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Kirche is the daughter of a Germanian military family, but her carefree attitude became a nuisance to them and was forced to marry an "old geezer" (bin her own words) as a way to restrain her. She hates it when other girls get more attention from males, especially if its Louise herself, throwing a bit of a jealous tantrum which Tabitha usually mutes her voice without realizing. She cares for others around her and their well being, especially Tabitha. She would mostly tease and look down on Louise, commenting on her childish body and that she struggled with even basic magic in the early years in the Academy.īut beneath her seductive and carefree attitude, she has a caring side. She loves to be center attention, especially from boys and men alike.
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Kirche is vain, seductive, manipulative, boastful, and prideful. She wears her shirt collar up and has the shirt opened, nearly exposing her seductive curves and breasts. She wears Mary Jane shoes, knee socks, a black skirt, a white shirt with a black raiment.
NOBEL FONT AUTODESK FLAME SERIES
Kirche wears many outfits in the series but is mostly in the Magic Academy school uniform, which she has made alterations to. She flaunts her good looks everywhere she goes. She always wears makeup and dark red lipstick. She has a brown complexion, long red hair, and a colossal bust, possibly one of the biggest in the series coming 2nd to Tiffa. People can enjoy villains, and not need a constant reminder that these are bad people, because they’re not really people, even if we see aspects of themselves in us.Kirche is a tall, ravishing, seductive girl in her late teens.
NOBEL FONT AUTODESK FLAME MOVIE
You can try to make your movie or TV show or novel realistic, but it will never be a perfect simulacrum of what actually happens on a day to day basis in the world.
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Maybe it’s not that we don’t care-although, personally, I don’t-it’s that we recognize that being bad, whether at times or all the time, is an innate part of humanity.Īt the same time, there’s also a point to be made that these are fictional characters, and the core tenet of fiction is that none of it is really real. We know characters like the Succession protagonists are bad people if you come from the perspective that humanity as a whole is problematic and typically ill intention-driven, you might even sympathize with this band of corporate, extremely privileged characters. A duo of academics from Northwestern University even published research that people are drawn to villains and antagonists because it reflects their darker selves. I’m not alone, though: there have been articles on sites like Penguin Teen of all places that advocate for villain lovers. There is a reason these characters are considered “villains”. I love that a good segment of most audiences kind of hate that. They cause problems, they trouble the system they’re rarely on the side of things progressing in a story in a way that the audience would like to see. I historically like antagonists on TV shows they’re often more interesting than the heroes to me. Which brings me to the title of this column, in particular the words “We don’t care.” If I could take out billboards across the country, or just ads on Twitter, I would put that in all caps, in that weird flame font. Still, there’s a certain group in Succession fandom, or every fandom, who has to remind us that we’re not supposed to root for these bad people. It’s also an HBO show, and in a way, it reminds me of Game of Thrones: powerful, corrupt family tries to keep their hold on considerable power and influence, minus the dragons? I’m thinking the audience is probably pretty different, but I think what draws people in is the innate drive to see conflict between Bad People who do grave misdeeds. There are pairings with plenty of chemistry, homoerotic or otherwise-you can’t make a Tomlette without cracking some Greggs-but it’s a show about the inner workings of a twisted corporation, admittedly told extremely stylishly. None of the characters are good they’re all Bad People, with those two words capitalized for emphasis. It’s a great, phenomenal show, but it doesn’t necessarily have all the ingredients that make a fandom…or at least, not the ingredients that made past fandoms. Possibly the weirdest fandom to come out of the past three to four years is the Succession fandom.