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#content for brooklynn
bendarius · 2 years
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2 more hours till s5 drops! drew this to celebrate them. ill miss them so much 
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awsydawnarts · 9 months
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In case someone missed the trailer and/or other announcements, here’s some of the bigger stuff that we know so far about the movie:
• New designs! (Sammy and Ben are objectively the best)
• Bumpy’s baaaaaaaack!!! I mean of course she would be, she’s part of the Camp Fam, but after not getting as much of her in seasons 4 and kind of 5, I’m excited for more Bumpy content
• Hap’s alive!
•Hap has a sister and can I just say-MILF
• Kenji’s dad is in prison and Kenji’s struggling to cut him off completely (my poor boy 🥺)
• We get to see more of Sammy’s family!
• They’re FINALLY going to tell us Brooklynn’s last name, not sure if that’s something that’ll actually be important in the movie or what but at this point I just want to know (watch it be the most boring generic one you can think of or something that doesn’t work AT ALL lol)
• Dr Wu is back
• Also Claire Dearing? Wondering if that means they’ll meet up with Owen and other movie characters too?
• The campers are actually discussing their time on the island, I’m glad to see that it’s being treated with the seriousness it deserves and not being swept under the rug in favor of new adventures
• Yasammyyyyyyyyyyy
• Nothing really between Brooklynn and Kenji tho, maybe they’re backtracking on that??? Fingers crossed??? Is it too much to hope?????
• Dave’s va recorded lines! Dave back??? Maybe Roxie?
Feel free to add on in the comments or reblogs if you think I missed something important!
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juniperhillpatient · 6 months
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Hey have you watched/played the Camp Cretaceous Hidden Adventure? It's an interactive special taking place between seasons 2 and 3 that has a SURPRISING amount of Darius/Brooklynn/Kenji content!
Whaaat? No I haven’t! Darius/Brooklyn/Kenji content? 🤯 The Ot3??? 🥺👀 Well now I’m highly interested!
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mariacallous · 5 months
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Around dinner time one night in July, a student in Albuquerque, New Mexico, googled “suicide prevention hotline.” They were automatically blocked. The student tried again, using their Albuquerque Public Schools district–issued laptop to search for "contact methods for suicide." Blocked. They were turned away again a few hours later when attempting to access a webpage on the federally-funded Suicide Prevention Resource Center. More than a dozen times that night, the student tried to access online mental health resources, and the district's web filter blocked their requests for help every time.
In the following weeks, students and staff across Albuquerque tried and failed to reach crisis mental health resources on district computers. An eighth grader googled “suicide hotline” on their take-home laptop, a ninth grader looked up “suicide hotline number,” a high school counselor googled “who is a mandated reporter for suicide in New Mexico,” and another counselor at an elementary school tried to download a PDF of the district’s suicide prevention protocol. Blocked, blocked, blocked—all in a state with among the highest suicide rates in the US.
Thanks in large part to a two-decade-old federal anti-porn law, school districts across the US restrict what students see online using a patchwork of commercial web filters that block vast and often random swathes of the internet. Companies like GoGuardian and Blocksi—the two filters used in Albuquerque—govern students’ internet use in thousands of US school districts. As the national debate over school censorship focuses on controversial book-banning laws, a WIRED investigation reveals how these automated web filters can perpetuate dangerous censorship on an even greater scale.
WIRED requested internet censorship records from 17 public school districts around the US, painting a picture of the widespread digital censorship taking place across the country. Our investigation focuses on Albuquerque Public Schools (APS), one of the largest school districts in the US, which provided the most complete look at its web-filtering systems. APS shared 36 gigabytes of district network logs covering January 2022 to August 21, 2023, offering an unprecedented look at the kinds of content blocked by US schools on a daily basis. Our analysis of more than 117 million censorship records confirms what students and civil rights advocates have long warned: Web filters are preventing kids from finding critical information about their health, identity, and the subjects they’re studying in class.
“It’s just like another form of oppression,” Brooklynn Chavez, a senior at La Cueva High School in northeast Albuquerque, says of the district’s filters. “It’s like an awful kind of feeling.”
It’s a problem that’s not going away. This summer, APS installed Blocksi web filters on all student and staff devices. According to our analysis and interviews with APS staff, the results seemed to be disastrous. During the nearly three months APS used the Blocksi filter, it blocked more than a million network requests a day, on average, including searches for mental and physical health services; words related to LGBTQ+, Black, and Hispanic communities; websites for local youth groups; thousands of student searches for harmless information; and tens of thousands of news articles.
“It will basically shut down your internet,” Shellmarie Harris, director of educational technology at APS, says of Blocksi’s keyword filtering technology. “Kids, teachers will not be able to get into anything.”
APS, which installed Blocksi in May, stopped using the filter on most of its devices in August due to its restrictiveness, Harris says, and returned to the GoGuardian filter it used before the switch. Our investigation raises questions about the appropriateness and implementation of GoGuardian's filter as well.
In May, before the district switched to Blocksi, the GoGuardian filter blocked an eighth grader from searching for “suicide prevention.” It prevented a third grader from searching the word “latina” and a sixth grader from searching “black man.” When an 11th grader googled “Obergefell v. Hodges ruling,” instead of a list of websites with information about the landmark United States Supreme Court case that legalized same-sex marriage, the student saw a gray screen with APS’s logo and the message: “Restricted. This website has been blocked by your administrator.”
It is difficult to determine who exactly is responsible for a given content restriction. While APS administrators set the network policy for the entire district, individual teachers can also choose what to filter with GoGuardian—including whether to turn off the internet entirely for a particular student or class during a lesson, according to Harris. Outside of school hours, parents can also use the Blocksi and GoGuardian parent apps that APS provides to set their own restrictions on their kids’ school-issued devices.
Blocksi did not respond to multiple requests for comment or answer detailed questions about censorship of APS web activity.
Jeff Gordon, director of public relations for GoGuardian, tells WIRED, “GoGuardian regularly evaluates our website categorization to ensure, to the best of our ability, that legitimate educational sites are accessible to students by default.” He said more than 7,600 school districts use the company’s web filter and referred all questions about whether the blocked activity in Albuquerque was appropriately censored to the district.
Sithara Subramanian, an 11th grader at La Cueva High School, says she began to run into her school’s GoGuardian filter on a regular basis around the time remote learning ended. “It got kind of intense when we went back to school, like educational websites were being blocked,” Subramanian says. The censorship has been particularly frustrating for her biology and anatomy studies. “It felt like they were trying to restrict our education rather than enhance it.”
“My son says the filters make the internet useless,” Sarah Hooten, the mother of Henry, a 13-year-old former APS student, tells WIRED. Henry says that he couldn’t use YouTube to look up information for a report he was assigned about rainforests. “I know it’s partly to do with blocking kids from doing what they aren’t supposed to be doing,” Henry says. “But it’s also just the school not understanding what they are blocking.”
What Went Wrong
The scale of censorship we found in Albuquerque’s schools shows how web filters can twist seemingly simple decisions to block unwanted online content into policies that render the internet near impossible to use.
In one instance, an APS staff member was unable to view The New York Times’ Pulitzer Prize–winning 1619 Project, a historical exploration of slavery and its consequences in the United States, because of an apparently misguided keyword block in the district’s Blocksi filter. The district’s web-filter blocked websites containing the keyword “avery.” This blocked hundreds of attempts to access the website of a printing company, Avery.com, although APS officials could not explain why “avery” was keyword-blocked. But because the URL for the 1619 Project includes the word “slavery,” it was also blocked. So was a Stanford University lecture about slavery, a Wikipedia map of slavery in the United States, and several articles about a controversial Florida curriculum about slavery.
APS records show that keywords on the district blacklist triggered the Blocksi filter nearly 32 million times from May 31 through August 21.
While most of the keywords WIRED reviewed are meant to restrict pornographic content and games, some appear to have unintentionally caused broader restrictions that prevented students from accessing legitimate educational content. A ban on the word “assault,” for example, blocked news articles at least 60 times, including stories from The Atlantic, CNN, and the Associated Press. In total, APS blocked students accessing news websites nearly 40,000 times.
“It’s not the right approach to try and censor information because we are afraid of how they are going to react to it,” Caitlin Vogus, deputy director of advocacy at the Freedom of the Press foundation, tells WIRED. “If anyone in our society has a stake in reading about school shootings, it’s the students themselves.”
The banned keywords also show that someone—APS could not say who—blocked access to critical health websites. For example, the websites of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and Planned Parenthood were keyword blocked. CDC web pages, including many specifically pertaining to Covid-19, were censored as many as 1,607 times. Planned Parenthood pages were censored more than 50 times in Albuquerque while Blocksi was in use.
APS communications director Monica Armenta tells WIRED that, “to the best of my knowledge,” the district didn’t purposefully block URLs containing “avery” or the websites of the CDC and Planned Parenthood.
“We regularly referred our families and staff to the CDC for guidance on Covid,” Armenta says. “We did not find any issues with students or staff accessing CDC, Planned Parenthood, or ‘avery’ during school hours.” At the time of Armenta’s response, the district was no longer using the Blocksi filter that restricted those websites.
Nearly three-quarters of the blocked activity WIRED examined was not explicitly tied to a keyword, and the data APS provided did not explain why those web pages triggered the district’s filters.
Blocksi says it sorts content into 79 preset categories to make its blocking decisions. Those categories include “alternative beliefs,” “abortion,” “sex education,” “folklore,” and “meaningless content.” School staff can choose which of those categories to block, allow, or block with a warning.
GoGuardian says it uses machine learning algorithms that scan the content and context of a page, rather than just pick out keywords, to decide whether it’s appropriate for students. But WIRED’s analysis of censorship logs from APS raises questions about the effectiveness of GoGuardian’s filter at judging context. For example, between January and August of 2023, the district’s GoGuardian filter blocked more than 1,580 websites with the word “gay” in the URL. While that included domains and URLs that contained sexual content, many did not appear to have any sexual content at all. On May 18, the district’s GoGuardian filter blocked a La Cueva High School 10th grader’s one-word Google search for “gay.”
Harris, Albuquerque’s educational technology director, says the word “gay” shouldn’t have been blocked on its own but might have triggered another rule in the filter. After googling “gay” on her own computer, she speculated that GoGuardian might have blocked the search because the results page includes Google Maps listings for several bars in Albuquerque that cater to LGBTQ+ customers, and the district has chosen to block content related to alcohol on its devices.
GoGuardian’s filter can trigger automatic alerts to school staff about browsing activity. During an interview with WIRED, Harris received a GoGuardian Smart Alert notifying her that a student was looking at potentially dangerous material online. “This poor child is getting targeted because [they searched] ‘how to draw grass,’” Harris says. “And so it’s probably thinking ‘grass’ is marijuana.”
Harris says APS allows staff and students to request that content be unblocked. Several of the students who spoke to WIRED say they wouldn't feel comfortable asking administrators to unblock content.
Tiera Tanksley, a research fellow who studies youth and technology policy at UCLA, tells WIRED that schools need to consider the consequences of over-filtering, especially when technology like GoGuardian’s Smart Alerts automatically notifies adults about what kids are looking at online.
“We have to remember who’s using school-issued devices,” Tanksley says. “It’s already baked in that these are going to be lower income, probably people of color, just because of the economic disparities. Getting flagged multiple times trying to access inappropriate content is opening the door for other types of disciplinary disparities,” she argues.
During the 2022-2023 school year, 66 percent of APS students identified as Hispanic, 20 percent as white, 5 percent as American Indian or Alaskan native, and 3 percent as Black, according to data published by the school district. Nearly 68 percent of the district’s students received free school meals, which is a rough reflection of how many families live near the poverty line and slightly higher than the national average.
Our investigation found that both the Blocksi and GoGuardian filters used by APS censored a wide range of words, websites, and online resources related directly to race and ethnicity. And students who spoke to WIRED say they were frequently blocked while attempting to research historical events that involved racism or violence.
When a 12th grader at the city’s Atrisco Heritage Academy High School tried to ask Google for information about “structural racism black community,” GoGuardian blocked their search, records reviewed by WIRED show. It also nixed a ninth grader’s search for illustrations of Black people, a seventh grader’s search for “pueblo indians,” a fourth grader’s image search for “immigrant,” and a ninth grader’s image search for “el mobimiento [sic] chicano”—the Mexican-American Chicano Movement of the 1960s.
Blocksi’s filters blocked similar search terms, including “how oppressed are black people.” And it blocked hundreds of attempts to access legal information for immigrants at USCIS.gov. On July 27, it prevented an APS staff member from opening the form used to apply for US citizenship online, APS records show.
Chavez, the La Cueva High School senior who leads their school’s Native American Student Union, says the district’s filters have hindered their attempts to research Indigenous heritage and Indigenous protests. ”Because I can’t find information on certain Indigenous topics, I’m wondering about kids who are younger than me, Indigenous kids who are trying to look up their heritage, trying to learn about their heritage,” Chavez says. “It frustrates me because they can’t. It’s not easily accessible, especially during school hours.”
Content related to gender, sexuality, and identity was also blocked across Albuquerque. For instance, the district's web filters prevented six students from visiting pages at the Trevor Project, one of the nation’s leading LGBTQ+ youth advocacy groups. Even the websites of local youth nonprofits, including Together for Brothers and the Southwest Organizing Project, were restricted. Three different middle schoolers, on three different days, searched for “pride flag” and were blocked.
In a statement to WIRED, Casey Pick, director of law & policy for the Trevor Project, characterized APS’s censorship as “dangerous” and “unethical.”
“Blocking content inherently suggests that it’s something that is inappropriate or that people shouldn’t see or know about,” says Josh Block, a senior staff attorney at the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) who focuses on the civil-liberties-focused nonprofit’s LGBT and HIV Project. “That certainly has a message that reverberates beyond just the computer screen.”
Gordon, the GoGuardian spokesperson, says the company “does not block searches or restrict access to legitimate educational sites by default, nor do we block LGBTQIA+, reproductive health, or racial justice websites by default.”
Web pages belonging to the ACLU were blocked 68 times.
Safety vs. Education
The consequences of school web filtering reach far beyond Albuquerque. Virtually every school in the US uses an automatic web filter, largely due to the Children’s Internet Protection Act (CIPA) passed by Congress in 2000. The law requires schools and libraries to block “child pornography” and other content deemed “obscene” or “harmful to minors” in order to be eligible for federal technology aid known as E-rate funding.
In districts like Albuquerque’s, which invested millions to provide take-home computers to students, the filters have increasingly come to govern kids’ online lives both inside and outside of school. Our investigation found that nearly 10 percent of the blocks between January 2022 and August 2023 occurred on weekends.
The filters catch plenty of content that district officials say should legitimately be blocked—some students try to look at porn, many try to play online games during school, and a significant portion of the content blocked by Albuquerque’s filters appears to be pop-ups, advertisements, and spam. Harris says the district has intentionally chosen to block students from accessing generative AI tools; during the three months it was in place, Blocksi prevented more than 41,000 attempts to access ChatGPT.
“There are hundreds of thousands of sites that are being created every day that we don't have the resources to vet and look at all the time,” Harris says. “We do the best with our resources and our stance really is to limit the amount of filtering and teach digital citizenship.”
Since CIPA was first proposed in 1998, critics and supporters alike have raised concerns about the impact of web-filtering technology and the balance between free access to information and safety.
“I am very concerned about censorship,” the law’s primary sponsor, late Arizona Senator John McCain, told The New York Times in February 1998. “But I think we need to act to try and provide some rules, otherwise we may find ourselves in a situation where Americans say, ‘Look, this has got to stop; we are willing to sacrifice some of our civil liberties to protect our children.’”
When it was passed in 2000, CIPA was immediately challenged by the American Library Association and the ACLU, which argued in a series of lawsuits that that the law’s web-filtering requirement placed unconstitutional restrictions on library patrons’ speech. In 2003, the US Supreme Court voted 6 to 3 that government-mandated web filtering was constitutional, in part because libraries allowed patrons to request that specific websites be unblocked.
Students and civil rights groups have continued to fight against web censorship. In 2011, the ACLU launched a “Don’t Filter Me” campaign that encouraged schools to stop using web filters that blocked LGBTQ+ content. The campaign culminated in a 2012 case in which a federal court ordered the school district in Camdenton, Missouri, to stop using a filter that explicitly blocked non-adult LGBTQ+ websites.
In the decade since that ruling, students have consistently complained about school web filters’ allegedly discriminatory blocking patterns. A student in Hawaii claimed his school’s Securly web filter was labeling sites that had “gay” in the domain as pornography. In Park City, Utah, students complained that they were allegedly prevented from searching for words including “gay,” “lesbian,” and “queer.” And in Katy, Texas, student protests and an ACLU complaint last year forced the school district to stop using a web filter with a category that the complaint said had been titled “Alternative Sexual Lifestyles (GLBT) Global” and blocked access to the Trevor Project and other LGBTQ+ support organizations’ websites.
Victories against inaccurate and potentially dangerous web filters are rare. In September, a nationwide survey conducted by the Center for Democracy and Technology found that a majority of students believe their school’s web filter hinders their ability to do schoolwork. In schools with web filters, 71 percent of students agreed that it was sometimes hard to complete school assignments because web filters were blocking access to essential information. The same percentage of students said they’d been blocked from visiting websites they felt they should have been allowed to visit. And LGBTQ+ students reported being blocked from content at higher rates than non-LGBTQ+ students on both questions.
More than half of the teachers who responded to CDT’s survey (57 percent) agreed that their school’s web filters made completing assignments harder. Thirty-seven percent of teachers believed their school’s web filters were more likely to block content associated with LGBTQ+ students, and 32 percent believed the filters were more likely to block content associated with students of color.
Chavez, the senior at La Cueva High School in northeast Albuquerque, says they and many other students at their high school have stopped using their APS-purchased Chromebooks altogether. Instead, they say, students now bring their personal laptops from home to school. But other students say they don’t have that option.
“It totally inhibits me from doing proper research or slows down my whole workflow,” Mateo, a senior at another APS high school who asked that we not use his real name, says of the district’s filters. But his school won’t allow students to bring personal laptops, meaning he has no choice but to use the filtered internet.
“I think it’s kind of redundant and almost offensive,” Mateo says, “that they would try to censor everything to such an obscene degree.”
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bobapplesimblr · 1 year
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End of Gen 1!! Brooklynn finished the last of her goals and Brennen is on his way to starting his!
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This was a very fast generation, but I actually kinda liked it! If my Interior Decorator career worked I definitely would’ve given us a lot more content, but sadly I never figured out what mod caused the career to glitch - if it was due to a mod at all. But I’m very happy that I still got to do everything else! I did a lot of things that I usually don’t do in my gameplays, which turned out to be really nice! This was great!!
I’m also pretty excited to start Brennen’s journey, I will have to change the lifespan to normal for a while but maybe that’ll be for the best.
And now, a quick rundown of what we accomplished with Brooklynn!!
- Start with no money, build a home at 5k with stolen objects and only buy from the in game catalog after getting a fully functional house of stolen items ✅
- Use Retail Stores, ThriftTea, and the Flea Market for furniture and clothes as well ✅
- Steal furniture from clients ✅
- Master Charisma and Photography ✅
- Finish the Perfectly Prestine Aspiration ✅
- Reach top of the Interior Decorator Career ✅
- Complete the Voidcritter Cards Collection ✅
- Have more than 1 child (2) ✅
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brooklynnthelame · 22 days
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((a unasked for introduction🙂))
~~
Name: Brooklynn
Preference name:Lynn or brookie
Age: Nineteen😺
Birthday:Oct 8th '04🌹🌹
Zodiac: ♎ Libra!
Unlabeled🏳️‍🌈🏳️‍🌈
Currently at NYU🫡
Pronouns:she/her
Fandoms I'm in💐
~~
AIB♦️♥️♣️♠️
JJK (new fan😿)
Stranger Things🎸
Blue Eye Samurai⚔️
PJO🌊
ATSV🕸️🕸️
~~
Kpop fandoms I'm in🧚🏾‍♂️
BTS
Stray Kids
NCT, NCT U, NCT DREAM etc.
New Jeans
TXT
Twice
Le Ssefirm ((I feel like I spelled it wrong))
~~
I don't normally write or make stories but I do sometimes other then that this is purely for shits and giggles, minors pls DNI this blog will have mature 18+ content and Im gonna respect any writers wish for minors to not view their content😁👍🏾
And last but not least. Free Palestine🇵🇸 any pro Isreal or z*onst get the hell off my blog please and thank you.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Bye babies🫶🏾🫶🏾
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wornoutspines · 8 months
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The Marsh King's Daughter | Official Trailer
Daisy Ridley, Ben Mendelsohn and Garrett Hedlund star in the movie adaptation of Karen Dionne's ‘THE MARSH KING’S DAUGHTER’. #daisyridley #BenMendelsohn #TheMarshKingsDaughter #OfficialTrailer #FilmTwitter #moviestrailers
Writer: Karen Dionne (Novel), Elle Smith & Mark L. Smith (Screenplay) Director: Neil Burger Stars: Daisy Ridley, Ben Mendelsohn, Garrett Hedlund, Caren Pistorius, Brooklynn Prince, Gil Birmingham I want to read the book first but I might not have the time because on that trailer alone the movie sounds amazing. Releases October 6, 2023 If you like this content, please consider supporting the…
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jupitersrising · 8 months
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SotF Universe Masterpost
Links to every Survival of the Fittest related content for easy access. Will update as more content comes out :)
MAIN:
Survival of the Fittest Fic
Character Guide
Survival of the Fittest Fic
Playlists (Spotify):
Survival of the Fittest/Ben Pincus
Kenji Kon
Kenji Kon/Ben Pincus
Darius Bowman
Sammy Gutierrez
Yasmina Fadoula
Brooklynn
Yaz's Running Playlist
Fanfics (ao3):
In chronological order:
Series Link: How to Burn Bright (and fall so far)
Survival of the Fittest: 340k+ words, incomplete
Country Roads and Unknowns (i don't think i'm ever comin' home): 25k words, complete
All She Is To Me (Is Everything): 3.5k words, complete
All The Screams Sound The Same: 15k words, complete
The Rickety Bridge: 1.8k words, complete
all our bloody teeth: 3k words, complete
Runaway: 1.6k words, complete
Tumblr Posts:
Mostly chronological order...
July Tenth 2023 Update
Fic Poll Results (2023)
Teaser for "Country Roads and Unknowns (i don't think i'm comin' home)
Ben Pincus' Quote
"Country Roads and Unknowns (I don't think I'm comin' home)" release announcement
Nov. 19th 2023 Fic Announcement Post/Update
Darius Playlist Release
Rachel "The Wilds" & Yaz Comparison
SotF Hiatus Announcement (Nov. 9th 2023)
Oct. 20th 2023 Break Notice & New Chapter Sneak Peek
Shitpost about my S3 rewatch (Vaguely related to SotF)
Announcement/Release Post for "Runaway"
Jan. 3rd 2024 Series Name Change Poll
Announcement/Release Post for "all our bloody teeth"
Notes: Pls tell me if any links break/don't work and read warnings in chapter notes and tags before reading fanfics.
LAST TIME EDITED: 2/15/2024
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I can’t wait for more Brooklynn/Kenji content in Camp Cretaceous season 5
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louthestarspeaker · 2 years
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hey i’m kinda curious, what are you guy’s headcanons that have like little to no canon backing it up or just are completely in spite of canon? you know, the Simply Because I Can headcanons XD
i’ll go first...
Yaz is older than Kenji 
Ben is a high fantasy fandom nerd, “never seen a ghost before”? hands down a line from his favorite book series lol XD
This is how he knew how to DIY a spear, the power of ~fandom~ (and also maybe pickpocket people lol)
Brooklynn’s channel started as one of those DIY channels where she stamped jeans and crocheted hair ties and threw glitter on everything (she was ten i’m so sure this happened)
Kenji Kon is five foot nineish (six foot Kenji I know him not, your gelled up hair does not count towards your height)
This also makes Sammy like two inches shorter than him and this is a reality I am content with
Darius' mom is a lawyer (I simply love the idea of her suing Jurassic World into oblivion 😌)
Also Darius has dinosaur trading cards, I feel so strongly about this where are this boy's dinosaur trading cards??
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phantom-z0ne · 1 month
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Through the Looking Glass - Part 2
Part 1
WC: 1783
The bus rolled to a stop and Brooklynn helped unmount the bikes from the bus. It was only a couple minutes walk before they arrived home, their mother welcoming them enthusiastically. 
“Mom!” Jayden whined, trying and failing to stop his mother from kissing his cheeks. Brooklynn laughed under her breath, feigning innocence when her brother pouted at her. Her mother moved on to Brooklynn, hugging her tightly. Brooklynn squeezed her mother just as tightly, pleased to see her after her long day. Jayden took his mother’s distraction to dart to his room. 
“What’s got you so excited?” Her mother, Imani, laughed. They separated, Imani looking her daughter over in appraisal. Whatever she was looking for, she deemed it satisfactory with a smile. 
“Nothing. I just missed you.” Brooklynn grinned bashfully, “We don't see you as much now that you’ve got that new job.”
Imani grabbed Brooklynn’s hands, holding them in her own. “Oh Brooks, baby, you know I'll be here in the afternoons.” 
Brooklynn hummed in agreement, “I'm just used to seeing you earlier in the day. The change is… weird, I guess.” 
Imani narrowed her eyes in thought, “I can’t switch jobs again since this one pays well…” She brightened, an idea forming, “But we can't spend more time together! How about next week, Saturday. We’re all free then, right?”
“I think so. Jayden doesn't have practice next week and neither do I. We’ll have to ask Destiny though.” Imani gestured with her hand as she looked here and there, eventually marching over to the kitchen to grab a notepad, Brooklynn trailing behind her. She scratched down a couple of ideas before turning to Brooklynn, “What do you think we should do?”
“Umm.” Brooklynn paused, thinking of places they should go for the outing. She picked the first that came to mind. “The park?”
Imani tapped the end of her pen on her chin contemplatively. “Hmm. That’ll depend on whether Poison Ivy is running loose or not, but I'll add it to the list. Anything else?” 
“The Zoo and Aquarium was fun when we last went. Or maybe the Observatory. Jayden would love that. You know how much he loves stars.”
“Those are definitely some good ideas. We’ll have to check if the Observatory is open on the weekends though.” Imani nodded, noting down the places.
“Why are we checking if the Observatory is open? Are we going somewhere?” Destiny asked, closing the front door behind her. She shucked off her shoes and walked behind Imani, holding her mother in a quick hug. Imani caressed her daughter’s face in greeting without looking away from her notepad. “We’re planning a trip next Saturday, are you free then?”
“I’ll have to check, but I might be.” Destiny placed her head on her mother’s shoulder, peering at the notepad. 
Brooklynn smiled at the domestic scene, soaking in the presence of her family. Her smile waned at the thought of those in her visions who were suddenly cut off from their family for a variety of reasons. Some were unfortunately murdered, their lives cut short, or witnessed the death of a family member. Others were separated from siblings and family from corrupt officers and thrown in detention centers.
“Is something wrong?” Imani asked, giving Brooklynn a look at her sudden frown. Destiny looked over too, raising an eyebrow in question.
“It’s nothing. I just forgot about the homework I was supposed to turn in. I’ll go and do it now.” Brooklynn beat a hasty retreat, her sister and mother sharing a bewildered glance behind her.
Brooklynn flopped face forward on her bed after locking the door behind her, letting out a groan of frustration. It was obvious that the right thing to do was to post the contents of her visions and help others. But some of the things she could post would just paint a target on her back. She didn’t want her family to get into harm's way because of her. 
She would have gone straight to the Bats with her information, but she had no idea how to contact them. They would’ve been able to help others faster, but she doubted it would be as widespread than if she just posted it for all to see.
Still, there was the matter of the account she makes being trackable. She bought an older model phone for that, with the hopes that it would be harder to trace than her WaynePhone. She doubted that an older phone would make it completely untraceable, but at least lessen the likelihood of her identity being exposed. She made sure to turn it completely off and take out the sim card each time she used it. 
Brooklynn sighed, resting her head on her arms. Who was she kidding? It was obvious that she would post her visions eventually. Otherwise, why else would she buy the second phone and go through so many precautions while using it?
She reached over to her bottom drawer, pulling out a small, discreet pouch and rifling through it. She took out a thick sock, removing her second phone from the layers of cloth. Grabbing the notebook and pen that sat on her drawer, she flipped the notebook open to a blank page, setting the phone on the next page. That notebook was the one that she used to keep track of her visions. 
Brooklynn penned down all the visions she had in the past two days, piecing them together with her older visions to figure out the approximate timeline of events. Many of her visions came out of order, but she had some clues. For example, the star of her recent vision had been reading a newspaper before vines attacked the populace. The newspaper was dated for the 28th of October, so assuming he was reading it the same day it was printed, then Poison Ivy would attack next Saturday. The same day her family would go on an outing…
Brooklynn shook her head, returning to her self-appointed task. She had to make the timeline and post it, for the safety of her family and Gotham. The task took hours, Brooklynn having to double back and redo some points of her timeline due to misinterpreting something or putting it in the wrong space. Her mother knocked on the door to call her for dinner, having to wrangle her down to the table when she didn't come in time. 
Eventually, she managed to make a rough timeline of events, though it was missing a couple visions that she couldn't make the date out of. What surprised her while making it was the fact that she didn't only see into the future, she saw into the past too. One of her visions, she dated back to the early 1900s, the architecture, slang, and outfits made it pretty obvious. Another was closer to her time, taking place in the late 1990s, showing the marriage of a lovely couple that sadly ended in tragedy. She managed to track down the actual cathedral where the ceremony took place, along with the names of the couple. 
Her timeline ranged from the 1800s to far in the future, the 30th century! Honestly, Broklynn didn't expect humanity to survive that far, least of all as such an advanced civilization. Though, those visions in the 30ths century ranged from few and far between. 
Finally, it was time to compose a coherent post, using only the information that she learned about the next day. It was easier than she thought to compile the info and write it out, since nothing big happens tomorrow. All she had to do now was create the account. 
Brooklynn unlocked the phone with a complex password she worked hard on to memorize, and paused. What social media platform should she use? She knew making her own blog would be putting too much energy into something that would have little payoff. Should she try Chirper? The algorithm there would make sure that her posts would go out to as many people as possible. Or maybe Tumbler, since the formatting and customization was very nice. She’ll just do both, she decided after some thought. It’ll spread her posts even farther if it's on both websites.
The name she chose was inspired from greek mythology, of which she was always a fan of. She always felt connected to the Oracle of Delphi since she could also see what others could not, but now it seems their similarities were more substantial. 
All that was left was posting her vision. Brooklynn’s hand hovered over the post button, she prayed she was doing the right thing. 
──── ∘°❉°∘ ────
@PythiaPredicts 
Good evening Gotham! I am your bearer of news, Pythia. Tomorrow, Saturday October 21, there is a 100% chance of rain, so make sure to bring your umbrellas or find shelter until the rain stops at around 3 pm. For the temperature, highs are in the forties and lows in the mid tens. However, with windchill in effect, expect the temperature to range from about 35 to 21 degrees Fahrenheit.
Big news for tomorrow is that Wayne Enterprise will announce their collaboration with the Department of Public Utilities to create a project that will clean our waters. The waters that are planned for decontamination are the Gotham Bay, Gotham River, Sprang River, and the Finger River. The program will create new jobs and pay an astounding 23 dollars per hour for every worker. This project will run for the course of three years, even less if the amount of workers is high enough. Please keep this offer in the back of your mind. After all, who doesn't want a cleaner Gotham?
Another smaller, yet just as great, news is a new cure for the recent strain of Joker Venom will be released tomorrow afternoon. The co-creators of this, which will not be named for their wellbeing, have managed to create a cure that will reach pharmacies tomorrow at the low, low price of just 10 dollars per bottle. If you or a loved one have come in contact with the most recent strain of Joker Venom, I urge you to buy a bottle if you are unable to afford hospitalization.
Some not so great news is that the rogues Killer Croc and Mad Hatter are still at large and unlikely to be caught anytime soon. Let us just hope that our protectors will find them soon and without any harm to the general public.
And finally, a new book shop in Cherry Hill will be opening for its first day tomorrow. If you are interested in cozy places to read and classical books, make sure to give it a visit soon at 4179 Otterford Road.
— Yours truly, Pythia
──── ∘°❉°∘ ────
Wow, Imani just steamrolled her way into this chapter. She wasn't even meant to appear, she was supposed to be mentioned only!
As far as I can tell, Chirper is the in-universe name for Twitter(or X) and I couldn't find an in-universe name for Tumblr, so I just called it Tumbler, as in from the inspiration for tumblr, tumblelogs.
Imani Banks - 43 years old, She/Her, Black
──── ∘°❉°∘ ────
Masterpost | Part 3
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bendarius · 1 year
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ah yes...the jwcc ending scene where they are all grown up (they are actually all still in high school)
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youngfcs · 9 months
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hi! do u know any child actresses that can be the child of chris evans and emmy rossum in a movie? thank you
Hello, of course <3 but please don't use underage fcs in mature content ok? You're welcome :)
Abby Ryder Fortson (10-15)
Violet McGraw (07-12)
Brooklynn Prince (08-13)
Florence Hunt (11-16)
Summer Fontana (09-14)
(cib)
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theoracleofgiana · 1 year
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Growing Family
(Wolfhound Mansion, Amora)
Camillia's room is full but calm. Peaceful. Things Brooklynn never thought she'd experience. Camillia and Emil are cuddled on the dark red sofa. Emil talks about dinosaurs, while Camillia gives her input every once in a while. On the floor near the couch, Marcie and Rina chat with their hands instead. Marcie's wearing a pair of Brooklynn's headphones to help with the noise. Christina is asleep on the girl's shoulder. In the beanbag, Jazz types on her laptop. On the bed, Brooklynn sits with Soul asleep on her lap. Julien is on the other side of her, his wings draped over Brooklynn's legs. They were supposed to be talking about the upcoming festival. Brooklynn feels the urge to get them back on track. But when she looks at her friends and the peacefulness of the room, she can't. She was taught to keep moving. To always be doing something productive. Soul stirs and looks up at the girl with sleepy eyes. "You okay?" He asks, making Brooklynn confused. Of course, she's okay. Everything is perfect. Soul hugs her waist when she doesn't say anything. It's then she realizes she's crying. Emil's voice pauses, and he looks over at her in concern. "I'm fine," Brooklynn croaks. "I'm just content." 
Camillia lets out an airy laugh, and Emil playfully smacks her arm. Rina looks at the two and then at Brooklynn. She lets out a soft sigh. Marcie tilts her head, slightly confused. Brooklynn wants to be swallowed by a giant wormhole. Marcie taps her arm, and Brooklynn looks at the other reluctantly. Marcie signs it's okay and gives Brooklynn a soft smile. Brooklynn feels her heart wanting to burst. It's warm and safe here. In this room of idiots, it's okay to be vulnerable. It's okay to need love or someone who understands. It's okay to need cuddles or someone to listen. It's okay to take a break or a nap. Everyone can be themselves. Brooklynn can't help the sob that escapes her. Soul holds her tighter, and Julien wraps his wings around her. "I'm sorry," She says between tears and sniffs. Camillia and Emil have migrated to the floor next to the bed, along with the others. "It's fine, Brook," Christine tells her with a sleepy smile. Marcie nods her agreement while Rina twists her necklace with concern. Brooklynn gets out of the two boys' embrace and hugs Rina tightly. Rina returns the hug, and the two hold each tightly. 
"Our family has grown," Brooklynn says after a few minutes. Rina feels tears rush to her eyes at the words. "It has, big sister," Rina says with a grin. Brooklynn nods and gently releases the younger. Jazz claps, startling everyone. "Well, it's nearly dinner time," The angel says, closing her laptop. "We might as well get food." Camillia sighs and shakes her head. Emil and Marcie nod eagerly. Julien and Soul shrug. Christine stands up. Rina rolls her eyes but follows her girlfriend out of the room. As everyone leaves the room, Emil and Marcie latch themselves to Brooklynn's arms. "Move faster, Brookie. I want Cam to cook," Emil says while Marcie nods. Brooklynn sighs but moves a bit faster. The feeling of home never leaves her, and Brooklynn knows it never will. 
(A/n: Emotional Brooklynn! Very sweet and wholesome. Meet others as well. They are all good friends with the dummies. I hope you enjoyed and have a fantastical day!)
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thebobby1432world · 1 year
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Xobrooklynne Wiki, Biography, Age, Height, Weight, Family, Net Worth
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Xobrooklynne Wiki: Xobrooklynne, also known as Brooklynne Webb, is a multi-talented Canadian artist born on March 31, 2004, in Vancouver, BC. She attended a local private school for her education. She has gained massive popularity with her captivating POV videos on TikTok and Instagram. She has established herself as a social media sensation with a staggering fan base of over 10 million followers. Xobrooklynne's astrological sign is Aries, and she proudly holds Canadian nationality. Xobrooklynne Wiki Xobrooklynne Educational Qualification Xobrooklynne Body Measurements In addition to her social media presence, Xobrooklynne also runs a self-titled YouTube channel where she showcases her talents through short video uploads. As a model, musical artist, and social media influencer, Xobrooklynne has established herself as a versatile personality and continues to inspire her followers with her creative content.
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Xobrooklynne Wiki
Xobrooklynne Wiki
Real NameBrooklynne WebbProfessionSocial Media Personality, TikTok StarDate of BirthMarch 31, 2004BirthplaceCanadaAge17 years (as of 2021)HometownVancouver, BC, CanadaReligionChristianEthnicityCaucasianNationalityCanadianZodiac SignAries
Xobrooklynne Educational Qualification
SchoolNot KnownCollege/ UniversityNot KnownEducation QualificationNot Known
Xobrooklynne Body Measurements
Heightin centimetres: unknown in meters: unknown in feet inches: unknownWeightin kilogram: unknown In pounds: unknownBody MeasurementsNot AvailableEye ColourGreyHair ColourDark Brown Read the full article
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awsydawnarts · 2 years
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Is it now canon that pretty much the first thing Brooklynn does when she gets back to society is re-dye her hair? Yes. Am I going to completely disregard that and continue pushing my two-toned hair Brooklynn agenda? Also yes.
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