Elliot "actual disney princess" Craig (
fiddlestick) wrote in
kaisou2022-02-27 03:55 pm
UN: ecraig; Video
WHO: Elliot Craig
WHERE: Network
WHEN: February 27th
WHAT: Video
WARNINGS: None!
[This video opens up to a redheaded guy in what looks like a pretty tiny apartment kitchen. Anyone who attends Kaisou High School will likely recognize him as the music teacher]
Erm...is this some kind of phishing or crypto scam? Because you're really wasting you're time if it is, I'm broke. If you need proof, I can show you my cupboard of ramen and eggs.
[He sighs, muttering to himself anxiously]
I really don't need this right now...
WHERE: Network
WHEN: February 27th
WHAT: Video
WARNINGS: None!
[This video opens up to a redheaded guy in what looks like a pretty tiny apartment kitchen. Anyone who attends Kaisou High School will likely recognize him as the music teacher]
Erm...is this some kind of phishing or crypto scam? Because you're really wasting you're time if it is, I'm broke. If you need proof, I can show you my cupboard of ramen and eggs.
[He sighs, muttering to himself anxiously]
I really don't need this right now...

no subject
Magic is real huh... [Just saying that sound wild, but surely Rean of all people wouldn't lie to hi-- so he just accepts it. ]
The Multiverse? Isn't that the thing they use in superhero stuff to justify all the reboots?
no subject
How in the Mother's name would rebooting what I can only assume are mechanical heroes be remotely connected to the existence of multiple worlds and versions thereof?
no subject
Superheroes aren't mechanical, I mean, most of the time. They're stories about heroes with super powers. There's some really popular superheroes they like to make a lot of movies and comics about, but every few years they'll restart their story because the writer changed or they want to do something different - which is what a reboot is.
And it's connected to multiple worlds because they will often use the concept of a Multiverse to justify any changes they make from one reboot to another. Like "In this universe spider-man is a girl instead of a boy".
no subject
...By that broad definition, I would have qualified as a superhero once upon a time.
[Which... is a weird, weird feeling.]
But that example does sound uncannily like the situation a couple I know found themselves in.
[Not that the drama of it hadn't been resolved well before he got there, but you learn a lot when people don't think they're within your hearing range.]
no subject
[He'd place this guy in a fantasy before a superhero comic, but hey he's not completely out of place!]
Does it? So thinking of the multiverse like superhero comics shows it isn't off?
no subject
[A pause.]
...Is it common for superheroes to be a part of a team, or are they mostly the type to work alone?
no subject
[ok so Elliot's knowledge of superheroes might be slightly limited to just mainstream movies]
no subject
So it's most often the equivalent of a bunch of famous people teaming up for a common goal, and only occasionally a band who almost exclusively work together. I'm guessing they tend to have cooler sounding names than "the Four Heroes" too, hm?
no subject
They tend to? But I guess people's opinions vary on that. Like the Terrific Trio is pretty close to that....then again every movie about them usually turns out terrible so maybe that has something to do with it...
[Oh even in this world the fantastic four's equivalent can't catch a break]