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Sakura Blossoms
One of the most significant character moments for Sakura Haruno in the original series of Naruto remains one of the most misunderstood. This can, no doubt, be attributed to the fact that a large portion of shonen fans are incapable of understanding any form of writing that isnāt surface-level and doesnāt have to be spoon-fed to them. Many view this scene as an example of illogical decision-making by Sakura because she had an āopeningā to stab her opponent, as shown here:
However, Masashi Kishimoto goes out of his way to provide two specific reasons as to why this approach wouldnāt work: a practical reason and a symbolic one.
Practically speaking, it is explicitly stated that had Sakura attempted to stab the Hidden Sound shinobi, it wouldnāt have worked.
It was also established very early on that there was a massive power imbalance between the two and that, no matter what Sakura did, the Hidden Sound shinobi would always have a counterattack because they were more skilled and had more experience. Hence, instead of using the Kunai to stab her opponent, as this particular Hidden Sound shinobi expected, Sakura decided to cut her hairānot only to catch her opponent off guard but because Sakura herself knew that stabbing her wouldnāt work; sheād simply be overpowered.
Symbolically speaking, the reason Kishimoto had Sakura cut her hair (the most important reason and the entire purpose of the scene in the first place) was to signify the beginning of her character arc. To understand this, we need to look at Sakuraās initial character traits and the perceptions she carried at the start of the series.
Initially, Sakura is introduced as a superficial, appearance-obsessed, boy-crazy girl who has a no real understanding of what it means to be a shinobi.
She even outright admits to already considering herself a full-fledged ninja despite having done nothing to earn that title.
This false self-perception is what leads Sakura astray compared to her teammates. She becomes disinterested in the idea of training to become stronger and doesnāt work for the skill she so desperately needs at this point in the story. In her mind, thereās no point in training if sheās already graduated the academy and become a āfull-fledgedā shinobi. Her own arrogance and naĆÆvetĆ© on the subject even lead her to believe that sheās fully superior to her teammates on Team Seven.
However, as the story progresses, we see Sakuraās inexperience in battle and taijutsu, combined with her misguided priorities (particularly her obsession with Sasuke) and her arrogance regarding her own self-perceptions, make her overly reliant on her teammates. This not only makes Sakura a burden to her team but shows the consequences of her actions, behaviours, and beliefs.
The forest of death arc is so crucial for Sakuraās character, as it pushes each member of Team Seven into moments of growth. For Sakura, it where she learns the true meaning of being a shinobi and the trials and tribulations that come along with it. Sakura is put in a situation where sheās forced to fight on her own for the first time in her life to protect her two teammates. As she does, her enemy grabs her by the hair, trapping her. With no escape, Sakura takes her Kunai and cuts her hair.
In this moment, Sakura is physically cutting off an aspect of her identity that aided in the superficial virtues of her character, both physically and emotionally. She is unbinding herself to the girl she used to be, freeing herself of her negative qualities and traits, and most importantly, her false self-perception regarding the identity of a shinobi. The act of haircutting within literature can carry various meanings, but the most common symbolism behind it is to mark a characterās transition into a new stage of life. In Ancient Greece, it was tradition to cut oneās hair as a sign of mourning, symbolizing a positive or negative change for the character. In Sakuraās case, she is ākillingā her past self and mourning this loss through the act of cutting her hair, while also stepping in to a new sense of self with a clearer understanding of what it means to be a ninja and the harsh realities that follow it. Thatās why this line:
Is so important because it serves as a representation, both figuratively and literally, that itās Sakuraās turn to step into the role of a true shinobiāto be someone her teammates can count on and, most importantly, to say goodbye to the girl she once was.
Whatās more is that we actually see how this character development impacts Sakuraās throughout the series. The Forest of Death scene is more than just words; it marks a transition she carries forward, not only becoming someone her comrades can rely on but also becoming someone who understands the deeper nature of things and people rather than viewing them through a superficial lens. This growth is especially evident in her desire to become stronger, seeking out training from a Sanin, and in the way she begins to see Sasuke after the Forest of Death. Instead of viewing him merely as an attractive classmate she has a crush on, she starts to see him for who he truly isāa traumatized boy falling prey to his own pain and going down a dark path. This new perception makes her want to help him, both physically and emotionally, rather than simply wanting to make him hers, as she did initially.
Ultimately, this scene is what gave Sakura the development to become the character she was at the end of the seriesāa strong kunoich and a true, full-fledged shinobi, as well as someone who can genuinely understand the pain and trauma of others.
#sakura haruno#naruto#naruto uzumaki#sasuke uchiha#kakashi hatake#team 7#sasusaku#team 7 naruto#naruto shippuden#anime#literary analysis#ino yamanaka#shikamaru nara#choji akimichi#tsunade#uchiha clan#masashi kishimoto
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Tatsuki Fujimoto: An Anomaly in Shonen
Itās no secret that within shonen anime/manga, female characters are often sidelined and or treated like plot devices to further the storylines of male characters.ļæ¼ However, Chainsaw Man, written by Tasuki Fujimoto, takes a different approach to the way he handles and writes his female cast.
The women of Chainsaw Man not only defy traditional stereotypes but also have agency, development, relevance, and strength, as well as character arcs that center around furthering their own storyās instead of being dedicated to their male counterparts. An interesting way to see this is by juxtaposing how Fujimoto handles the two-boy, one-girl trio formation compared to how other mangaka handle it.
Often times in Shonen anime, the author will formulate a main trio of characters consisting of two boys and one girl: one main character, one deuteragonist, and one main heroine.




The issue isnāt with the gender ratio of the trio itself; itās with how mangaka handle the gender ratio in the trio. The MC and the deuteragonist often get numerous opportunities to hold plot relevance within the story, whether through strength or character writing, while the female characters are either sidelined or reduced to just being love interests. This is seen in Naruto with the way Sakura is diminished as a heroine and put at a heavy disadvantage in both writing and strengthļæ¼. We see it again in Jujutsu Kaisen with how both Nobara and Shoko are handled. Although they arenāt love interests, they are still either pushed to the side and made completely irrelevant (Shoko), resulting in the female character falling into the token girl trope, or fridged to further the storyline of their male counterparts (Nobara). Attack on Titan also faces a similar issue, despite the immense potential Mikasa had coming from a warrior bloodline and having an interesting backstory. She was ultimately reduced to being a simp with no agency or development outside of being a love interest. ļæ¼ ļæ¼
Oftentimes, when authors of shonen manga create these types of trios, the women donāt get nearly as much time and effort put into the creation of their characters. They exist for the sole purpose of being a token, a love interest, or completely fridged. ļæ¼ ļæ¼
However, Fujimoto subverts these common tropes ļæ¼and actively writes against them. This evident in the main trio of the series. ļæ¼

Power, the main female heroine of Chainsaw Man and the only girl within the main trio, isnāt a character that exists solely to push Denji and Aki forward. Sheās also not a love interest or just there to be a token. She is her own person, her own character within the narrative of the story. She has agency, development, and a rich backstory that only further adds to the complexity of her character. Power gets a character arc that isnāt centered around Aki and Denji but one that centers around the deconstruction of the preconceived notions she has about humanity and the concept of human bonds and relationships.ļæ¼
What makes the main trio of Chainsaw Man so rich and fulfilling is the fact that Fujimoto understands the concept of balanceļæ¼. Denji, Aki, and Power are all separate individuals that exist within the narrative of the story for different reasons and purposes. They all have a unique backstory, wants, and needs that arenāt attached to one another, despite being a trio, because Fujimoto knows what character agency is, and he doesnāt negate that based on the fact that one of the characters in the trio is a woman.
#chainsaw man#csm denji#denji hayakawa#power csm#aki hayakawa#hayakawa family#tatsuki fujimoto#asa mitaka#makima#naruto#sasuke uchiha#sakura haruno#team 7 naruto#masashi kishimoto#attack on titan#eren jaeger#eren yeager#mikasa ackerman#armin arlert#hajime isayama#yoru csm#jujutsu kaisen#gojo satoru#geto suguru#shoko ieiri#yuji itadori#nobara kugisaki#megumi fushiguro#shonen anime#gege akutami
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If you ever think your least favourite ship is the worst, just remember that Naruhina had toā¦
mutilate and fridge a 14 year old girl.

And then kill off a fan favourite character.

In order to pull off the ass pull of the century by making two characters with barley any page time of interactions end up together purely for the sake of fan service.
#naruto#anti naruhina#neji hyuga#hanabi hyuga#neji deserved better#masashi kishimoto#studio pierrot#naruto shippuden#anti hinata hyuga#hyuga clan#naruto uzumaki
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Literally them
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BTSV Thoughts:
I was thinking about Beyond The Spider-Verse recently and theorizing how the movie could play out. At the same time, I was also catching up on some Miles Morales comics. One of my favourite Miles Morales/Gwen Stacy comics is the one where they have a crossover, and Miles ends up on Earth 65 looking for his dad (SpiderMan & Spider Gwen: Sitting in a Tree). Itās also the comic where Gwen and Miles go on this huge adventure together in hopes of finding Milesās dad. In the process, Miles and Gwen get separated, and Gwen ends up in a dimension where her and Miles are married and celebrating their anniversary.

In this dimension, she also finds out that her and Miles have kids, leading to a funny and awkward interaction.

It would be really cool and funny If part of BTSV followed a chunk of this comic storyline. At the moment, Gwen and Miles are separated, and Gwen has assembled a band to save him. Because of that, sheāll have to travel part of the multiverse with her band to rescue him. If, in the process of travelling the multiverse, she accidentally got separated from the group, it would be funny if she ended up in this dimension and saw this version of herself and Miles.
#gwiles#spider man#marvel#comics#ghostflower#spiderman across the spiderverse#spiderverse spoilers#beyond the spiderverse#gwen stacy#marvel comics#miles morales#spider ham#peter b parker#spider band
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Gwen Wearing Milesās Jacket >>>

#miles molares#spider gwen#gwen stacy#gwiles#marvel#spiderman across the spiderverse#spider man#ghost spider#spiderverse spoilers#ghostflower
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š Major SATSV Spoilers š
I recently saw SpiderMan: Across the Spider-Verse, and it was amazing. I love all the hype the movie is getting, however, Iāve been seeing a lot of Gwiles (Gwen x Miles) slander for the dumbest reasons ever. So, I thought I would just debunk some of them because itās clear you antis struggle with media literacy. Letās go.
1. āGwen and Miles shouldāve just stayed friends; they were so much better platonicā
Saying this just makes me think you watched the first movie with your eyes closed. In what world were they ever ājust friendsā?




You canāt say they were better platonic when they were never even platonic to begin with. Both Miles and Gwen had a mutual crush on one another in the first film, so they were never ājust friends.ā The first film was literally building up their relationship.
2. āļæ¼Gwen betrayed miles in SATSV; sheās fakeā
No, she didnāt. Gwen didnāt invent the laws of the multiverse, and she doesnāt run the Spider Society. Itās not Gwenās fault that Spider-Man becoming an orphan, or half an orphan, is a multiversal constant. ļæ¼ ļæ¼ Thereās nothing in her power she can do to change that. Miles being chased by the Spider Society wasnāt Gwenās fault eitherāthat was Miguelāsļæ¼. Saying things like, āshe should have told Miles about what was going to happen to his dad,ā again just makes me think you watched the movie with your eyes closed. Gwen wasnāt even allowed to interact with Miles. If she told Miles (a Spider-Man who isnāt even part of the Spider Society) about what was going to happen to his dad, Miguel wouldāve kicked her out. She was almost kicked out in the first place just for talking to him; If that had happened, sheād be homeless, becauseājust in case you forgotāher dad disowned her after holding her at gun point. Gwen quite literally had no other choice but to comply with Miguelās rules. She also states in the movie that she didnāt know how to tell him, which makes sense given that she hasnāt seen him in over a year. How would something that big and consequential even come up in a conversation? Not to mention, sheās young and inexperienced as a hero. Sheās gonna screw up and make mistakes. She was put in a completely unfair situation by the adults around her and had an enormous amount of pressure put on her shoulders. ļæ¼Blaming the teenage girl for a situation like this, instead of Miguel, Jessica, or Peter B. is absolutely wildļæ¼.
3. āThey have No chemistryā
Now, this one is just completely biased. You know damn wellā¦




these stills alone just prove you wrong. No way you watched the movie, saw the way they looked at each other and interacted, and actually said, āthey donāt have chemistry.ā š
4. Interracial Relationship Backlash
Lastly, Iāve seen people hate on Gwiles solely based on the fact that itās an interracial relationship. The fact that this is a problem in 2023 is absolutely mind-boggling. Some of you are just racist bigoted people who need to learn how to stfu.
#miles morales#gwen stacy#gwiles#spiderman across the spiderverse#spiderman into the verse#spiderverse spoilers#miguel o'hara#jessica drew#peter b parker#spiderman#spider gwen#marvel#comics#part 2 of defending my favourite ships š¤š#ghostflower#debunking
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Goated Movie š
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My Unpopular Star Wars Opinions:
- Movie Anakin is better than CW Anakin
- Padme is the best female SW character
- Anidala is the best SW couple/ship
- CW Anakin is a terrible characterization of him (for multiple reason)
- Vader is the most powerful sith
- Rey isnāt a Skywalker
- Rebels was boring as hell (I couldnāt even finish it)
- Plo was a better mentor to Ahsoka then Anakin ever was
- Ahsoka is A BIT of a Mary Sue
- Ahsokaās outfit in the first couple seasons of CW was completely inappropriate and sexist and anyone who justifies it is gross
- Kenobi show was actually really good and is over-hated
- Reva isnāt a bad character but the writing for her could have been better
- Tales of the Jedi was the best Ahsoka appearance
- Padmeās character was fridged in ROTS
- Padme in ROTS was written so out of character ļæ¼
#star wars prequels#star wars#padme amidala#ahsoka tano#tales of the jedi#obi wan kenobi#anakin skywalker#the clone wars#anidala#obi wan show#hot takes
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My Favourite Spider Couple About To Carry 2023 š

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Biana Vacker ļæ¼
Vs
Selina Beauregard
Iāve gotten a few ppl Ask me why I donāt like Biana Vacker as a character, and I think the easiest way I can explain it is by jutaxposing her character to Selina Beauregard and showing the difference in writing between the two.
A big issue with Biana as a character is that she lacks development. She starts off as a spoiled, privileged, rich girl Whoās entire character is about looking pretty, about appearances, and about being the popular āitā girl at Foxfire. The problem is, she stays that way from book 1 to 8.5. Thereās no development, thereās no character realization, and no moments where she changes and becomes a different, better personļæ¼.
And before you Biana stans come at me, I hate to break it to you, but what she did in Nightfall was not character developmentļæ¼; it was selfish and self-centred. Before they even go into Nightfall, Sophie tells her group to stay by her, not go off on their own, and not try to make themselves the hero of the mission, because it was about getting her parents out and leaving without getting caught. But Biana disobeys the leader of her mission and the instructions given to her, going off on her own and risking everybodyās life in that room, including Sophieās parents. She almost got everybody killed because she decided to be selfish and wanted to have her own glory moment. What she did was not heroic; it was downright stupid and selfish. Risking everybodyās life around you just to make yourself look better makes you a selfish person. Because of her actions, the Gorgodon was released from the force field, compromising the entire mission. 
After she gets hurt because of the consequences of her own actions, nothing about what sheās done gives her time for reflection. Itās not seen as selfish; nobody calls her out on that behaviour, and itās not seen as bad. Itās just seen as heroic, and then the story moves on. Her decision ļæ¼in Nightfall does not change her actions or behaviours as a character. She just continues on as that same spoiled, rich, self-centred brat as she was in the first book. Her character does not change; she still has the same personality. She doesnāt go through any realization or growth, and she doesnāt take accountability for what sheās done or apologize for the lives sheās put in danger or the people sheās injured because of her own actions. She still believes what she did was heroic (which it wasnāt).
Bianaās entire character revolves around her femininity, which also doesnāt change even after Nightfall. Her character is clichĆ© and stereotypical, and because she still exhibits the same behaviours, attitudes,ļæ¼ and decision-making after Nightfall, it proves that her character didnāt develop or change
ļæ¼
Now Onto Selina Beauregard. Similar to Biana, Selina is heavily obsessed with her appearance and physical identity on the outside. She falls more into the damsel in distress archetype because of the way sheās portrayed as a daughter of Aphrodite. Sheās not into physical fighting or learning hand-to-hand combat or sword fighting; sheād rather fly on a Pegasus all day and braid her hair. However, this changes once we get to The Last Olympian. ļæ¼
Selina isnāt forced to fight in the war; she couldāve easily stayed back with the Ares kids because she didnāt want to risk her life or mess up her physical appearance. But she didnāt. By giving her this choice, it gives her character agency and development. Towards the end of the story, she leaves the war to convince Clarisse to come and help them fight Kronos, but Clarisse refuses. Selina then steels Clarisseās armour and leads the Ares cabin into battle, going undercover in the process. She fights a humungous monster, risks her life just to save the world, and defeat Kronos. In doing this, she gets sprayed by acid, and half of her face is melted off, as well as her armour getting destroyed. But in the end, Selina didnāt care because she did it to save her fellow demigods and the rest of civilization
Notice how this characterās thinking, decision-making, behaviours, and attitudes change from the first book to the last. Because of this choice, it shows how her character has really grown and changed as a person, and she then gets something called āØcharacter developmentāØ. This is what makes Selina a well-written, fleshed-out characterābecause of this development, and because her character actually changes, ļæ¼which is something that didnāt happen with Biana.
#character analysis#kotlc#kotlc fandom#sophie foster#fantasy books#anti biana vacker#pjo fandom#pjo series#Selina Beauregard#clarisse la rue#percy jackson spoilers
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Notice how the superior KOTLC girls are also the more powerful and prettier ones to š¤
#kotlc#kotlc fandom#sophie foster#linh song#maruca chebota#anti biana vacker#anti marella redek#anti stina heks#keeper of the lost cities
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I HATE Biana Vacker thatās it thatās the post š¤
#anti Biana Vacker#kotlc fandom#slander#keeper of the lost cities#kotlc stellarlune#shannon messenger#hot take
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