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Eski öğretmenler günü nerde diyenlerden misiniz? "Öğretmenlerimizin öğretmenler günü kutlu olsun!"
Eski öğretmenler, eski öğrenciler, eski okullar, hatta eski insanlar nerde diyenlerdenim :) Tüm öğretmenlere sevgilerimle :)
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what is love?
It's like "the force" except it smells a little funnier.
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Would you approve a story about how a character quits smoking? Would you approve character smoking if it's portrayed negatively and he/she quits during the course of the series? Or would you consider that to be too preachy?
We've done stories like this, so yes--most notably, MARVELS: EYE OF THE CAMERA (though the lead character in that story doesn't quit smoking so much as he dies...)
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Not sure what you meant by DC trying to be like you guys. In your opinion what are they good at and how have they tried (and failed) to emulate you. I kinda understand what your saying, but would love to hear you expand on that point.
I don't think I really have the space to do this topic justice here. But to try to make a start of it: there's a fundamental difference in the way the Marvel Universe and the DC Universe are oriented. By its nature, the DCU has a more optimistic outlook on the world, and the Marvel U has a more pessimistic outlook. Now, that doesn't mean that bad things don't happen in the DCU and good things don't happen in the Marvel U. But it does mean that the DCU is a place where people look up in the sky and admire Superman, whereas people look up and shake their fists in anger at Spider-Man. But in a world of rampant cynicism, it's easy to scoff at an optimistic outlook, and harder to make "sexy", so DC seems to constantly try to make their world more pessimistic. But this clashes with the natures of most of their central characters--it's an ill fit in the world of the Justice League. So it feels artificial, in the same way that you can only have an optimistic Heroic Age in the Marvel Universe for so long before things need to start coming apart again in some ways. To put it in other terms, the DCU is Aaron Sorkin's "The West Wing"--it's not how government actually works, but it's the way you wish that it worked, the way you'd like it to be--idealistic, passionate, energetic, spirited. And so I wish that the DC hierarchy would spend more energy and effort embracing those qualities in their characters. Some of their key creators certainly do--Grant Morrison's ALL-STAR SUPERMAN is a very optimistic work, for example, and that's one of the reasons why it functions so well. And even something like DARK KNIGHT RETURNS, which is gritty as hell, is at its heart about a heroic ideal, a larger-than-life figure who rises up to champion the city in its time of need. But too often, DC seems to try to turn away from their core viewpoint, to make their characters darker or more dystopic or more downtrodden. And it just doesn't play in the long run.
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Whats Your Favorite Baseball Team?
Goooooo San Francisco Giants!
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Harry Potter opens today. If you were going to cast a magic spell, what spell would you cast?
Formspring question of the day
i dont know
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