Femslash February art! Korra/Asami Hogwarts AU. idek
i think a hogwarts au is a natural fit for a pairing that LOVES SPORTS so much, omg slytherin asami rooting for gryffindor in quiddich and giving no fucks when her housemates glare at her about it, HER GIRLF IS TEAM CAPTAIN OK, -varlandgear
always reblog because best crossover in history
This. Always.
76,000 notes
Yesterday, I came across a post regarding a plausible cast for a live action film version of the cartoon series the Legend of Korra (LOK). Once again, I was disappoint to see that all the actors suggested to play the roles were white.
What was disturbing is that once again, skilled actors who are POC, were blatantly overlooked. To counter this, I found another site where a dedicated fan actually took the time to properly highlight POC actors who could accurately portray these beloved LOK characters. To view the details click the link below.Fan Casting the Legend of Korra
There are many POC actors who are extremely gifted. Stop over looking these actors and falling back on unimaginative whitewashing.
#Lok #Legend of Korra #REMEMBER THIS YOU GUYS #REMEMBER HOW EXCITED WE WERE TO SEE MORE OF THHIIIISSSSSS?! #SO BITTER #that romance really killed it for me #and the nonbenderxbender plot #and just…SIGGGGH #WE ROOTED FOR YOU #GOING THROUGH THESE MAKES ME TEARBEND
WE COULD HAVE HAD IT ALL!!!!
ROLLING IN THE DEEP!!!
YOU HAD MY HEART INSIDE YOUR HAND AND YOU PLAYED IT TO THE BEAT!!!!!!!
This is like the only fight she ever really won on her own. Goodness.
Remember, Korra can only win if the enemies do not have names. All you have to do is say, “My name is X from Y place” and you are now Korra-proof.
This is one of the few fights in the show that did not have Korra faintbending at some point. It’s sad to see the main character in a show that is named after her get this type of treatment.
#i miss the days when i actually believed this show would be the best
(Source: chiblocked)
Remember all those equalists Korra and Tarrlok killed?
I’ve been analyzing all the chi-blocker scenes in LoK so I can make the scenes in my fic as accurate as possible.
Found a little fridge horror in the sixth episode, “And The Winner Is…”
This chi-blocker was sharing a cable up to the airship with Lt. But then, everything changed when the Avatar attacked.
Lt. noticed Korra approaching first, probably gaining an extra second to brace himself for the fall. Both Equalists are surrounded by flames and release the cable in surprise.
Lt. falls first. The chi-blocker is still on the platform, though he isn’t holding onto anything. Both of his hands are in front of his face in an attempt to protect himself from Korra.
Which doesn’t work. Korra firebends again, which is completely unnecessary considering she could have knocked the guy down with a simple kick at this point. He falls from the airship to the arena roof, most likely sustaining severe burns.
We cut back to Korra as she swings to the left, slipping a little as she gets her footing on the platform. And when she swings to the right…
We see the chi-blocker sprawled flat on his back. A distinct crunching sound can be heard when he makes contact with the roof. He doesn’t move.
Lin grabs another chi-blocker and slams him onto the roof. Two more join the fight and knock Korra back onto the roof as well, landing beside her. There are now five Equalists on the roof: four chi-blockers and the Lieutenant.
Only four Equalists are seen participating in the fight.
So I feel safe assuming that Korra flat-out killed that man. All so she could follow a ridiculous plan to get to Amon, which failed spectacularly. Even Lin couldn’t get anything accomplished because she had to drop everything to save Korra’s ass.
“You’re…You’re just oppressing yourself!”
As much as I love this show, this really bothered me.
Like the benders clearly had a lot of power over non benders, and a lot of the benders were using that power to oppress non benders.
But the people who try to fix that are just crazy, bender-hating evil people.
:|
This part of Legend of Korra was not addressed with a complete understanding or awareness of how systemic oppression functions. There were chances to do so that were missed and parts that were awkward…
In the first scene, Korra is telling off the Equalist protestor. This character is small and unnamed but still kind of significant in that he lays out the Equalist position more clearly than any character in the first few episodes. Other than Amon, this guy is the show’s mouthpiece for exposition about the Equalist movement and what it stands for.
How he is presented kind of bums me out. From the way he talks to Korra he is clearly a sneering and arrogant person. The audience is not supposed to like or identify with him (and it’s difficult to like him, I’m sure he is a joy to be around.) “Social justice” (apparently a horrific word on tumblr) movements are not immune from having people who are unpleasant. In fact, usually these folks are the ones people with privilege point out when they want to invalidate an entire movement. Underneath the bombastic rhetoric protestor dude may be making some valid points, but Korra has the privilege to use this guy’s “unpleasantness” as a reason to dismiss him. (Trying to word this as carefully as I can. Tone argument is messed, but people buy it.)
The audience isn’t shown a “reasonable” Equalists mouthpiece, just this dude and Amon (who turned out to be just another bender appropriating nonbender struggles for his own power, ouch….and yet, oddly appropriate given how easily this can happen with real life -isms.)
There’s pretty much just this protestor. The official website (Welcome to Republic City game) describes him as someone who wants to be at “the center of attention.” Paraphrasing off of Avatar wiki because I don’t have Flash, but he is described a someone who gets attention by “challenging the opinion of the majority.” He pursues his “agenda” full time as a graduate student.” It notes that his parents were nonbenders and liked Avatar Aang and the protestor is contrary to his parent’s opinion. Why? Not, apparently, because of injustice—just attention.
That’s just a WEIRD way of framing this character. Like he’s just someone who is speaking out for attention and not like the presumably thousands of nonbenders who are terrorized by triads or denied representation or recovering from a bender-on-bender war that lasted three generations. (Meanwhile, lots of benders can become the center of attention just by nature of being benders.) This idea that “graduate school” is like the natural place for this guy to fester his beliefs which are just about “going against the majority” and “being a rebel.” (Or whatever people in real life who try to invalidate ethnic studies or women’s studies or LGBT studies or disability studies say about students in those grad departments/fields.)
[To add an additional meta-layer of awkward: The protestor is played by a Latino voice actor, so in this scene (on a meta level), a white woman is telling a Latino guy “you’re oppressing yourselves.” To add another layer of weird, Latino and Asian actors play the more prominent nonbenders (Asami, Mr. Sato, this protestor dude) except for maybe Gommu, while white actors play the more prominent heroes (except for Dante Basco’s one episode Iroh).]
I mean, perhaps the show is set up so we are supposed to empathize with this not-very-lovable protestor to see his point and see a balanced view of the issues (much more easily accomplished by showing some Equalists moderates or someone who wasn’t portrayed as evil or bug-eyed jerk, but sure. Gommu’s quasi-colorblind, kinda cliched, “poverty brings us together” “coexist” stuff is included but never addresses how influences from greater society were resolved in that community.) Perhaps I am supposed to be distraught when Korra roughens the protestor up, even though I get the feeling the show kind of wants me to root for Korra for standing up to him.
Perhaps the show is challenging the audience to consider what Korra is saying or challenging to audience to recognize that Korra is unaware of something big about inequality. If it is, good for it, but even if it is challenging the audience it is really ambiguous and it certainly isn’t challenging Korra in-story. If Korra had more self awareness of her privilege as the freaking Avatar and more empathy towards this nonbender inequality issue as a character, I think fans would be less critical of her. I also think if the show was more firm in presenting some self awareness of systemic inequality (the way it did for feminism and albelism in the original series) people would be less critical of the show.
tl;dr I am thrilled we are having this conversation as a fandom but I wish it had occurred in-show, too!
Bold mine.
(Source: asamifuckinsato)
“You’re…You’re just oppressing yourself!”
this cartoon is fucking awful
#This is what happens when a couple of white guys write about oppression
/endless stream of tears
I can’t even rewatch Korra anymore
like I’ve tried but it’s literally impossible for me to make it through an episode without getting frustrated and having to turn it off
this shit is bad














