Haru is great in this game. She’s being used better than in the original game. I love her cheerful but passive-aggressive comments.
Haru is great in this game. She’s being used better than in the original game. I love her cheerful but passive-aggressive comments.
Maruki might be as well (despite being a villain, he is technically a Persona user as well), but I can’t find his official age anywhere.
The earliest precedent is actually probably Aladdin, although Toy Story definitely contributed, and Shrek probably was what made it a full on trend.
This practice has never really gone away. Niki Yang was a storyboard artist on Adventure Time with no VA experience when they cast her as Lady Rainicorn and BMO.
I found Teddy to always be way worse than Morgana. Morgana’s crush on Ann always felt relatively innocent and sincere, and Ann rarely seems bothered by it if she even notices it. Compare that to Teddy’s constant sexual harassment of all of the female characters around him, which hacked me off way more and seemed to…
In this case, not really. The Florida Nintendo World is part of a new, unbuilt park that is quite a ways away from the existing Universal Parks down there. Whether the other parks are open would not really affect the logistics in the slightest.
Well, I just discovered that I’m not the only one who wants a Luigi’s Mansion ride.
You know it’s a bizarre news story when EA is one of the most reasonable parties involved.
Yeah, it’d really be better if they did.
Everybody who worked with him seemed to say that he was a great person to work with. He also was outspoken against racism and anti-religious bigotry, and became an early and outspoken advocate for gay rights after his daughter came out as a lesbian (there is some evidence that he may have been a closeted bisexual…
Certain movies benefit from the theatrical experience, but there’s a lot of films that are fine at home. There’s a really nice theater/grill near me that I saw Sonic the Hedgehog and My Hero Academia: Heroes Rising at right before all of this went down, and I’d say the experience was worth it in both cases. Seeing the…
The Sneetches and Yertle the Turtle come to mind for Seuss books that were explicitly anti-racist and anti-fascist respectively. And I think that Seuss himself even said that Yertle was supposed to be an allegory for Nazi Germany.
Some of these would be hard. The Chinaman in Mulberry Street is part of the rhyme scheme, which means that you would have to figure out something to replace him with to make the story still work.
If I Ran the Zoo and To Think What I Saw on Mulberry Street are both decently popular. Not on the level of The Cat in the Hat or Green Eggs and Ham, but they were some of the more famous B-tier Seuss books. And Mulberry Street is noteworthy for being Seuss’ first published book.
The Sneetches is also probably one of the best stories that I’ve seen about intolerance aimed at that demographic. It’s a great introduction for young kids about the pointlessness and stupidity of hatred and bigotry.
Sure, but they’re all for buying books that they won’t read to own the libs!
Eh, I might have picked up Scrambled Eggs Super at some point because that was a childhood favorite of mine, mainly because I liked scrambled eggs. I don’t remember any racist imagery, but I was also like a 7-year-old white kid at the time, I don’t remember the exact contents, and the book was about traveling the…
The thing is that you can rent or buy most of these movies on Amazon, where you can then watch them anywhere as opposed to just on your Playstation console.
I’ve done it through Amazon Prime before. If its not available on any streaming services that you’ve subscribed to but is something that you want to see, but don’t think that you’ll want to watch it more than once, it’s not a bad deal.
The closest thing that I could think of is the whole debacle with Cooking Mama: Cookstar, which is a whole other story unto itself.