why am i just finding this
i am losing my mind,, oh my gosh

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why am i just finding this
i am losing my mind,, oh my gosh
hi hello have some poorly drawn black butler art
ik im very talented
thank you thank you
My Problem With Marinette Dupain-Cheng
DISCLAIMER: This is my opinion. If you have a different opinion, that’s totally okay! I’m not trying to invalidate your opinion, I just wanted to get my thoughts out! I respect yours, and I hope you respect mine! :-)
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Marinette Dupain-Cheng. I’m well aware that she is a hot topic in the fandom. Some people hate her, while others love her. Personally, I think the idea of her character is pretty neat. I’ve seen some people talking about how her home life is boring, and how it, in turn, makes Marinette boring. I disagree with that. I’ve always thought the writers were trying to have her represent inner struggles. Because of that, I think that having Marinette have a normal life is a good thing. She’s surrounded by good luck and people, but has inner turmoil due to balancing her life and her superhero life while also cracking under the stress of being a hero. I think it’s a cool idea. It shows how anxiety can attack everyone. It can also call for a good character, and it has so much potential. But that’s the thing: it’s only potential. Potential matters, but it’s the execution that matters most. And the execution of Marinette’s character? Yeah, that’s something I don’t like.
My problem with Marinette is that she has flaws, but they are never addressed. (Obviously I also have problems with her…questionable behavior towards Adrien, but since I feel uncomfortable writing about it, I’m not going to.) Marinette isn’t the best person. She does rude things, and is sometimes rash with people. And hey, in some instances, that’s a good thing! Characters need to have flaws in their actions so they can grow. The problem is, however, that none of Marinette’s rude actions are addressed. She’s been toxic on several occasions to her friends and people around her. For instance, when Lila was lying about being a superhero to Adrien, Marinette reacted badly. See, Lila wasn’t doing the right thing in this situation–she shouldn’t have been lying, but Marinette shouldn’t have transformed into Ladybug, call Lila out on her bluff in front of someone she knew Lila was crushing on, and embarrass her. There were countless mature ways to handle it, but Marinette chose the rash way. Which, again, is fine if she grows from it. But she didn’t. She never has.
The show depicts Marinette as being in the right all the time. Even when she is doing the wrong thing, she’s still put in a positive light. That’s a problem. Marinette needs to learn from her actions. After making a mistake, a character realizes what they did wrong, and they grow. I know that Marinette is young, she’s not going to be perfect, but that doesn’t mean the show should gloss over her flaws. The show keeps on trying to paint her in a good light, trying to tell the audience that she is a perfect little girl who does nothing wrong. But by doing that, they are contradicting the actions they made her do and making her more and more one-dimensional.
I thought that making her a guardian would be a smart choice. I thought she would make bad decisions (which she did) and learn from them to become the leader her team needs her to be. She made the mistakes, but once again didn’t grow. And when a character tried to call her out on it, he was painted in a bad light. Marinette just gave him a stupid rant and then he’s suddenly all happy with Marinette. Like, no, that’s not what should’ve happened. Have Marinette accept that she was wrong and understand why. Take what she learned and implement it by showing her working to be a better leader. But alas, that didn’t happen. So all I can do is imagine. By ignoring Marinette’s flaws, the showrunners have made me less interested in her and more interested in other characters (Juleka, Kagami, and Chloe). It’s infuriating too, because I adore the potential Marinette has. She could have been a great character! She could have been a character with struggles and flaws and she could have grown from them! But, like most of my old hopes for the show, that never happened, and it may not ever happen.
In short, I like the potential Marinette has, but her execution throws me off. The show ignores flaws and actions and paints her in a perfect light, which creates a one-dimensional and infuriating character.
Anyway, thanks for reading this ramble. If you have any other thoughts, I would love to know them! That’s all I have today, so once again, thanks for reading!
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Signing off,
Jade
she's so cute >-<
Hi! So I just finished this graphic novel, and I just thought it would be cool to share.
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"A covert team of young women--members of the Curie society, an elite organization dedicated to women in STEM--undertake high-stakes missions to save the world. An action-adventure original graphic novel, The Curie Society follows a team of young women recruited by an elite secret society--originally founded by Marie Curie--with the mission of supporting the most brilliant female scientists in the world. The heroines of the Curie Society use their smarts, gumption, and cutting-edge technology to protect the world from rogue scientists with nefarious plans. Readers can follow recruits Simone, Taj, and Maya as they decipher secret codes, clone extinct animals, develop autonomous robots, and go on high-stakes missions."
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The Curie Society, as said in the promotional summary above, follows the adventures of three girls; Simone, Taj, and Maya. Each of them have their own area of expertise. Simone studies biology, Taj seems to be great at programming and engineering, and Maya is amazing at all things math.
Each girl is different in personality, and they have to learn to work with one another in order to succeed as recruits. The Curie Society is a group of woman who strive for scientific breakthroughs, and often time do reach those goals.
The book is a great read, combined with nice drawings and a fun plot. The concept of the book is very fun to read, and is similar to "Project Mc2," if you happened to watch that show. It also has good representation. The cast is diverse--and there even is an lgtbq+ ship--which gives extra brownie points.
To cut my ravings short--I highly recommend reading this book, you won't regret it!
A covert team of young women—members of the Curie society, an elite organization dedicated to women in STEM—undertakes high-stakes missions
Signing off,
Jade
I've been scared to make this announcement for a LONG time. Mostly out of fear of how other's will take it. But, I guess the truth can't stay hidden forever. It'd come out eventually anyway, given how some people on social media like to dig into other's personal life /nbh.
But…
We're a system. We have OSDD. And yeah, we're traumagenic (not going into detail with it though).
You'll know who sent the post or message because of the tags. Their name or something like "Amber is speaking." Will be there.
Hopefully this doesn't change much. Thank you to everyone who supports us. /srs
Cactus Baseball Cap 💕 Use the discount code Jade for 10% off! 💕
Round Readers (also available in Black and Tortoise Shell) 💕 Use the discount code Jade for 10% off! 💕