Richard is gay for Asbel but values Asbel’s happiness more than his own and never verbally tells him. Asbel has depression and is a suppressed gay where he’s convinced himself he’s straight. Let the dude live his dream with fontech. Post game Luke either loses all of his memories or gains all of Asch’s and I don’t know which one to pick. I’m open to the idea of Yuri being trans Brave Vesperia becomes one of the most reliable guilds and takes on a similar reputation that Fairy Tail does. Also because he wanted to heal any wounds Yuri would have the next time he saw him. Flynn learned First Aid when he became lieutenant to lift some work off the shoulders of the female knights in his squad. He trusts Flynn as one of the few knights he can vent to and mocks the people on the council in very subtle ways in conversations/meetings with them. Ioder has a brilliant mind and is actually rather devious in the empire. Flynn is bi and Estelle is pan, and I think Yuri and Rita being gay is a largely accepted head-canon in the fandom. Just… It’s all silly, the entire situation is that cute, awkward, “you want to do it but the universe says not until you’re in the perfect setting” kind of thing. But both of them want to take that step! The whole gang eventually starts making plans for getting Lloyd to propose but every time it’s interrupted by something completely unexpected in the most silly way possible (like Colette’s clumsiness) until Lloyd and Colette make the decision themselves without the help of the others. Lloyd and Colette both get awkward around each other when marriage is mentioned only because they’re worried about moving too fast for the other. So post true ending Emil would die before Marta. By the previous logic Emil has a body that’s two years older than his mentality which actually takes a couple years off his life. But this also means she lives longer than she would have and would be one of the last members of the group still alive when the human members start to die off. Meaning she goes through puberty like a normal teen even though she’s actually in her 30′s. Presea’s body starts growing again but from the age it was at. Both Colette and Zelos have depression, but Colette doesn’t know she has it and brushes it off as “not important enough.” Let’s see how many I have for the localized games – Oh definitely! I have gained a lot of head-canons after learning what it means.
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We’d sit there and idolize all of them and wanted to be just like them. I had a great love for Buck Jones, Gene Autry, Roy Rogers, Ken Maynard, John Wayne and all the great stars that did Westerns in those days. If we had a nickel, we’d buy a Baby Ruth or a Mounds, and that would be lunch or early dinner, because we’d stay and watch two shows. Everybody would exit out of the side instead of going out the front. After the first running of the movie and the serials, they would open the side doors. We didn’t have any money, but theaters had exit doors. Who was your favorite ballplayer and what movies did you like as a boy? The Washington Senators invited me to spring training in 1955 in Orlando, Fla., and the first moment I put on the uniform, I sat by my locker, turned my back on everyone and just shed tears. Number two was, without a doubt, putting on the major league uniform. When I received that bonus, the first thing I did was buy our family a brand-new four-door Buick-whitewall tires, radio and heater. I was underage but signed to a pro contract with a $6,000 bonus. What are some favorite memories from your days playing pro baseball? So I never really got a chance to share with the audience what I eventually was going to contribute to the character and the story. Custer became a very bad name, unfortunately, so we were off after 17 shows. I could make a wonderful marriage to this character and do something exciting and interesting and show to the American audience what kind of man and leader he was.īut passed away after the seventh show, died of a heart attack on the golf course, and we were knocked off the air because of political correctness. He was my favorite because he was a visionary and a militarist, a deep thinker, had a high element of a spiritual side. I had read a great deal about him and had tremendous respect and love for native Americans. What was it like to play Crazy Horse on the 1967 TV series Custer? I made notes about his character, but I never got a chance to play him. He began to get a little too aggressive, which led to his demise. He was a great horseman, and he and his brother were a team, and his gang was a family. I wanted to make him a colorful character. He was a colorful character, very deceptive and knew the territory and despised the railroad. What real-life Westerner would you most like to have played on-screen? Dante recently took time to speak with Wild West about his various careers. 1 (2021), co-authored by wife Mary Jane Dante and such novels and novellas as the post–Civil War Six Rode Home ( 2018) the Western sequel Winterhawk’s Land (2017) and the redemption tale Macabe’s Journey (2022), all from BearManor Media. Dante has since turned to writing both nonfiction and fiction, including the autobiography Michael Dante: From Hollywood to Michael Dante Way (2013) My Classic Radio Interviews With the Stars: Vol. From 1994–2008 he hosted the radio series The Michael Dante Classic Celebrity Talk Show, out of Palm Beach, Calif. Nursing a shoulder injury, he took a screen test arranged by big band legend Tommy Dorsey and left pro ball. Before moving to Hollywood, he played professional baseball in the Boston Braves and Washington Senators organizations. Born Ralph Vitti (Dante picked his professional name after signing with Warner Bros.) in Stamford, Conn., in 1931, he started acting in fourth grade and majored in drama at the University of Miami. Western film buffs would recall him best from such movies as Westbound (1959), with Randolph Scott Apache Rifles (1964) and Arizona Raiders (1965), both with Audie Murphy and as the title Blackfoot chief in Winterhawk (1975). Michael Dante, 91, appeared in nearly 200 big- and small-screen productions. Broomstick Cowboy - Bobby Goldsboro Tabbed by JerseyRock!!! ENJOY!!! Dream on little Broomstick Cowboy Of rocket ships and Mars Of sunny days and Willie Mays And chocolate candy bars Dream on little Broomstick Cowboy Dream while you can of big green frogs and puppy dogs And castles in the sand For all too soon you'll waken Your toys will all be gone Your broomstick horse will ride away To find another home And you'll have grown into a man With cowboys of your own And then you'll have to go to war To try and save your home And then you'll have to learn to hate You'll have to learn to kill It's always been that way my son I guess it always will No broomstick gun they'll hand you No longer you'll pretend You'll call some man your enemy You used to call him friend And when the rockets thunder You'll hear your brothers cry And through it all you'll wonder Just why they had to die So dream on little Broomstick Cowboy Dream while you can For soon you'll be a dreadful thing My son, you'll be a man.This Actor from the Golden Age of Westerns Now Writes About His Career, History and the West Close Nathaniel Rateliff and the | photo by Dylan Eddinger | dylaneddingerphoto.squarespace. Check out photos from the set in the gallery below. The band is no stranger to WXPN or World Cafe, and we definitely haven’t seen the last of them. Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats perform Babe I Know in Vancouver, BC, as part of their 2019 tour. This was one of my most excitable acts of NonCOMM, and Nathaniel Rateliff & the Night Sweats endlessly expressed their appreciation for radio right back to us. Then they ended on not “S.O.B.,” but rather the latest single, “Mama,” and the crowd loved it all the same. While the crowd anxiously waited for the last album’s hit, “S.O.B.,” Rateliff sensed the anticipation and laughed about how the band had tried to make the track more “radio appropriate,” but in the end, he still has the humor of a child. He’s your typical funny guy, making a face or cracking a joke whenever he can. Whether you like his sound or not, his attitude is infectious. It was hard not to smile and dance along when “You Worry Me,” the track I was most excited for, was finally played. Rateliff is a very multidimensional artist, but on top of everything else, he’s fun. There were elements of a blues ballad in “Babe I Know,” 1960’s swing beats in “Say It Louder,” and a more relaxed indie sound with “Be There,” especially when the band cut out to simply clap out the rhythm for the final verse. Rateliff has a lot of layers to his music, and country isn’t the only defining genre. The band – a seven-piece consisting of brass, percussion, and electric string sections – took the stage before Rateliff to lead into “Shoe Boot,” a jumpy, quintessential country rock jam. They’re due back in Philadelphia on June 6th to play The Skyline Stage at The Mann Center. Fresh off the hype from their March album Tearing at the Seams, World Cafe’s Talia Schlanger introduced the band by saying that while she doesn’t like to play favorites, she is the most excited for their act. : Tearing at the Seams (Deluxe Edition) : Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats. Second to last on night three’s downstairs stage, they delivered all new songs for a joyous thirty minute set. It goes without saying that all of Denver-based Nathaniel Rateliff & the Night Sweats‘ most recent releases have all been radio hits. Nathaniel Rateliff and the | photo by Dylan Eddinger | |