Taking photos of puppets and this wonderfulness pops into my head making this situation even funnier
🤣🥰🤣
... I'm looking at the wee little puppet man...

#dc comics#batman#dc#bruce wayne#tim drake#dc universe#batfamily#dick grayson#batfam#dc fanart



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Taking photos of puppets and this wonderfulness pops into my head making this situation even funnier
🤣🥰🤣
... I'm looking at the wee little puppet man...
My sister just got this Spike tattoo!
Spike
*SPOILER WARNING for anyone new to watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer or intending to start watching soon*
Even after about 14 years since the last time we saw him on tv, I feel like it's still worth noting how interesting it was that Spike was able to love 2 different people without a soul (3 if you count Fred. Different kind of love than what he had for Dru and Buffy, but still love.) Spike loved Buffy before and after he got his soul back. He was fascinated with Drusilla while he was human, which led to his turning, and even then he actually fell in love with her. Angel only loved Buffy when he had his soul. When he was Angelus, he may have been physically attracted to her but he treated her like a challenging project, much like he did Drusilla before he turned her. That love he felt for Buffy was gone.
This isn't a team Spike v. team Angel rant. I don't hate Angel, I actually love him, and Angelus is entertaining. It's just interesting that Spike was one of the few vampires we saw who seemed to keep a piece of his humanity after turning/losing his soul. And why, when mostly everyone else who became a vampire was pretty much gone mentally or morally?
What if I re-watch Buffy for the 25th time but only watch the Spike episodes would that be weird or
Me: no soul, dead, has a lot of feelings, actually a vampire
Spike: Look at you, all afraid I'm hot for your honey. Riley: Because you are. Spike: Well, yeah. But that's not your problem, even if I wasn't in the picture you're never going to be able to hold on to her.
Into the Woods Season 5
William Pratt, Captain Peroxide, Blondie Bear, William the Bloody, The Slayer of Slayers, Spike: The character everyone hates to love, and loves to hate.
Spike is my favorite male character (Buffy Summers being my all time favorite, but I’ve already written like 50 posts on that, so). I used to call him trash, I used to love him apologetically and shamefully. But the more time I had with my thoughts, and the less time I spent around other peoples opinions, I realized how much I actually love him. And while I’ve been unapologetic about it for a while now, I would like to make it crystal clear exactly how great I think Spike is.
The "story of Spike" is a very feminist one, and being a raging feminist myself this is a topic of great importance. It's also a topic that can lead to heated arguments, since so many disagree on what “feminist storytelling” actually is. When in reality it comes in a huge spectrum, with one kind not canceling out another. The "story of Spike" is simply one particular flavor of it, not more right or wrong than any other - just different. It's also a very thought provoking (and anger inducing) one, which in my eyes is even better. So why is it feminist?
Spike’s a metaphor for a meninist turned feminist ally. It's a long and messy road of making a decent, functional person, out of a misogynistic, sociopath.
The rape attempt is treated as the worst thing you could possibly do. So vile that it makes even a soulless, murderous, monster, question his ways.
He takes on the stereotypical role of “naive, love-sick, secret mistress”, which is almost exclusively reserved for female characters in entertainment.
The content is very self aware of his flaws, making it clear that his behavior is unacceptable.
Also, I’ve never seen such a drastic, yet organic, character development.
Spike would take baby steps in the right direction, then huge strides in the wrong one, getting beat down, built up, and torn back down all over again. And it all made it feel so very authentic. He didn’t better himself on a steady curve - he was flying all over the chart, making massive mistakes on his way, which took the viewers on a very intense emotional roller coaster of not knowing whether to hate or love him half the time. Other times hating him with such sheer intensity that you just knew it was beyond repair, then growing to love him again against all odds, crying rivers when he sacrificed himself in Chosen.
There are many more reasons why I find this character so wonderful, but to keep this post relatively short and to the point, I’d like to conclude with this:
The character “Spike” is art. Everyone wont appreciate him, everyone will interpret him and his story their own way. But the vast array of raw emotions he evoke in so many of us, the soul searching and questioning he forces us to do, is what makes him not only art - but a masterpiece, worthy of going down in history as more than just your “problematic fave”.
Sometimes I think about Spike and get randomly blown away. I've never hated and loved a character so much, within such a short period of time. Like there's just 23 episodes between Seeing Red and Touched -one of his worst, and one of his best moments. Twenty three episodes, and I go from pure hate to pure love. Now that’s what I call excellent writing.