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"But how would you feel if a BLACK girl had a white toned model…?"
We wouldn't care because we've gone through that scenario multiple times over the last 40 years and aren't as completely race-obsessed as you. 🙄 https://t.co/w42BrByEAm
Depends on their age. I'd say "Marvels" or Archie Comics' sadly defunct "Mega Man" series. https://t.co/A3X1I67Pgo
Pornographers made a Scooby-Doo series without Scooby-Doo and it's somehow more faithful to the source material than #VelmaTheSeries is. 😅
Upon removing the banners, they went in both directions, though. 🤣 #MyHeroAcademia https://t.co/nHrxSx0a0c
To be 100% fair, Envy Adams' hair color varied wildly between printings and her depictions in Scott Pilgrim-associated media (such as video games) and her hair's been everything from blonde to brown to red to reddish pink. Hard to complain about "wrong hair color" with this. 😝 https://t.co/JvBZTBgLPr
@clickthiscat @pk_kenzie Her hair color seems to vary wildly with each printing and the brunette or redhead looks seen on the covers are contradicted by the distinct lack of shading in the black and white comics themselves. At the point in time the movie was made, her "real" hair color was a crapshoot.
Yes, Batman has used guns. But those instances have been the exception rather than the rule and many predate an internal edict at DC Comics where it was determined that superheroes should strive for higher standards. He did use a gun in "Batman: Year Two" but not on people. https://t.co/0dxYw0Dt5n