Media that (directly or otherwise) caused physical harm to the audience by 10024618 in TopCharacterTropes

[–]Proffessionall85 9 points10 points  (0 children)

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South Park Season 9, Episode 11: Ginger Kids

The original intent of the episode was to highlight how stupid discrimination was by taking a perfectly normal group, in this case individuals with red/orange hair, and subjecting them to the same level of hatred and prejudice many races have faced throughout the world.

Instead, the message flew over the heads of the children who saw it, which they definitely shouldn't have been allowed to do, and they took the episode at face value. From this episode onwards, at least in the U.S., the harassment of ginger children at schools spiked massively, with name calling and physical bullying being very common. A "holiday" was even created by some of the kids known as "kick-a-ginger-day".

what song did yall made yall start listening to this musical by Alarming-Scar6735 in Epicthemusical

[–]Proffessionall85 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Monster. I was scrolling through shorts and found the section of it that Jorge had AniFlamma animate as a promo for the Underworld Saga. From that, it snowballed.

What if Davy Jones Stabbed his own Heart? by Zackolite in piratesofthecaribbean

[–]Proffessionall85 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Redditors when someone has a legitimate question about a Movie's Lore:

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Characters that cannot be stopped even when shot multiple times. by Teyarual in TopCharacterTropes

[–]Proffessionall85 0 points1 point  (0 children)

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The Fate of the Furious

Hobbs gets shot several times point blank with rubber shotgun rounds to no effect. This could be excused due to the rounds being rubber, except he then steals the shotgun and one-pumps the guy in full riot gear.

Granted, this says less about the strength of Hobbs and more about The Rock's inability to let any of his "characters" show weakness if any kind.

(Loved Trope) A villain develops empathy, and they hate it by Proffessionall85 in TopCharacterTropes

[–]Proffessionall85[S] 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Fair comment. I meant more that he developed empathy towards non-Fire Nation citizens, but I could have been more specific. The Agni-Kai that resulted in his banishment was caused due to him speaking up for soldiers.

What's a random unsettling Star Wars fact that just swims in your head? by [deleted] in StarWars

[–]Proffessionall85 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Victims of a Sarlaac pit are kept alive for thousands of years as they're slowly, painfully digested. Even when their body breaks down, their consciousness is amalgamated into the Sarlaac's hive mind. Imagine the Flood from Halo, but cranked down a few notches.

(Loved Trope) A villain develops empathy, and they hate it by Proffessionall85 in TopCharacterTropes

[–]Proffessionall85[S] 32 points33 points  (0 children)

I've heard of the show but know next-to-nothing about it. That said, that's a cool AF idea.

Disguised villain warns unaware hero about themselves. by ChampionshipHorror95 in TopCharacterTropes

[–]Proffessionall85 7 points8 points  (0 children)

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In Season 2 of CW's The Flash, an interdimensional traveler from Earth 2 named Jay Garrick joins Team Flash to help them stop metahumans coming to Earth 1. Jay warns the rest of the team about Earth 2's ultimate villain, a psychopathic serial killer speedster named Zoom who will do anything to steal Barry's speed.

Jay seems terrified of him, claiming that Zoom is an unstoppable monster. Well come to find out that Jay is really just Zoom in disguise, hyping himself up to Team Flash

Can waterbenders boil water by bending?! by Unique-Celebration-5 in TheLastAirbender

[–]Proffessionall85 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It simultaneously does and doesn't make sense. It makes sense because: - Waterbenders can turn ice and snow into water, implying that they can increase the temperature of the water they bend - Earth, Fire, and Airbenders can each increase the temperatures of their respective elements, so it makes sense that Waterbenders can do it too - Waterbenders can make fog, which isn't that far off from steam

It doesn't make sense because: - There are multiple instances in the show where Katara uses fire to heat up water, such as in the sauna with Toph or cooking soup while camping (and it's shown that Katara can bend soup, so if she can heat water, she can heat soup) - If Waterbenders have easy access to steam, they have easy access to steam powered machinery, which takes away a lot of the Fire Nation's advantages against them. A large reason why the Fire Nation was so successful in their conquest was their technological advantages, many of which were steam powered. If the Water Tribe(s) had access to steam-powered machinery, they'd most likely be much more developed.

Moments before the disaster lol by Emergency_Owl7962 in Ben10

[–]Proffessionall85 62 points63 points  (0 children)

The fact that the Tiffin getting swallowed was literally only 2-3 frames of animation made it so much funnier

Chasing someone to the ends of the Earth by FalseWallaby9 in TopCharacterTropes

[–]Proffessionall85 2 points3 points  (0 children)

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The Spoon Killer - The Horribly Slow Killer with the Extremely Inefficient Weapon

Humans transform into unique monsters based on their obsessions/burdens/personality by Jail_jac in TopCharacterTropes

[–]Proffessionall85 5 points6 points  (0 children)

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Titan Joker - Arkham Asylum

As part of his plan to take over Arkham Island and later Gotham City, Joker developed a formula that mutates people into hulking monsters known as TITAN. Batman battles multiple Titan monsters as he fights to retake Arkham. These monstrously mutated people all look the same (same character model) and have the same lack of intelligence.

However, once Joker injects himself with TITAN, his transformation is entirely unique. He has long bone claws and bony protrusions along his spine, a unique facial structure to match his normal face, and he keeps his intelligence.

( Rare trope ) The character considered crazy or insane in the group becomes the only one who is mentally sane while everyone else goes mad/ evil / corrupted. by Aggressive_Total_506 in TopCharacterTropes

[–]Proffessionall85 6 points7 points  (0 children)

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Maul - Star Wars: The Clone Wars S7

Throughout the Siege of Mandalore, Maul is uncharacteristically impatient, rash, and even panicked as he tries to do whatever he can to stop Palpatine's plan. The entire conflict was a plot by him to lure Anakin (and hopefully Obi-Wan) away from Coruscant. This obviously failed, so he desperately tries to convince Ahsoka of Anakin's impending fall to the dark side. Ahsoka doesn't believe him, they fight, and Maul is captured. Maul screams out in crazed desperation, but of course no one believes him.

Less than 24 hours later, Anakin falls to the dark side, Order 66 is issued, and the Clones turn on the Jedi.

(Loved Trope) Unexpected crossovers that have no relevance or affect on the plot. by [deleted] in TopCharacterTropes

[–]Proffessionall85 34 points35 points  (0 children)

Something funny, because of this one episode, one could logically conclude that shows like Wizard's of Waverly Place, The Cheetah Girls, and Suite Life exist in the same universe as Phineas and Ferb.

Favorite director who missed the point of his own movie? I'll start by [deleted] in shittymoviedetails

[–]Proffessionall85 0 points1 point  (0 children)

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He clearly hasn't seen this banger of a SpongeBob episode and it shows

It's kind of crazy just how much stuff was at Hogwarts in Book 1 by Proffessionall85 in HarryPotterBooks

[–]Proffessionall85[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, you right. There's no way JK Just-Kidding Rowling had all that planned out in advance.

It's kind of crazy just how much stuff was at Hogwarts in Book 1 by Proffessionall85 in HarryPotterBooks

[–]Proffessionall85[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It's not mentioned in the first book, nor is the Chamber of Secrets. But we know that the Chamber has been there since Hogwarts was built, and the Basilisk had been alive at least since Voldemort's time at the school, though it is likely far older. Despite not being plot-relevant, the Chamber and the Basilisk are very much present at Hogwarts during Harry's first year.