day 29
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Character’s Accomplishments Oooh, I have the perfect character for this one! Leah Kwasny was actually one of the first characters I developed for Paradiso – right after Fan, actually – and man, is this woman a force to be reckoned with. She knew exactly who she wanted to be when she was a child; beginning
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Honestly? I got what I wanted with the creation of a live-action version (of which I will be finishing up over the next couple of days), and although I don’t have a solid opinion of how they did as of yet, I haven’t had too many complaints so far. But I think what I’d like
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I am going to sum this up to avoid a tldr: I love the originals, the prequels are terrible yet enjoyable for the most part (almost in a spiteful way), and the sequels are … their own thing. Now for the longer version: It’s difficult to compare the three trilogies: they’re products of different times
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In case you hadn’t heard, Bioware just recently announced they were releasing a remaster of the original games (seriously, just take my money), so they kind of ruined what I was planning on writing about – the first game, in particular, really needed a rework – which means I have to come up with something
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Friends is as much a primer on what not to do as it is what you should do. It was ridiculously successful during its run, taking risks – like having Monica sleep with Paul the Wine Guy on their first date in “The Pilot” – and capitalizing on its popularity with that oh-so coveted age
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Tom Haverford is probably the character that changes the most over the course of seven season of Parks and Rec. I mean, he is still obsessed with being a “baller.” Can I say that without sounding tremendously white? I don’t think I can. Anyway, as I’ll get into on my Tom supplemental post (that’ll be
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Admiral Cain* was a great character. She was everything Starbuck wanted to be: tough, respected, had her shit together, got what she wanted, stuck with her convictions, and didn’t sleep with Baltar. She wasn’t without her flaws, obviously, seeing as she had Roslin and Adama planning on her assassination, but it’s not like she was
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Buffy the Vampire Slayer never really ended: it continued, at least until September of this year, in comic form, and there’s apparently a reboot/reimagining/continuation/whatever in the works, about which I have many, conflicting feelings. I was actually surprised at the number of BTVS novels that exist, and my to-read pile just got that much larger, even