#cujo is best doggo
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bluerosefox · 10 months ago
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Glowing Green Puppy, Tiny Tots, and Damian 'I am not turning into my Father' Wayne.
I've been seeing a few DPxDC Dad!Damian ideas so I'd like to toss my idea into the void of the internet.
Damian is on a lead about a glowing green puppy, that can apparently change size and go through walls, and finally manages to track it down before even his father hears about it. The puppy seemed to be stealing random things too.
He was fully ready to use all the tricks in the book to get the puppy to trust him... and after a few days/weeks he manages to gain its trust.
He just wasn't expecting the puppy to drag him to abandoned warehouse and drop him in front of a few kids that were hiding out in it.
"Oh! Cujo you finally brought your new person over!" says the only red-haired one in the group, and she was holding a baby, as two almost identical toddlers ran over to the excited pupper that began to run around them.
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pransesdp · 3 years ago
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To found out the main heroes for the ask meme, Danny himself?
Headcanon A:  realistic
At some point when he's his own independent adult, Danny finally achieves his dream of getting a dog via-adopting a Dalmatian puppy (appropriately named "Comet"). The pup is pretty much Danny's "mini-me" in mannerisms & attitude, never being phased by the ghostly aspects of Danny's life (even once inviting fellow doggo Cujo (*still in giant form*) to come play & chase eachother around).
Headcanon B: while it may not be realistic it is hilarious
Danny may not admit it, but he's always had a soft spot for weird/lowkey-cute alien merchandise (think the classic lil green men w/ the big bug eyes). Most likely bought/was gifted that one alien teddy bear from Build-a-Bear at some point.
Headcanon C: heart-crushing and awful, but fun to inflict on friends
Ever since the portal accident, Danny had the biggest fear of anything electricity-related (even stuff like brief static sparks gave him horrible anxiety). He's slowly been trying to work around that though as he's gotten older... just don't expect him to be on the "best" of terms with Technus or Vortex for such reasons.
Headcanon D: unrealistic, but I will disregard canon about it because I reject canon reality and substitute my own.
Unlike what happens in-canon, Danny never actually reveals his true identity to the entire world ('cause I mean... why lol). Instead he more practically reveals this news to the rest of his family/closest friends (including Valerie, despite them being broken-up he still knows she deserves closure :( ). Perhaps overtime he'll find the confidence to reveal his secret to more of the town as he becomes their "hero"... but for now, better safe than sorry 👍
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anniec1369 · 6 years ago
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This was horror movie #11 of 2020. I watched it the other day but, I wasn't in the best of moods do I didn't post it.... #horrormoviesof2020 #11 #cujo #beethovenonbathsalts #stephenking #doggo #bluraycollection #horror #horrorchick #horrornerd #snarkmastergeneral #nerd #shenerd #fairygoremother #shenerdroom https://www.instagram.com/p/B6_9YCMFWWq/?igshid=1qv844btsgak8
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chocolategir · 8 years ago
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I'm finally watching Cujo and I love him! A good doggo! The best doggo!
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theconservativebrief · 7 years ago
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We’re currently in a Stephen King renaissance that shows no sign of stopping. Thanks to the record-breaking success of last year’s remake of It, Hollywood is lining up to dig into the horror master’s massive literary output — starting with a long overdue remake of Pet Sematary, the uneven yet hypnotic 1989 treatment of one of King’s scariest novels.
In the wake of It’s massive success, it’s easy to see why directors (like Guillermo del Toro) are interested in improving upon older King adaptations that may not have lived up to their source material. But there are also plenty of King gems that have yet to be unearthed for movie audiences — some of which have long been stuck in development hell, to hopefully be rescued by this new cultural craving for King adaptations.
Although King stories have traditionally found recurring success as television miniseries, the tremendous payoff to Hollywood’s gamble of releasing It as two separate feature film installments has paved the way for more big-screen adaptations that take similar chances. With that newfound cinematic appetite in mind, here are 10 King novels and short stories, ranging through horror, suspense-thriller, science fiction, and fantasy, that are just waiting to be transformed (or remade) into films for the next generation of moviegoers.
Darek Kocurek
King wrote this story while he was still in college and later compiled it in the 1978 story collection Night Shift. One of his earliest published works, it has all the earmarks of King at his finest: an engrossing plot featuring psychological suspense, a deep sense of nostalgia for a specific time and place, and a complex villain — in this case, a serial killer nicknamed Springheel Jack.
Why it would work: King’s writing throughout this popular story is lush and evocative, just begging for graceful, ever-moodier cinematography that mirrors the story’s encroaching sinister subtext.
The biggest pitfall in adapting “Strawberry Spring” is that the ending, undoubtedly a serious shocker in 1968, would probably be instantly guessed by savvy modern audiences. Still, given audiences’ love for King and his ability to ground his stories in a deep sense of place, this isn’t an insurmountable obstacle, and in the hands of a solid screenwriter, this story could be well-told.
gfpeck/Flickr
Another Night Shift short story, “The Boogeyman” tells the classic demon/poltergeist tale of a family pursued by a horrifying supernatural entity that may or may not be murdering children. The tense psychological ambiguity of King’s writing and the grim, terrifying certainty that no child is safe sets this tale apart from innumerable “scary thing in the closet” stories, as the protagonist fights to keep his kids away from the clutches of the Boogeyman. What makes this story stand out from other similar tales is that King’s Boogeyman is corporeal and dangerous, with the kill count to prove it.
Why it could work: Despite being part of King’s most popular short story collection, this story has only ever been adapted into short films. (In fact, a 1982 adaptation was the first of King’s famous “dollar baby” short films.) But there’s a lot of potential for this story to be absolutely terrifying as a feature film in the right writer’s hands. Like Pet Sematary, there are themes of grieving and parenthood, and like many other King stories, the protagonist’s psychological breakdown muddies the waters. Above all, there’s lots of potential to expand the world of King’s short story into something truly complicated and memorable.
King’s beloved novel of Lovecraftian horror infesting a small modern-day New England town succeeds on multiple levels, serving up memorable characters, loads of action, and a central haunted house setting as creepy as they come. It’s also an analogue for dying rural ways and steadily encroaching sociopolitical shifts that go unnoticed for years until suddenly all hell breaks loose. And you thought it was just about vampires.
Why it could work: Though it’s been made into two television miniseries — a 1979 miniseries directed by Tobe Hooper that hasn’t aged well, and a forgotten 2004 remake — Salem’s Lot has never been given a big-screen adaptation. This is undoubtedly because, like many of King’s best works, it’s sprawling and epic. (A Dracula-esque short story prequel, “Jerusalem’s Lot,” and a sequel, “One for the Road,” add even more background context.)
But as Muschietti’s adaptation of It showed, a somewhat scaled-down version of the story could work elegantly on the big screen. And with its emphasis on nostalgia and the terrors of childhood, it shares many themes with It that could make it a hit with new audiences. Plus, the vampires, easily the most popular part of Hooper’s adaptation, could be made even scarier through modern effects — and we all know, the vampires are the main draw.
King’s most popular novel under the Richard Bachman pseudonym is set in an alternate history in which Germany won World War II. The modern US under fascist rule is a deeply disturbing dystopia where boys compete in a grueling pedestrian marathon — think Speed meets The Hunger Games — that ends in death for all but one winner.
Why it could work: The power of this novel rests in its explication of the deep emotional and physical toll taken on the walk’s participants, all of whom come into the race shouldering the broader social effects of a deeply oppressive government. The book features memorable characters and even more memorable moments along the route of the walk, in which no one is allowed to slow to a speed below 4 miles an hour. It’s tricky, but in the hands of a thoughtful screenwriter and director, an adaptation of this novel could be a brutal, suspenseful, thrilling anti-fascist takedown.
Cujo is a jaunt into two subjects King loves: non-human killers and terrible forces of nature. A story about a St. Bernard that goes rabid and becomes nigh unstoppable in his urge to kill, Cujo brought us one of horror’s most memorable titular villains and is constantly being brought up by King fans as one of his scariest books.
Why it could work: As terrifying as Cujo the book remains, the lackluster 1983 film adaptation suffered from a fatal flaw, which is that it’s hard to make a real dog into a convincing actor, let alone a convincing arbiter of terror. This is one area where modern special effects could be a significant assist — think of Life of Pi’s entirely computer-generated yet terrifying tiger. It helps that dogs are currently enjoying something of a moment in an internet culture long dominated by cats; in an environment where all dogs are good doggos, a new spin on Cujo — who, as noted in a famous line from the novel, had always tried to be a good dog — could easily take the populace by scary surprise.
Full of mythical symbolism and beautiful imagery, Rose Madder is one of King’s many attempts to tackle the subject of domestic violence. It tells the story of a woman who leaves her intensely violent husband and attempts to start over in a new place, with a policeman hell-bent on tracking her down.
Yes, that is the exact plot of Nicholas Sparks’s Safe Haven, but here’s where things get distinctly King-ian: In her new town, Rose impulsively buys a portrait of a woman in a rose madder gown that leads her into an incredible other world, where she meets and befriends a woman named Dorcas. Dorcas sends Rose on a quest in that other world, and through it, Rose becomes a warrior and a fighter and a slayer of minotaurs. Whether any of that will help her free herself from her real-life stalker husband, though, is a more complicated question.
Why it could work: Rose Madder is teeming with solid roles for women, particularly the leads of Rose and Dorcas, whose friendship is the book’s greatest asset. In addition to delivering more of the complex fantasy world building that fans of King’s Dark Tower crave, its interweaving of fantasy and reality is bait for sumptuous cinematography and artistic direction.
Plus, its unusual combination of fantasy and suspense thriller tropes makes it rife for a high-art treatment — a feature that could actually make it an improvement over the book, which, as Grady Hendrix at Tor notes, fails to truly capture the compelling essence of the gorgeous painting at its center. There’s room for a treatment of this story that’s both nuanced and evocative. Please can we have this one yesterday?
lockthedoors / Deviantart
Like both Rose Madder and Duma Key, this short story involves a painting with supernatural or magical properties. And like a multitude of King’s works, it features a writer who could be a stand-in for King himself, this time a famous but weary horror writer who stumbles across a demented painting at a yard sale. Intrigued by the weirdly titled painting and the tragic death of its creator, he buys it, only to discover the details in the painting are subtly changing. The painting, it seems, has a life of its own and is impossible to leave behind or destroy. Things escalate quickly, and while this is all standard horror fare, the combination of weird details, the King traits, and a gripping climax make it one of his more memorable short stories.
Why it could work: This story was already adapted for the small screen, in a 2005 episode of Nightmares and Dreamscapes starring Tom Berenger as Richard Kinnell. With the proper treatment, however, this could be an excellent fun horror flick. While the “object in the picture is moving” plot is clichéd, it could be easily juiced up with a lot of world building, an infusion of jump scares, and opportunities for hammy acting. In short, this could be a perfectly enjoyable bit of mainstream horror with the King brand attached.
This short story received critical acclaim when it was published due to its harrowing and exhausting depiction of a woman’s struggle to escape a violent serial killer. The story plays out as a slow-build tale of a woman empowering herself after a traumatic event (think every ’90s Ashley Judd movie). Emily is a grieving mother who finds solace in a grueling physical regimen — which proves to be her only defense when she runs, literally, into the clutches of a serial killer one day on the beach. What follows is a classic cat-and-mouse horror story with plenty of twists and turns.
Why it could work: Emily, the titular Gingerbread Girl, is a juicy role for any actress. No waiflike Final Girl, she’s an adult woman who spends the first part of King’s story reinventing herself mentally and physically — rare stuff for any horror film. Like many of the best horror narratives, this one sets itself up to be about one thing and then abruptly proves to be about something completely different. A good director could easily lull an audience with the seductive beach setting and our empathy with Emily’s quest to rebuild her life — all to make the abrupt about-face and the sudden switch to a grueling slasher/stalker narrative that much more terrifying.
One of King’s most successful “post-sobriety” novels, Duma Key is a rich tapestry of myth, artwork, and terror splayed across a sunny Floridian landscape. After a near-fatal injury, a still-recuperating man moves to a remote Florida Key island, where he and his daughter are soon engulfed in a local mystery involving old secrets, psychics, and strange paintings that seem to have the power to predict and change the future. This is a story that’s bursting with plot, with a powerful and enigmatic villain at its center.
Why it could work: Duma Key is easily one of King’s most unusual and interesting stories. Who doesn’t love a movie set in a sumptuous coastal paradise — especially with an element of horror lurking amid all the local color? Add in the parade of intricate paintings that play key roles in an equally intricate plot, and Duma Key could easily make for a highly successful film adaptation.
(Yes, several of these suggestions involve paintings that exert power over the viewer — but that theme could be a refreshing break from Hollywood’s typical interest in King stories that focus on writing as a creative metaphor, rather than visual arts.)
This underread King novella is a tribute to his love of baseball — but it’s also got an ominous undertone not typically paired with this kind of Americana. Set in 1950s New Jersey, the story focuses on an initially unimposing Rube Waddell-type figure, a quixotic, mysterious new player up from the minor league whose powerful playing style quickly endears him to fans and fellow teammates. But “Blockade Billy” has a secret, and things get dark fast. For a short work of fiction, this story manages to pack in a lot, from rumination on identity to fan mania and the maintenance of cultural rituals at all costs. Oh, and death.
Why it could work: A movie adaptation of Blockade Billy could easily sell itself as a baseball story for fans of baseball — with a twist. It takes a while for the cracks to show through in this entertaining novella, and there’s plenty of room for a good screenwriter to play on the conventions of the baseball movie genre to surprise and upend the audience’s expectations just as King does. Plus, like all of King’s best works, there are plenty of characters here to love and hate, which makes this perfect movie fodder.
Original Source -> 10 great Stephen King stories that are ripe for film adaptation
via The Conservative Brief
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Another reason why Cujo be best doggo
Danny and Eri interactions next, please! I think he'd adore her and be like a big brother like Mirio and Deku are.
Danny had absolutely no experience when it came to little kids, but everything just seemed so natural when it came to Eri.
Danny was practically vibrating in his seat as he walked towards the teacher's dorms where Eri was staying. She was an official ward of the school since she no longer had any biological family to take her in, and she would be close to Aizawa, so it only seemed logical.
He, Mirio, and Midoriya had taken turns playing with her throughout the past couple of weeks since she's moved in. Sometimes they double up, but three people this early on might be overwhelming. Eri needed somebody mellow that wasn't a parental figure. And as good as Mirio and Midoriya were for her, neither of them fit that bill.
But Danny didn't mind. He had been one of the ones to help rescue her, and she reminded him a lot of Elle in her early days. Lost, confused, not really sure what to do now. But with three overprotective brothers and a terrifying father, he was sure Eri was going to do just fine.
Danny thanked Ectoplasm as he let Danny into the teacher's dorms. He was led to the common space where Eri and Aizawa were waiting for him. He waved, and Eri looked up with a bright smile on her face.
"Danny!" She cheered. He walked over and sat next to her, and she squeezed his face hard. He laughed and returned the favor, and pretended like he didn't see the fond smile growing on his teacher's face.
I have to go up to the school and do some paperwork, as well as meet with Nezu. Can you watch her until I get back?"
"Will do, Mr. Aizawa," he said with a two-fingered salute. Eri looked between him and Aizawa, before half-heartedly repeating the gesture. And once Aizawa bid his goodbye with stressed, please call me don't hesitate if you need me, Danny and Eri got busy coloring.
"So, Eri, how are you today?" He asked, grabbing a green crayon. He didn't really know what he was making, but it seemed like the right choice to make.
"I'm great! Mirio came and said hi, and Aizawa said we could bake cookies when he gets back!"
"That's great! Promise to save me one?" He asked. She nodded her head vigorously before looking down at what he had been drawing for the past couple of minutes.
"Why is the dog green? Does it have a quirk like Nezu?"
Danny looked down, and realized he had been mindlessly coloring Cujo. It didn't look anything like him. Not even the shade of green was the same, but it was recognizable enough. After all, there aren't many green dogs with spike collars running around.
"Not quite," Danny said. "This is my dog, Cujo. He's a ghost."
"What a ghost?"
"It's like...Uh...When a person or an animal go away forever, sometimes a piece of them come back. And that piece is called a ghost. They're just like how they were before they went away, but sometimes they look a little funny. That's why he's green, now."
"Is he soft?" Eri asks him. "Aizawa said animals like cats and dogs are soft."
Danny all but melts at the look she gives him.
"Do you wanna see for yourself?" He asks before he can stop himself. She nods, and he gets up. His knees ache and his shoulder is still giving him problems from training two days prior, but he wastes no time in hoisting Eri onto his hip and going out to the front. He's sure the teacher's won't enjoy a 20-ft tall ghost dog running around inside.
"Cover your ears, okay?" She nodded and did as she was told. Danny stuck his index finger and pinky on either side of his mouth, and blew out a shrill whistle. It was loud and piercing, and Eri looked both annoyed and awed at the fact that he could make such a loud sound.
"What now?" She asked, removing her hands. Danny just shrugged.
"Now we wait. Sometimes it takes him a while to get here."
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They waited for maybe thirty minutes. They spent the time playing hopscotch and drawing with chalk. Danny made a poor caricature of Frostbite, and Eri made a papa cat and an Eri-cat to show Aizawa later. He briefly wondered if his teacher would cry from Eri's sheer adorableness. It was definitely a possibility.
Soon enough, Cujo came trotting around the building. He yapped and wagged his tail. Eri giggled as he spun around her in circles, and Danny took pictures and videos so he could send them to Aizawa. She twisted this way and that, trying to watch as he came and went.
"Do you wanna pet him?" He asked. She nodded. "Put your hand out flat like this-yeah, perfect," he beamed. "Now, all you have to do is say, Stay!"
She repeated the word, though it was too quiet for Cujo to hear in his excitement. After some prompting from Danny to be louder, she tried again, and he skidded to a halt in front of her.
"Good job, Eri! He's trained pretty well so if you want him to do anything else just ask me, okay?"
She nodded, before placing a tentative hand towards the green dog. He nuzzled his face into her palm and looked up at her expectantly. She started to scratch and pet, and Cujo was absolutely living for it.
Spoiled brat.
"Wanna see something cool?" He asked. How she managed a verbal confirmation through her endless giggles were beyond him. he walked forward and knelt down next to them. "All dogs have this special place they like to be scratched. It makes their back leg kick really fast. Do you wanna know where Cujo's spot is?"
"Yes, please," she said. Danny was going to spoil the shit out of her one day, if it was the last thing he ever did. Even when he became a full ghost and she was still alive and kicking he'd try his best to give her the world. How could he not?
Danny reached forward and scratched under Cujo's chin. Immediately his back leg started thumping against the ground. With his free hand, her gently pulled Eri's hand and quickly replaced his with it. Cujo didn't seem to care. In fact, he leaned into the touch, throwing himself off balance. With that and the thumping of his leg, he ended up flopping over to the side. He rolled over onto his belly with an expectant look towards Danny. The hero in training rolled his eyes as he started to rub the dog's stomach.
"I wish there was more of him to pet," Eri said. "He's so small. But if there was more of him then Aizawa would be able to pet him too."
Danny couldn't help the grin that spread across his face as he looked over at Eri, who was diligently scratching Cujo under his chin.
"I have one more trick I wanna show you," he said. "So remember when I said ghosts can come back different? And they can look weird and be able to do weird things?" She nodded. "Well, that applies to ghost dogs as well. Wanna see what Cujo can do?" Eri nodded excitedly, her hair bouncing from the force.
He brought her a few feet back and commanded Cujo at attention. Usually Cujo did this on his own, but Danny had trained him to do it at his command whenever they were hanging out together if it wasn't a life-or-death situation.
And man is he glad he did, because the sheer look of excitement on Eri's face as Cujo grew was more than worth it. He snapped a picture and sent it off to his teacher.
"Now there's plenty of him to pet, wouldn't you say?" He asked. Eri squealed with delights as Cujo leaned down enough for her to scratch under his chin. His leg thumped, making the whole ground shake.
Eri's giggles never once stopped.
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Shouta doesn't really know what he had been expecting when he returned. Maybe drawings they wanted to show him. Maybe invite him to a tea party that Eri magically had roped Bakugou into one time. Maybe it was both of them passed out watching cartoons.
So, needless to say, the giant green dog sitting in front of the teacher's dorms hadn't made it on the list. Danny and Eri were standing in front of the dog, taking pictures. Danny showed Eri, and only a few seconds passed before he felt his phone buzzing in his pocket.
"Do you wanna ride on Cujo, Eri? He's gentle, I promise. It'll be like riding a giant horse. Except it's a dog."
Eri was visibly vibrating with excitement, making Danny laugh. He wasted no time in scooping the girl up and flying her up to the top of the dog. They sat just behind the collar, which he was having Eri hold onto. He sat behind her, arms bracing on either side protectively.
It was during this that they finally noticed Shouta standing there.
"Mr. Aizawa! You should join us! We're just gonna do a lap around U.A!" Danny called to him. Shouta sighed. He didn't particularly care for dogs. They were fine, sure, but he had a very obvious preference for cats. But then he met Eri's excited eyes, and he just couldn't say no.
So after a long day of paperwork and meetings, his winddown was not a nice cup of coffee and baking with Eri. it was riding a giant green dog around campus grounds with his daughter and student.
If you asked him directly he would say he hadn't really cared, the ride was fine, he preferred cats, yadda yadda. Of course their teacher would never admit he had actually enjoyed something other than threatening expulsion or playing one of his logical ruses on the class.
But Danny knew he had made the right call when he walked in Monday and saw that his teacher's new background was a picture of him and Eri beaming at the camera, with a stupid, giant green dog drooling in the background.
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bluerosefox · 2 years ago
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[2023 Prompt List 1][Previous] [2023 Prompt List 2][Here] [2023 Prompt List 3][Next]
|The MANY Bloodlines of Constantine (Its by pure dumb luck Danny is crowned Ghost King before his 18th, because he learns his biodad had sold his soul, its void now, and not just his but also his half-siblings as well... Constantine is getting decked.)  (Psst read the reblogs, everyone had fun adding to this one) |Daughter of Phantom, Lady Gotham. (Lady Gotham, is Danny Phantom’s daughter) |No Longer In Service (Ghost King Danny has an idea how to get summoners to stop summoning him) |Overdue Payments (Ghost King Danny finds Ra’s al ghul’s overdue payments and a request to repossess it) |For Them (Danny uses his ice to save Dani (Ellie) from melting and does so in front of one Dr. Victor Fries, aka Mr. Freeze) |In A Single Night (Vlad is taken down by either Selina or Tim in a single night due to being a creepy creep) |Assassin Heir? Crime Fighting Furry? NOPE NO THANK YOU! (Danny wakes up in a DC version of himself and tries to nope out of the Assassin lifestyle and avoid becoming a crime fighter. Now if only the others understood that) |Playing Dead AU (Danny is the dead body for those Murder Mystery parties and gets a gig for the Gotham elite. I strongly suggest reading the reblogs, they get amazing for this) |Of Godsons, Fruitloops, and Lois ‘I will drag all secrets out into the sun’ Lane (Lois Lane is Danny’s only godparent, Vlad better watch out) |Recluse Owner, Bookshelf Gremlin, and the Cute Cafe Guy (Danny and Dani have to leave their home dimension behind and decide to open a cafe with Ghostwriter whose been wanting a way to get new books without having to go out and deal with people. Jason is sus of the new bookstore that opened up overnight) (Very hinted Dead on Main) |Cujo is.... Trying (Danny gets hurt, Cujo and him are yeeted into the Gotham, and Cujo... Cujo is trying to do his best even as he’s chased after a sword wielding bird boy)  |Tim, buddy, what do you mean you might had accidentally made a Love Child?! (Danny learns is the love child clone? of Tim and Kon that Tim accidentally made during his bad year of losing everything and Danny gets deaged and tossed back into his home dimension. It was due to Clockwork that he never noticed the life he created (cause villain Tim timeline was nearly on set) but finds out what he created when said love child shows up at a Gala wandering around just after he announced he’s dating Kon) (a TimxKon story where they try to raise their clone love child) |Bellatrix Star ( a TaliaxDanny idea. Queen Talia and Ghost King Danny) |Joker Messed Around and Found Freaking Out. (Joker messed with the wrong person when he took a visiting class hostage) |Fenton Ethics and Test Tube Babies (Jazz and Danny aren’t Fenton’s but are half-siblings and cousins (basically same mom, different dad’s)...The Fenton’s have some... questionable ethics and moral) |Timelines, Red Robins, and Kings (dont ask about the title, it was only thing I can think of) (Tim crashes in on Danny’s ghost King lesson’s during his Red Robin run. Clockwork is excited for this timeline cause he gets to have some fun) |Beloved Beyond Time (Due to weird time-traveling, Ghost Prince Danny is summoned and mistaken as King by the LoA. There he meets a smitten young Damian al Ghul who proclaims they will marry... Later Danny finds himself cornered by a year older Damian when he returns to his own time) |Over Tea (Gotham gets a sudden and strange weather that shakes it to its core. The Batfam is trying to find the source, meanwhile a young Ghost King and Lady Gotham are discussing things over tea. |Good Doggos Give Hope! (A self-indulgant idea of Cujo wanting to help his fav ghost boy and meeting a very special ring wearing Corgi) |Taking a Chance (Good!Mom Talia! DannyxTalia (Royal Errors) and half-siblings Damian and Ellie (Danielle). Talia discovers Ra’s future he set out for Damian and is at the ends of her ropes, she is given a chance to leave in the form of a cryptic time being. Meanwhile Danny needs someone to become Danielle’s mother before she completely destabilizes)
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