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#eric foreman propaganda
Eric Foreman: Inconsistently Characterized?
Submissions propaganda will be here. Feel free to reblog or reply to this post with additional inconsistency in characterization, or to refute it!
See #Eric Foreman Propaganda as a tag.
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Foreman is routinely compared to house and often described as being just like him. This is often the case. However, it isn’t always. Sometimes, he’s a borderline sociopath. Other times, he goes so out of his way to do something nice for someone he barely knows that it impedes on his own life. Most of his personality remains the same or is changes slightly by reasonable major events, but his level of kindness varies wildly for apparently no reason. It’s kind of fascinating, honestly. Why does he offer to let Taub move in with him? Why does he ditch his own girlfriend on Valentine’s Day to spend time with a patient he just met a few days ago who’d gotten dumped because he and his wife found out they were actually related? Why does he snarkily tell Cameron, a close coworker, that they aren’t friends after he steals her idea for an article, totally out of the blue? Why does he fire his own girlfriend, who he recently risked his medical license for out of love, after realizing they weren’t working as boss and subordinate instead of stepping down or trying to make it work? At a certain point, these actions become so inconsistent that one could argue they make his character too inconsistent to make sense. Honestly, I choose to believe that his level of kindness varies wildly depending on his mood in the moment, and it’s inconsistent because he’s constantly going through an identity crisis (supported by his house-related identity crisis he has throughout the show) that expresses itself in an unpredictable amount of empathy. I think he’s just a really fucking weird guy who struggles WAY more than the average person with his own sense of empathy. However, I fully acknowledge that my theory is just as provable as the idea that his character is just written inconsistently. That’s why I’m submitting him.
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dragonkick-bootshine · 8 months
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blorbos from my hospital 🏠
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osinthewhite · 10 months
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Why is everyone getting in the most random, out of nowhere, non-compatible relationships this season??? Like I'm on ep 13 I think and not only do we have the House/Cuddy thing but now also THIRTEEN AND FOREMAN???? To whoever was in the writing room at the time - put down the crack pipe
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Tumblr's Favorite House Character Tournament: ROUND 1
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PROPAGANDA UNDER THE CUT!
Praise for Cameron!
"She's so silly and smart and queer-coded and mother and very pretty and very complex and awesome ilhsm"
"She's actually such a girlboss"
"She looks so good in vests"
"She's as complex as a woman written by a man is going to be"
Praise for Foreman!
there wasn't any, just blank submissions. but you know him, the guy that's vexed.
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Note
any chance of an updated list?
Of course!!
Also, this is the NEW and FUCKING IMPROVED LIST, I alphabetized it so it’s even better than before >:3
Currently, we have 340 unique characters (if I counted right) and 487 total submissions. The top three most submitted fandoms are Homestuck, Danganronpa, and One Piece, excluding submissions that were spelt wrong or spelt differently. The top three submitted characters are Haiji Towa, Vriska Serket, and Stella Goeta (stella has so many submissions it’s funny)!
Finally, this is the raw, unedited list of characters submitted so far. Just because they are here doesn’t mean they’ll be in the tournament; it just means they’ve been submitted, regardless of media or what character they are!
as always, list under the cut!
This first list is for characters with two or more submissions. Characters who have three or more submissions will get first dibs in the tournament!
Akechi Goro
Akio Ohtori / Himemiya
Anakin Skywalker
Ansem the Wise
April O’Neil (2012)
Ardyn Izunia
Ayin
Azula
Bill Cipher
Boston
Bramblestar
Buzz McCallister
Caillou
Chibiusa
Childe
Cici
Cullen Rutherford
Darkstalker
Dazai Osamu
Dio
Dio (Zero Escape)
Donald Trump
Donquixote Doflamingo
Dr. John ‘Jack’ Seward
Drannus
Eichi Tenshouin
Elias Bouchard/Jonah Magnus
Eridan Ampora
Evan Hansen
Every Genshin Impact Character Ever
Glenn Quagmire
George Wickham
Greg Heffley
Haiji Towa
Happosai
Her Imperious Condescension
Higashikata Josuke
Huey Emmerich
Ibara Saegusa
Izzy Hands
JD
Jace Herondale / Wayland / Lightwood / Morgenstern
Jin Guangyao
John Gaius
Julia Mazzone
Junko Enoshima
Jurgen Leitner
Katsuki Bakugo
Kokichi Ouma
Kristoph Gavin
Kromer
Kusaka Masato
Kylo Ren
Kyubey
Lance Dubois
Le’garde
Live Action Buggy
Makima
Mal
Marvin Falsettos
Meenah Peixes
Merlin
Micah Bell
Michael
Minoru Mineta
Mr. Bungee
Pierce Hawthorne
Pierre
Princess Daisy
Ranpo Edogawa (Beast)
Regal Farseer
Ronaldo
Rose Quartz
Santa Claus
Sasuke Uchiha
Scrappy Doo
Sentinel Prime
Shiver
Shou Tucker
Simon
Simon Laurent
Sosuke Aizen
Spamton
Stella Goetia
Teddy / Kuma
The Maverick
The Metatron 
The Once-Ler
Thistleclaw 
Tony Stark
Tsumugi Aoba
Ty Betteridge
Val Velocity
Viren
Vriska Serkat
William Afton
c!Dream
Ōchi Fukuchi
The next list is for characters only submitted once. If you want these characters to have a higher chance of being added to the tournament, feel free to submit more propaganda for them!
Absalom
Abyss Sibling
Adam
Agamemnon 
Airy
Akane
Akito Shinonome
Akito Sohma
Alastor
Alexander Hamilton
Ali Lectric
All For One
Aloise Trancy
Anatole Kuragin
Angel Dust
Anne Hathaway
Any Character From Welcome to Nightvale
Anyone From The Locked Tomb
Aranea Serkat
Ashfur
Astarion
Asuka
Bella Swan
Ben Jackson Walker
Betsy Wolfe
Billy
Billy Hargrove
Black Pete
Blackbeard
Blitzo Buckzo
Booker
Box
Bro-Strider
Buck Cluck
Buzz (cheerios)
Byakuya Togami
Caesar Clown
Caliborn / Lord English
Captain Kuro
Cersei Iannister
Chloe Bourgeois
Chris McClain
Chrollo Lucifer
Cicero
Clara Oswald
Coco
Cozy Glow
Cynte
Damian Wayne
Dan Moroboshi
Dean Venture
Dean Winchester
Detective Saracusa
Dimitri Alexandre Blaiddyd
Disembodied Voice
Don Flamenco
Dr. Henry Miller
Drew
Duke
Edelgard
Elias Ainsworth
Elias Ainsworth
Elon Musk
Equius Zahhak
Erebus
Eric Cartman
Erlina and Brugaves
Eugene Coli
Every Single Country In 1993
Everyone In Romeo And Juliet
Father / Dwarf In The Glass
Feferi Peixes
Five
Five Pebbles
Floch
Foreman Oyun
France (Hetalia)
Fuyuhiko Kuzuryuu
Gamzee Makara
Georg Weissmann
God
Goeffry St. John
Gordon Blackwall
Graham Spector
Gra’ha Tia
Haiji Senri
Heath cliff
Henry Miller (OC)
Henry the Eighth
Himiko Toga
Hisoka
Hiyoko Saionji
Holly Blue Agate
House
Huey Laforet
Ianthe Tridentarius
Il Dottore
Inspector Tobias Greyson
Itsuki Shu
Izumi Sena
JJ
Jacopo Bearzatti
James T. Kirk
Jayne Cobb
Jiren
Joe Destefano
Johnny
Jonah Magnus
Jonathan Groff 
Judith Ford / Natalie Cook
Judo
Julia
Julie-Sue
Ken
Kevin
Kusunoki Muu
Kyouichi Saionji
Ladd Russo
Lady Catherine de Bourgh 
Lebreau Fermet Viralesque
Light Yagami
Liontari
Lotor
Louie
Louis
Luke
Mahiru Koizumi
Makoto Itou
Marie
Marlon
Mary Keay
Master Crown
Matou Shinji
Matpat
Me
Medusa Gorgon
Meredith Rodney McKay
Michael Scott
Miguel O’Hara
Millions Knives
Moash
Moeka Kiryuu
Monokubs (Except Monodam)
Mori Ougai
Morris
Mr. Collins
Ms. Valentine
Muu Kusunoki
Muzan Kibutsuji
Mystery Hunter (Jeremiah Hartley)
Nagito Komaeda
Nanami Kiryuu
Narumi
Natsumi Sakasaki
Nefera DeNile
Nickel
Nikola Tesla
Noor Pradesh
Ocelot
Octavian 
Ogai Mori
Orochi
Otto Apocalypse
Paul Von Oberstein
Pencil
Petyr Baelish / Littlefinger
Prince Louis
Queen Scarlet
Quiche
Quill Kipps
Rafal (FEE)
Rafal (SGE)
Rafe Cameron
Randy
Raven Queen
Rebecca Costwolds
Redd White
Riley Finn
Roger
Rohan Kishibe
Roland
Roshi
Rumpelstiltskin
Ruruka Ando
Sakazuki Akainu
Sandy
Sanji
Sebastian Mechaelis
Sheldon Cooper
Shen Jiu
Shiki Tohno/Nanaya
Shinonomes (both)
Shredder
Sigma Klim
Silver Spoon
Skizzleman
Slayer
Solf J. Kimblee
So Sejima
Splinter
Stark Sands
Steven Universe
Stormcaller
Subara Akehoshi
Tatsumi Kazehaya
Teruhashi Makoto
Teruteru
The Eleventh Doctor
The Entirety Of Homestuck
The Groke
The Little Palace Mistress
The Mage
The New Ninja
The Old Palace Master
The Operator
The Pale King
Tim Drake
Tom Wambsgans
Tomaru Sawagoe
Touichiro Suzuki
Trishna
Tumblr Staff
Valens Van Varro
Verstael Besithia
Victor Frankenstein
Vivienne Medranno’s Impsona
Voice In The Calm Ad On Spotify
Volgin
Wanderer/Scaramouche
Wen Chao
Whiteout, Clearsight, and Benjamin
Will Shuester
Willy Stampler
Woodes Rogers
Xisuma
Yoshiharu Hisomu
Yu Ziyuan
Yumichika Ayasegawa
Yuri Briar
Zeke Jaeger
Zenos Galvus
Zhou Zishu
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flauntpage · 7 years
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The Boxing Career Of Nazi Defector and Waffen-SS Recruit Eric Pleasants
In the decade before the spectre of World War II cast its creeping shadow across Europe, Eric Pleasants was a headstrong adolescent attending school in sleepy Norwich. He was already making a name for himself as an amateur boxer, body builder and wrestler at this point, aided in no small part by his height and prodigious strength. In his book Zigzag: The Incredible Wartime Exploits of Double Agent Eddie Chapman – more on Eddie later – author and journalist Nicholas Booth describes Pleasants as "a gentle giant of a man… [with] the unfortunate manner of a comic-book simpleton and the physique of a fitness freak." Likewise, his character is defined by "both his strength and stubbornness, especially towards authority figures," which for a lad whose formative years were spent in the rural environs of twenties Britain must have marked him out from a young age.
While Pleasants may or may not have seemed somewhat simple in his demeanour, he was certainly not a stupid or thoughtless man. He was sufficiently self-aware that, come the outbreak of war in 1939, he seriously considered registering as a conscientious objector, but he ended up compromising by becoming an agricultural labourer instead and helping to supply food to wartime Britain. Having travelled to Jersey on a ship intending to work there for a time, he ended up stranded on the island as much of the population was evacuated.
Without a return ship to board, he was captured by German forces when they occupied the Channel Islands in 1940. This set off a chain of events which, despite his seemingly unsuitable temperament, ended up with him serving in the British Free Corps, a small group of foreign volunteers whose allegiance lay with one of the most reviled organisations in human history, the Waffen-SS.
READ MORE: The Day England's Footballers Gave The Nazi Salute
In attempting to explain how this happened, one has to start with the methods of the German authorities in Jersey. Wanting to keep the population of the Channel Islands pacified and use the success of the occupation as a propaganda coup against Britain, German forces were considerably more lenient in their treatment of the local population than elsewhere.
As such, when Pleasants was caught stealing from a German bakehouse – he had been sustaining himself through black market activities, theft and looting, having lost a job as a potato picker after a punch up with his foreman – he was not shot as he might have been if captured in a more restive area. Instead he was jailed and, after a subsequent attempt to escape back to England, he was interred in a prison camp, from where he was transferred first to Dijon in France and then to a camp near Kreuzberg in Germany.
Check out some more video from VICE Sports:
It was in Germany that, after getting a transfer to another camp by pretending to be merchant seamen, Pleasants first met recruiters for the British Free Corps. This was in 1944 and, with supplies for prisoners running short, Pleasants and his friend John Leister were supposedly seduced with promises of more food, tobacco and alcohol, as well as the opportunity to socialise with women. According to journalist Adrian Weale and his book Renegades: Hitler's Englishmen, Pleasants told his recruiters "that they were 'stupid bastards' if they thought they would persuade anyone to join by trotting out the line about a crusade against Bolshevism; he was in it to have a good time." So his journey from potato picker to SS affiliate was complete, and the history books have it recorded that his decision to join was essentially a lifestyle choice, as opposed to a sinister ideological one.
A Luftwaffe officer speaks to a British policeman during the occupation of Jersey // PA Images
In the prologue to his posthumously published autobiography Hitler's Bastard: Through Hell and Back in Nazi Germany and Stalin's Russia, Pleasants had his own opportunity to explain his decision to join the SS. "The fact that I joined Hitler's army has no political or moral significance for me," he wrote. "Why should it have? In a war forced upon me I was on nobody's 'side' except my own, neither traitor nor partisan, and I never fought for anybody except myself." He certainly seemed to square with himself the choices he made during the war, and the truth is that – having survived to tell the tale – we can only really assess the motivations he attributed to himself, and decide for ourselves whether they are credible. There was certainly a degree of self-justification to his accounts of his wartime efforts. "I was neither anti-British, nor anti-German, not anti-Semitic or anti-Russian," he went on. "I made my own, highly individual way through the war… I make no apology; I have no regrets."
In that same prologue, Pleasants disdains what he sees as the "pious moralising" of later historians who wrote about the British Free Corps, and their judgements on the motivations of he and his fellow recruits. While in keeping with his stubborn and defiant character, it was perhaps rather rich of him to expect people not to attribute a moral value to his actions. In hindsight he seemed to consider himself a bit of a rogue caught up in extreme events and swept towards an extreme decision, this in stark contrast to the smattering of genuine fascists and serial wrong 'uns who volunteered to the Free Corps. Nevertheless, Pleasants became affiliated with an organisation that served as Hitler's ideological crack troops, and will forever be associated with the most appalling atrocities of the war. It may well have been an act of self-preservation and self-interest, but it is hardly a surprise that many have viewed that act with profound disgust nonetheless.
Of course, were Pleasants alive today, he may well retort that nobody can judge who was not there to suffer the consequences of continued imprisonment. Likewise, one could point to the fact that he never actually saw battlefield action for the SS as a mitigating factor in his service; the British Free Corps, despite its smattering of ideologues, was generally considered to be a half-hearted farce populated by hedonistic young aristocrats and opportunistic ne'er-do-wells. That said, Pleasants did fight for the SS, though he did so in the boxing ring instead of the freezing mud of the Eastern Front or the gory dugouts of some other such theatre. This brings us back to Pleasants' career as a boxer, and his athletic endeavours before the war.
READ MORE: Life, Death, Tennis and the Nazis
Pleasants was certainly not an aristocrat, and was in fact the son of a Norfolk gamekeeper. By the time he reached his mid teens, he began to gain a reputation as a talented amateur wrestler and pugilist. He soon picked up the nickname 'Panther' Pleasants, and began contesting professional bouts with some success. However, according to his own account in Hitler's Bastard, one day he woke up seeing double, and was eventually taken to the doctor by his father. "At the age of about 15, which was when I made my first public appearance, there was no other thought on my horizon but that I would be a boxer, and a good one, and for the next few years I never wavered in that drive," he wrote. When the doctor told him to stop boxing on account of incipient head injuries, though: "I was dumbfounded. For a moment I felt as though the world had collapsed around my ears."
This was obviously devastating news for the young Pleasants, and perhaps explains his superficial "comic-book simpleton" demeanour. Still, it would not in fact be the end of his time as a boxer and entertainer. Reflecting on his head injuries in Hitler's Bastard – eventually published in 2003 – he actually makes several insightful and empathetic comments on potential brain damage caused by fighting sports, again showing that he could be a keenly perceptive man. After his boxing career was put on indefinite hiatus, he began to focus more and more on wrestling, which for the moment came to replace the role boxing had played in his life. "I had kept in training as a wrestler right up to the time I had been imprisoned [by the Wehrmacht]," he wrote. "That, combined with my almost fanatical devotion to physical culture of any description, which I continued as far as possible in the camps, undoubtedly played a very large part in my survival."
According to Nicholas Booth's Zigzag, Pleasants went on to become a champion wrestler, bouncer and bodyguard in the early to mid thirties, while it is also claimed that he was a reservist on the British gymnastic team for the 1936 Olympics in Berlin. His hiatus as a boxer came to an end in the merchant seaman POW camp, where the various different nationalities – Australians, Canadians and soldiers from across the empire – would organise bouts between themselves to alleviate their boredom and pass the time. In Hitler's Bastard, he claims to have accrued considerable winnings after knocking out a black fighter pretending to be Kid Silver, a boxer of Jamaican heritage who had once been a contender for the European middleweight championship. While this may well have taken place, Pleasants' account of the fight has a whiff of Boy's Own gallantry to it, something that pervades much of his autobiography and makes one wonder just how reliable a narrator he is.
British prisoners of war in 1944 // Via Wikicommons
Later, while Pleasants was enjoying the amoral perks of the British Free Corps, his reputation as a boxer saw him selected to fight for the SS pioneer boxing team. It was late 1944 at this point and, with the situation on the Eastern Front getting desperate, entertaining SS troops must have seemed like the best way to ensure that he dodged active front-line service. He is meant to have trained for several months and then fought a bout against an SS police contestant in Prague, which he won. According to a 2002 article in The Scotsman concerning the "legion of traitors" that he had signed up to, this gave him "the dubious honour of being the reigning middleweight champion of the Waffen-SS until his death in 1997."
Perhaps most amazingly of all, Pleasants is meant to have gone on to fight a series of exhibition bouts against Max Schmeling for the entertainment of German officers. A legendary heavyweight who had been champion of the world from 1930 to 1932, Schmeling had a complicated relationship with the Nazi establishment and was certainly used by them, despite what is widely regarded as passive resistance on his part. Having been forcibly drafted, trained as a paratrooper and then wounded in the Battle of Crete in 1941, Schmeling was discharged from active duty and used instead to boost troop morale. So he found himself fighting Pleasants in officers' messes, and Pleasants in turn found that the pinnacle of his boxing career came long after he had given up on his own hopes of being a world star.
Though there are several discrepancies in Eric Pleasants' wartime records, this is as complete a picture as we have of his time as a boxer. With the war coming to an end at this point and even the most enthusiastic adherents to the British Free Corps looking for an exit, Pleasants' pugilistic endeavours – revived in the most unlikely circumstances – also reached their natural conclusion. In the last few months of the war, he married a German woman, witnessed the horrific bombing of Dresden and failed in an escape attempt as the Nazi regime began to crumble, supposedly killing two Russian soldiers with his bare hands in the meantime. Eventually he was captured by the Soviets after a brief spell as a strongman in a travelling circus, after which he was accused of espionage and sent to the Vorkuta gulag in the Arctic Circle.
READ MORE: Sex and Gender In Hitler's Shadow – Dora Ratjen and the 1936 Olympics
While Pleasants' tale might seem scarcely believable – and some parts of it he almost certainly embellished – such was the nature of World War II, a scarcely believable conflict in a scarcely believable era of human history. Pleasants was released around the time of the death of Joseph Stalin in 1953 and, having been forced to do hard labour in an underground coal mine, initially struggled to readapt to normal life. While one prominent member of the British Free Corps was executed for treason after the war and several imprisoned, by the early fifties it seems that Pleasants was believed to have suffered enough. So he returned to life in Norfolk, where he eventually became a PE teacher and judo instructor, going on to live a relatively quiet life.
Eddie Chapman, himself an amazing character, ghost-authored an autobiography for Pleasants in the fifties, though it is less often cited than the self-authored Hitler's Bastard. The two had met while imprisoned on Jersey, and Chapman – a kindred spirit, habitual reprobate and former double agent who was renowned for his illustrious wartime service – helped to popularise Pleasants' morally ambiguous tales of derring-do. Aside from continuing his interest in fitness, physical education and fighting sports, Pleasants clearly wanted to clear up his story on his own terms. He invested a significant amount of time in writing his memoirs, with the resulting manuscript published as Hitler's Bastard after his death.
In attempting to understand Pleasants' decision to join the British Free Corps and the Waffen-SS, we can either take his explanation at face value or come to a more sceptical conclusion. Though it may be easier to go along with the idea that he was in it for booze, better food and boxing, there is nevertheless something deeply troubling about a man willing to don the insignia and ideological trappings of Nazism in order to benefit himself, this while many of his countrymen starved. There is perhaps more than meets the eye to his story, especially considering that he was briefly a member of the British Union of Fascists while still a young man – though he did also flirt with communism. The idea that he joined the SS dispassionately and half-heartedly fits with much of what we known about the British Free Corps, but must also have made his story more palatable when he returned to a country that could feasibly have thrown him in jail, or worse.
Whatever Pleasants' feelings and motivations with regards to the armed wing of the Nazi Party, his war record indelibly shows that he fought for them rather than his own country. He may never have fired a bullet in anger, but he certainly exchanged left and right hooks with SS men in the ring and entertained their rank and file in the process. One might argue that this was all part of a subversive act, one which earned him a greater share of Germany's dwindling resources and gave him the chance to chin a few Nazis, too. Then again, there have perhaps been enough excuses made for Eric Pleasants, who despite his fascinating story remains an illusory and enigmatic man.
@W_F_Magee
The Boxing Career Of Nazi Defector and Waffen-SS Recruit Eric Pleasants published first on http://ift.tt/2pLTmlv
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Whose characterization is the most inconsistent?
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