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Woman
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25 Jul 2007, 6:05 pm

Which cartoon character best represents you?

Today I am Grumpy from Snow White & the Seven Dwarfs.
Usually I am Minnie Mouse, or Belle from Beauty & the Beast.
I also like to think I am like Sandy from Spongebob Squarepants



IdahoRose
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25 Jul 2007, 6:08 pm

Beetlejuice, of course. I've got horrible hygiene and bad manners, but I'm still fun to be around.



Quatermass
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25 Jul 2007, 6:26 pm

Are we talking strictly Western cartoon? I'd say Tintin.


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violentcloud
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25 Jul 2007, 7:20 pm

Ultra Magnus from Transformers.
I try to do the right thing. Oh, how I try. Most of the time, I just seem to suffer for it while achieving very little.



JerryHatake
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25 Jul 2007, 9:20 pm

Monkey D. Luffy of the anime One Piece

Image


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Last edited by JerryHatake on 26 Jul 2007, 3:14 pm, edited 1 time in total.

Prudence
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26 Jul 2007, 11:48 am

Oh, I am always Prudence from the Cinderella sequels. Beware the large screenshots!

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(She fell. She would never willingly smack her face into tomatoes, but her choices were either landing in the basket or landing face down on the hard floor!)

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I like this lady a lot. She worked as the castle's majordomo for decades before meeting Cinderella, and thus is extremely loyal albeit with her nose stuck in the air. She's quite quirky, although this has not stopped her success-- something she is very proud of. She eventually marries the Grand Duke, although it is implied that she turned him down in her younger years. Being self-sufficient matters the world to her, and for a long time, she associated that with total independence.



IdahoRose
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26 Jul 2007, 2:32 pm

Since everybody else is posting pics:

Image
Image
Image



JerryHatake
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26 Jul 2007, 3:13 pm

Image

Image

Image

Image

:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:


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Quatermass
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26 Jul 2007, 6:42 pm

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for a western cartoon, unless I can count an animated webcast based on a live-action series, in which case...

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....but as for an Anime.....


Hmmm....

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Prudence
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26 Jul 2007, 7:30 pm

In regards to anime, I am something like Beruche.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wTB_-3xA2xE <--- Yes, Beruche is obviously "the one with the long braid."



JerryHatake
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26 Jul 2007, 8:27 pm

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Turtle Power :ninja: :ninja: :ninja: :ninja:


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Woman
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27 Jul 2007, 9:42 am

Those were awesome!! ! :D :D :D



kitsunetsuki
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27 Jul 2007, 3:55 pm

Gir from invader zim



cosmiccat
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27 Jul 2007, 8:28 pm

"It is, in the truest sense, post-modern. There is no center, no moral, no constant beyond the idiot-savant bliss of Krazy Kat. It's about a century ahead of its time, which explains the current interest, and it's an indictment of the newspapers of today, which no longer regard the comics page as an appropriate place for avant-garde strangeness. If Herriman lived today, he would have to seek out an obscure place on the Internet, or self- publish his strip in fanzines."

Joe Bob Briggs (aka John Bloom), world's foremost Drive-in Movie Critic.


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"In Krazy Kat the poetry originated from a certain lyrical stubbornness in the author, who repeated his tale ad infinitum, varying it always but sticking to its theme. It was thanks only to this that the mouse's arrogance, the dog's unrewarded compassion, and the cat's desperate love could arrive at what many critics felt was a genuine state of poetry, an uninterrupted elegy based on sorrowing innocence. In a comic of this sort, the spectator, not seduced by a flood of gags, by any realistic or caricatural reference, by any appeal to sex and violence, freed then from the routine of a taste that led him to seek in the comic strip the satisfaction of certain requirements, could thus discover the possibility of a purely allusive world, a pleasure of a "musical" nature, an interplay of feelings that were not banal. To some extent the myth of Scheherazade was reproduced: the concubine, taken by the Sultan to be used for one night and then discarded, begins telling a story, and because of the story the Sultan forgets the woman; he discovers, that is, another world of values."

Umberto Eco, translated from the Italian by William Weaver, from "The World of Charlie Brown", ©1963 Umberto Eco[
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