But as has been pointed out and illustrated in lovely gifsets, Rip is remarkably touchy-feely when people are injured. Â Shoulder pats. Â Face holding. Â Hand holding. Â And itâs not a matter of him tolerating their need for comfort. Â Heâs the one who reaches out.
Heâs the one that, as soon as heâs freed from the brig in his mind, immediately clings to Gideon (though when it came to the kiss, she pretty much jumped up to meet him half way. Â But thatâs a different bit of meta.)
And then there was that weird sort of lean/not-lean into Jonah Hexâs space when theyâre bantering about laser guns.
I think ultimately that Rip is not touch-averse at all. Â Heâs touch-starved. Â He wants to reach out to people. Â He wants to offer comfort and receive it. Â Heâd actually really enjoy a shoulder pat or a hand-shake, or a god-damned real, corporeal hug. Â But he doesnât know how to ask for it.
He gives âdonât touch meâ vibes because he doesnât know how not to.  And thatâs so very sad.
Rip - respect
Okay, this one is more tangential. Â But I always find myself wondering about Magister Druce. Â I mean, specifically, his role in young Ripâs life. Â Because Rip respects him and trusts him so damn much for most of season one. Â EVEN after being lead into an ambush. Â EVEN after knowing about Chronos. Â EVEN after he issues the Omega Protocol.
And has that actor EVER played a good guy? Â Ever?
But Ripâs utter shock when he learns the depths of Druceâs betrayal is unmistakable.
And the thing is, Iâm not sure that the regard is entirely one-sided.  Iâve mentioned before that the entire Oculus reveal was basically unnecessary.  Rip was captured and likely to be executed, exiled, or just imprisoned for life.  Druce had no reason to remove him from his cell and explain everything.  Unless he seriously thought something would be gained by it.  I wonder, if Rip had given into despair and surrendered, if Druce wouldnât have actually brought him back into the fold.  I kind of think that was the intention.  (Especially given the parallel cuts to Mickâs re-brainwashing.)
Itâs pretty clear that they were mentor and student at one time.  But it seems like a little more than that.  This isnât just a studentâs respect and trust for a mentor.  Itâs bigger, blinder, more unconditional than that.  Itâs a childâs trust, and as weâve seen, Rip isnât particularly good at trusting anyone.
It wouldnât surprise me if Druce had been grooming him from a very young age. Â He might have even been the one who initially found little Michael on the streets and brought him in. Â It would explain a lot. Â Particularly the level of self-loathing that Rip has for his younger self. Â Mary Xavier wouldnât have encouraged that, and instead seemed gently tolerant of Michaelâs issues. Â Druce, however, may have.
And of course, then it leads to more speculation. Â Rip may not have trusted the Time Masters, but he trusted Druce. Â How much did he trust him? Â Did Vandal Savage know how to find Miranda and Jonas because Rip told Druce where they were?
Rip - love (all of them).Â
All of the types of love or all of the characters? Â
Okay, so, this is another âI blame the Time Mastersâ bit, but I suspect that eros and philia are really easily mixed up in Ripâs brain.  Itâs what comes of a society that stigmatizes normal human connections the way it does. Â
Iâve mentioned before that I imagine Rip sees gestures of romance in the same way that we look at overtly sexual acts, and I stand by that.  In a lot of ways, I think heâd be more comfortable seeing sexual acts, as thatâs just primitive biology.  Romance and friendship, concepts that prize connections between people, that prioritize certain people over others or even the world⌠ those are truly dangerous for a Time Master.
And considering that Rip did help break time specifically for his team, the Time Masters may have had a bit of a point.
But anyway, this is yet another chance to state my sincere belief that Rip Hunter is deeply in love with his entire team. Â Even Martin. Â Even Mick. Â And of course, Gideon. Â And he has no idea how to begin to parse out these emotions or what to do with them.
I think the Time Masters probably have a really interesting stance on storge. Â There are certain implications that itâs frowned upon as well. Â Certainly Jonas was a problem. Â And I suspect thereâs a reason Rip had to cross his own timeline in order to seek his motherâs help.
The one storge type of relationship that seems to be tolerated is Ripâs regard for Zaman Druce.  But perhaps that makes a lot of sense.  If the young Time Mastersâ are only allowed one outlet for human connection, they will likely be very dependent on it, and therefore more easily influenced.
Agape is probably the love most favored by the Time Masters.  But I think itâs the love that Rip is least suited to.  Agape requires a level of emotional distance that I donât really think Rip has.  Rip goes all in.
Rip - disaster.Â
I feel like that dash should be an equal sign. Â And that pretty much says it all. Â :-)
Rip - loneliness
One very consistent character trait of Ripâs is that, in the end, he really needs to have people around him. Â Weâve seen what he does when heâs alone: he either ends up succumbing to despair or engaging in tremendously bad, self-destructive ideas.
The truly depressing part about Ripâs story so far, however, is that he starts out as a man who is (except for Gideon, to be fair) completely alone with his grief, rage and guilt. Â He ends up gathering a makeshift family of misfits and assholes. Â But he still ends up suffering alone. Â
Rip - leadership
Wisecracks aside, I donât actually think that Rip is THAT bad as a leader.  As weâve seen in the Spear flashbacks and  in Fellowship: when thereâs a clear goal, with a clear direction, with a team thatâs willing to listen, he does fine.
Furthermore, there are a number of really good decisions that he made in season one that he never really gets credit for:Â
For example, naming Jax as shipâs mechanic. Â This wasnât just a lucky spur of the moment decision. Â It was a decision made in the context of a growing issue.
If you recall, the relationship between Martin and Jax was a pretty important arc in the beginning of season one. Â Martin had kidnapped Jax to bring him along, to begin with, while Jax had expressed doubts that heâd be any use on this kind of team. Â They were also dealing with Martin being overprotective and domineering toward Jax, as a result of dealing with Ronnieâs death. Â Martin had to learn to trust and back off of Jax.
So looking at that, then we can see why naming Jax as the shipâs mechanic was actually a legitimately brilliant management decision.
Jax didnât initially have a lot of self-confidence. Â He saw himself as the normal guy. Â An ordinary mechanic surrounded by super geniuses and assassins and so on. (Not that there is anything wrong with being a mechanic.)
But Jax was a mechanic and a very good one. Â And he was much smarter than he gave himself credit for. Â This made him an ideal choice. Â (And since heâs patient and mature, heâs far better suited than Ray, who while brilliant and mechanically inclined, is a bit too erratic for this kind of job.)
So Jax discovers that he has it in him to be an awesome Chief Engineer. Â Instant boost of confidence.
It also has nothing to do with Martin or Firestorm. Â As weâve seen with Ray, when you have powers or cool tech, it can be very easy to put all your self-worth into one specific role. Â And when youâre partnered with someone who can be a little overbearing, like Martin, then that can be a lot of added stress or a recipe for co-dependence.
But this way, Jax has something that proves that he has value as a teammate besides just being Martinâs partner. Â Itâs something thatâs all his. Â And it gives him more of a way to argue on equal footing.
And it gives him a way to seek privacy and vent if he needs to. Â Need some time alone? Â Important repairs.
Another good decision that Rip made was to pair Kendra and Sara in White Knights. Â This was, if you recall, right after the episode where Sara had revealed her issues with bloodlust. Â And of course, we learn that Kendraâs having a great deal of difficulty managing her Hawk powers and memories.
Neither woman would have likely sought the other out on their own. Â As we saw, both had a considerable amount of distrust for each other at the time. Â Furthermore, Saraâs used to suffering in silence, while Kendra was understandably overwhelmed with the changes in her life.
Theyâre both good people though and even though theyâre not likely to ask for help for themselves, both women were inclined to try to help someone else.
So Rip pairs them up, points out to each how sheâs uniquely qualified to understand what the other is going through. Â And voila, both women are able to help each other, and then embark on a lasting friendship.
I donât point this out to give Rip credit for either Jaxâs achievements or Sara and Kendraâs. Â He is certainly not the reason that Jax was a good mechanic or the girls became friends.
But in both cases, he was the one to recognize the potential that these characters had, and pushed them into a position to discover that for themselves.
And thatâs pretty good!
In the end, Ripâs biggest obstacle as a leader is, I think, a measure of confidence. Â He doesnât have the confidence to open up to his team. Â He doesnât have the confidence to exert authority over his team. Â So he is never able to quite direct or control them successfully.
Rip - ever be ready/willing to have a relationship again?
Thatâs a hard question. Â I think at some point in the distant future, he would be ready/willing to have a relationship, but honestly, heâs nowhere near that point right now. Â Heâs not quite the jagged chasm of despair that he was in season one, thank goodness, but I think heâs still a bit too fragile.
One of the reasons that I ship Time Hex is that I think itâs the only relationship that I could see actually working right now, because all the groundwork was laid a long time ago. Â Even if you donât think they had something going on then, there was still a level of trust and camaraderie that predates Ripâs current fragility.
Prior to Turncoat, I thought Time Canary had a chance to work too. Â Heâs still kind of broken, but sheâs kind of broken too, so I thought they might be in a place that they could help each other. Â But then there was evil Rip. Â And even though I think Saraâs already forgiven him, and had basically as soon as they saved him if not sooner, Rip isnât anywhere near ready to forgive himself. Â
And really, I donât think Sara would pursue it either right now, even assuming sheâs interested. Â She has some idea of how lost and fragile he is right now, and how hard heâs trying to adjust to the changes of the crew, his role and hers. Â Pursuing a relationship right then and there would probably feel like a potential abuse of power. Â And I think Sara is someone who is always very conscious of that kind of thing.
Oddly, I also donât think Rip is ready for Time Ship at this juncture, and I kind of wonder if that wasnât maybe some subconscious push for him to leave the ship. Â Because he and Gideon have been partners for a very long time. Â Sheâs a rock and a sole point of stability for him. Â But suddenly, thanks to his own impulsive gesture, thereâs something new and chaotic in the mix. Â I donât think heâs remotely ready to process that.
Rip - relaxation.Â
Iâm not sure that I believe Rip is able to relax. Â Even before his family died. Â He just seems like the sort of person who is constantly focused on a goal or idea.
Iâve mentioned that I donât see Rip as much of a chess player. Â I think of him more as someone who would be putting together a giant 5 billion piece puzzle, or making something. Â Basically solitary and creative pursuits.
Rip - nemesis.
Hmm. Â Well, so far we had Vandal Savage and Eobard Thawne? Â I admit though, Iâd love to see the introduction of some rival ex-Time Masters or something.
But really, I want the return of Zaman Druce. Â He was such a great villain. Â Iâd love to see him cross swords with Rip again. Â (Also, Leonard Snart would be back too. Â I know a lot of folk would enjoy that. Â :-P)
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Get to Know Me Tag
Get to Know Me Tag, tagged by @expectogladiolus. Thank you for the tag.
Tag 20 blogs you would like to get to know. Iâve been on Tumblr for years, but still havenât quite sorted out in my head how it all works, so Iâm not at all good with the tagging.  Iâm also in a pretty odd but highly emotional place today & brain is not working well, so forgive me if I fuck it all up. Tagging @ravatogh, @lattehappy, @arcanelibrarian, @ardatli, @chocobro-daydreams, @chocobrodreamteam, @dancing-aqua, @for-lack-of-a-better-world, @greatswordgladio, @ignis-scientia-estrogen-brigade, @khirsahle, @kaciart, @lily-mina115, @miss-scientia, @sunshine-porcelain, @standbyme-ffxv, @tulipnight, @winemum-ignis
If any followers want to do this, consider yourself tagged by me, and if anyone I tagged doesnât do this kind of thing, just ignore it :D
Nicknames:Â Nope
Zodiac sign: Taurus
Heigh: 5â˛6
Last thing you googled:Â just got a new combo lap-top/tablet so have been busily googling security freeware and aps
Favorite music artist: I notice thereâs noâageâ question here, but this answer might give me away anyway... Tori Amos, no question. The only artist to have held my interest throughout their entire career.  I have every album, several singles and a shit load of downloads, and have only missed one concert in my area. âLittle Earthquakesâ spoke to me, and it really doesnât matter that none of her songs since that album have resonated the same- thatâs simply down to lives & experiences. I still adore her music (mostly- thereâs been the odd duff song).
Song stuck in your head: for the sole reason of the wording of this question, itâs now âCanât get you out of my headâ. Good song, but once itâs there youâre stuck with it. Thanks, whoever wrote these questions!
Last movie you watched:Â Guardians of the Galaxy 2- very fun, highly reccomend
What are you wearing right now: jeans & a flowery top
Why did you choose your URL: for my main blog (Neist) itâs as simple as a place I adore. For the FFXV blog, I wanted something both photography & FFXV related.  I was pleasantly surprised to discover âlovethelight!â was available.  Realised about 3 months later that this was, probably, because I canât type and accidentally stuck an extra âlâ in there...... Ah well.....
What did your last relationship teach you: my sole ârelationshipâ taught me that relationships arenât for me
Religious or Spiritual:Â extremely anti-religious (although I try to respectful of othersâ rights to their beliefs). Â Not spiritual either, but I could concede a theoretical possibility of some sort of energy that we canât conventionally sense
Favorite color:Â varies, but midnight blue and forest green always soothe me
Average hours of sleep:Â damn, I could sleep forever and die happy. Absolute bare minimum of 8 required. Honestly Iâm at my best with between 10 and 12. Â I LOVE sleep. Â Iâve claimed before that Billy Kaplan may be my spirit animal, but maybe it should be Noctis.... Â
Lucky number: is, to me, a vaguely ridiculous concept
Favorite characters:Â OK, sit back and make yourselves comfortable.....Â
Ignis Scientia (FFXV): intelligent, kind, devoted, selfless, sassy, beautiful & altogether perfect except for the whole âfictional characterâ business
Billy Kaplan (Wiccan, Young Avengers): cute, sarcastic, super powerful gay teen wizard geek, struggling with some serious self-esteem issues and depression
Tara Maclay (Buffy the Vampire Slayer): sweet, gentle, loving lesbian witch, whose death Iâm still not over.
Kaylee Frye (Firefly): sweet, gentle, horny brilliant engineer.
For brevity (hey, Iâm trying, OK?), Iâll put all my Discworld favs together: Granny Weatherwax, Sam Vimes, the Patrician, Death, the Librarian, Nanny Ogg
Claire Temple (Netflixâs Marvel shows): sheâs actually been the standout for me in all of them so far- interested to see how things progress for her (which does sadly mean Iâll need to brave Iron Fist at some point...)
How many blankets do you sleep with:Â I see this question so often, & it always confuses me. Blankets? Isnât that a bit of an old concept? I remember having blankets at my Granâs house, but even she had changed to duvets by the time I was 10. Â Is it an American thing? Or are we Brits the odd ones?
Dream job: wow, now youâre asking. Having just today become informally unemployed, with my former boss and HR both suggesting I think about a career change, I guess itâs a good time to think about it, but Iâve really never had one. Iâm, perhaps, slightly above average competency in a lot of areas, but no one wants a jack of many trades when there are aces, kings and queens of specific trades. And thereâs nothing Iâve ever wanted to do. Â I like taking pictures, and I quite like writing, and I love singing, but Iâm nowhere near good enough at any of those things to do them for a job. If someone wants to pay me to sleep, hell yes.
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@lena-in-a-red-dress Its entirely your fault I spent DAYS thinking/dreaming about these concepts. I actually had a friend of mine consider a Supergirl/Sanctuary crossover back in Sg Season 1. Because we are both ridiculous nerds and I got her hooked on Sanctuary.
But anyway, Sanctuary first!!!
I love the idea, it would be hard to shift some characters over from Supergirl into the Sanctuary setting because like you said its NEVER aliens and Helen actually scoffs at the idea of them (which always made me laugh because SG1) but you could make most of them Abnormals of one kind or another and it would still work.
I think Lena and Helen would have the kind of Mentor/ProtĂŠgĂŠ type relationship that Will/Helen have. It would, I think be more maternal due to Lena's background with her family and if you set it after Ashley's death. But I think they would have an interesting relationship.
Lena, Ive always felt was a little like Helen, a woman ahead of her time who thinks faster and four moves ahead of everyone else, sensitive but keeps her emotions under lock and key only showing you what she wants/needs to show you.
Helen is some one who doesnt always respond or react the way ordinary people do and she might see some of herself in Lena. I can definitely see a lot of mentoring going on, lots of guidance and advice. They'd clash a lot i think on ethics of things but they'd be an interesting pair to watch solve problems, I feel like Helen wouldnt have to stop and explain as much as she does with Will lol.
Stargate SG1!!!
I am amazed and ashamed that I never thought to bring Supergirl into that setting! BAD fangirl!!
I think it would work best, as you said with Sam Carter as General and in Charge because honestly if your going to have anyone in charge of that place it SHOULD BE THE WOMAN WHO SAVED IT EVERY OTHER WEEK!!!!
I love the concept of Alex leading the new SG1 team. Badass genius soldier leading a team of other badass ladies. You could do a lot with the remaining characters, Lena the engineering/physics genius, Kara the languages/alien culture genius, maybe throw in Sam (Arias) to round out the badass ladies quota and have her suffering along side Alex as they listen to the geek-squad bicker amongst themselves.
Or you can make Kara the Alien they bring onto the team, or any number of ways to mix and match.
You could easily fit pretty much most of the Supergirl characters into the SG1 universe however you like. Winn as the Gate Tech, Brainy as one of the Lab Guys who helps out with the latest problems that crop up.
Not entirely sure how James might fit... but im sure it would work.
But I just get this image in my head of General Carter having to give a Stern Talking To to SG1 and them sulking off and her going back into her office and Retired Jack O'Neill sitting in her office fiddling with some doodad from her desk and grinning and being like,
"So thats the new SG1 huh?"
"Yes Jack," snatches away doodad and gives him a less explosive fidget spinner
"Niiice"
Cue that long suffering look that Amanda does so well lol.
I think in any setting really the dynamics would be incredible and interesting and as much as Id like to see Helen and Lena make out, I just cant quite make it work in my head.
On one hand, I really want Lena to meet Helen Magnus, because theyâd either be really gay or else Lena would get an awesome positive female role model (and could conceivably have already met due to Helenâs prevalence in certain prominent circles), but the Sanctuary and Supergirl âverses are antithetical to each other, because on Sanctuary itâs NEVER aliens.
So itâs more conceivable for Lena to meet Sam Carter, which would be an exceptional nerd-out opportunity and an explosion of female genius, but at the same time would be a completely different (and decidedly less gay) character dynamic, and one thatâd be far less intriguing.
Unless Lena got to go through the 'gate.
Ooh! Supergirl Stargate AU where Alex leads a superfriends gate team, and Carter is the new Hammond. Now THAT has potential.
(@samarallewis86 pls read my tags and weigh in on which helen&lena dynamic would be better)
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okay, so iâve been meaning to do this for a while because iâve had a bunch of new muses that i want to put out there. so under the cut is some information about a variety of new and new-ish, some returning and some that just donât have much, muses that iâve got. give it a quick read, and then give this post a like if youâd wish to have a starter from them! (iâll come to you about which muse).
tenley harding. 23. aspiring screenwriter, personal assistant. los angeles. barbara palvin.
so tenley is my precious little bean, sheâs such a sweetheart. she loves soft things, she loves to write, her favorite place in the entire world griffith park because thereâs this little spot she always goes to sit to write. sheâs a stationery fanatic from hell, she spends way too much money on it (she gets it from me, sorry). but honestly sheâs just an unintentionally reclusive sort of person--sheâs not shy by any means, but she always ends up by herself, which sheâs not entirely against. super friendly little bean. tenley is currently working as a personal assistant (where is dependent on verse or plot) while sheâs trying to make it with her screenwriting. super friendly, but sometimes comes off as flakey because of her inevitable, unintentional habit to be reclusive. pansexual, biromantic.
dahlia taylor. 27. travel photographer and journalist. from melbourne, australia, but her present location is always changing. margot robbie.Â
tbh she is the most relaxed, most laid back, most chill of the chill people you will ever meet. dahlia has basically been travelling ever since she finished high school, never really feeling like australia was the place she was supposed to be even though sheâll never call anywhere else home. sheâs always had this sense of adventure--kind of made her the most problematic child in the entire world because sheâd always go wandering off. dahlia picked up photography when she was about twelve or thirteen, and when she decided to leave home, it seemed like the best thing to do. sheâs very used to roughing it on her travels, camping frequently unless she knows someone or meets someone willing to put her up wherever she is. heterosexual, heteroromantic.
isa laghari. 30. ceo. new york city. priyanka chopra.
honestly the most ruthless and heartless human being ever. she just cares about getting the job done, rarely has a personal life other than the occasional active efforts to get some sex in to blow off some steam. she honestly spends more time shopping and going to couture shows than she does having genuine human interaction tbh. also an avid workaholic, and donât expect her to apologize for it. i mean she HAS a heart but good luck finding it yâall. heterosexual, heteroromantic.
valentia benitez. 18. college freshmen. washington d.c. madison beer.
okay so her dad was previously the head of the fbi and as well as an analyst for the cia, and now he serves as secretary of state. she was born in new york while her feather was at the fbi there, but has lived in washington since she was about seven or eight years old. val is very much a little preppy baby, and sheâs a-ok with that. she lives of ralph lauren and tommy hilfiger, and spending summers up at the hamptons and out on yachts. but my little angel is studying sociology and political science because, while sheâll never admit it, thereâs a lot about how her father conducts himself and his politics that she doesnât agree with. sheâs very used to being the perfect daughter, daddyâs little princess, that sheâs still very very far from finding out who the hell she is all on her own. bisexual, heteroromantic.Â
rylee agrona. 26. underground boxer, fitness trainer, bartender, single mother. new york city. elizabeth olsen.
so sheâs my tough lil cookie, she literally will kick yo damn ass if you even look at her the wrong way so #havefun. literally takes no shit from no one; has no tolerance for men who donât have their shit together or canât handle her. her daughter is three years old, basically had her with some guy that basically didnât have his shit together or was able to handle her, so... sheâs not even sure where he is now. but rylee literally kicks ass on the weekends to make money to spoil her daughter and everything. sheâs always been the tomboy??? type and honestly the thing she gets the most amusement from is guys hitting on her at the bar sheâs working and basically like throwing them out herself #suchfun. bisexual, biromantic.
javier vargas. 35. physical therapist. chicago. oscar isaac.
my lil dad bean heâS MY ONLY??? DAD muse oh my ok so heâs got two kids (his eldest is his daughter who is about seven or eight, and his son is around four)--his marital status is verse dependent, so like yea those kids can be your femaleâs or whatever, just let me know whatâs happening, but his kids are non-negotiable. his kids are his whole world. he works as a physical therapist so heâs like pretty well off for money. even before his kids, javi has always been the type that tries to take care of those close to him. heâs like the reliable friend. but do not??? take him for a pushover, this bitch gets pissy when shit not looking up tbh. he sounds cliche iâm sorry pls love him. heterosexual, heteroromantic.
rhett cohen. 33. pediatric surgeon. denver. taylor kinney.Â
ok precious bean heâs so good with kids, heâs such a lil smarty pants, so he became a pediatric surgeon. he can be a bit??? of a hardass, heâs very good at remaining professional when he needs to be, but heâs also the cutest lil softy with the biggest heart. he actually comes from new york where he grew up among the bratty upper east side, and after his little sister died, it kind of drove him to do what he can to save??? lives. he moved away from his gross ass robotic parents to denver, and he always spends christmas over in other parts of the world doing charity work because heâs?? i donât wanna call him the do-good type but heâs very much in line with the idea that he should use his many privileges to do more than just spend too much money on houses and clothes and penthouses and stupid decor. heterosexual, heteroromantic.
paxton miller. 21. MIT student, part time software designer. boston. jack gilinsky.
yâall heâs my lil itty bitty nerd. heâs literally glued to his computer all day long. heâs been into computer since he was about nine, could build one on his own easily, and is intending to work in engineering on a much more....space-related level. heâs my precious babe that knows way too much about all things science, HATES geology (donât ask) and ya. heâs not overly experienced in the world of romance, but my lil babe loves hanging out with his friends so pls donât mistake him from one of the incompetent geeks of the big bang theory thnks. bisexual, biromantic.
#that took way too long for such a half-assed effort but there u go#anyway#ă â bella speaks â ă#indie rp#indie smut rp#open rp
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Future Ada: Tech Organizing Through an Intersectional Lens
Ada Lovelace's work on the first analytical engine helped lay the path for our modern world and continues to serve as an inspiration to people worldwide, including Electronic Frontier Alliance member Future Ada.
Based in Spokane, WA, Future Ada was founded in 2017 to advance opportunities and support for underrepresented genders in science, technology, engineering, art, and mathematics. That same year, Forbes noted that closing the gender gap could increase U.S. Gross Domestic Product by two trillion dollars, yet work environments in many of these fields are so hostile to women that over fifty-percent will leave the sector as a result.
"Just because you're not a master at your skill or you don't have something published in your name, doesn't mean you can't bring something to your field."
Since their launch, Future Ada has grown into the understanding that establishing a genuinely representative sector requires an intersectional approach, and that creating inclusive spaces, where individuals from all diverse backgrounds want to be, is key to that mission. In the days leading up to our recent collaboration on panels at this year's HOPE and DEF CON conferences, I spoke with Rebecca Long and Emilie St-Pierreârespectively Future Ada's founder and Security Ambassadorâto find out what they've learned since the groupâs founding, and how they have adapted to the needs of their community and this unprecedented moment.
How did the idea for Future Ada come about? What inspired it and what were some of the first steps you took toward making it a real thing?
Rebecca: In 2017, I was really struggling with my career. As a woman in tech, I was dealing with some discrimination and sexism in my own career, and I wasn't feeling supported by the leadership in my company. Honestly, I was feeling like I should quit all of tech. I felt like, ânobody wants me here, I don't feel welcome, and the messages that I'm getting are that I am not good enough to be hereâand no one wants to help me improve to meet whatever mysterious gap that no one will disclose, then maybe I should just go do something else.â Thankfully, I ended up going to a conference called Write/Speak/Code that happened to be nearby in Portland that year. I went with another woman on my team who's a developer. At this woman- and non-binary-specific tech conference, they had everyone divide up into two groups. One was for the people who were newer in their careers, and one who was for people who were further along. I ended up in that [second] group.
Throughout the week, we had to come up with projects and talk about them. At first, I didnât know what to do. Then I got a text message from an old bossâalso a womanâand she was expressing the same feelings. Thatâs when I got mad. I felt like, âmaybe I don't belong here, but I'm sorry, I know for a fact that you belong here because you're awesome.â I thought, what kind of nonsense is this that we're both feeling like we're being driven out of tech? I have a ton of experienceâover a decade of experience at that pointâand she had even more than me. I felt, âwe're well trained and we have every right to be here.â So, I channeled that into this project at the conference. I decided I was going to create a nonprofit.
I was already running a user group called Spokane Geek Girls and active in the community. I had already been feeling like there was more I wanted to do to help people that were coming to me for mentoring, and help, and feeling similar to me. I had this idea of a nonprofit that would be what Iâd need. But, I also felt like âno, I don't know how to do that. I have no idea how to start a non-profit or run an organization. That's just a ridiculous idea.â But it was at this conference I decided, nope, that's not a ridiculous idea. This is really important and I'm going to find out how to do it. So, I bothered all of the organizers of this conference to tell me everything they knew. How do I do this?
I made some friends and they helped me develop our original mission statement and our name. They were all wonderful soundboards for me. There hadnât been anything like this in Spokane. I just tried to channel all of my anger at the industry for lack of support and all that I'd been experiencing. I thought âwe need to do better. We need to channel that into positive energy, and I want to help other people.â It helps me to help other people and I know other people are in similar states. Maybe they don't feel comfortable speaking up, or maybe they just haven't woken up to what's going on around them. Maybe they don't understand why they're never getting that promotion or why they're not getting these career opportunities.
It sounds like maybe that conference was an awakening moment for you in the way that you and other women were experiencing Imposter Syndrome. Are there any tools or strategies that you've been able to use that help women identify that that's what they're feeling and overcome that?
Rebecca: Every speakerâand these are folks who are accomplished, wrote books, high-level managementâand they're like âI also feel this way.â And it was just like, âwhat!?â That's incredible. At some level, I'd always known that. But I think hearing it, and hearing it again, and hearing everyone share their stories, that was most powerful for me. Because you feel that you arenât good enough right now, that doesn't mean that you actually aren't good enough. It's a facade that society or various things are trying to tell you and convince you of.
Hearing other people, who are very successful, talk about that kind of stuff, and share their stories and how they work through itâeven if it's âI just powered through,â thatâs been really helpful for me.
I try and speak about this stuff and be open with my own experiences with people, and help others know that it's okay if you are also feeling this way. That doesn't mean that you have to stop. That doesn't mean that you don't belong here. It doesn't mean that you don't deserve a promotion or that nice salary or whatever your dream job is. You can still make an impact.
In the last few years, Iâve been picking up the storytelling mantra as a tool. I want to highlight other people's stories and give people a platform, so they feel safe to talk to me about their story and I can share, with them, my story.
One of the other things that, thankfully, Emilie was able to bring was an emphasis on security. Security has always been a passion of mine but it's always been on the side, because it's not really my main job. So, I've been really happy Emilie's been able to help bring some of that to our organization with our open office hours and with our security workshops. To really make these things approachable for the whole community. We want everyone to feel like technology and all of these things are safe, and you can do it. You don't have to be some math genius to do any of this stuff.
Emilie, have you had any experiences with Imposter Syndrome or starting to buy into folks devaluing your work or your contribution?
Emilie: Yeah, fully. To this day it comes and goes. I have to say, sometimes itâll come back in moments where I'm going through something hard at work. But I definitely had Imposter Syndrome when I was new to the security industry. I'd hang out at conferences like DEF CON when I was still new. I was learning a lot, but even though I had some skills, I constantly compared myself to the security researchers that had found vulnerabilities. These people that were presenting at these conferences, I was like âwell, I don't have something like that to bring to the tableâ so I just figured I wouldn't belong. But just because you're not a master at your skill or you don't have something published in your name, doesn't mean you can't bring something to your field. I think it took me a while to realize that. Later on, training people that were new to the field helped me realize that. âOh, I can easily tell this person what they can bring to the field so why is it harder to say that to myself?â I've gotten better with that over time, but it's very relatable.
The name Future Ada, I imagine it's an ode to Ada Lovelace, but can you talk a little bit about how you arrived at that name?
Rebecca: Yeah, it is totally in honor of Ada Lovelace. I find her very inspiring. Our whole computer industry is thanks to her. We have a tendencyâover historyâto erase certain people from their contributions. She was one of them. Having her as part of our name, I get to talk about her. I can say, âhey did you know that computer science, the whole reason we have technology, is thanks to a woman? Did you know that?â That's been really awesome.
I want our organization to help create future Ada Lovelaces. Ada Lovelaces of today, of tomorrow, of the next day. Our next generation. Where we're inspiring folks to go out there and break those molds. Because she definitely broke molds back in her day. That's what we need to be doing. That's how you get really awesome things and you can change the world. That's what we were going for when I came up with the name.
How did you find Future Ada, Emilie?
Emilie: Thanks to the Diana Initiative, which is a small conference that tags alongside others during hacker summer camp. So, DEF CON, Blackhat, and B-Sides Las Vegas. I had just moved to Spokane, and I had already been doing these workshops over in Las Vegas about security and privacy, and had been hosting crypto parties, and I wanted that to continue in Spokane. But, Spokane is different. There wasn't a hackerspace that was open weekly. So, I just focused on seeing what I could do with other folks. When I saw that Rebecca was speaking at the Diana Initiative and it said she was from Spokane, I was so excited. I went to see her talk, and then after the talk let her know I was also from Spokane and that Iâd love to do something together. I told her that Iâd been doing these workshops and was looking to bring them. She was super receptive and very welcoming. Since then weâve been doing these workshops. Learning as we go along. Now we get to offer them online, which is really cool. So, yeah, it's been fun to see our partnership grow and where we took it from there.
What are some of the biggest challenges that you faced creating the group and finding the right people?
Rebecca: Maybe I shouldn't have been surprised, but I was surprised that I had people coming to me. I was trying to keep it kind of on the D.L. that I was doing this until I had it really formulated, but word started getting out, and people were saying âI want in on this,â âI want to be on your board,â âlet me help you.â That was really inspiring.
Challenges? I'm not a marketing person, that's not my specialty. We don't really have anyone on our board that's a marketing expert. So we learned a lot on that end. I feel like we're learning a lot by doing things wrong. Not wrong, but not very effectively. We think âthis will work greatâ. And it works, sort of, but we want to have a bigger reach. Learning more marketing will help us on that front but that takes time. It is a challenge.
We want to be really careful with what we do. We want to make sure that when we expand our board, that we're bringing in the right people. That weâre really mindful about that. Weâre also aware of our 100% white board. As we work to expand our board, and organization leadership, we are being mindful to diversify ourselves and bring in better racial perspectives. We are working as an organization to learn how to grow and best speak on the topic of race and injustice. It's a process and it's important so we aren't shying away from it.
Are there any other challenges that you didn't anticipate?
Emilie: Creating the workshops and letting people know that we are available to help them. We spend time creating these workshops. We spend the time to get volunteers to come to workshops and be there to help folks. I thought our biggest challenge would have been managing the demand, because we literally offer free tech supportâand privacy and security supportâbut it's actually been very easy to do that. We have open hours for folks that we want to help, but we're obviously not reaching as far as we can. For me, marketing is like an alien planet. My background is really privacy and security. I think that's the challenge I've never faced before. And definitely the hardest one from my end.
Rebecca: We've had some really successful programs. We ran March for Science last year in Spokane. It was great. It was kind of a last minute thing. We came in to help as the new parent organization, and it was super successful. We had a huge turnout but that was one event. A one-day thing. And, then we've had other one-day events that have been really successful. But then our recurring workshops arenât even an hour and we have low turnout. We haven't unlocked that piece yet.
Since moving online because of the pandemic, we've seen higher participation in our workshops, and I feel like we're going to have higher participation across the board. So, we're working to transition everything. Next year when we restart some of our year-long programs, they'll be online or a majority online. Maybe part of our problem is that Spokane is a little different and folks have different priorities, but attending something from home, where they don't have to worry about travel or parking, I think that kind of helps avoid it and it's less of a dent in their day. I'm really hopeful that this actually can be a really positive thing for our organization. and that it also expands our reach outside of Spokane. Anyone can participate. Which is really cool because it helps broaden our reach.
Are there any other partnerships in your area that youâve found to be effective partnerships?
Rebecca: Emilieâs been working with Volunteers of America.
Emilie: Yes. With Crosswalk. We teach teenagers about privacy and security. Online privacy and security. We've even done some introductory cryptography stuff. I'm very big on making sure that it's something fun. Itâs a puzzle. We actually use some of EFFâs crypto tools for that. At the end of the workshop I told our participants âdid you know that crypto is math and you just did math?â They thought it was really fun and really cool. For kids that are maybe told that they're not good at math, or are uncomfortable with the idea of math, after that they realize that there's all sorts of ways to look at math. That's a big partnership for us.
Rebecca: There's another nonprofit in Spokane, that is more of a general tech nonprofit called Inland Northwest Technologists (INT). Our original Vice President came from that organization. He had brought to Spokane, with INT, this event called Code in the Dark. The last two times that event has been held in Spokane, it's been a partnership between that organization and ours. We bring in more of a diversity, and really work to help and make sure itâs an inclusive space. The first few years they ran it, it was nearly all men that were participating. Only men were in the top three winners. October of last year, the last time we held it, was the first time we had a woman win the competition. It was amazing.
We have been trying to work with the YWCA in Spokane, to help bring some of these security principles and privacy principles to their domestic violence survivors. Emily and I are very passionate about that and we want to be supporting this group of our community. We know the YWCA has been very busy. Just in general. So getting the momentum to really get that partnership off the ground has been a little slow. We're still hopeful. We're not going to give up on it anytime soon.
Emilie: We are already available for service for survivors. When we have our open office hours on Saturdays we are ready to accept survivors. We have a clinical approach to detect compromise. So, we can accept anyone that is in that situation and help them navigate their technology or help them navigate compromises or any kind of stalkerware, spyware. We are ready to do that already.
I think switching to online has been wonderful for certain aspects of what we offer. The workshops are available to a larger population, and more accessible in some ways. My only concern is office hours. We would typically do them downtown at the Spokane Library. This also gave us the opportunity to help homeless folks. We had a few people come in that don't have a computer at home. Don't have a home. How do you make sure that you're helping that population? So thatâs something that, when things start to open up, we'll definitely want to make sure that we're not overlooking certain segments of the population that we might be able to help. We said we're going to focus on being very online but not 100% online, because we don't want to miss those folks that we might be able to better serve that way.
No two communities are exactly the same. Thatâs one of the reasons itâs so critical to have groups like Future Ada that are rooted in and can adapt to the needs of their city or town. What are you finding are the core needs of your community? Is it different from what your original expectations were?
Rebecca: My original intention was really limited. The organization was focused on gender diversity. I thought we would just focus in on that. What I've found is you can't really solve that problem without taking an intersectional approach. If you care about women in tech, then great, you're gonna need to have an inclusive environment. Hey, you know what? That also helps all these other people. So, really, focusing on shifting our mindset to be inclusive and approachable really helps everybody. That's been kind of a shift for me that I guess I was a little surprised with, but I'm really happy that we've made this turn. I'm also learning how many people in our community could use more basic support. Not necessarily learning how to program, but âhow do I fix this on my browser?â Really turning folks from being afraid of technology to helping them feel that they can do this. That's been a little surprising to me, but I'm really happy that that's something that we can help with. Wherever the community is, that's where we want to be to help lift everybody up.
What is Future Adaâs decision-making process like? What are the voices that are involved? How do you work together to come to a shared path?
Rebecca: We have different committees. Anything security or privacy related, Emilie is in charge of that. So, anything she says we're probably just gonna back it. We have our career mentoring committee. One of our other board members is responsible for that. Itâs the same thing, whoever is responsible for a committee we've entrusted them with leading that and reporting back anything that seems more pivotal or in need of a larger decision. But, generally speaking we meet once a month as a board, and we discuss things on a regular basis. I think we're all pretty much in alignment. We're also still a really small group, board wise, and our committees are still pretty small. Once we get bigger we're gonna need a more formal process, but at the moment we're all pretty well in sync, I think. Emilie, what do you think?
Emilie: I was smiling when nash asked that question, because I was like âhow do we come to decisions?â Well, first we share all of our cats and cat videos during our meeting. And once we've done that, then we start really having these discussions. But what I like is that everyone is very very receptive and generally considers everyone's point of view and opinion really well. It's been a really nice dynamic, and I think it has a lot to do with, you know, starting the meeting off with cat memes and showing off our real cats, if we can. It makes a big difference.
Future Adaâs work to lift up and support Spokane women in STEAM has extended far beyond their local area, while still being focused on the needs of their own community. As members of the Electronic Frontier Alliance they have been instrumental in contributing to the development of related work for allied groups throughout the U.S.
If you are a member of a community or student-led group in your area working to protect digital security, free expression, privacy, creativity and access to knowledge, consider joining the Electronic Frontier Alliance.
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Bill Nye the Science Guy released the first installment in his best-selling middle grade series, Jack and the Geniuses, co-written with Gregory Mone, this past April â and now heâs gearing up for a second book.
Jack and the Geniuses: In the Deep Blue Sea follows Jack, his genius siblings Ava and Matt, and their pal, inventor Dr. Hank Witherspoon, as they investigate a project by tech billionaire Ashley Hawking and engineer Rosa Morris thatâs mysteriously being sabotaged. While they meet a wide cast of suspects (including surfers and a cat-loving former Navy SEAL), they also learn all about the ocean and green energy.
EW can reveal an exclusive excerpt from this second installment, in advance of the bookâs Sept. 12 release date. Check it out below.
Excerpt from Jack and the Geniuses: In the Deep Blue Sea by Bill Nye and Gregory Mone
Chapter 1
Inside the Underplane
The cliffs of Nihoa Island stood tall as we soared above the calm blue water. Nihoa means âtoothedâ in Hawaiian, but the jagged mass of gray-green rock jutting up out of the Pacific Ocean looked like the rotten molar of a sea monster. We were flying low in a small six-seater airplane, and I really, really didnât want to crash into that tooth. For about the fifteenth time, I checked my seat belt.
Our pilot, the bazillionaire computer scientist Ashley Hawking, was rambling about the annoying birds that nested on the island. But I didnât care about finches or swallows. An eagle could have chest-bumped my window and it would not have shifted my focus. If we continued on our current course, we were going to smash into the jagged wall like an egg launched from a slingshot.
The planeâs engine roared.
My stomach spun.
Next to me, my brother was staring straight ahead, eyes bulging, with his thin black notebook computer open on his lap. I grabbed his shoulder. His muscles were as solid as rocks and his face was a greenish shade of white. âMatt?â I asked. âIs she pulling up?â
His mouth barely opened. âI hope so,â he mumbled.
Our sister, Ava, was sitting in the row behind us, watching the flashing red and green numbers on the electronic control panel. A vein on the side of her head pulsed. She didnât notice me staring back at her. Meanwhile, Ashley Hawking was grinning so wide I could see the edges of her smile from my seat directly behind her. Our mentor, the geek-famous inventor Henry Witherspoon, or Hank, glanced back at me from the co-pilotâs seat, his awkward smile flashing too many teeth. Was he trying to make us feel better? If so, he was failing.
Hank leaned over to Ashley. He held his hand out flat and swooped it up toward the roof of the cockpit. âShould we, you know, ascend?â
âWhat?â Hawking asked. âNo! Of course not. Ascend? I thought you knew!â
âKnew what?â
Hawking let go of the controls and waved her hands in a sweeping motion. She sighed with disappointment. âThis is one of yours!â
âOne of my what?â Hank asked.
âOne of your designs!â
Hank spun in his seat, scanning the interior. His mouth was all bunched to one side. He was squinting. And he was completely stumped. Only Hank Witherspoon would struggle to recognize one of his own inventions. His mind was so productive that he dropped out new ideas with about as much thought as a chicken laying eggs.
Matt reached forward with one of his long arms and pointed. âUmmm . . . cliff?â
âWhat was that?â Hawking yelled back.
We couldnât have been more than a few football fields away from the rock wall. âI think heâs wondering if weâre planning to avoid that cliff,â I said.
Below us, out the left side of the plane and far from the island, a large dock with two boats tied to the sides floated in the middle of the ocean. The water was neon blue and smooth as glass. We probably couldâve landed on it, but I hadnât noticed any pontoons when we climbed into the aircraft that morning. The thing clearly wasnât a seaplane. So the only safe choices were up, right, or left. And if Ashley Hawking didnât pick one of those soon, weâd keep heading straight. Into the cliffs. Weâd be smashed to bits, and all the headlines would read, âFour Geniuses Die as Plane Crashes into Tooth.â
No, I wouldnât be the fourth. That honor would belong to Ashley Hawking. The world would mourn the loss of the two accomplished adults and my brilliant brother and ingenious sister. Me? I might be mentioned in the story somewhere, but Iâm no brainiac. Iâm average. Maybe a little above, but not by much, and only through effort. I have to work hard, and read all the time, to keep up with the geniuses.
But anyway. Back to that nasty nine-hundred-foot-tall cliff sticking straight up out of the water in front of us. Maybe the Millennium Falcon could have made the turn, swooping up at the last second, but I wasnât liking our chances. âMs. Hawking?â
âAshley! I told you already. Ashley. And not because I think of you as an equal. Not at all.â She laughed to herself. âI simply prefer the sound of my first name. Now, honestly, Hank, someone of your intelligence . . . I assumed youâd see.â
Hank was panicking now, his head turning from side to side in jerks, like a broken sprinkler. âI donât . . . when . . .â
Suddenly my sister leaned forward and pointed at a large orange button in the ceiling, covered by a clear plastic case. âAre you serious?â she said with excitement. âIs this the underplane?â
âYes!â Ashley fake head-butted the dashboard a few times, then looked up to the ceiling. âThe child gets the answer. Finally!â
Although Ava was relieved, I found this news to be more than a little frightening. âYou made a plane out of underwear?â I asked.
The moment the words escaped I realized Iâd probably misunderstood. But no one noticed. Or at least no one bothered to make fun of me. Not yet, anyway. Ava and Matt were pretty skilled at remembering my mistakes, though.
âThis is the underplane?â Hank asked. His eyebrows rose so high they nearly touched the top of his head. âYou actually built it?â
âI did. But enough talk. Youâre right, Jack,â she said, swiveling around to look me in the eye. âWe are getting awfully close, arenât we?â I nodded. The acknowledgment was nice, but I really wanted her to turn back around. âAre we buckled? Good. Would you like to do the honors, Hank?â
âYouâve tested it?â
âOf course! Once. But it worked beautifully. Go ahead. Press it. Do it. Now.â
âYouâve only tested it once?â
On the dashboard between them, a number in the center of the screen was blinking red and decreasing rapidly. âYes, once, and a thousand times in simulation. Be confident in your ideas, Hank! Press the button already.â She pointed to the flashing red number, which just kept dropping. âReally. Now. Three hundred meters is pushing things. I havenât felt this much adrenaline since I climbed Everest.â
Matt mumbled something about the cliff.
Hank hesitated.
Ashley had Manga eyes.
I donât know what Ava was thinking or doing.
But this was no time to sit and wait. I slouched forward in my seat, reached up with my right foot, flicked open the plastic covering, and kicked in the orange button with the heel of my high-top sneaker.
Ashley let out a long, almost disappointed breath. âFinally,â she said.
Hank had his right hand out, three fingers extended. He counted down from three. A moment later, the engine stalled. The aircraft turned strangely quiet, as if we were suddenly flying in a giant paper plane.
âNow the chute?â Ava asked.
Before anyone could respond, something exploded behind us.
Yet nobody but me panicked.
Ava put her hand on my shoulder. âA rocket-launched parachute,â she explained. âDonât worry. That was supposed to happen.â
Firing a parachute out with a rocket didnât make sense to me, but the plane slowed, rattling like an old roller coaster, then began circling to the left. Away from the cliffs. So I exhaled. The lonely floating dock came into view ahead of us. Out through the window, I noticed two wooden boats rounding the corner of the island. Matt was staring at his computer screen again, mumbling to himself. He had a big test coming up, and heâd been studying constantly. One of the downsides of being a genius is that everyone expected you to ace all your tests. I donât think Hank cared, though. Matt put more pressure on himself than anyone else did. But was this really a good time to prepare for an astronomy exam? No. So I reached across and closed his laptop. He didnât protest, which was pretty much a thank-you.
âWow, it works,â Ava said.
âI told you Iâd tested it.â
âYeah, once,â Ava noted.
âAnd a thousand times in simulation,â Hank added.
The others laughed. Apparently this was funny.
Normally I avoided asking for an explanation when everyone else understood. Hank was always saying thereâs no such thing as a dumb question, but I was pretty sure I proved him wrong twice a day. And I hated reminding them that I lived on a lower level of the brain game. But there were times I needed to know. âWhat does âin simulationâ mean?â
Ashley looked back at me like Iâd just asked the difference between salt and pepper.
âItâs a computerized version of reality, Jack,â Hank explained.
âItâs like the difference between Street Racer and an actual street race, with real cars,â Ava added.
Now I understood. She knew how to speak my language. See, I was actually kind of awesome at Street Racer, and I had this feeling that Iâd be a sick driver in the real world, too.
A brown, wide-winged bird swooped in front of us. âIs that a petrel?â Matt asked.
âTheyâre frequent visitors to the island,â Ashley said.
Great. Now they were bird-watching, and yet we were still in a plane without pontoons, gliding over the ocean without any clear runway in sight. Sure, we were finally descending, but the underplane turned about as easily as the Titanic. As we swung closer to the cliff, I held my breath. No one spoke. Iâm not sure anyone even breathed. Ashley and Hank leaned to their left, as if that might help, and the tip of our right wing passed within ten feet of the rocks. Next to me, Mattâs face was still that greenish-white color, and he was breathing carefully and gripping the armrests with enough force to dent them.
âThat was close!â Ashley said, her voice more excited than relieved.
âSo, umm, whatâs next?â I asked.
âWell, you see, this is the first phase of the transition,â Hank said. âThe first parachute allows for a more gradual descent, but thereâs also a braking chute to slow us down further.â
âAnd then?â I pressed.
Hankâs eyebrows arched twice. âWait and see,â he said.
Ava tapped me on the shoulder. âDonât worry, I think youâre going to like this. It is called âthe underplane,â after all.â
I still didnât get what boxers or briefs had to do with the five of us landing safely. But I wasnât about to ask. âSo, about that braking chute . . . can we use it now?â
âNot until we slow to thirty miles per hour.â
Hank cocked his head to the side, struggling for a view of the parachute suspended above us. âAmazing. Truly. I donât know how to thank you, Ashley. I never thought anyone would ever build one.â
The plane soared through a wide loop. We were still about the height of a four-story building from the glassy sea. We swung toward the rock face of Nihoa again, only this time at half the speed and with much less chance of crashing. The color in Mattâs face had not changed, but I knew better than to ask him how he was feeling. When Matt was hurt or sick, he didnât want anyone to know. Heâd rather hide off by himself somewhere than let you see him aching.
The two boats came into view again. They looked like museum pieces. The masts were tall, the sails all rolled up, and a few people on either side were digging into the water with long black paddles. âWhat are those?â I asked.
Ashley Hawking squinted, gagged for a three-count, then breathed in, shook her head, and smiled. âFriends of mine,â she said. âThey think weâre enemies, but as Iâm sure you know, kids, those two are one and the same. As Sun Tzu said, you should treat your enemies as if they are your best friends.â
âIs he one of those jazz guys, Hank?â I asked. Our mentor had strange taste in music, but I was growing to like some of the tunes. Iâd been trying to learn their names to impress him.
âNo, thatâs Sun Ra, and he only really began as a jazz pianistââ
Another jolt cut his answer short. Ava pointed to the control panel. Our speed was dropping rapidly. And we were circling closer and closer to the water. Hank turned. I thought he was checking to see if we were okay, but he stared out the small rearview window instead. His smile vanished. âYou used a larger braking chute.â
âYes,â Ashley said. âI had to. In simulation, the chute you suggested didnât slow the plane quickly enough. Your design was completely inadequate. No offense.â
Hank paused before answering. âNone taken?â
We were at least a few city blocks away from the island, gliding through our third full circle, cruising at the speed of a bike down a steep hill, when the plane finally skimmed the surface of the sea.
We bounced.
Hank whooped.
Ashley hollered.
Then we bounced again and again, lower each time, like a stone skipping across the water.
Ava quietly beamed, and my still-green brother relaxed his grip. When we finally stopped, my heart was thumping. My hands were cramped. Apparently, Matt wasnât the only one squeezing the armrests. I looked out the window. We had to be a mile away from the shore. Was this really the right place to land? Were we floating? Or sinking? And what did all this have to do with underwear?
Ecstatic, Hank pointed to the button on the roof, then asked Ashley, âMay I?â
âYouâre the guest,â Ashley said.
Hank pushed the button with the heel of his hand. Above me, something clicked. A thud followed, somewhere behind us. Then two loud hisses on either side of the plane. Below me, I heard the sound of rushing water, like a quickly filling toilet bowl. Suddenly I needed to go to the bathroom, but there were more important things happening.
Glancing out the window, I noticed that the wings were dropping below the surface. The plane was sinking. And no one else on board seemed particularly bothered. âThis is supposed to happen?â I asked.
Matt pointed his thumb out the window and swallowed. âWhy not shed the wings?â he asked, struggling to get the words out.
âThe aerodynamic profile of the wings is hydrodynamically efficient, too,â Hank answered. âIn both cases, youâre just moving through a fluid.â
Ava put her hand on my shoulder. She wore several colorful beaded rings. âWhat he means,â she began, leaning forward, âis that you donât need to drop the wings becauseââ
âI know,â I said. And I didnât, really, but the geniuses are always explaining things to me, and I wasnât in the mood for a lesson. So I pulled out my new notebook. Before weâd left for Hawaii I had a great idea. Or a great idea for me, anyway. Whenever the geniuses said something I didnât understand, Iâd jot down a little note about it, then do some research later and learn about it on my own. That way I wouldnât have to admit it when I wasnât following along. And sure, I couldâve checked on my phone, but then theyâd notice. I held the notebook down in the space between my left leg and the side of the plane, so Matt couldnât see, and scribbled âhydrodynamicâ on a blank page. After a second, I added âSun Somethingââunfortunately, Iâd already forgotten the name of the guy Ashley quoted.
The plane was sinking faster. The dock with the two boats was only a few pool lengths away; part of me wished we couldâve just swum over. But the blue water was already climbing up the sides. The surface reached the bottom of my window, then rose higher and higher until it climbed over the top. A few seconds later, the underplane dropped below the surface and began gliding down through the blue sea.
Oh.
Right.
The underplane. As in underwater plane. Not an aircraft made out of old boxer shorts.
Our ride had transformed into a six-seat submarine.
Since we met Hank seven months ago, Iâd been introduced to all kinds of strange machines and vehicles and experiences. Iâd been to the bottom of the world and fought off a crazy Australian and flown in an inflatable vehicle that wasnât supposed to fly. Iâd even had some experiences with miniature subs, since my sister had built one. But Iâd never been inside an actual submarine. And certainly not in the Pacific Ocean, with who knows how much water or how many deadly creatures lurking below me. On the one-to-ten scale of soul-stretching, brain-twisting experiences, Iâd give this one a fourteen.
The water was filled with specks that sparkled in the sunlight. A group of long silver fish darted past our windows. Iâd always imagined that riding in a submarine would be like staring at the fish tanks in an aquarium. But now it felt as if we were the ones trapped in the tank. And I kind of wanted to get back to the air. âSo that was fun,â I said, âbut can we go back up now?â
My ears popped.
âUp? Of course not,â Ashley said.
The underplane nosed down in the direction of the island. But we werenât going to Nihoa. Not yet. Far below us, an enormous, brightly lit underwater building hung below the dock. It looked like the headquarters of some kind of powerful secret society or nefarious villain. The outside was swarming with huge fish.
âYou still want to go back up, Jack?â Ava asked.
I could practically hear her smiling. âNo,â I said with a grin. âNot anymore.â
30 May 2017 | 3:06 pm
Isabella Biedenharn
Source : EW.com
>>>Click Here To View Original Press Release>>>
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The Nevers Star Laura Donnelly Answers Burning Finale Questions
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The following contains major spoilers for The Nevers episode 6.
The star of HBO sci-fi series The Nevers has never shied away from the fact that the showâs sixth episode would be a big one.
âSix is an extraordinary episode,â Donnelly (who plays Amalia True) told Den of Geek prior to the series premiere. âIt provides a lot of the answers to the questions that the audience might have. It seemed like a very natural cut-off point.â
Whether episode 6, titled âTrueâ, is a natural cut-off point remains to be seen. Due to the coronavirus pandemic suspending production, the showâs initial 10-episode first season order was shortened to six and âPart 2â (containing six more episodes for a total of 12) is set to arrive at a later date. Itâs hard to argue though that episode 6 is anything but extraordinary.Â
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âTrueâ doesnât merely provide some answers to long-running Nevers questions â it basically upends the premise of the entire show. It turns out that creator Joss Whedonâs initial vision for The Nevers wasnât merely Victorian ladies with supernatural powers, but that of a much larger story about the human race on the edge of collapse and a dimension-hopping alien species intent on helping us.
Whedon departed the project during the production delay so when the show returns it will be up to new showrunner Philippa Goslett to shepherd this bold new vision. To get ready for that, Den of Geek spoke with Donnelly about the many revelations of episode 6 and what the future of The Nevers entails.Â
For those looking for a more complete rundown of just what happened in this truly wild episode, check out our explainer over here. But here Donnelly does an admirable job of unwinding âTrueâsâ many twists.Â
This interview has been edited for length and clarity.
Den of Geek: I participated in the press day interviews before the season premiered. Now Iâm wondering what was that press day experience like on your end? People ask you âSo whatâs your show about? Whatâs going on?â And then you just kind of have to sit back and lie!
Laura Donnelly: Itâs the most frustrating thing ever. I wanted to go into some details but honestly it felt like I could say nothing without unraveling an entire six-episode arc. People would ask me âHow did you research to get into the role?â I canât say that I researched what it might be like to train in the army, what combat would be like with PTSD, things like that. So Iâm left going, âOh, I just read some books on what itâs like in Victorian times.â It made me sound like a really lame researcher.Â
You mentioned back in those pre-air interviews that when you first had the meeting for this show, Joss gave you kind of the âwhole picture.â Was this episode what that meeting was referring to? And what was your reaction like when you first heard it all?
Well, it was obviously then that I realized I was not dealing with Victorian X-Men. (That meeting) introduced the idea of having an entire backstory of somebody who has been through so much and then gets thrown into this situation and has to deal with it. I just knew that that was going to be such a deep dive into this character and that there was going to be so much to be able to explore with it. Then it was bringing in the elements of how the show is relevant to today, not just in an allegorical sense, but literally â how they are trying to go back in time to make sure that humans do better.
I couldnât believe that a mind or a show could hold that much. And I knew that I had to be a part of it. What blew me away about (episode) six was that I didnât know the details, how the story would be told and everything. Now I just canât believe that with this single hour of television, they managed to tell all of these separate stories with such beauty and nuance. And not just with a ton of exposition, but instead, showing these things in the most clear way possible and that you find out so much in such a short period of time.Â
Definitely. The first chapter in this episode is really filled with futuristic sci-fi jargon and there is very, very little expository dialogue. Maybe this is a non-sequitur, but have you ever seen the movie Primer? It kind of reminded me of that in that sense.
No.
Itâs a time travel movie made by Shane Carruth a while back (Editorâs Note: 2004). And all of the dialogue is just complete jargon that only an expert in theoretical physics would understand for basically the whole runtime, but the audience is still able to pick up whatâs happening for the most part. This episode just reminded me of that.
Yeah. I love it for that. I love it for the fact that it rewards intensive viewing. Itâs not the show that you can watch while youâre scrolling on your phone. If you are willing to just buy into that, you realize that on first watch you get the important information: the Galanthi are an alien race that are here to help humanity from itself, and that Stripe is Amalia. Then everything after that the more passion you bring to watching it, the more you get out of it.
I finished my first re-watch right before this interview and I think I finally understand just now how and why Stripe got sent back in time by the Galanthi. Because things are too far gone now. The Galanthi are finally going to really help and their version of really helping is just âWeâve got to go back. Humanity needs a fresh start.â
Yeah! I loved that there were things that I realized from watching it that I hadnât picked up in the reading of the script. When they suddenly realize that the portal is an exit one and not an entrance one, that makes Knitter (Ellora Torchia) in that moment lose all hope. But what you come to realize is that that is not a moment of despair actually. You realize that the reason that they had an exit portal was because they had a plan and they werenât coming back. You see that with the Victorian artifacts in the room. In fact, this plan was brought together with the scientists. They were working on that together. That was only something that I caught from watching it.
What was it like watching Claudia Black play your character?
I thought she did a really, really beautiful job. It was strange for me because I wanted them to shoot that before I shot my Stripe stuff, so that I would have a lot more to go on to replicate when I first land in the asylum. But it just couldnât work out that way and they had to shoot all of Claudia and the future stuff after Iâd already shot in the asylum. I went in and watched a lot of their rehearsals and got some video footage of their rehearsals and stuff so I had a good idea of what it was that she was doing with that, but it was just amazing to watch the whole thing put together. Itâs like the final piece of a puzzle that I didnât even have any say in. I was just kind of glad really that it matched up to what I had in my head, because Iâd been having to make a lot of guesses when it came to playing Stripe in the asylum.Â
It occurs to me now that for five episodes youâve been playing a woman with a North American accent doing an old-timey Victorian British accent. What was that process like?
It allowed a little freedom actually because, on her part, itâs a learned accent. I didnât have to be hugely strict about the rules of what would be particularly Victorian. I allowed myself to bring a little more modernity to how she would phrase something. I kind of hoped that people would pick up on the idea that Amalia seemed, in some indistinguishable way, slightly anachronistic. I also then kind of hoped that there would even be the odd person going, âOh, well her accentâs slipped there, she got it wrong thereâ or whatever, because I kind of felt once you then see episode six, theyâd see why.Â
When you think of the character in your head, what name comes to mind first: Molly, Zephyr, Amalia, or Stripe?
Amalia, actually, but the second one that would come would be Stripe. Itâs funny, âZephyrâ is the last one I think of and I think that that is probably true of Amalia as well in that it is so far pushed down. It is so far into her past for so many different reasons. It would be too painful to have all of the implications that the Zephyr name carries in the forefront of her mind. In her soldier way of being, she just needs to constantly move forward.Â
Again, back before the season premiered when I spoke to you and Ann (Skelly), my first question was about charactersâ names and how they were a little odd. Perhaps that was a bit prescient because in the far flung future names are sacred. What was your impression of that concept and why do you think names have become sacred?
I wonder if itâs just the idea that itâs the only little bit of recognizable humanity left for them. I think that people will always find a way of making something sacred. You need what is sacred to you at times when things are most difficult. Youâre looking at a human race that doesnât even have real food. Everything is engineered and they canât even breathe the air outside. The sacred can be very important in moments of deep, deep despair like that. A name is something that everybody can have, and a name is something that everybody can therefore keep for themselves.
At the same time, it also speaks to the idea that everybody then is involved in that war on one side or the other. It doesnât seem to me that youâve got the army and then youâve got citizens. It seems to me like everybody at that point in humanity as theyâre coming towards the end is on one side or the other and is fighting. That means that everybody is being called by their rank, and so Stripe is known as Stripe That also makes a name more sacred because itâs the part of you that isnât involved in this war. Itâs the last vestige of true humanity that you might have left.
Any updates on the production process for part 2? I believe last time you had yet to see any scripts.Â
Iâve had lots of conversations with (new showrunner) Philippa Goslett and with Ilene (Landress), our producer but I have as yet not read a script. Iâm just waiting, but Iâm in prep. I know enough about the next couple of episodes to know what fights I need to learn and things like that.
I cannot imagine being in Philippaâs shoes right now. Showrunner changes happen all the time but this is one of the more unusual narrative circumstances to fall into, I think.
Absolutely. I mean, the show is wild, but I think that, whatever else happened, we were so fortunate that episode six became this very natural break point in the story for obvious reasons. So much has been wrapped up. I feel like the world is built and the characters are established, you know. It really could go pretty much anywhere from here and it just needs somebodyâs brilliant imagination to do that.
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Now that the real plot behind the curtain was revealed, does the name âThe Neversâ have any more added significance?
Not that Iâm aware of, no. I think the only thing that I have to go on about the name is something that Joss said several years back about the idea that these people never should have existed. Theyâre anomalies or even the more pejorative term â abominations.
Do you think future seasons and storylines of the show will take things past Victorian England and inch closer to that dystopian present?
I mean, I would love for it to. It makes sense to me that it started in Victorian times because that was a key moment of change in so many different ways in how the world communicates. There are kind of several revolutions going on at once, technological being one of the main ones. But it would be really interesting then to see how that progresses, and the issues at hand get dealt with, depending on the social aspects of different countries or different decades. The key to all of that is can you find a really cool way of doing it? Because my head isnât able to come up with that. Whatever keeps the storyline the most interesting, keeps the characters true to themselves, and doesnât jump the shark, Iâm well up for.
The Nevers season 1 part 2 is awaiting a release date at HBO.
The post The Nevers Star Laura Donnelly Answers Burning Finale Questions appeared first on Den of Geek.
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She can be both. Sheâs Annabeth Chase.

I know itâs controversial but I think Annabeth geeking out over the Hephaestus contraptions was adorable
#annabeth hoo#annabeth chase#and yes architectural engineering is still on the table#any kind of engineering works honestly but i loved how she geeked out over the machine#percy jackson#pjo#percy jackon and the olympians#percy jackson and the olympians#pjo tv show#percy jackson tv show#pjo spoilers
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My Hero Academia: The Rise of Jiro and the Future of Dubbed Anime
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Funimation is one of the leading companies in the anime business and theyâve been instrumental in bringing many popular series over to America, along with producing excellent dubs that are actually able to improve upon the source material. My Hero Academia and Attack on Titan are easily some of the biggest anime of the decade and Trina Nishimura voices two pivotal characters in the series, My Hero Academiaâs Kyoka Jiro and Attack on Titanâs Mikasa Ackerman.
The anime dubbing industry has had to roll with a lot of changes due to the COVID-19 pandemic, but it hasnât stopped Trina Nishimura or Funimation from getting the job done. Taking some time to discuss her career at FunimationCon 2020âa virtual anime conventionâNishimura opened up on the meteoric rise of her My Hero Academia character and how sheâs terrified over Mikasaâs safety and how the dust will settle in the final season of Attack on Titan.
Den of Geek: The final season of My Hero Academia got impacted by COVID-19. What has the process been like to record at home?
Trina Nishimura: It was really hard! It was a challenge to go from having so much support in a professional studio environment and being together with the director and engineer, to then immediately be in a situation where youâre in a closet and do everything yourself. Iâve never really done a lot of engineer work, where you like edit and move things. It was initially a little daunting, but Funimation was really kind and patient about it all. Just so nice. I think I had a two-hour session where they just walked me through everything and I just silently dealt with my heart palpitations.Â
It was challenging in a lot of ways, but itâs just been so cool. I have a small little setup, but some of the other people who are recording from home have much more advanced stuff. With My Hero Academia, Funimation made sure that there was always support that you could call like before your session if youâre freaking out.Â
Itâs been interesting to witness that from the other side of things, too. You guys have developed a real rhythm for the releases and kept up with everything.
Itâs the future!
You play Kyoka Jiro in My Hero Academia whoâs typically not a huge character, but she really takes the spotlight during those final episodes with the performance that the class puts on. Was that a fun change of pace?
Iâve been looking forward to that particular character arc for a while now! Iâve been really excited and nervous for it, but then COVID hit and we were like four episodes away from it all! It was really scary! Actually, My Hero Academia was the last thing that I recorded in a professional studio and the director Colleen [Clinkenbeard] was amping me up for the arc coming, but then everything closed down.Â
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It was intimidating to have this arc thatâs so important to the character and something that Iâve been looking forward to for forever, but then need to record it all from home. It was scary, but Funimation and specifically Colleen were such a calming force through all of this. It was just great to finally get into that arc and show a little more of what Jiro is really all about.
I think those episodes have made a lot of people Jiro fans. Iâve definitely noticed an increase in Jiro fans since then.
Yeah! Iâve been getting a lot more messages concerning Jiro lately, which has been such a fun experience. I play a lot of quiet characters and Jiro is certainly one too, but it was a lot of fun to see her come out of her shell more and own who she is.
Itâs also a fortunate situation that the song that Jiro performs is already in English, but was there discussion over you re-recording the song?
I did not re-record the song. Itâs a beautiful song though. Itâs just beautiful. Iâve rocked out to it myself! Itâs just so sweet and happy. I really like it.Â
That performance is such a high point for the series. This was easily my favorite season and seeing Eri smile from that song is so sweet.
I feel like in any good media or story it can be exhausting if itâs just constantly heavy and full of that weight. Now I say this, but Iâm also on Attack on Titan! But those little moments of calm and hope that bring it back to the characters and focus on them as people are so important.
On the topic of Attack on Titan, that anime is heading into its final season and Mikasa is such a beloved character in a series where everyone really gets to grow and change. Has it been rewarding to get to voice someone so complex?
Itâs been really cool to voice a character that goes on such a drastic journey and experiences so many tragedies and hardships, but then watch how she changes from a child to a young woman. Itâs really rewarding. I love Mikasa for a number of reasons and I love Attack on Titan for the same reason that Iâm fond of the character, which is how they approach gender roles. Itâs so important and reflective of todayâs society.Â
Mikasa is a woman, but sheâs also such a strong fighter. Armin on the other hand is a man, but heâs also the least physically strong character, but highly intelligent and emotional. He gets to cry, which men often donât do in media. Thereâs also a character on the show whose gender is never specified. I think not just that portion of it, because there are so many layers to Titan, but itâs amazing to be a part of that world and in Mikasaâs shoes. Itâs been incredible. Attack on Titan has honestly changed my life for the better. Iâve met so many amazing people through it.Â
More than any other series, Attack on Titan is a show where Iâm just legitimately worried for the characters as they head into this final season.
Iâm terrified! We donât get the manga ahead of time, so Iâve been expecting to get killed off since season one! I donât know whatâs happening and Iâm just hopeful everything works out. Iâm not at all prepared for whatâs to come. Actually, during the very beginning of the show, the English dubâs director, Mike McFarland, said that he wanted me to go on the journey along with Mikasa and be as blind as she is. He said that there are things that are going to happen to Mikasa that she doesnât know about, so I shouldnât know about them either. He didnât want me to read ahead or anything, which is great because thatâs how I prefer to work anyways.Â
Now some of that has to do with how Mike and I are familiar with each other. Weâve worked together before and heâs such an amazing director and a great leader. But it can be heartbreaking to head into a session with a cheerful mood, record two hours of depressing content, and then leave a wreck because you didnât know it was coming. So Iâm in the dark on what happens, just like a lot of other people, but Iâm such a colossal fan of everything that the show does. Iâm so excited and so scared.
Weâve talked about a bunch of your bigger characters, but are there any other roles that really stand out for you?
Kurisu Makise from Steins; Gate is my jam! She was such a fun character to voice because of her emotional depth and all the trauma. Actually, I donât know what that says about meâŚâHmm, this character cries a lot and is so messed up in the head. Wonder if Trinaâs available?âÂ
But the sillier ones also made a big impact on me, like Francesca Lucchini from Strike Witches. Sheâs hilarious. Navirou from Monster Hunter is another one who was super close to my heart. That series had like 54 episodes so we worked on that show for like a year. I love all of my characters for different reasons, which I know a lot of people say, but itâs true!
My Hero Academia and Attack on Titan are both available to stream on Funimation.com.
The post My Hero Academia: The Rise of Jiro and the Future of Dubbed Anime appeared first on Den of Geek.
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