- Jun 12, 2017
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Olivia could beBut would an surgical assistant call herself a nurse?
I guess she doesn't even have to be a nurse at all. If she's just trying to get Diane away from the hospital and (importantly) she's aware of the things done to her/him, she may just tell the hospital's nurse what she wanted to hear to clear Diane as soon as possible and regain control over her faith.
I do agree on the not oversharing information in sci-fi though. To keep with the Star Wars example: the Force was better before the Midichlorians than it was after.
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. That would fit the story quite well.Midi-chlorians are a great example!
Maybe I'm just simping for Olivia? I don't know why! My headcanon is that she got dragged into this mess. If this was an arrangement between her mother and her boss, I could see her feeling forced to go along with it. Putting myself into her shoes, yeah, that would be a tricky situation to deal with.I guess a better comparison would be an arm's trader or a smuggler; they're aware of the conflict but they're willing to profit off of someone else's misery. One man's freedom fighter is an other man's terrorist.
In wrestlers tweeners don't really work either. The good old bad vs evil works much better. Stone Cold wasn't a tweener despite being a, shall we say, flawed personality. But he was up against the evil Mr McMahon, so he was the good guy. Rock was a cocky Hollywood guy who talked about himself in the third person and he destroyed careers of promising up-and-comers (I'm looking at you, Billy Gunn), but we liked him so he was a good guy.
Muhammed Hasan was a good guy. Seriously, go and listen to his promo's with some empathy and he was a good guy. All he did was point people to their flaws so he was despised. Much like Jinder did a few weeks ago when he confronted Rock. But they were still despised by most of the audience.
Point is historically tweeners don't work. Someone's always a bad guy in the story, or there wouldn't really be a story. In this story, if Olivia played a part in the unwanted physical change that makes her a bad guy. Is redemption possible? The canteen personnel on the Death Star are good people to their families, but bad people to those who suffer from an operational Death Star. I suppose your point is that whether someone is good depends on the perspective. I guess I just don't really see the redeemable aspect if she did play a role in Jasons forced feminisation.
Being lied to doesn't really work, as she tries to cover things up when she finds out he didn't want any of this. If she realised the wrong of her ways then and there I suppose I could buy into her peddling between good and bad. But right now, based on what we see? Nah.
Oh no! You just had to start talking about pro wrestling with me! When I was 16 years old, I started volunteering to work at indie pro wrestling shows to get free autographs and tickets. I started off doing stuff like working concessions and putting the ring together. Eventually, I became something like a personal assistant to one of the local promoters that I had befriended. One of the scariest moments in my life was having to guard a lunch box with all of the cash (gate sales + payroll) inside of it. There was a 6'4" 374lb wrestler who was having money issues because of drug use, he had asked the promoter to be paid in advance (like a loan) for his next few shows. The promotor refused since he had a strict policy of half payment before the show and the other half after the show. The wrestler got angry with that answer and decided to try and help himself to the money in the lunch box... that I was guarding. Thank goodness the other wrestlers in the locker room were sweet enough to hold him back and remove him from the building.
I can definitely say that the term tweener is used behind the scenes in the wrestling business. Promoters/bookers do separate their roster into groups of faces/heels/tweeners. The show card in the back (usually written on a dry erase board) would list what role the wrestlers were supposed to portray. This was very important for indie promotions because indie wrestlers usually work for multiple promotions. In my area, it was usually three matches a week for three different promotions. So, someone who was wrestling in HWA, IWA Mid-South, and JCW, might be a heel in one and a face in another, or a tweener, or various other combinations. Sometimes it was as simple as, the guy from Ohio is a face in Ohio, a heel in Michigan, and a tweener in Indiana or Kentucky. Tweeners provide a lot of booking flexibility. The Big Show was a good example of a wrestler who could be switched back and forth whenever needed. (WWE kind of overdid it with him but that is a whole nother story.)
There are various different types of tweeners. Some are truly in the gray area between good and evil. Some bounce back and forth. Some are only tweeners against certain people or in certain territories. I have to disagree with you and say that Stone Cold was a tweener at various points in his career. Especially during his 1996-1997 feud with Bret Hart, who was also a tweener at that time. They both acted like tweeners, the fans treated them like tweeners. I think most wrestlers at some point in their career, go through a tweener phase, even if it is just limited to certain matches or certain territories. Ric Flair could have been in the middle of a huge heel run but if he had to wrestle in "Horsemen country", he was going to get cheered for, no matter what villainous things he did against a real babyface.
I personally think it is more rare to see wrestlers who can go through an entire career as either a clear cut babyface or a heel. Some, like Ricky Steamboat and Tito Santana were able to avoid ever being a tweener because they only wrestled as babyfaces. Same for some pure heels. Most everyone else who made at least one transition from one side to the other, did at least experience a short time period where they were in between.
I do recognize why a lot of wrestling fans are opposed to the concept of tweeners but I agree with this video below.
Yeah, I looked through everyone but I just couldn't come up with a pair that made sense. I have no idea what to expect for the next update.Two new characters or just two new voices. The blue is rgb(0,60,150) which seems to be a generic male character color. It was used by both the doctor and the guy in the hospital bathroom. And the sheriff is very similar but slightly darker. Most of the men (sheriff, doctor, guy in hospital bathroom) are some shade of blue and women (Jason's mom, hairdresser, clothing shop girl, mystery burglar, Olivia, nurse, Michelle) are purple/red/pink. Jason started as middle blue and has been getting progressively lighter purple, so one might expect Diane's voice to be turning bluer, and after a month it could look like the bubble in #271. Four characters are various shades of teal: the mad scientist, motel front desk guy, Diane's husband, and the other new bubble on #271. Not sure what differentiates them from the other men, or if the author just considers teal to be a shade of blue.