Favorite Quotes → Uncle Iroh
Aang: “So, Toph says you give good advice, and great tea.”
Iroh: “The key to both is proper aging.”
Uncle Iroh is one of the many aspects I love about Avatar: The Last Airbender. :-)
Favorite Quotes → Uncle Iroh
Aang: “So, Toph says you give good advice, and great tea.”
Iroh: “The key to both is proper aging.”
Uncle Iroh is one of the many aspects I love about Avatar: The Last Airbender. :-)
has this been done yet
Oh HELL YES! XD
Kovu could fit just as easily. ;-)
Kiss me! I’m FIRE NATIONISH!!!!
Grey, what is the annual ultimate firenation holiday? :-D
The showdown that was always meant to be.
YES!
(Source: kinsharas)
YEAH
*waits for it*
[From Avengers #106, 1972.]
“Aww, car…”
HAHAHAHAHAHAHHA BEST.
“Aw, Satan.”
IT GOT EVEN BETTER HOW
FUND THIS
SATAN IS JUST SO DONE WITH EVERYBODYS SHIT

(Source: dave-stridlediddle)
Avatar: The Last Airbender → live action and as it should have been
Water. Earth. Fire. Air. Long ago, the four nations lived in harmony. Then everything changed when the fire nation attacked. Only the Avatar, master of all four elements, could stop them. But when the world needed him most, he vanished…
this is how you fucking do it
YES
How does a cosplay do it better than a movie idgi
Hey…cosplay and fanon have done this way better than canon (live action) could ever do. ;-)
“Countless others have come before you, seeking weapons or weaknesses or battle strategies!”
this is one of the truly brilliant things about this show. while most kids’ shows will have good vs evil conflict, atla has a war. a real war, between people, with all the moral greyness and points of view made clear. the fire nation isn’t evil: it’s a repressed country under the strict control of its ruler. we’re shown how history is altered and propaganda is taught as fact, so the people grow up moulded to hate all other nations.
and then we get lines like this, which make us stop and think wait, is what the other nations are doing really right? after all, Ba Sing Se was supposed to be a haven, but turned out to be repressive and full of lies.
in this case we know that Aang is justified, and we trust him to do what’s right because he has such high moral standards. then we get to the finale and all that is challenged again.
it’s just a brilliant show guise.
^ All of what was just said above. ^
This is exactly why this TV series is one of a kind. It doesn’t beat anyone over the head with what is supposedly *right* or *wrong.* It shows us that life & humanity is a lot more complex than what is perceived by the average person. Human interaction, emotion, and psychology whether on a grand scale with a nation of people or just one person, has several dimensions to it.
(Source: agentsokka)
Poor Zuzu HAHAHA
I can actually hear Dante Basco’s voice. LOL!
Ultimate Agni Kaiby ~ming85
Powerful. Very powerful.
(Source: ladylannister)
I Fell in Love With Katara (And I’ll Probably Always Love Her): A meta on the Zuko/Katara relationship, Katara’s hero’s journey, and how that fits into canon.
First off, let’s get this out of the way: I’m not trying to argue Katara and Aang’s marriage and children were not endgame, nor am I stating the contrary re: Mai and Zuko’s relationship. They happened. It’s over and done with.
…And yet, when Dante Basco posted this (and he’s made it no secret he likes Z/K) it got me thinking on the nature of Zuko’s relationships, Zuko’s feelings towards Katara, and in the end, why Zuko and Katara had a completely different dynamic than what we ended up with.
I think if you ask a Zutarian shipper for an honest, critical assessment of where they think Kataang didn’t meet their expectations, it would be in one place: Katara’s half of the narrative had to be secondary to Aang’s. In the end, Katara is part of Aang’s story. This in and of itself isn’t necessarily bad or wrong, but it’s standard fare, and the pacing of season three dropped the ball on elaborating on Katara’s feelings with the due attention it needed. Is Katara a “prize” to be won by anyone? No. She isn’t. But in retrospect, with Katara ending up with Aang, the narrative feeds “Aang is a hero. Aang has the girl. Aang’s story goes on, and Katara keeps up Aang’s story after his death.” Not her own, but Aang’s. Yes, TLOK shows that Katara has moved to the South Pole and has taught students there but the focus of her presence is as Aang’s wife, the mother of Aang’s children, etc. We don’t see a single flashback of her, and moreover, we don’t get references of what she did with herself outside of Aang’s story. Toph’s significant other is never even shown and to be honest, whomever he was is irrelevant because Toph was the Chief of Police, and a famous Sifu in her own right.
Aang being with Katara forces Katara’s narrative to include him, which is not unusual or wrong, but is a bit imbalanced. Zutara basically is an idea that that concept can be subverted; it’s a “romance” [and I use the term in a loose, non-physical sense] of two hero’s journeys, rather than just one.
❝…You are stronger, and wiser, and freer than you have ever been. And now you’ve come to the crossroads of your destiny. It’s time for you to choose. It’s time for you to choose good. ❞
I can relate to Zuko. I too am at a crossroad in my life where major choices have to be made. Some that will change my life for the better, hopefully.
(Source: fearlesskorra)
Bahaha!
(Source: burninglikeafallenangel)
Aww snap!
LMAO! HONNNOOOORRRR!!!
You know what would make this 11100% times better? If GRUMPY CAT were present underneath Zuko’s picture!
(Source: koalaotters)