#moses franklin
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theolivepit04 · 3 months ago
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Moses needs more appreciation and attention from this fandom ❤️
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sleepybamboo · 4 months ago
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A Liberty’s Kids Christmas
Unmute before watching.
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tricornonthecob · 5 months ago
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Heard the Iggles are playing in the sportsbowl today.
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call-me-casual · 11 months ago
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(Also posted to the LK community)
Okay who’s interested in hearing about the school au I thought up in the shower
Keep in mind that all following information is based on my experience in British education, I have no clue how American schools run different
First we have the kids - James and Henri are both kids from the foster system, James has been adopted by Moses, whilst Henri is still technically a foster (ik ik not Franklin but maybe they’re neighbours). Henri is definitely the class clown whilst James is ambitious, but not too sure how to achieve his academic goals. Sarah is an exchange student from the UK living with Franklin, who is either a relative in this au or a family friend like in canon. She and James initially don’t get along but over time through the newspaper club and sharing most classes they grow closer. Sarah is an A+ student and she tutors James and Henri after school.
Most historical figures are teachers or general staff, except for named foot-soldiers like Joseph Plum Martin or other young historical figures like Sybil Ludington, who would be fellow students
Franklin - the kids’ (or at least James and Sarah’s) tutor (I think Americans call it home room?). He teaches science, and it’s his love of teaching that’s kept him from retiring (though he probably should have years ago). He runs the school newspaper (which James and Sarah are both a part of)
Moses - I can see him as a member of the site team or subject technician of some kind (basically helps to prepare stuff like experiments and maintain the school, but more responsibilities than a janitor). He’s also doing an online university course to get his teaching degree (he’d most likely go into either engineering/dt). The adopted Father for James and foster parent to Henri. Has known Franklin for years and the two are next door neighbours
Lafayette - French. Obviously. He’s a younger teacher popular with the students. His class is the only one Henri doesn’t goof around in, and the two are very close (spoilers: he may end up adopting him). Constantly asking the finance department to let him take a class trip to France. If anyone acts up enough to make him mad the class all turns on that one person (based on my mother’s experience (coincidentally she was also a languages teacher lol)). Often gossips and speaks with Hamilton in French.
Adams - idk if they teach law or politics in American high schools but if not then he’s probably an English teacher. His students live in terror or presenting essays or debates because no one can beat the man. You either love him or hate him, there’s no in between with his classes. Probably head of the department
Hamilton - probably either English or history (though maths is also a contender because he was treasury secretary). Also a younger teacher popular with the students. Has almost gotten into a fight with other teachers. And students. Definitely runs the debate club. Expects assignments in a week before the deadline. Is one of the leaders in staff room gossip.
Washington - I know most people make him the head teacher but I’m not a huge fan of that. He’ll probably end up as the head eventually for this au, but for most of it I imagine him is a department head. I can see him teaching either history, maths or geography (he was a surveyor after all, I could see him being a really good geography teacher). He’s that teacher that looks intimidating but is actually very nice. Believes way more in practical than theory and WILL drag his class outside in any and all weather to do a study. He also looks after any of the animals the school owns. Sometimes brings his dog to class. Is DEFINITELY involved in staff room gossip
Abigail Adams - I can see her as either the school nurse or some sort of creative arts teacher
Phillis Wheatley - definitely either an English teacher (damn we got a lot of those) and if not then some sort of creative arts teacher who also runs a poetry club. If anyone acts up in her class the other students ensure the body is never found.
Please suggest what subjects and the sort other historical figures would teach or any other ideas you have relating to this! ^^ Idk if I’ll draw anything based on this but it’s fun to brainstorm!
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salmonthecat · 1 year ago
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pettyshippen · 2 years ago
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Libertys Kids newscasters au where James and Sarah are amateur field reporters with hopes of becoming anchors for a news show in Philadelphia. Ben Franklin is one of the anchors on the show who is going into retirement so James and Sarah are naturally competing for his spot.
Henri is the lovable mic guy who’s always snacking in the news van and Moses is the camera man that looks out for James and Sarahs safety.
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cantsayidont · 5 months ago
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Hateration holleration in the cinema:
THE BAT WHISPERS (1930): Creaky early talkie thriller, based on a Mary Roberts Rinehart/Avery Hopwood stage play, about a group of people terrorized by a mysterious masked criminal called The Bat. (Bob Kane later claimed that this was one of the inspirations for Batman.) There's a great opening shot and some cool model work in the first 10 minutes (like a sequence where The Bat descends by rope into his special car, which can generate a smokescreen to deter pursuers), but once it gets into the actual play, it becomes too static, and it's burdened with hammy acting and a truly painful level of mugging comic relief from the supporting players (with Maude Eburne the worst offender as the cowardly, superstitious maid). Star Chester Morris appears briefly out of character at the end to urge the audience not to reveal The Bat's true identity. CONTAINS LESBIANS? No. VERDICT: Promises FANTÔMAS or LES VAMPIRES, mostly delivers Scooby-Doo. Batman fans interested in the character's antecedents should check out the first 10 minutes, but you won't miss much if you stop there.
ONE WAY PASSAGE (1932): Charming pre-Code melodrama about the doomed shipboard romance between a dying rich girl (Kay Francis) and a suave escaped convict (William Powell), who's being escorted back to San Francisco to be hanged for murder. Despite its obvious contrivances, the compact script and brisk direction keep things from becoming maudlin or grim, and Powell and Francis have wonderful chemistry (the best of their many pairings at Warner Bros.), with good support from Warren Hymer as the thick-headed but not entirely unsympathetic cop, Frank McHugh as a drunken scam artist, and Aline MacMahon as a bogus countess. A surprisingly warm little story about people doing the best they can in the face of unsympathetic fate. CONTAINS LESBIANS? No. VERDICT: Touching, funnier than you'd think (though McHugh lays it on a little too thick), and even life-affirming.
THE BAD SLEEP WELL (1960): Overlong, overwrought, somewhat undercooked Akira Kurosawa corporate crime drama, a loose modern-dress variation on HAMLET, about a junior executive (Toshiro Mifune) who borrows someone else's name and identity to infiltrate a big corporation whose ruthless skulduggery is responsible for his father's suicide, even going so far as to marry the boss's disabled daughter (Kyoko Kagawa) to ingratiate himself with his foe (Masayuki Mori). It starts off well, with a punchy style Leonard Maltin aptly compares to a '40s Warner Bros movie, but Kurosawa lets the supporting cast go overboard while failing to provide Mifune with enough fireworks to sustain the film through its rather ponderous 150-minute running time, and the gloomy ending offers no real dramatic payoff. CONTAINS LESBIANS? No. VERDICT: Highly regarded by Kurosawa fans and film nerds, but casual viewers may wonder what all the fuss is about.
CROSSPLOT (1969): Labored action comedy starring Roger Moore as womanizing ad executive Gary Fenn, whose new discovery is a gorgeous Hungarian model named Marla Kogash (Claudie Lange), who's tied up in a convoluted assassination plot. Moore is game, but the script and direction are too clunky to ever whip up the requisite degree of froth, and the plot's awkward equivocation about student protests doesn't sit well. Martha Hyer is fun as Marla's flirtatious English aunt Jo, and fans of THE PRISONER will immediately recognize costar Alexis Kanner from "Living in Harmony" and "Fall-Out." (Moore's future Bond movie costar Bernard Lee also pops up in a small role.) CONTAINS LESBIANS? No. VERDICT: Never as funny or as fun as it wants to be, and your attention will start to wander by the midpoint.
THE HOT ROCK (1972): Droll, lightweight caper film, adapted by William Goldman from a Donald Westlake novel, about a gang of thieves (Robert Redford, George Segal, Ron Leibman, and Paul Sand) attempting to steal a rare diamond on behalf of a UN delegate from a fictional African country (Moses Gunn), only to have one brilliant plan after another go badly awry. Director Peter Yates wisely keeps things light even as the plot gets sillier, although he sometimes lets the energy level wane too much, and the ending feels a bit anticlimactic. Gunn steals the show as the gang's increasingly exasperated financier. CONTAINS LESBIANS? It really only has two female characters, and their roles are very small. VERDICT: Never laugh-out-loud funny, but a pleasantly relaxed amusement.
DEVIL IN A BLUE DRESS (1995): Near-miss film adaptation of the first of Walter Mosley's popular Easy Rawlins detective novels, about a newly unemployed Black veteran in 1948 Los Angeles (Denzel Washington) who's hired to track down a mystery woman (Jennifer Beals) some people will kill to find. Adapted and directed by Carl Franklin, it has great atmosphere, a charismatic lead, and superb support by Don Cheadle as Easy's casually murderous friend Mouse. Unfortunately, the story lacks an emotional hook, and Beals' flat performance leaves a blank space at its heart; the mise-en-scène is ultimately more compelling than the plot. CONTAINS LESBIANS? Not in any substantive way. VERDICT: A movie good enough that you'll come away frustrated that it falls so short of greatness.
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loudlylovingreview · 4 months ago
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Barbara Hamby: The Word
In the beginning was the word, fanning out into syllables like a deck of cards on a table in Vegas,litigious leafy parts fluttering into atoms and cells, genus and phylum, nouns, verbs,elephants, orangutans, O Noah, you and your philological filing and filling of arks, gullets, daughters.In the beginning was the word and it was as big as Aretha Franklin after “Chain of Fools,” long as your…
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longlistshort · 1 year ago
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Moses Soyer’s oil painting, Young Girl, is one of the works on view in A New Deal: Artists of the WPA from the CMA Collection at Canton Museum of Art. The exhibition is a reminder of one of the best social programs ever created by the US government and the positive impact it had on the country during one of its hardest periods.
From the museum about the exhibition-
Against the backdrop of severe economic strife caused by the Stock Market Crash of 1929, President Franklin Roosevelt created the Works Progress Administration (WPA), which put roughly 8.5 million Americans, including more than 173,000 men and women in Ohio, to work building schools, hospitals, roads and more. Within the WPA was The Federal Art Project (FAP) which provided employment for artists to create art for municipal buildings and public spaces. The FAP had a non-discrimination clause that meant it attracted and hired artists of color and women, who previously received little attention in the art world. The only guidance the government offered about subject matter was to depict the “American scene” and stipulated no nudity or political issues. The goal was for artists to help the United States develop its own distinct American style of art, especially as artists in other parts of the world were forbidden freedom of expression and ordered to create artworks that projected the beliefs of their governments.
Though the WPA artists in the United States shared the common goal of capturing life in all its variety and promoting national pride, they each had different approaches, and many modified their typical subject matter to fit whatever project they were assigned. The arts before and after the New Deal relied on private patronage and the philanthropy of wealthy and elite institutions: galleries, museums, dealers. But during the WPA, art wasn’t a luxury good, it was seen as an essential part of our democracy. Artists were seen as professional workers who were making important and significant contributions to American life. The artworks made under the WPA became the collection of the American people and were put in public collections – hospitals, schools, post offices, housing projects, etc. – ensuring they were part of communities. The arts were seen as an important part of a democratic society and the American way of life, with a richness of experience and accessibility to culture.
While artists were offered opportunities through the WPA, they were far from immune to the distress caused by the Depression, and many still struggled to make a living. Will Barnet detailed a bleak scene he came across, saying:
“It was like a war going on. There were bread lines and men lined around three, four, five, six blocks waiting to get a bowl of soup. It was an extraordinary situation. And one felt this terrible dark cloud over the whole city.”
Moses Soyer also described the hardships artists experienced, saying,
“Depression–who can describe the hopelessness that its victims knew? Perhaps no one better than the artist taking his work to show the galleries. They were at a standstill. The misery of the artist was acute.”
The FAP supported the creation of thousands of works of art, including more than 2,500 murals that can still be seen in public buildings around the country. The FAP also supported art education and outreach efforts, including traveling exhibitions and art education programs for children. The WPA and FAP had a significant impact on the American art scene, and many of the artists who participated in the program went on to become important figures in the art world.
A New Deal: Artists of the WPA from the CMA Collection highlights the lives of artists from our Permanent Collection who worked for the WPA, and in doing so, fostered resilience for a struggling nation. You will learn about the projects they worked on, the subjects they were interested in, and how their own lives were affected by the Depression. Each of these artists helped to foster the nation’s spirit and prove that even in the darkest of times, art serves as a uniting force to collectively lead people into a brighter future.
And about Moses Soyer and his painting from the museum-
The Depression set the mood for most of Soyer’s art expression, and his portraits of people seem to be preoccupied with a sad secret. His portraits were often of solitary figures, using professional models or his friends, capturing in these paintings the spirit of his sitters, their dreams or disillusionment. He is best known for his introspective figure paintings of weary, melancholy women in muted colors, matching the mood of his sitters with the pigment in his paint. He was inspired by artist Edgar Degas, who used color expressively.
On the museum’s website you can find both the artwork on display for the exhibition and also a gallery of the museum’s entire collection organized into several categories.
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isisisasim · 1 month ago
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last sullivan family fun day 🐠
⋆*・゚:⋆*・゚: *⋆.*:・゚ .: ⋆*・゚: .⋆ ⋆*・゚:⋆*・゚: *⋆.*:・゚ .: ⋆*・゚: .⋆ ⋆*・゚:⋆*
born moses eugene sullivan to elbernia and franklin sullivan, he was a loving and devoted son, brother, husband, and—above all—a proud father. moses spent his days working diligently as an electrical subcontractor until his untimely passing. a man of many skills and passions, he could never be found idle on the weekends, no matter how demanding his work week had been.
though his schedule was always full, his most cherished moments were those spent with his family during what he coined as “sullivan family fun days.” whether he was planning a lavish vacation or a simple outing to the local aquarium, he scoured for the best deals to ensure his family of five made lasting memories together.
moses is survived by his loving wife, tiara davis-sullivan, and their three children: miles sullivan, melody sullivan, and maverick sullivan. his presence, warmth, and unwavering love will be deeply missed by all who knew and loved him. 🕊️
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scotianostra · 7 months ago
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Happy Birthday Scottish actor Gary Lewis, born 30th November 1957.
Born and raised in Easterhouse, Glasgow Lewis seems an unlikely actor, he has had jobs as a roadsweeper and librarian, his brother, a teacher encouraged him to do more and he became in his own words a “voracious” reader, this pushed him into wanting to become an actor at the age of 32.
It was a chance meeting with fellow Scot, Peter Mullan that gave him his break, he joined the regular “in house” actors in Ken Loach films, starring with Mullan in My Name is Joe and Robert Carlyle in Carla’s song he was in good company to learn.He had a cracking role in Peter Mullan’s film Orphans, with one of my favourite lines, “She’s not heavy, she’s my mother”
Lewis won the best actor award for the part at the Gijón International Film Festival in 1998.I think most of you will remember Gary Lewis playing coal miner Jackie Elliot, father to the films title role Billy Elliot. I sometimes feel like I m repeating myself when noting the CV’s of these actors, Taggart, Rab C Nesbitt, Rebus were early shows for Lewis, while Stonemouth and In Plain Sight are more recent.
Then there is of course Outlander. Gary Lewis appeared in the first two seasons of the hit show, based on the novels by Diana Gabaldon playing, Colum MacKenzie, laird of the MacKenzie family and Uncle to Jamie Fraser. Colum died in the season finale 2 finale Hail Mary. Of Outlander he says,
“The fan base is extremely passionate. It is strange because I live in Scotland and Outlander isn’t massive here to the extent it is in Australia, America and Canada. There are fans all over the world.”
The past few years have been busy for Gary, he managed to snap up an appearance in the final series of Still Game, as well the movie, The Vanishing, teaming up again with Peter Mullan and last weeks birthday boy Gerard Butler. He has also been in His Dark Materials, Rig 45, It’s a Sin, Vigil and series 3 of The Bay.
IMDB has Gary, along with Billy Boyd and Sharleen Spiteri to star in a film, set in Glasgow called I Feel Fine, however I think the project has stalled as it has been at the “announced” stage for several years now. Gary is also to play Roald Amundsen in the film North Pole: 90° North.
Gary wa also in the Scottish feature film, Stella, about a German Jewish refugee who finds herself working in a stately Home in Dumfries and Galloway belonging to aristocratic supporters of fascist leader Oswald Mosely. I havent seen the film as yet, but will try and remdy that as it has a good rating on Imdb.
Gary reprised the role Colin Robertson last year in the second series of Vigil, he was seen earlier this year in Frankin, Michael Douglas in the lead role as American founding father Benjamin Franklin.
Earlier this month Gary was sighted alongside Emma Thompson and Ruth Wilson, shooting aboard a boat in Newquay. It's speculated that the trio were filming for an upcoming British TV series on Apple+, named Down Cemetery Road., although I can't find him on the list of actors.
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sleepybamboo · 5 months ago
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Thinking back to Henri’s backstory…
Remember the episode where we learn about Henri’s backstory? We saw the flashback scenes of James and Moses finding Henri on the ship, sneaking him in the crate that was originally meant for the printing press parts, and sneaking him off the ship under the captain’s nose. I think an extra flashback should have been added, showing Dr. Franklin’s surprise at what is inside the crate instead of printing press parts.
I imagine it playing out like this:
Dr. Franklin: Ah, have you come back with the parts for the printing press?
Moses: Well…sir, no.
Dr. Franklin: (confused look) Hmm?
James: We actually came with something…no…someone unexpected.
Moses gently lifts up the crate lid, revealing Henri, who is snoring quietly.
Dr. Franklin(eyes slightly widened, chuckles): Oh my!
Henri wakes up a few moments later. He is given some food, which he gobbles up every half second.
Dr. Franklin, Moses, and James all exchange concerned glances, wondering how little this boy got to eat while he was still on that ship.
Moses: Come on, James. Let’s run the boy a bath and stoke the fire, hmm?
James nods and follows Moses out of the dining room.
Dr. Franklin(extending his hand to pat Henri on the shoulder): My boy, you don’t need to rush-
Henri flinched when he saw Dr. Franklin reach for his shoulder.
Dr. Franklin(eyes slightly widened): ….!
Henri: …Je suis désolé…don’t hurt me, please!
Dr. Franklin, his face a mix of devastation and slight shock, instantly pulled his hand away from Henri’s shoulder.
Dr. Franklin puts on a small smile.
Dr. Franklin: …No one will hurt you here, my boy.
Henri slightly loosens up and slowly continued to eat.
After finishing his meal, Henri taken a bath upstairs. He had stepped into warm water for the first time…probably ever. The temperature reminded him of being with his parents, their joyful laughter, silly jokes, and caring moments.
After Henri got out, he changed into a new pair of clothes that James gave him because he couldn’t fit them anymore. Henri was given a reddish-brown shirt and some brown pants. Henri came downstairs, where everyone else was waiting for him by the fire.
He took a seat on the floor and stared at the bright flames, flickering around.
James: …So, what’s your name?
Henri: Henri. Henri LeFevbre.
Moses(hesitates for a moment): So, Henri. Why were you caged up on that ship?
Henri slightly curled up at the memory of that horrid ship. That horrible captain. That disgusting rat-filled cell he was put in for even the smallest slip up.
Henri: …If I were to make a mistake, the captain would throw me in that hold for hours. I make a mistake. I dropped some plates. Henri: I was the captain’s cabin boy. He made me work for him to pay off my parents’ debt for being passengers on his ship. A disease had spread around the ship. It killed my parents. So I was left alone.
Dr. Franklin, Moses, and James had exchanged worried glances.
Moses: …Well, thank goodness you’re here now.
Henri gave Moses a soft smile.
The Next Day
Henri, sprawled out on the bed, woke up and looked at James, noticing that he was on the edge of the bed.
Henri slowly got out of bed and made his way downstairs. Dr. Franklin was sitting by the fire and reading a book.
Henri(hoarsely): Good morning, sir.
Dr. Franklin: Good morning. How did you rest?
Henri(lightly chuckles, stretches): Très bien.
Dr. Franklin: That’s good, but there is something we need to discuss, Henri.
Henri(one eyebrow raised, comes downstairs and takes a seat by the fireplace): What’s that, sir…?
Dr. Franklin: While we are extremely happy to have you here, you’ll have to start helping around the printshop as well.
Henri: And how will I do that?
Dr. Franklin: I assume you can speak French very well, is that right?
Henri: Oui! C’est exact!
Dr. Franklin: Are you just as good in speaking English?
Henri: Well, I know some things from being around the captain for so long, but-
Dr. Franklin: We’ll need to work on that. Can you read and write in English or French?
Henri: Non.
Dr. Franklin(chuckles): Well, that’s more we have to work on. Starting today.
Henri: Aww! Could we do that some other time?
Dr. Franklin(smiles): ….
Henri: (groans)
Dr. Franklin: (chuckles softly, ruffling Henri’s hair.)
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tricornonthecob · 1 year ago
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soft headcanon.
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dreamerdoodles · 1 month ago
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so, we're down to the last 10... let's speculate!!
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(image from themarioaddict on twitter bc I am too lazy to screenshot them all myself)
I think #42 is obviously Kopi/Dom Dinh and #69 is obviously Teddy/Charlie Wes, so I'm excluding those from my speculating.
that leaves us 8 silhouettes and 9 unique voice actors left. so, who's who?
I think #6 is Stella/Nancy Linari, because she's probably the stairs and Date Everything likes to name characters with similar letters/sounds at the start of their objects.
Probably #20 is Keith/Christian Lanz, the couch, for the same sound reason.
I'm a lot less certain about #29 and #57, buuuuut my best guess is #29 is Willi/Mara Junot and #57 is Mateo Manta/Ben Balmaceda. Mostly based on vibes tbh.
I think #58 will be Franklin Lieste/Ben Diskin, because I think Lieste means something like "read" in german, BUT I could be wrong about that.
I have a lot of thoughts about #59 so here goes. I think this one will be Rongomaiwhenua/Tameka Vahatau, and this is our hidden island dateable that Scandalabra mentioned. According to The Internet TM (so please correct me if I'm wrong x,D) "Rongomaiwhenua" means "land god/peace to the land/song of the land" which could fit with the crystal-like silhouette.
Obviously #63 is the record player, which I think will be Rainey/Jenelle Randall for more alliteration reasons. Also, Jenelle Randall is a singer, and she looks like a singer to me!
Last but not least, #86 is likely Koa/Moses Goods, probably a big old key of some sort (maybe he's a skeleton key for the house that was lost in the crawlspace or something xD).
But wait! I said there were 9 unique voice actors, and there are only 8 characters here... so who's left?
Enter Ashley Burch voicing Zoey Bennett, who I PERSONALLY think will be another human we can date (like Sam). Not only that, I specifically think she'll be tinfoilhat, the one who sends us the dateviators in the first place. Ashley Burch is a killer voice actor and this tinfoilhat person seems like a really important character to the main story.
so what do we think? I'm probably wrong on some of these but they're my best guesses so far. please speculate with meeeee we can all go mad together !!
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salmonthecat · 1 year ago
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Liberty's kids animal crossing au ideas
James hiller-human-jock
Henri Lefebvre-human-lazy
Sarah Phillips-human-sisterly
Moses-human-normal
Benjamin Franklin-raccoon-lazy
George Washington-eagle-cranky
Benedict Arnold-cat-cranky
Ethan Allen-bear-jock
Marquis de Lafayette-chicken-smug
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pettyshippen · 2 years ago
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Hey I’m Toasted Watching Libertys Kids. Here are my comments
Boston Tea Party
First I’m so happy that every episode is available on YouTube! That makes things so much easier.
The theme song has NO RIGHT to hit this hard. Why isn’t this our national anthem? 🥹
For real though, the premise of this show overall has potential for an Outlander quality show for us big kids.
The opening montage? Cinema.
Walter Cronkite as Ben Franklin is A+ casting because his name ends in kite.
I love how Sarah’s so calm even though she’s trapped in a stormy ship. Maybe it’s because she’s hyper focused when she’s writing. I was on a cruise once and panicked when the ship got to swayey for me.
I love how Sarah adores her father. Leaving London for a new land unsupervised as a teenage girl sounds wild.
Moses is done with James already
Moses doesn’t end up having kids because he basically already had kids and said that’s enough for me.
“It’s addressed to Moses! You look like James!”😆 He’s so cute.
THAT TRANSITION
Omg it’s the beer guy. Beer overthrew tea.
It’s pretty hardcore that they have a picture of the redcoats murdering them hanging on the tavern wall.
Imagine walking out to the deck of a ship to see strange and unfamiliar land. Also where is the captain??? Why is she the only person on the ship when they break in to it?
The sons of liberty look like they’re going to coachella.
“Mom? How did you and dad meet?” “I hit him with a pillow stuffed with books and insulted his grammar.”
When she cute but conservative af
“You’re Sarah Phillips!?”
“Dr. Franklin sent YOU?”
Why didn’t Moses go below deck first?
Bro straight up tore her locket off on purpose. He always wanted to do that to a woman.
Moses calling them big ugly hogs 😂😂
If James and Henri stink that bad, poor Sarah must have been suffocating under that blanket.
Omg Sarah we don’t just ask people if they’re slaves.
Ok real talk though, how many of you have been to an African American history museum with a slave ship hallway? Because that was horrific.
Phylis Wheatley should have written the Declaration, not Jefferson.
Sarah dropping the mic more than Hamilton tbh
Sarahs doing pretty well for a rich girl sleeping in a barn for the first time
Bro that is not sanity, throw that fish away
Look at all the wigs!
OMG you guys the tea party is totes Bens fault. Ben looks so done with them.
The Intolerable Acts
Dear mom, this is not the airbnb that I wanted
“English Henri!” “I’m counting the English!”
WIGS! WIGS!?
Ben literally said suck my dick at Parliament.
James not noticing the redcoats in the barn for five minutes
The redcoats act like Karens.
Sarah don’t have time for your shit James
That captain is such a piece of shit. Henris backstory is lowkey fucked up.
I’d like to have more of a backstory on James’ parents.
*heavenly music*
He just put Sarah on the spot like that and she outwitted him beautifully.
When a man gives you his outerwear, he’s at your service forever.
Dear mom I’m finally in the right airbnb
Bro just straight up gave up his ring so she could have a locket omg 🥺
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