Free G3 Monster High Episodes (to be continued)
SEASON 1
1. The Monstering or option 2 (for those who may not have access to the Nick website)
2. Food Fight or option 2 (for those who may not have access to the YouTube channel)
3. Unfinished Brain-ness or option 2 (for those who may not have access to the YouTube channel)
4. Case of the Moondays or option 2
5. Portrait of a Monster or option 2
6. Witch Hitch
7. Part of the Pack
8. That Thing You Deuce or option 2 (preferred option, as it’s through an official medium)
9. Werewolf Weekend or option 2 (same information as #8)
10. Paw-zzle Pieces or option 2 (same information as #8)
11. Nightmare Nightmore or option 2 (same information as #8)
12. Out of Step or option 2 (same information as #8)
13. Pyramid Scheme or option 2 (same information as #8)
14. What’s Up, Watzie?
15. So Familiar
16. Crushed
17. Over Bro-tective
18. Horoscare
19. Flaunt Your Skeleton
20. Creepover Party
21. Creature Clash
22. Monster Movie
23. Earworm
24. Spell the Beans
25. Growing Ghoulia
26. Casketball Jinx (same link as above)
27. Cleo in the Kitchen
28. Case of the Missing Squeak (same link as above)
29. Pet Problems
30. License to Rock (same link as above)
31. Power Heist
32. Monster Midterms
33. Fur-mergency
34. Boogey Nightmare (same link as above)
35. Best Fiends
36: Scareer Day (same link as above)
37. Stone Alone
38. Horsin’ Around (same link as above)
39. Moonlit Fieldtrip
40. A Little Boost (same link as above)
41. Fresh Waters Run Deep
42. Sew Fierce
43. Witchful Thinking
44. Monster Match
45. The Monster Way
SEASON 2
1. Rule School
2. New Witch in Town
3. Play It Again, Clawd (same link as above)
4. Mummy in the Mirror (part of the beginning is missing; the first few minutes can be found in this video)
5. How to Scare a Banshee (same link as above)
6. So Chill
7. Mixed Up Meowlody
8. The Haunted Sand Castle Caper
9. Fangs for the Memories
10. Two-Riffic
11. Monster High-Jinks
12. Vamps Just Wanna Have Fun (same link as above)
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Suzanne's statement on the stage adaptation: "I'm very excited to be collaborating with the amazing team of Conor McPherson and Matthew Dunster as they bring their dynamic and innovative interpretation of The Hunger Games to the London stage."
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hot take but like the reason my adaptation choice for asoiaf would be anime (or just animation in general) is because i think that is the only way the feeling of the pov structure could even be attempted to be recreated in some way. animation can be “exaggerated”, it is about capturing sensations and emotions rather than the objectivity and omnipotent perspective that an hbo show provides through a camera. it allows for more freedom for some kind of exploration of how the characters see the world. like visually it would be way more capable of conveying the world of asoiaf and its characters to me. ofc it would depend on the execution but still
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James Roday Rodriguez in Psych (2006) Pilot
Shawn Spencer was ruthlessly trained in observation as a boy by his father Henry, a strict cop, who moved away years ago, to his relief. Shawn never was able to keep a job. Now a TV news item on a high-profile kidnapping in the wealthy McCallum family makes him attempt a longstanding dream, solving crime for a living. So he recruits his shy youth friend Burton 'Gus' Guster to set up an agency. To get access to the police, he poses as a medium, which bully detective Carlton Lassiter finds frustratingly hard to unmask. the case is harder then expected, but cocky Shawn's perseverance pays off.
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Jennifer Lawrence on Medium in 2007
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Have you seen the new trailer for Velma or any of the clips of the series online I would love to hear your thoughts.
Yeah, I've seen the trailer, anon, but I didn't watch any of the clips.
Honestly, I disagree with any R-rated reboot of children's media, especially R-rated reboots that keep the characters underage, which Velma's done by keeping the characters in highschool.
I think it contributes by its nature to the adultification and pornification of children's media, which increasingly makes spaces originally designed for children unsafe for them to be in. At best, I find it depressing, and at its worst - as someone who works in child safety and the arts - I can tell you for a fact that it's actively dangerous. Adult entitlement over children's stories is something that feels increasingly common between shows like Adventure Time, My Little Pony and Steven Universe, and playing into that as a writer by slapping an R-rating on it and saying 'Scooby, but make it sexy', only further encourages it and forces children out of media that should be for them.
I get the nostalgia argument that they're making - that it's not for new kids, but for the adults who grew up with Scooby Doo - but I think there are ways to do that organically in a way that doesn't seek to shed its intended audience and drag back its old one. That's something The Babysitter's Club reboot did really well even! But yeah, to me, Velma isn't it.
You want to write an R-rated mystery show, create a new one. Don't hijack a children's show to do it.
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