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#mystery skulls next gen gang
lauritanaomystery · 1 year
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To my father, who has supported me with all the power of his heart. I love you dad!!!❤
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its-whitetomorrow · 5 years
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Pokemon Sword & Shield... yeaaaaah, more like Shine & Miss and nothing can protect you!
I’m not sure how many people share my opinion but once I saw that Team Yell leaks were correct... which I predicted would be the case since that’s exactly a kind of completely unoriginal, lame scenario Gamefreak is prone to take... I was done. I mean... really done. I felt nothing. Pokemon developments had always been a thing of interest to me and even when I did not agree with many things - it was pretty interesting to observe how things develop. I was excited about news. I wondered what could happen next. But now... it wasn’t even interesting... It’s just so empty. I can see just fluff. Nothing more. SIMPLY. ONE. BIG. FLUFF. And repetition devoid of originality/continuity. 
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What could have been more Ultra Space, Ultra Beasts and opportunities for crazy adventures in Ultra Space is replaced with random “new phenomenon.” Once again, we’ll hear an exciting talk from NPC about “a phenomenon and energy unique to this region” and we’ll be expected to treat it with utter seriousness. Again, we are bombarded with new Pokemon, new forms, new special moves and again, more Kanto forms with a ridiculous Weezing. Give me a break.
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Nothing new happens despite superficial “story layers” being added and thousands of new forms and moves pilling up at the pile of nonsense and nostalgia. With the next Team (gosh, do we need a team??? Sun and Moon proved we don’t!) being an exact copy of Team Skull, a silly gang with a female admin/boss causing some trouble along the way, and probably a red herring for a real villain of the story. And yeah, at this rate it’s fairly possible there is a clone of Nekrozma that’s involved in all of this somehow... as a final threat to overcome... or maybe part of a lame “alternate story title” where most of the content is just copy-pasted...
And seriously. I know it’s just stupid Pokemon and most people expect “fluff.” But honestly... There are titles that do it better. Much better. These graphics aren’t even that much of an improvement to the series (when you consider the fact this is Switch). XY got some pretty good graphics (for its hardware) and explored the archetype of “misanthropy” and “beauty” in Lysandre (probably the only sensible thing left to do at the time when it comes to a traditional “team leader”). Remakes like ORAS can be “for giggles” and it’s OK because they’re just remakes. SM had some interesting surprises for us, including Island Trials and mystery of “dimensional” Pokemon to solve. But now, if Pokemon wasn’t Pokemon, let’s be honest - most of you would simply throw it into a garbage where it belongs. Who wants to play these graphics on Switch when there are better games out there? Who wants to do a raid against a ridiculously oversized Pokemon (same old design!) and explore the “story” behind it? There are better games with actual cool-looking bosses. They don’t need to be serious, they can be silly, but there is a thrill to the discovery because that’s what stories and games should be about. Now, I don’t remember all the leaks but either the Pokemon FIFA president is bad and the matches are fixed, or there is some kind of Team Flare hybrid behind the main plot. Some recycling from there, some recycling from here, and nothing adds up anymore. In any case, nothing exciting, nothing engaging, nothing interesting about it. EMPTY. 
Pokemon really needs to go back to the basics. Start fresh. New region, new place, original story, no “evil team,” no “silly team” - with only new Pokemon at the start, with their own special characteristics and maybe fighting mechanics. SM and introduction of Ultra Space (=other alien worlds AND realities) was a perfect setup to make this possible. Maybe introduce a new dimension disconnected from the one we know. New gen of Pokemon/UBs. And Ultra Holes are a convenient way to bridge the worlds together and make the transfer of Pokemon possible. But NOPE, instead they throw it all into a garbage bin... because they ARE garbage. Sword and Shield in a nutshell, honestly.
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As for the anime... 2 things... Unless they spice things up with their own quirks and unique storyline, It’ll be a come back to a standard Pokemon journey with regular set of characters. Pretty bore and pretty annoying after the diversity of Sun and Moon anime. Also, if Team Rocket trio won’t get some kind of Best Wishes treatment, we’ll end up with lame villains or no villains at all, just like XY and worse! Heck, I can already imagine a scenario where a nonsensical and completely generic Team Yell ends up with more “story” focus than Team Skull and Guzma... which would become a final disgrace of Sword and Shield generation to its much better predecessor!
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ryanjtrimble · 7 years
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The Boxcar Kids
Reading time: 10 minutes
A new gang of artists, armed with gall and heart and tools from Harbor Freight, threatens to diversify Provo, Utah, with fine art, artisan coffee, haircuts, tattoos, and community events. They’ve taken over the tired midcentury building located at 156 West 500 South and have turned it into a parlor of sorts, a source of golden light and autumnal galas and monthly Drink and Draws with nude models. They call the place The Boxcar Studios.
The Boxcar Studios opened twelve months ago, unofficially. Jake Buntjer—father, photographer, found art sculptor, and now community organizer—founded Boxcar when he acquired the building on a bargain lease. Inspired by Corey Fox, owner of Velour and godfather to Utah Valley’s music scene, Buntjer set out to create a marketplace and community for fine artists and their patrons. “I knew in my gut,” says Buntjer, “if I could acquire this space, if I could create the opportunity for myself and then share it with other people, that we could hook dreams. And if I hooked a dream with somebody and they hooked with me, then we could hook more dreams together and create an ecosystem that benefitted everybody.” Boxcar has since endured on Buntjer’s vision, enlisting artists’ faith and gumption and gristle from volunteers. On any given day at the Boxcar, Millennials and Gen-Xers can be found rewiring electrical circuitry, plumbing new pipes, nailing up reclaimed boards, or painting walls. On weekends you’ll find art shows, musical performances, mingles, and costume parties. This February you can attend a private carnival for $50, which includes live music by Timmy the Teeth, premium cocktails, fire dancers, contortionists, stilt walkers, and whatever shenanigans might ensue in such an environment. In recent months, Boxcar has hosted Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year’s gatherings, providing a free space for friends and community members to gather for drink and food.
Seven artist studios flank the rear of the Boxcar, while three shops comprise the storefront—Revolución Barbershop & Co., Man in the Moon Mercantile & Reclamation, and Rugged Grounds, a coffeehouse. Azure paint adorns the building’s face, corrugated steel roofing runs down its west side. Out front, on a crumbly sidewalk, a wooden sign beckons folks inside, where they are apt to meet Jeremiah “Pete” Hansen behind the glass counters of the Mercantile.
Pete is lean and blond, wears a newsboy cap. A reassuring Paul Newman-like smile springs easily and frequently across his face, erasing the worry that traces his temples and brow. Pete’s background is in the restaurant and construction industries and his first love is culinary arts, but the vagaries of life have sent him meandering. He got to know the Boxcar while patching its roof one day, working odd jobs. It didn’t take long for the unheated and leaky building—combined with Buntjer’s vision—to seduce Pete, like an empty frontier. He soon began regularly working and hanging around the Boxcar, volunteering his time. Now he mans the entry point five days a week.
What inspires a grown man to abandon a recurring paycheck for some impossible opportunity, to take a chance on art and community?
“The short story?” says Pete, “I grew up in a big-ass family, the seventh of nine kids. Always shared a room. Married young, always shared a house. Got divorced, didn’t know what the fuck. Got remarried, tried to make that work. Didn’t work out. I don’t know how to be alone. I don’t know who I am. I don’t know what 'me' is. So why not?”   Besides, he adds, "I can reinvent myself, I can be whoever I want. And reality is what?”
Reality does seem to twist and morph inside the Boxcar. The Mercantile, for example, is bedecked with green soda bottles, burlap bags, clackety typewriters, trilobites, brass belt buckles, wired spectacles, fraying leather jackets, false teeth, and black-and-white postcards. Drunken Sailor Radio plays on Pandora. A gray housecat named Toby toes about, purrs. There’s a velour chaise lounge, a yellow Tonka truck, a stuffed piranha, bat, and boar’s head, one sheep skull covered in turquoise, and a brocade sofa in the colors of The Mystery Machine—sea green and aqua. In the evenings, bistro lighting colors the timbered room copper and gold. In the mornings, the large south-facing shop window is platinum white, a portal back to a world of concrete and cubicles, where the pathway is known. But inside the Boxcar, possibility wafts around like an invisible river, and there’s the sense that, if lucky, you can hitch and ride the flow.
Next door, inside Revolución Barbershop & Co., California natives E’Sau and Lizzy Negrete cut and buzz hair. Actually, Lizzy quietly works the counter, swiping cards, taking money, smiling at the conversations that ricochet around the shop. E’Sau wields the scissors, clipping hair with jabs and hooks, while she dances around each customer. Rectangular black-rimmed glasses accent her round face. She talks in loud, quick gestures, her tattooed arms unfurling in all directions. Old liquor bottles—Jack Daniels, Don Julio, Jim Beam—fitted with spray nozzles, line a shelf below a mirror. E’Sau’s been cutting hair for 24 years.
“I’m the oldest of fourteen kids,” she says, “and I have ten brothers. My mom bought me a pair of clippers from K-Mart one day, when I was 13. I’ve been cutting hair since.”
Being the eldest, E’Sau spent most of her life taking care of younger siblings. “I never got to know who I really am until I moved away,” she says. Until she came to Provo.
And until Revolución, she’s always barbered from home. Having an actual shop, for the Negretes, is a dream come true. To see it through, E’Sau provides the chutzpah, Lizzy provides pragmatic oversight, encouraging her rebellious partner to play by the rules and file for all the appropriate licenses.
To the other side of Mercantile lies Rugged Grounds, set to open for business this February. Partners Skyler Saenz and Sadie Crowley, with help from friends, have renovated the old tax and payroll office entirely with reclaimed materials, from the paneled walls to the stainless counters to the modified sawhorse tables. They plan to sell traditional espresso and coffee, but will also offer kombucha, pour-overs, and cold-brew. The two blow kisses to each other from across the room, hug when they collide in the kitchen area. They both are young and attractive, and their endearments give off an intoxicating air of youthful promise, but without naivety. What they have seems solid, rugged, adding charm to the already quaint quarters.
“I’ve thought about doing something like this forever,” says Sadie. “Since I was pre-teen. And Skylar thought about it forever, too.”
Skyler confirms this. “Big dream on a whim,” he says.
When Boxcar hosts a gathering, the three storefront shops come alive. Doorways connect the structural trio like tunnels between funhouse rooms. The Negrete’s Latino community descends on the brightly lit barbershop en force, showing this gringo what familial relationships should look like—the generous hugs and fearless laughter. Ceviche and tequila abound. In the dimly lit Rugged Grounds and Mercantile, the scent of dried fruits and cocoa drifts between the chatter of Provo’s curious and outcast, who flock to the Boxcar on such evenings. Espresso and soymilk swirl inside paper cups, mimicking déjà vu.
After coffee and conversation—or during or before, there are no rules—guests mingle their way up a flight of creaky stairs, northward through Buntjer’s own atelier, and back down a set of creaky stairs into the industrial tail of the Boxcar. Depending on the evening, a band plays on a makeshift stage or art hangs from the rafters—photographs, paintings, mixed-media installations. The artists in residence open their doors and answer questions about their work.
Painter and illustrator Chase Henson rents a studio. Pencils, brushes, and tubes of paint litter his space. A while back he was studying aviation mechanics, following his father’s footsteps, but an internship opened his eyes. Chase realized mechanics wasn’t for him, so he altered course and earned a degree in art. Around the same time he abandoned the religion of his upbringing, became fascinated with religion in general, and in particular Hinduism. He now portrays its mythologies and gods in his paintings, metamorphosed in various ways. Of the Boxcar he says, “This place saved my artistic life.” Chase recently lost a tattooing apprenticeship and was ready to forsake the starving artist’s way. Boxcar, with its burgeoning community and forthcoming tattoo shop, represents a second chance.
Artists desperately need second chances in Provo. With a pious religious base and a politically conservative worldview that spiders through its suburban sprawl, the third largest city in Utah feels more like the set of The Donna Reed Show than an actual metropolis. Culture is something primarily emitted via Mormondom. Artists who have succeeded in Provo tend to paint portraits of Jesus Christ or depict dead Mormon prophets, Mormon temples, scenes from the Book of Mormon, and so on. Photographers succeed by snapping happy and glistening pics of Utah’s scenery. So making Hindu-inspired paintings that connote mysticism (Chase Henson) or honest photos of naked men (Trevor Christensen) or found art sculptures that hint of death and magic (Jake Buntjer) or photos that color youth and playfulness with loneliness and nostalgia (Lyndi Bone) or mixed media that decry industrialism and corporatism (Kelly Larsen) is a labor of love and uphill battle. But the Boxcar has enabled this motley crew to concentrate their artistic efforts, and they are puncturing cultural barriers, pushing through.
The crew is more interested in building than in tearing down, however. Buntjer’s vision of Boxcar is inclusive. Despite being an ex-Mormon and divorcee—marks that Mormondom customarily frowns upon, even shames—Buntjer doesn’t want to alienate members of the dominant culture. He in fact sees Provo’s homogeneity as artistic promise—a clean page on which to score a new song. He wants to give back to the community that shaped him by sprouting a culture that it can one day appreciate. And if that day doesn’t come, well, he and the other misfits will have each other and whatever they make of themselves through art. “I just want the community,” Buntjer says. “I want church.”
The community is coming together, and maybe the “church” is too. Boxcar is akin to a clubhouse for adults, a chapel, a place of play and spiritual replenishing. Sometimes in the late hours, usually between one and four a.m., when the night is taut and black and all that remains of the crowds is echoing whispers, three or four or six overgrown youth will circle within the gold light, among the stuffed beasts and skeletal fragments and vintage tools, and share wine or whiskey or whatever alcohol can be found hiding in a dilapidated desk drawer. The stars turn overhead. Those gathered begin to skip and leapfrog their words, so that they end up communicating more through vibes and frequencies than actual language. Psychologists call this “flow,” except they’ve yet to study it in conversational contexts. To a stranger or latecomer, it would sound like gibberish. In truth, it’s a deeper form of communication than everyday chatter, something that occurs at the level of the soul, and often regards matters of the same—what it is or isn’t, how to attain it or express or channel it. The details of these revelries are often forgotten by morning, but lingering impressions remain—footprints on each being’s nucleus, pictographs of the night tattooed onto vital organs. Of these clubhouse sessions, Pete says, “They happen when they need to.” You can’t buy tickets. No money required.
The beasts and skeletons and tools belong to Buntjer. His studio is where the Boxcar’s more serious and subdued meetings occur. His also radiates the greatest amount of magic. Whereas the other studios feel like studios, splotched with paint, flung with framed illustrations and photos, Buntjer’s studio is part shop of horrors, part dreamland, part American Pickers collective. There are leather and felt hats, fur coats, and twenty-one pairs of rusty pliers. There are hammers, saws, tapes, an old tequila bottle filled with purple goop. Block letters on a beam read: MISTER PAUPER. There are springs, wires, cloths, razor blades, dressmaking torsos in wicker, iron, and plastic, and over twenty-five doll heads, many with their eyes plucked out. A horse bust sits blindfolded in one corner. There are canvas bags, model ships, birdhouses, dusty jewelry boxes, a wall of brass curiosities. Buntjer reimages the refuse when he sculpts, which involves grinding, cutting, stitching, tying, wiring, hammering, gluing, and dreaming. The floor creaks. Light streaks through its cracks. A stuffed desert bighorn sheep stands in the center of the room. Above it drapes a large white flag bearing a red X, as if to suggest: this is the place.
Buntjer, with his pointy beard and heeled boots, resembles a satyr. Fitting for a mythmaker. Between overseeing Boxcar’s operations, sculpting, shooting photos, pitching art shows, and directing art for a new theatre in Provo, Buntjer works sometimes eighteen hours in a day. He is in the Boxcar’s tail, the storefront, and out back unloading his Jeep all at once, planning, directing, organizing. Sculpting. Sometimes following a Boxcar event, which represents the climax of a month’s work, he retires to his studio, the hearth of Boxcar, on a burgundy sectional next to the desert bighorn, for a clubhouse session. For church. But even as he unwinds, a vision visibly turns in his head, one he has expressed a hundred times in a hundred different ways, but that always resounds the same:
“I knew in my gut if I could acquire this space, if I could create the opportunity for myself and then share it with other people, that we could hook dreams. And if I hooked a dream with somebody and they hooked with me, then we could hook more dreams together and create an ecosystem that benefitted everybody. Then maybe everybody could be a little more creative, a little more real, a little more daring, a little more risky, because they were connected to other people doing the same thing. It’s a family.”
A family of foolhardy misfits, a chest of coupled dreams. Without them, Boxcar is just an old building. But, for now, it feels like a train car being pulled toward some remarkable, enchanting place. And I, for one, am aboard, if only to see what's at the next stop.
A version of this story was originally published February, 2017, at Utah Stories.
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lauritanaomystery · 10 months
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Well, Albert is very good at drawing pictures and here he portrayed his little sisters and the Kingsmen-Yukino children. Apparently he decided to be an independent artist. He is very good at his job!!!
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lauritanaomystery · 8 months
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 I had wanted to make my version officially!✨ Let's take a turn in time and see what our researchers were like from the beginning, well... they are like little naughty people. Same for Mystery!!!
Vivi always wore glasses in this case, even bigger than those from the future; Lewis as always before "Ghost", cheerful. We also have a scared Arthur and a naive Laurel...
(Next Generation) Eimi is adventurous, likes astronomy and has shown that she is good at "self-defense".
Albert has always been a polite child, he is very similar to his father but if you look closely he is more similar to his mother, Eimi and Albert grew up together since kindergarten. In fact, he was born in South America and later they went to live in Tempo-Texas permanently.
Canon is obviously a descendant of Duet and a plant-empowered Mexican woman named Aurora or also known as "Rori." Canon has always had the nickname "pequeño alebrije", the combined clothing is influenced by "Aunt Chloe". likes to sing, more than talk and is a very separate member.
Chiara is a very shy African-American girl, as well as very cute and adorable. She would be the fearful one of the group but also the most reasonable one of the group. She lives on the ranch next to "Sow Soul", she has always said that she does not like things related to the supernatural. But she loves her group of friends very much...
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lauritanaomystery · 10 months
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"Fight!" If you are one of those who responds to blows in an unfair act, then you identify with Takeo! Vivi too XD
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lauritanaomystery · 8 months
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Well, I was chatting with my friends on my streams and I had this idea.
Well, why not? I revealed that Takeo and Tetsuya are twins. because they were born between two days.
Takeo (Orange boy) is older and was born on December 24 and while Tetsuya (Blue boy) was born on December 25, yup! everyone was tired in a selfie Eimi took celebrating her new big sister role...
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lauritanaomystery · 1 year
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Mytsery Skulls gang next gen B! Albert Pepper Inti, the ghost of reveng Eimi Kingsmen Yukino the leader Chiara the best friend 4ever!
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lauritanaomystery · 1 year
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"Ghost Albert was at an abandoned fairground inside the haunted house, so the two mystery girls ventured out. Albert doesn't have a good mood but he doesn't remember his past life either, only that people try to venture into his domain and he always scares everyone away, but this time... it will be different..."
And a extra doodles...
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lauritanaomystery · 1 year
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Yep, its Albert Pepper Inti in his AU ghost version. a punk/gothic style and insp, oh yeah... I forgot to mention, he has long earrings. but not as a set, they are weapons! that is to say, he uses them to attract his victims so that they do not escape!!
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lauritanaomystery · 2 years
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A family walk at sunset! a commission on twitter made by my friend @TMaldigo 💖
I really loved the result of this. In addition, it is a unique family. they are a paranormal family!!!
The oldest son is Albert and the youngest daugther is Harmony!!!
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lauritanaomystery · 1 year
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A wonderful commish by @nickkkdoesstuff
I love the lineart and the shadows so much! My kidos are cool here, thanks again Nick!👍💛👈
Are the gang of the next generation: Albert, Chiara and Eimi
and the next art are "Little "cute" skulls": Takeo, Harmony and Tetsuya!!!
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lauritanaomystery · 2 years
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The next gen Mystery Skulls's gang and the littles cute skulls too for christmas time!!!🎄✨ Yep, Albert is oldest son of the Pepper-Inti´s family and Eimi is oldest daughter of the family Kingsmen - Yukino's or the twins. Lol Chiara, Albert and Eimi are best friends. Takeo, Harmony and Tetsuya are best friends too ha haha!!!
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lauritanaomystery · 5 years
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Fan Doodles Of Mystery Skulls gang Next Gen...
1- Luis Pepper Ghost Inti (( Casual Clothes)).
2-Vivian Kingsmen Yukino.
3-Daisy Pepper Ghost Inti.
4-Andrew Yukino Fujinu.
5- Ethan The Cat/ Transformation Spiritual.
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