Drew this back in June of last year! Ui x Victim-Chan shippers, where y'all at?!
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Every time I watch the episode of Psych with Juliet's brother im reminded of the time my husband walked by the TV while Psych was on and went "holy shit, it's John Cena!" and I was like "what?" and he repeated, "That's John Cena, I'm pretty sure" and I pulled up the cast list and he was correct.
I have been watching this show, on repeat, for YEARS. and I never noticed that was john fucking cena. Meanwhile he caught a passing glance and was like holy shit, it's john cena.
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GRIFFIN: no, hold on, first of all you need to watch your fucking mouth when you talk about my family. second of all, it's not my job to make you feel like a man and if you didn't think so, we wouldn't have half the issues we do.
ZACK: is that so?
GRIFFIN: seems like it.
ZACK: well if i'm that much of a loser, maybe we do need a break.
GRIFFIN: fucking agreed.
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Miraitabi as Among Us
inspired by @naha-division & @sapporo-division
[ more shenanigans below because it’s oddly therapeutic ]
*Miraitabi members are playing the [Among Us] game with Yuuya’s clubmates*
*There are 5 crewmates left and 2 imposters are still at large*
Saigo: Listen you damn brats, Asahi-kun’s body has been found. One question: who killed him?
*everyone stays silent in awe*
Saigo: I’m not mad. I just want to know.
Yuuya: I did, I ki—
Saigo: No, no, I know you didn’t. What do you think, K-kun?
K-kun: Don’t look at me. Look at S-chan!
S-chan: WHAT? And who allows you to add ‘-chan’ to my name? I didn’t kill him.
K-kun: Hmm? That’s super SUS. Aren’t you the first one who reported his body?
S-chan: CCTV dumbass. I was in the security room.
K-Kun: EHH still no alibi? Suspicious.
E-kun: If it matters— but it probably doesn’t. R-san was the last one I saw with Asahi-san.
R-chan: Liar! You’re with us too!! Isn’t it your idea for us to stick together!
E-kun: Then what were you doing in the room he died earlier??
R-chan: I was doing my task of course!!
Yuuya: Okay guys, let’s stop fighting. I’m the one—
Saigo: No.
Saigo: WHO killed Asahi-kun?
*Silence again*
K-kun: …Saigo-san, H-kun has been awfully quiet.
H-kun: REALLY?!?! Kaichou (another victim who died before Asahi) has been killed earlier so can’t I just take some minutes to mourn for him??
*the sound of everyone arguing*
Saigo, uses a private talk to Yuuya: Actually, I was the one who killed Asahi-kun. It was just too perfect timing for him to be there. Well, thank you for helping me eliminate those with more brains first.
Yuuya, on the private talk with Saigo: I-I actually don’t know what to worry first between that I got chosen to be an imposter 3 times in a row or the fact that no one suspected me even if I tried giving them hints… My goodness, I feel bad for them.
Saigo: I predict ten minutes from now they’ll be at each other’s throats with some knives and machete guns. Good. It was getting a little bit too chummy around here.
Yuuya: By the way, should we invite more people from other divisions next time?
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Ui and Victim-Chan were childhood friends until they both separated for unknown reasons, and now Ui keeps thinking that Omi is Victim-Chan because they share a striking resemblance, and to cope with that fact that her first ever friend is gone.
presses post now.
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goes on Spotify private mode so they don’t know i’m just listening to the same song on repeat
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February 1977. The general presumption in DC's pre-Crisis era was that at some unspecified point in the 1950s, the published adventures of Superman, Batman & Robin, and Wonder Woman had switched from the "Golden Age" Earth-2 characters to their modern Earth-1 counterparts. In a very unusual move in early 1977, the Golden Age Wonder Woman actually reclaimed her own title, which for a little over a year featured WW2 adventures of the Earth-2 Diana. The Golden Age Wonder Woman also got her own feature in WORLD'S FINEST COMICS, an oversize WONDER WOMAN SPECTACULAR, and a costarring role in the 1978 SUPERMAN VS. WONDER WOMAN tabloid edition (ALL-NEW COLLECTOR'S EDITION #C-54).
This was a surprisingly big push for an Earth-2 character — since their revival in the early 1960s, the JSA had become popular supporting characters, but only the Spectre had gotten his own series — but DC was trying very hard to cash in on the popularity of the WONDER WOMAN TV series with Lynda Carter and Lyle Waggoner, which was initially set during World War 2. The series had actually launched a year earlier with a pilot TV movie, followed by a couple of one-hour specials, but it was then picked up for a full-season order that premiered not long before WONDER WOMAN #228 (pictured above) appeared on stands.
Unfortunately for DC, when the series was renewed for a second season in 1977, ABC decided the period setting was too expensive and shifted the second and third seasons to the present, which the show rationalized by declaring that Wonder Woman hadn't aged in the interim and Waggoner was now the son of his first-season character. It took DC a little time to catch up, but the Earth-1 Wonder Woman got her title back in early 1978, in WONDER WOMAN #243. The Golden Age Wonder Woman was also summarily dismissed from WORLD'S FINEST after issue #250.
Even if you're a fan of the TV show (and who doesn't love Lynda Carter as Wonder Woman?), these '70s Earth-2 Wonder Woman comic book stories are generally disappointing. The art, mostly by José Delbo or Don Heck, usually inked by Vince Colletta, is lackluster, and the stories are largely uninspired: Unsurprisingly, the loopy utopian philosophy and BDSM themes of the Marston/Peter comics are almost wholly absent, but the stories also don't line up well with the plots or continuity of the Golden Age Wonder Woman stories, and take various liberties to align the series with the TV show (such as inexplicably making Diana Prince a naval yeoman rather than an Army officer). There's not much effort to ground the series in real-world history either, which often reduces the period setting to a rote backdrop for some very ordinary superhero adventures. Nonetheless, these issues are potentially of interest to JSA fans, as several Justice Society members guest-star, and this period spawned a number of new Golden Age supervillains (like Baron Blitzkrieg, first seen in WORLD'S FINEST COMICS #246) who later became staples of ALL-STAR SQUADRON and YOUNG ALL-STARS. After this, the Golden Age Wonder Woman went back to being a supporting character, popping up only once more in the WONDER WOMAN book (in the appearance that introduced her daughter, Lyta Trevor) before her exit at the end of the Crisis.
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