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I still really want an Avatar in space. I'd love to see fire benders starting rockets or earth benders shoot meteors at each other.
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# ? Jun 7, 2017 16:02 |
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# ? May 28, 2024 15:38 |
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I don't know, I think Korra was already pretty rough at times, I think dragging it out in the first place was a bad idea. A third series seems like an awful idea.
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# ? Jun 7, 2017 17:07 |
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Pakled posted:Loud House looks nice and it isn't bad, but the plots tend to be pretty bog-standard family-oriented kids' show stories and the sisters are all pretty one-dimensional. It's basically an animated Full House where a bunch of inoffensive suburban white people deal with a bunch of inoffensive suburban white people problems. Which is fine if you like that kind of thing I guess but I have a very hard time getting invested in it. Pluss, that genre's breed of Hallmark gift card forced sincerity has always came across as contrived and annoying to me (and boy howdy does TLH have a lot of that poo poo). nerdman42 posted:I still really want an Avatar in space. I'd love to see fire benders starting rockets or earth benders shoot meteors at each other. See also: Avatar in the 80s
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# ? Jun 7, 2017 17:24 |
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My dream series is basically martial arts worldbuilding in cgi, possibly in space, not avatar but something inspired by it. Turtles 2012 season 1+2 came close to what I wanted but doesn't tell a complete story, had unfortunately shallow characters, failed in many ways... I still liked the grotesque and fun designs and it proves that CGI can do both good fights and characterization, both it and TF Prime manged to do subtle facial and body language at times that you couldn't pull off on a reasonable budget for traditional animation. Many scenes in season 1 were JUST to show they had done their research on Ninjas, their philosophy, their fighting techniques and weapons. Like slowing down the first Raphael fight to show him using his Sais the right way, explaining how they make smoke bombs, etc. There was so much promise there for a series as well researched as Avatar. Maybe I'm angrier at how the series disappointed everyone than I thought I was. (When the current seasons of Doctor Who and Kamen Rider AMAZONZ finish, I'll probably watch something american and mature like Preacher or American Gods, but maybe I'll finally watch that Green Lantern series from a while back...)
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# ? Jun 7, 2017 17:35 |
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On one hand, Avatar was a creative world with great characters and ideas. On the other hand, Korra really struggled with the "seasons as independent mini-series" pacing. If they were to come back, I think they'd need to commit to doing longer seasons and arcs because tight pacing doesn't seem to be their strength.
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# ? Jun 8, 2017 01:49 |
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FronzelNeekburm posted:On one hand, Avatar was a creative world with great characters and ideas. On the other hand, Korra really struggled with the "seasons as independent mini-series" pacing. If they were to come back, I think they'd need to commit to doing longer seasons and arcs because tight pacing doesn't seem to be their strength. Yeah, I only watched the first season of Korra, and the abysmal pacing really killed my interest in the series. In the first few episodes they set up what felt like a very interesting world with a morally gray and compelling conflict, but then they spent so much time on stuff like Bending Sports that they had to rush through the Actual Plot in a few episodes, abandoning any chance to grant additional characterization to the villains or provide any additional nuance to the plot, which were two of TLA's greatest strengths. It just felt as though the entire first season was filled with missed opportunities, and by the time the second season came around I didn't have any interest in keeping up.
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# ? Jun 8, 2017 02:03 |
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Acebuckeye13 posted:Yeah, I only watched the first season of Korra, and the abysmal pacing really killed my interest in the series. In the first few episodes they set up what felt like a very interesting world with a morally gray and compelling conflict, but then they spent so much time on stuff like Bending Sports that they had to rush through the Actual Plot in a few episodes, abandoning any chance to grant additional characterization to the villains or provide any additional nuance to the plot, which were two of TLA's greatest strengths. It just felt as though the entire first season was filled with missed opportunities, and by the time the second season came around I didn't have any interest in keeping up. The second season is a million times worse at this. edit: Like if I just described the episode-to-episode plot to you I would sound like an insane schizophrenic, but I wouldn't be able to talk about anything else because the characterization is so strange and makes everyone come off as a petty jerk. mycot fucked around with this message at 02:31 on Jun 8, 2017 |
# ? Jun 8, 2017 02:22 |
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mycot posted:The second season is a million times worse at this. You know, people upthread have mentioned how Nick burned them by burying the 3rd and 4th seasons, but really, considering how badly the 1st and 2nd seasons performed, it's kinda a miracle those seasons were put out at all.
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# ? Jun 8, 2017 02:29 |
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mycot posted:The second season is a million times worse at this. There's even a season 4 episode that makes fun of the 2nd season's plot and villain.
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# ? Jun 8, 2017 02:40 |
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I tapped out in the middle of Season 2, but I heard the show got much better by the end, so maybe I'll go back and finish it at some point.
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# ? Jun 8, 2017 02:50 |
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FronzelNeekburm posted:On one hand, Avatar was a creative world with great characters and ideas. On the other hand, Korra really struggled with the "seasons as independent mini-series" pacing. If they were to come back, I think they'd need to commit to doing longer seasons and arcs because tight pacing doesn't seem to be their strength. Either that or focus on standalone stories with a Problem of the week style format and maybe a hint of overarching plot
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# ? Jun 8, 2017 03:10 |
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Benne posted:I tapped out in the middle of Season 2, but I heard the show got much better by the end, so maybe I'll go back and finish it at some point. Yeah, while the series as a whole isn't quite as good as it's predecessor the last 2 seasons are probably the best of the whole show. It's just too bad the first half is kind of rough as the first few episodes are actually really good, then, as has been mentioned, it gets bogged down with unnecessary details and has to rush to finish it's story (the reduced episode count per season probably didn't do them any favors either). The latter half is a lot better paced in that regard. If there ever is a third series I hope they learn from their mistakes and pace it more like the first show (that is, one continuous story rather than loosely connected mini-arcs). Then again, the prospect of there even being another show is doubtful at this point seeing as Nick doesn't really care too much about the franchise and I'm not sure what other network would be willing to pick it up (or if that's even possible as Nickelodeon probably still owns full rights to the property). There are still avenues they could cover if they did one day decide to make another series though. I don't remember if this has been touched on in Korra or the comics but it might be interesting to know just what Bending is, is it something you're inately born with by chance or could it potentially be taught to anyone with enough work? Also, if the Avatar is capable of using all 4 elements what's stopping any Bender from trying to learn another element as well? Larryb fucked around with this message at 14:06 on Jun 8, 2017 |
# ? Jun 8, 2017 03:14 |
Seasons 3 and 4 are basically up there with Season 2 of ATLA for me, so that made it worth it for me. But as it is, I think continuing to explore the world with the comics is the best option.
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# ? Jun 8, 2017 03:15 |
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As someone who Loved To Complain About Those First Two Seasons Of Korra, 3 and 4 were pretty great.
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# ? Jun 8, 2017 03:18 |
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FilthyImp posted:Nick chased that Disney Channel dragon pretty hard in the post-Nicktoons era. As a result, they kind of sanitized all the weird Nick stuff they produced (Like Wienerville), with their last gasp being Zim. They leaned on Klasky Csupo pretty hard, but the As Told by Ginger/Rocket Power years kind of killed their prominance. How did CN get where it is recently? Back in ye old days of the late 90s, early 2000s my understanding was that Cartoon Network was in third place compared to Nick or Disney in most ways but its reached crazy heights artistically, compared to Nick especially, since like 2010.
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# ? Jun 8, 2017 03:55 |
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Dangerous Person posted:Sumner Redstone is a very Original Character Do Not Steal kind of name Holy poo poo, he makes Donald Trump look like he aged with grace and dignity, the hair is straight from a ken doll.
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# ? Jun 8, 2017 04:03 |
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i thought season 3 was a bit tepid but season 4 of korra is legitimately amazing and brings the whole series to a satisfying close. i really like that they brought back some of the previous villains and made a real point of showing how she fought kuvira differently than the others. more to the point, the beam cannon special effects were awesome
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# ? Jun 8, 2017 04:03 |
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I always thought Korra took the magic out of Avatar. The world in last airbender seemed to be a world shaped around bending whereas Korra was a world that wanted to be modern. Also thought a better idea for a sequel to Last Airbender would be to explore the loose ends as tv movies.
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# ? Jun 8, 2017 04:16 |
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khwarezm posted:How did CN get where it is recently? Back in ye old days of the late 90s, early 2000s my understanding was that Cartoon Network was in third place compared to Nick or Disney in most ways but its reached crazy heights artistically, compared to Nick especially, since like 2010. It helps that CN has managed to home-grow a ton of talent. Starting from the mid-2000s on shows like Camp Lazlo and Flapjack they were able to draft and develop creators like Pendleton Ward (AT, obviously), J. G. Quintel (Regular Show), and Patrick McHale (Over the Garden Wall), and then through the shows those creators developed they found additional talent in people like Rebecca Sugar and Ian Jones-Quartey. It also helps that their brief foray into CN Real bombed horribly, so they had no choice but to re-commit to animation to define the network, whereas animation on Disney and Nick has to compete for airtime with live-action shows.
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# ? Jun 8, 2017 04:23 |
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The first season of Legend of Korra was all about pro-bending and love triangles, and if you like that, you'll be happy, if you don't, you won't. Of course, neither the romance nor the sports really have any satisfying endings, especially if you keep watching into the later seasons where everything important in the previous season is dropped like a bad habit. Of course, if you want to see an extension of Avatar that hits upon the themes of the four nations trying to get along, the complications of industrialization in a spiritual society, or what happens with the main characters after the war's over, read the comics. They're great and better than Korra.
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# ? Jun 8, 2017 04:39 |
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Yeah, I think CN's winning strategy was to start greenlighting shows from younger creators (JG Quintel, Ben Bocquelet, Pendleton Ward, Rebecca Sugar, and Skyler Page, to name a few, were all in their mid 20's when their shows started airing) and cultivating talent among the crews of those shows. I dunno what the corporate culture there is like but considering the retention rate they've got I've gotta imagine it's pretty good towards creative types.
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# ? Jun 8, 2017 04:40 |
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Pakled posted:Yeah, I think CN's winning strategy was to start greenlighting shows from younger creators (JG Quintel, Ben Bocquelet, Pendleton Ward, Rebecca Sugar, and Skyler Page, to name a few, were all in their mid 20's when their shows started airing) and cultivating talent among the crews of those shows. I dunno what the corporate culture there is like but considering the retention rate they've got I've gotta imagine it's pretty good towards creative types. It's crazy to think how Flapjack alone indirectly spawned something like four or five different shows through the people that worked on it, including Gravity Falls.
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# ? Jun 8, 2017 04:47 |
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CN got on the map by airing old classic cartoons and reintroducing them to a new generation (Ted Turner scoring both the Hanna-Barbera and Looney Tunes rights is an underrated stroke of genius, given how protective companies are of IP these days). They used that momentum to develop in-house creators and groom them for new projects, which gave us the modern-day classics like Dexter/PPG/Johnny Bravo/etc. During that time, CN made the other underrated genius move, tapping into the 18-25 market with Toonami and Adult Swim. Making it "cool" to watch a channel called "Cartoon Network" is no small feat. So now they had kids watching for the current product and young adults watching for the "serious" cartoons. They lost their way for a bit (I don't think anyone is seriously nostalgic for the mid-to-late-2000s period), but CN eventually caught fire again with the current crop of AT/SU/Regular Show/Gumball/etc. Pakled posted:Yeah, I think CN's winning strategy was to start greenlighting shows from younger creators (JG Quintel, Ben Bocquelet, Pendleton Ward, Rebecca Sugar, and Skyler Page, to name a few, were all in their mid 20's when their shows started airing) and cultivating talent among the crews of those shows. I dunno what the corporate culture there is like but considering the retention rate they've got I've gotta imagine it's pretty good towards creative types. This is true, and I think an added benefit is that all those kids who grew up watching CN are now old enough to finish college and want to work for CN, thus creating yet another generation of bright, inventive creators. I know it's popular to concern-troll about CN and all the poo poo they do wrong (I won't disagree, given how often I see like 50 hours of TTG on the schedule), but the stuff they do get right, they really get right.
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# ? Jun 8, 2017 05:36 |
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Gaunab posted:I always thought Korra took the magic out of Avatar. The world in last airbender seemed to be a world shaped around bending whereas Korra was a world that wanted to be modern. Same. It also felt like a story without an end goal, if that makes sense. Last Airbender had a structure even if it went and did comedy or other stuff along the way. The entire series had one end goal: Defeat the Fire Nation, and each season led to that goal by having Aang learn an element (while his companions experienced their own personal growth). Korra, by comparison, starts with a weak rear end goal right from the start: Korra has to learn airbending*. Whoopee. And yes, there's a threat to be dealt with in the form of Amon and there's worldbuilding and stuff, but the show never feels like it's building to anything. And then after that each season introduces its own threat and then succinctly deals with it, but the show still never feels like it's building to anything except dealing with the next threat. 3 and 4 kind of worked by sending the world into sort of chaos, which is what the Avatar's supposed to prevent, but there was never a real overarching enemy like the Fire Nation in Avatar. *Side note: this never made a lot of sense anyway according to the show's own rules. Earthbending was supposed to be hard for Aang because the elements were diametrically opposed; so Korra, the natural waterbender, should have problems with fire. But at the show's beginning, baby Korra's already throwing flames and for some reason when she gets to Republic City she has problems with airbending because ???
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# ? Jun 8, 2017 05:57 |
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khwarezm posted:How did CN get where it is recently? Back in ye old days of the late 90s, early 2000s my understanding was that Cartoon Network was in third place compared to Nick or Disney in most ways but its reached crazy heights artistically, compared to Nick especially, since like 2010. Nick's problem was that it wanted to surpass Disney as the Go To for children's programming, but it's entire identity was built on a counterculture vibe (kind of like Kids Next Door) that was oppositional to parents and normalcy. Nick at Night was their weird way to get Old People buy-in to bolster their late night audience -- and part of me wonders if the OG Adult Swim was swiping at them. But if you look at their heyday of programming, they really embraced the idea that being a kid (or a young teen) is just all kinds of chaos and absurdity. That's unsustainable if you want to be the leader, because you lose that edge that allows you to be the crazy underdog. Nick also neglected to build a strong feeder system for their animated or live-action stuff, so when ClaskyKsupo fell out of favor when SpongeBob became a massive hit, there wasn't a slew of talent ready to step up. They did ok with Frederator for a short time, but same. To me (and this is biased as hell because it's TeenMemories.txt), CN's success hinges on 3-5 "eras" of invention. You start with Space Ghost Coast to Coast, which teaches us that nonsequitor humor works and that their forgotten animated characters can still be useful. The WhatACartoon! series of shorts that spawned a ton of innovative little series (Johnny Bravo, PowerPuff Girls, Cow and Chicken) allowed them to snatch up young animators or people relatively new. Next, the Toonami launch allowed them to successfully package and leverage their library of old animated properties, eventually leading to them being able to take risks with stuff (Real Adventures of Jonny Quest bombed, but dubbing the last of Sailor Moon R and DBZ Frieza is still paying dividends). This grows into TOM Toonami, whose focus on anime signals that CN is developed enough to stop propping up it's old shows. This is followed by the Adult Swim block (growing out of Toonami Midnight Run), which goes all in on original programming, serves as a secind renaissance for a number of shows and embraces creative stuff that might even alienate viewers. That keeps until CN Real fails abysmally, with Chowder/Flapjack serving as a prelude to AT, RD, and all the current go-to series that branch out from there. Unsurprisingly, a lot of their success comes from being able to nurture talent, with the occasional risk taken with programming and following up on their hits.
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# ? Jun 8, 2017 06:03 |
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Benne posted:CN got on the map by airing old classic cartoons and reintroducing them to a new generation (Ted Turner scoring both the Hanna-Barbera and Looney Tunes rights is an underrated stroke of genius, given how protective companies are of IP these days). They used that momentum to develop in-house creators and groom them for new projects, which gave us the modern-day classics like Dexter/PPG/Johnny Bravo/etc. Yeah they made a point about how strong of a backlog they had compared to any other channel with cartoons back in the early days; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xMqFcuSutE8
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# ? Jun 8, 2017 07:59 |
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TwoPair posted:Same. It also felt like a story without an end goal, if that makes sense. Last Airbender had a structure even if it went and did comedy or other stuff along the way. The entire series had one end goal: Defeat the Fire Nation, and each season led to that goal by having Aang learn an element (while his companions experienced their own personal growth). It doesn't make sense if you forget that there's a mental/emotional component to bending. Aang had the most difficulty with Earth since it contrasted too much with his own mindset (it's been a while since I watch AtLA so I might be a little off). In Korra's case, she couldn't quite get Airbending since her own mindset wasn't quite in tune with what wss needed for Airbending.
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# ? Jun 8, 2017 13:42 |
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Xelkelvos posted:It doesn't make sense if you forget that there's a mental/emotional component to bending. Aang had the most difficulty with Earth since it contrasted too much with his own mindset (it's been a while since I watch AtLA so I might be a little off). In Korra's case, she couldn't quite get Airbending since her own mindset wasn't quite in tune with what wss needed for Airbending. Problem with that is in a later episode Avatar Roku, a natural Firebender, admits to Aang that he at first had difficulty learning Waterbending, which would seem to imply it is an issue with the two elements being opposed to each other (at least partially). Also as bad as Korra's second season was I did kind of like the little arc they did about the life of the first Avatar. I still wish they'd have just picked one story and stuck with it rather than doing a series of loosely connected mini-arcs. Larryb fucked around with this message at 15:41 on Jun 8, 2017 |
# ? Jun 8, 2017 14:33 |
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drrockso20 posted:Yeah they made a point about how strong of a backlog they had compared to any other channel with cartoons back in the early days; You know this makes me wonder if there are any proper places for kids to watch the old Warner bros. or MGM theatrical shorts like Looney Tunes and Tom and Jerry these days. That was one of the best things about CN back in the day and it would be a shame if they faded out of the public eye since they are so good.
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# ? Jun 8, 2017 14:33 |
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Boomerang's app.
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# ? Jun 8, 2017 14:47 |
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khwarezm posted:You know this makes me wonder if there are any proper places for kids to watch the old Warner bros. or MGM theatrical shorts like Looney Tunes and Tom and Jerry these days. That was one of the best things about CN back in the day and it would be a shame if they faded out of the public eye since they are so good. You'll notice that old Woody Woodpecker cartoons aren't really anywhere, and old Tom & Jerries are maybe on Boomerang (as the poster above mentioned). I noticed a lot of the old shorts were scaled back in prominence following The Looney Tunes Show and Wabbit! becoming a thing (which is pants-on-head backwards as far as I'm concerned).
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# ? Jun 8, 2017 16:07 |
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Entertainment Weekly has a big article about Ducktales and shows some new characters. This is my most anticipated show this year.
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# ? Jun 8, 2017 16:28 |
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Those are some good ideas and relevant world building. The buzzworthy rich tech nerd could be pretty funny if they pull it off right.
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# ? Jun 8, 2017 16:36 |
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Larryb posted:There are still avenues they could cover if they did one day decide to make another series though. I don't remember if this has been touched on in Korra or the comics but it might be interesting to know just what Bending is, is it something you're inately born with by chance or could it potentially be taught to anyone with enough work? Also, if the Avatar is capable of using all 4 elements what's stopping any Bender from trying to learn another element as well? I thought they explained this in the Korra TV show.
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# ? Jun 8, 2017 16:42 |
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Mraagvpeine posted:I thought they explained this in the Korra TV show. They might have, it's been a while since I saw it (I'm actually in process of rewatching both shows at the moment and only just finished the original). Larryb fucked around with this message at 16:52 on Jun 8, 2017 |
# ? Jun 8, 2017 16:45 |
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khwarezm posted:You know this makes me wonder if there are any proper places for kids to watch the old Warner bros. or MGM theatrical shorts like Looney Tunes and Tom and Jerry these days. That was one of the best things about CN back in the day and it would be a shame if they faded out of the public eye since they are so good. I still remember when they first started censoring the old looney tunes shortly before they just stopped airing them, with one episode I remember they massively edited it, I think the plot was character A thought character B died so he was trying to kill himself throughout the episode but it was edited so heavily over half of it was cut and there was just suddenly a jumpcut to a couple frames at the very end with character A having a noose on his neck and a gun in his hand before rushing to character B returning. I can't even imagine how many of the racist episodes they had to edit or just stop airing and once those were gone all they had left were a handful of violent ones and the actually good ones with bugs and daffy and/or fudd. Ra Ra Rasputin fucked around with this message at 17:08 on Jun 8, 2017 |
# ? Jun 8, 2017 16:58 |
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Talkin bout Cartoon Network without linking Kaptainkristian? For shame. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Et4vu4lpPI https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pkup4zo97E0 FilthyImp posted:
It also had a predecessor to Family Guy Sockser fucked around with this message at 17:13 on Jun 8, 2017 |
# ? Jun 8, 2017 16:58 |
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I stopped watching Nickelodeon in 1997/1998, and I never moved on to another "kids' network" after that. So I missed out on the Cartoon Network stuff of the late '90s. Luckily, I got into it when it was getting big again with Adventure Time and Regular Show. I'm sure those shows will be looked back upon nostalgically by kids today in the same way people my age look at stuff like Ren & Stimpy and Rocko's Modern Life.
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# ? Jun 8, 2017 17:15 |
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Benne posted:I tapped out in the middle of Season 2, but I heard the show got much better by the end, so maybe I'll go back and finish it at some point. I'm convinced that the reason people say that is because the only the diehard fans stuck around after season 2. They are sort of like the people that say the Simpsons is still good.
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# ? Jun 8, 2017 17:18 |
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Larryb posted:They might have, it's been a while since I saw it (I'm actually in process of rewatching both shows at the moment and only just finished the original). Short answer : magic. long answer : Lion Turtles give peeps bending to go get food. longer answer : God you nerds got to stop being such giant nerds. PhazonLink fucked around with this message at 17:52 on Jun 8, 2017 |
# ? Jun 8, 2017 17:43 |