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Teenage Fansub posted:Rejected Alex Ross F4 proposal I, too, am legit bummed we never got this. But I'm having trouble imaging this flowing panel to panel. Maybe the palette would be more limited outside of splash pages, but other wise I can only imagine it as Illustrations partnered with a pulp novel.
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# ? Oct 15, 2018 04:57 |
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# ? May 25, 2024 13:44 |
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One of the last comics that I remember Alex Ross writing was Avengers vs Invaders from the post Civil War period. It wasn't great. Alex Ross is like the George Clooney of comics. Can produce amazing work, but doesn't like to use anything made post 1978.
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# ? Oct 15, 2018 07:03 |
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yeah Ross absolutely needs a writer His FF run would have been pretty to look at but intensely dull
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# ? Oct 15, 2018 14:10 |
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Blockhouse posted:yeah Ross absolutely needs a writer Has he drawn the kids before? I just don’t see that style working with the whole cast. All I can think of is the Secret Wars covers.
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# ? Oct 15, 2018 14:55 |
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Aaron's Avengers is just another car on the train being run on Namor since AvX.
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# ? Oct 15, 2018 17:19 |
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Ross doesn't like drawing anything from after Gwen Stacy died. Franklin would stay a baby and no Valaria at all. (Pretty sure the reason Marvel passed was entirely not wanting to reboot the team, given how load-bearing Reed, Franklin, Doom and Namor are right now.) Still could work for the MCU though. Let their accident put them 50 years forward, make them products of the sixties in the modern world, played straight...
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# ? Oct 15, 2018 17:44 |
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For the MCU I kind of like the idea I read somewhere else of they went up into space about 10 years ago in the MCU Timeline and disappeared. They finally return home after being across several dimensions like the Negative Zone and Microverse and have had their powers for years at this point so it's already a fully formed team used to their abilities.
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# ? Oct 15, 2018 18:13 |
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Thranguy posted:Ross doesn't like drawing anything from after Gwen Stacy died. Franklin would stay a baby and no Valaria at all. (Pretty sure the reason Marvel passed was entirely not wanting to reboot the team, given how load-bearing Reed, Franklin, Doom and Namor are right now.) I am legit down for a Brady Bunch movie FF, someone pitch netflix.
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# ? Oct 15, 2018 18:23 |
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X-O posted:For the MCU I kind of like the idea I read somewhere else of they went up into space about 10 years ago in the MCU Timeline and disappeared. They finally return home after being across several dimensions like the Negative Zone and Microverse and have had their powers for years at this point so it's already a fully formed team used to their abilities. "You're saying I can't call Sue "Woman" anymore? Can't tell her to get back in the kitchen?!" "Reed, you disappeared from 2008. Not the Sixties."
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# ? Oct 15, 2018 18:26 |
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Adept Nightingale posted:I am legit down for a Brady Bunch movie FF, someone pitch netflix. This is the story, of a boy named Jonny, who was leeching off his sister and her man~
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# ? Oct 15, 2018 18:41 |
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Lobok posted:"You're saying I can't call Sue "Woman" anymore? Can't tell her to get back in the kitchen?!" It turns out MCU Reed grew up in Mississippi. "Whaddya mean slavery is illegal now?!" Has there ever been a story about a super genius trailer park white trash? I understand why those two concepts tend to be mutually exclusive, but that duality could be fun before it overstays it's welcome. cant cook creole bream fucked around with this message at 21:47 on Oct 15, 2018 |
# ? Oct 15, 2018 21:39 |
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cant cook creole bream posted:Has there ever been a story about a super genius trailer park white trash? I understand why those two concepts tend to be mutually exclusive, but that duality could be fun before it overstays it's welcome. Marc Bernardin's Genius from Top Cow is about a once-in-a-century strategist and leader who happens to have been born as a poor black woman in the inner city, but that's as close as I can think of offhand.
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# ? Oct 15, 2018 23:38 |
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I read Cosmic Ghost Rider up to the latest issue, and now I have spent most of my day off catching up on comics instead of playing Persona 4. Help.
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# ? Oct 16, 2018 02:01 |
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cant cook creole bream posted:Has there ever been a story about a super genius trailer park white trash? I understand why those two concepts tend to be mutually exclusive, but that duality could be fun before it overstays it's welcome. "What if a poor person was smart" is pretty tasteless if taken as a gimmick or "a fun duality" rather than a chance to really examine issues of class and education and ideology and I don't know how many working comics writers I would trust to do it well and not in a tacky way. I know in some continuities Lex Luthor grew up in a pretty impoverished and dysfunctional rural home but I have no idea if that's canon anymore. I don't think there's been any real push to write Paige Guthrie as a super genius but in Gen X she was written as really really bright but also very insecure about her upbringing. I can't really think of others because a lot of the comics characters who do come from working class backgrounds are still located in NYC or some other metropolitan area and so they fill a different narrative niche.
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# ? Oct 16, 2018 03:36 |
At a certain point, Dr. Redneck would just be a guy with an annoyingly written accent and a mullet.
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# ? Oct 16, 2018 03:52 |
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Archyduke posted:"What if a poor person was smart" is pretty tasteless if taken as a gimmick or "a fun duality" rather than a chance to really examine issues of class and education and ideology and I don't know how many working comics writers I would trust to do it well and not in a tacky way. Come on now. There's a certain difference between just being poor and growing up in a remote hellhole stuck in the thirties. You're implying that I wouldn't believe poor people could be smart, or that all poor people grow up in such a way. The duality I was talking about is less about being poor but more about building state of the art technology while having an ideology from a century ago. I realize now that I made my point really unclear and I'm sorry about it. While it's an insulting term for the poor in general, when I was talking about "trailer park white trash" it wasn't actually about the living situation, but the attitude. Not every person who lives in a trailer is a redneck with a dozen rifles and as many Gadson flags, who thinks the years 2008 to 2016 have to be erased from history. That's not the sort of person I'd consider a high level genius. My apologies. cant cook creole bream fucked around with this message at 06:06 on Oct 16, 2018 |
# ? Oct 16, 2018 05:38 |
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cant cook creole bream posted:Come on now. There's a certain difference between just being poor and growing up in a remote hellhole stuck in the thirties. You're implying that I wouldn't believe poor people could be smart, or that all poor people grow up in such a way. No problem, I should apologize too-- I overreacted and was taking out a broader beef with the way class is dealt with in comics out on your post in a way that wasn't fair. My mom, who I admire a ton, went from if, not a trailer park per se, a very very backwards and culturally conservative rural upbringing to being the first member of her family to go to college (or even want to go to college) and a 40-year career in microbiology, so I'm sort of hypersensitive about this kind of thing. I think superhero comics are historically pretty unsubtle about class, and it's telling that there are so many more heroic billionaire industrialist superheroes than there are working class ones. We've come a long way, unfortunately, from Superman beating up exploitive landlords and corrupt bosses. When characters from less privileged upbringings do come up, I feel like they tend to fall into one a few very broad categories: 1) white urban working class or lower middle class, characters like Steve Rogers or Peter Parker who reflect the NYC-as-melting-pot romance that informed the foundational work of guys like Kirby or Will Eisner. 2) non-white urban working class, which can range from really cringe-worthy ethnic stereotyping to more compelling stuff, the latter much more common from, of course, actual writers of color. For a long time though this all read as really second-hand and offensively broad, like the writers' only knowledge was from blaxploitation movies or The Wire. 3) rural working class as metonymy for the American dream, which can be really maudlin and tacky, or, if treated more explicitly allegorically, ok-- like G.Mo's All-Star Superman or some of the better stories about Cannonball's family. 4) rural working class as one big roaming lynch-mob, which is a common enough archetype that it probably speaks for itself. Incest jokes, one-strap overalls, and Deliverance pastiches abound. This isn't always a disaster-- Alan Moore' Swamp Thing is essentially in many parts a variation on this, the American South as an ontological nightmare space, although much like #2 its easy to mess up if the writer just treats their characters like ideological cardboard cut-outs. Some of the best Ghost Rider stories also dig up to the knuckles into regional pulp and grindhouse tropes frequently coded as working class. The problem-- or, I'd consider it a problem-- is that none of these approaches are especially well-suited to actually saying something substantial or interesting about politics or culture, because they all just approach class (and race) as big convenient mythemes, short-hands of an Other against which the nominally more culturally normative hero debrides against. #2-4 in particular tend to be almost entirely exoticised, even in the works of very good writers. I think the kind of character you are proposing would still be tricky, albeit maybe more because of the Big Two's squeamishness in terms of getting too pointed about politics. One of the last big Marvel titles ostensibly tackling contemporary political issues was Nick Spencer's Cap and it almost immediately descended into "both sides" centrist porridge. Ditto, to hop mediums for a minute, Far Cry 5, which could have said something pretty incisive about class and culture in America but chose to oscillate between playing it excruciatingly safe thematically and taking the laziest, broadest potshots in the actual scripting. I suppose U.S.Agent as he was originally written, while not a genius, is sort of close to what you're describing-- he was deliberately a rural, reactionary counterpart to Steve Rogers' urban progressivism, although what that means in 2018 is obviously fairly different from what it meant in 1986. We also unfortunately don't have Mark Gruenwald or anyone much like Mark Gruenwald anymore, although I'd be really interested to see TNC take on something like this. His read on Nuke, actually, is sort of building up to be sort of a read on the alt-right as supervillain in an interesting way. There was a very cool China Mieville pitch a few years ago actually that sorts of flips the idea on its head-- kind of a leftist, collectivist Scrap Iron Man built out of urban salvage and jointly operated by a makeshift union of people. I think the idea of a villainous version of this is actually pretty compelling-- like a right-wing militia with its own cobbled-together suit of power armor, jerry-rigged by laid-off factory workers funneling their frustrations and resentment in the wrong direction.
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# ? Oct 16, 2018 20:11 |
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On some level (though it's hard to maintain that sort of status quo) both the initial introductions of Amadeus Cho and Lunella Lafayette involved them being young genius people of color without much/any socioeconomic privilege. I think Amadeus had a solid middle/upper middle class upbringing but also had his parents killed and went on the run when he was in his teens, and Lunella/Moon Girl's initial arcs are literally about how she's stuck in a struggling public school. Of course years down the line they're both friends with billionaires and have unlimited funding for whatever gadgets they're building, which is kind of the struggle of open ended shared universe storytelling. It was even baked into Riri Williams's origin for all of about three issues before she got invited to Harvard and inherited Tony Stark's patents or whatever. EDIT: I realize the initial question was about "trailer park white trash", not other underserved communities. I think that concept would suffer from the same sort of creep into "he's got a redneck voice but he's working for MODOK" within a few appearances. That said, if Bubbles from Trailer Park Boys just showed up one day as part of the Intelligencia with absolutely no explanation I wouldn't complain. Edge & Christian fucked around with this message at 20:45 on Oct 16, 2018 |
# ? Oct 16, 2018 20:38 |
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Edge & Christian posted:On some level (though it's hard to maintain that sort of status quo) both the initial introductions of Amadeus Cho and Lunella Lafayette involved them being young genius people of color without much/any socioeconomic privilege. I think Amadeus had a solid middle/upper middle class upbringing but also had his parents killed and went on the run when he was in his teens, and Lunella/Moon Girl's initial arcs are literally about how she's stuck in a struggling public school. Of course years down the line they're both friends with billionaires and have unlimited funding for whatever gadgets they're building, which is kind of the struggle of open ended shared universe storytelling. Yeah, I was going to mention Lunella but I feel like after the initial arc the book isn't really especially interested in being about class, which is fine, it would be weird of me to expect it to. I did appreciate that her gadgets were all made up of random bric-a-brac and that her not having access to high-tech equipment was part of the visual charm of the book, in the same way that I always really liked old Spider-Man bits about him not having infinite resources. I know the "Parker Luck" thing has become kind of a dead horse but I loved this brief gag in the 80s where his costume got soaked in brine during a fight and he couldn't make the time to get it cleaned so he was just running aroun in a washed-out looking pastel costume for a few issues. It always sort of bugged me that Ms. Marvel was supposed to be similarly grounded in economic reality but then her school has all kinds of super science gadgets lying around.
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# ? Oct 16, 2018 20:49 |
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Apparently In the marvel universe no one does inventory and they can't be bothered to hire someone to do that alone. Even though it would save them a lot of money and probably prevent a few supervillains.
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# ? Oct 16, 2018 20:54 |
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I feel like this even happens on the bigger/richer characters, I've lost track of how many times that Reed Richards, Tony Stark, Lex Luthor, or Bruce Wayne have lost their fortune and had to operate leaner and smarter and oh wait someone got bored with this status quo, they're a multi-billionaire again. Speaking of which, did anyone read the last issue of Slott's Tony Stark: Iron Man comic? The entire comic was built around the idea that some shadowy company launched Tinder, except the way this Tinder worked was that a human would fill out a profile and (unbeknownst to them) the Tinder company would build an incredibly lifelike AI robot/life model decoy that was their perfect mate and then I guess they'd just seed the world with hundreds/thousands/millions(?) of these perfect AI soulmates until one of them got security clearance to a big company like Stark Industries and then they'd immediately transform into Hivemind Thief Robots and try to steal all the technology they can to profit!!! Think of all of the technological advancements they could steal, all for the mere cost of seeding the world with countless perfect human duplicates that could initially fool even the world's greatest technologist! That can't cost that much money, right?
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# ? Oct 16, 2018 21:03 |
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Edge & Christian posted:I feel like this even happens on the bigger/richer characters, I've lost track of how many times that Reed Richards, Tony Stark, Lex Luthor, or Bruce Wayne have lost their fortune and had to operate leaner and smarter and oh wait someone got bored with this status quo, they're a multi-billionaire again. the plan only needs to go on until the VC money runs dry, duh
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# ? Oct 16, 2018 21:05 |
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I feel like being able to build note-perfect independent AIs who will be your soulmate and appear human to any sort of test or scan (even within the Marvel Universe) is a good enough feat that you could probably do okay in the market without the secret "transform into robbery-bots and steal other technology for money!"
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# ? Oct 16, 2018 21:13 |
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Oh i totally misread what was going on then, i thought it was a bunch of already existing robots who tried a catfishing op and just decided to send everyone they had once literally every stark employee revealed themselves to be single
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# ? Oct 16, 2018 21:26 |
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January 2019 solicits https://www.cbr.com/marvel-comics-january-2019-solicitations/
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# ? Oct 16, 2018 21:28 |
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Tom Taylor writing a Spidey book and Chip Zdarsky doing Invaders are two things I never thought of but definitely looking forward to.
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# ? Oct 16, 2018 21:48 |
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aww man I didn't realize Weapon X was ending in December
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# ? Oct 16, 2018 21:49 |
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The Soska Sisters are going to write Black Widow? That is going to be one violent book.
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# ? Oct 16, 2018 22:02 |
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No idea who the Black widow writers are but I'll take a book about her, Tom Taylor Spidey, cautious optimism on Kelly Thompson captain marvel, horror book by Ewing, why are they giving chaykin work give the ww2 stuff to Ennis he seems to enjoy doing that type of comic, sorrentino on an Aaron book has my interest
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# ? Oct 16, 2018 22:09 |
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I'm going to check out Conan, Tom Taylor Spidey, the Ewing horror book, Guardians of the Galaxy, and maybe Black Widow.
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# ? Oct 16, 2018 22:12 |
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site posted:why are they giving chaykin work give the ww2 stuff to Ennis he seems to enjoy doing that type of comic He had some Secret Wars comic "Where Monsters Dwell". I read most of the what seemed like 50 mini-series that came out from that event. Where Monsters Dwell was easily the worst. Extremely toxic masculinity dripped from it, and I don't remember it being tongue-in-cheek or sarcastic. Just a bunch of drat WOMEN telling a MAN how he should LIVE. I've since avoided him.
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# ? Oct 16, 2018 22:19 |
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site posted:Oh i totally misread what was going on then, i thought it was a bunch of already existing robots who tried a catfishing op and just decided to send everyone they had once literally every stark employee revealed themselves to be single IUG posted:He had some Secret Wars comic "Where Monsters Dwell". I read most of the what seemed like 50 mini-series that came out from that event. Where Monsters Dwell was easily the worst. Extremely toxic masculinity dripped from it, and I don't remember it being tongue-in-cheek or sarcastic. Just a bunch of drat WOMEN telling a MAN how he should LIVE. I've since avoided him.
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# ? Oct 16, 2018 22:42 |
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I didn't even know Daredevil was dead yet again.
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# ? Oct 16, 2018 22:48 |
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He isn't. Yet.
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# ? Oct 16, 2018 22:49 |
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site posted:No idea who the Black widow writers are but I'll take a book about her They're horror directors/writers/actors. American Mary is a legit good indie horror film.
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# ? Oct 16, 2018 23:50 |
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Edge & Christian posted:I feel like this even happens on the bigger/richer characters, I've lost track of how many times that Reed Richards, Tony Stark, Lex Luthor, or Bruce Wayne have lost their fortune and had to operate leaner and smarter and oh wait someone got bored with this status quo, they're a multi-billionaire again. At least in DC when that happens they had the decency to try their hand at a minimum wage job at the Belly Burger or whatever DCU fast food franchise.
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# ? Oct 17, 2018 00:00 |
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Definitely getting Conan. Might grab McKay’s new mini. The Ewing horror book looks good. And I love anthology books, so Marvel Comics Presents seems like a good buy too. I went from almost no big 2 (outside of YA) last year to a pretty decent selection by early 2019.
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# ? Oct 17, 2018 00:12 |
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Reed working a fast food place would be pretty good. I mean he could probably run the whole place by himself (I mean night time fast food is sometimes as few as a two person job anyway).
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# ? Oct 17, 2018 00:16 |
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Marvel Knights 4 by Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa (Afterlife with Archie, CW's Riverdale, Netflix's Sabrina) is about the Fantastic Four losing all their money and their home and they have to get jobs. Ben works in Construction, Sue becomes a teacher, Johnny tries to go back to acting, and Reed tries to math them out of it with him realizing that some problems can't be solved like equations so he goes and gets an ordinary job at a computer company. The series deals more with the family and personal angle of their struggles and I really enjoyed it.
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# ? Oct 17, 2018 00:46 |
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# ? May 25, 2024 13:44 |
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Of course Johnny would choose acting
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# ? Oct 17, 2018 02:46 |