Yeah, this pretty much covers it.
39. She's 16 years younger than Tenzin.
But look what popped up when I googled lol:
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16 years younger than Tenzin? Dude's getting some.
Yeah, this pretty much covers it.
39. She's 16 years younger than Tenzin.
But look what popped up when I googled lol:
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Well taking that big of a decision is a really legendary thing to do.
Even if you don't believe that as legendary, the way she was willing to sacrifice herself for the air nation is a story people in our world would certainly put in history books.
Man she started graying early like every other Asian woman I know.
You mean the one thing she had no thought of doing before the big bad basically forced her into the issue? some legend therebut you know what they say by history being written by the "winners"
Seriously though this what/what isn't canon stuff is pretty weird tbh
ED: I also thought about this under a fluidity of the English language perspective, in that the word 'canon' may be taking on a new meaning in the context of fans using it to describe fictional media content, but because the word is still used for its original definition and purpose by actual content creators and businesses, I think it's more appropriate for a new word or term to arise to describe what fans are feeling/believing.
No we just disagree. I agree with Kinvara that the original creators have a centralized authority that viewers cannot have. The origin of canon is from a particular religious and historical context. The early christian church hierarchy was determining which books would be official and which would not. It was not a question for individual members, it was a question for the leaders of the faith who were accepted as having the inherent authority to make those kinds of decisions. The authoritative bodies of other sects and denominations made different decisions about what to include in the biblical canon, but in no sense was the canon ever seen as a personal or individual decision. That was the whole point of the canon in the first place; to have an absolute authority decide what must be accepted as official to avoid continued personal disagreement/fighting. Otherwise every individual member would have their own unique list of what they considered canon and the church would have no way to police its own communal identity and internal consistency. Discourse and doctrine would be impossible.
In the content creator context, the question is a non-issue because there are no legitimate disputes over hierarchy or source of authority; there's nothing resembling the church structure and consumers are not part of some larger organizational body. There's a group of creators who are the only possible people with the inherent authority to make a decision regarding the canon. You could have the equivalent of a Catholic/Protestant split if co-creators split up after the first series and they both created spinoffs simultaneously. Then you might have two people with seemingly equal claims of authority making canonical claims that are inherently in opposition. But presumably they would both accept the canonicity of the original series which would make it part of the undisputed canon.
By the very definition of the word only Bryke and Co. can promulgate a canon. You can't have your own canon because it would imply you have an equal claim of authority to make those decisions. Different people don't have different canons, different authoritative bodies have different canons. The authority to decree is implicit to canon making; perhaps you object to the idea that anyone should have that kind of authority, but in that case you're more rejecting the very concept of canon itself. The term I usually hear thrown about is 'headcanon', which I think gets across the inherent contradiction between the official canon and an individual's own personal ideal/belief about what they wish the canon actually was.
ED: I also thought about this under a fluidity of the English language perspective, in that the word 'canon' may be taking on a new meaning in the context of fans using it to reflect their opinions concerning fictional media content, but because the word is still used for its original definition and purpose by actual content creators and businesses, I think it's more appropriate for a new word or term to arise to describe what fans are feeling/believing.
You mean the one thing she had no thought of doing before the big bad basically forced her into the issue? some legend therebut you know what they say by history being written by the "winners"
Seriously though this what/what isn't canon stuff is pretty weird tbh
For future reference have I ever said anything ban worthy?Just hold out for two more days, people. Then you can do whatever and I can ban the lot of you.
Can an earthbender levitate the rock that they're on and fly like Terra?
No Avatar has actually done anything out of their own progressive views. Almost all of them, with the exception of Wan, have reacted to forces, even Aang. Korra's decision of keeping the the spirit portals open was actually hers, not her Uncle's. Granted, it's easier to make a decision after someone already made it for you, but that was more proactive than a lot of Aang's decisions.
Hmm, I'd say that Aang being unshaking in his passive philosophy against Ozai is a pretty progressive view considering everyone and their mother expected him to "take out" Ozai.
For future reference have I ever said anything ban worthy?
Afterwards, (Amon) dying in a boat explosion was the best thing to ever happen to him.
Anyway, the source of our disagreement here is not the technical definition, but that Bryke has special authority on the subject that other viewers simply don't. My definition of canon is a model of something that details what happens vs what does not relative to a given person. For example, I have more than one story model for the avatar franchise, one that includes TLA and LoK, one that is just TLA, one that is TLA and LoK but altered.....but the one I take as the 'official one', just TLA, is the canon one for me. It is essentially what Bryke did when creating LoK, brain storming various ideas, accepting and rejecting various models until he found one that is right for him, which is presumably the one he presented to us. But it's just a story model, one of thousands. I do accept the concept of canon, but authority lies within each personal individual, not that there is a lack of authority.
And I just don't see the justification for Bryke's authority. There needs to be ownership of IP's for the sake of legal and economic reasons, but I don't see an inherent justification of Bryke owning a story model just because he's the one who put it together. Or, an alternate way of viewing it is if I acknowledge the Bryke's story as canon, but I don't really give it any power, and still subscribe to my idea of how events happened because I prefer them. In this way, canon has the definition you present, but it doesn't have any power to it. I take my version of events as preferences whether they're canon or not, which kind of makes the term meaningless in my eyes. The point is that I seek to have the best possible story model presented to me, and I don't really care much where it originates from.
I think it's only fair to point out we only ever got small glimpses into the lives of other avatars. Who knows what policies they enacted outside the scope of TLA that might have been progressive?
Considering how people complain about his reveal, I wasn't wrong. He went from "badass masked ninja dude" to "go see a psychologist."
Canon in it's historical context was conceived by the church to centralize their leadership. There, canon meant that those who claimed authority (the church) to say what it is and is not canon and was not left to individuals to choose. I read about up on this a long time ago, but before the king james version of the bible, people had to rely on the church for religious lessons, making it the only self proclaimed authority on the subject. People couldn't dispute this because any lessons they could dig up that would be rooted in historical evidence would be within the church's hands. If the church said that Jesus did X based on translations from the dead sea scrolls only they could read, what is the basis on which they could dispute that? Since the bible was put in the hands of the public, they started getting their own ideas of what has and has not happened. Given that it was a manipulative tactic to gain power, I feel that makes it's historical validity questionable at best. And, as you said, times change the english language and the term of canon has taken on new meanings, in addition to this being fiction. With the dead sea scrolls, it was a matter of translating an existing text. With fiction, there is no objective model that we absolutely have to follow.
Anyway, the source of our disagreement here is not the technical definition, but that Bryke has special authority on the subject that other viewers simply don't. My definition of canon is a model of something that details what happens vs what does not relative to a given person. For example, I have more than one story model for the avatar franchise, one that includes TLA and LoK, one that is just TLA, one that is TLA and LoK but altered.....but the one I take as the 'official one', just TLA, is the canon one for me. It is essentially what Bryke did when creating LoK, and the one he presented is presumably which story model he chose above others to use, but it's just his story model. I do accept the concept of canon, but authority lies within each personal individual, not that there is a lack of authority.
And I just don't see why Bryke should have authority exclusively if they are not the ones who can use the stories most efficiently. Or, an alternate way of viewing it is if I acknowledge the Bryke's story as canon, but I don't really give it any power, and still subscribe to my idea of how events happened because I prefer them. In this way, canon has the definition you present, but it doesn't have any power to it. I take my version of events as preferences whether they're canon or not, which kind of makes the term meaningless in my eyes. The point is that I seek to have the best possible story model presented to me, and I don't really care much where it originates from.
Bryke created both A:TLA and TLOK but you have thrown out TLOK simply because it doesn't meet your standards. You are treating A:TLA as if Bryke weren't the ones who created it in the first place. Many of the ideas present in TLOK are from when Bryke originally devised the Avatar world (IIRC the story of the first Avatar was written back during A:TLA Book 2). They have just never had the opportunity to present these concepts until now.
There is nothing inherently inferior about a noncanonical derivative work. Elementary and Sherlock are modern reimaginings of the original series by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle which in turn have their own individual canon independent of the parent story that they're based upon.
Your argument pretty much boils down to "I can write a better story than Bryke therefore I should have the authority to declare what is and isn't canon."
You're free to reimagine the story Bryke has created but you can't declare it canon as your idea/stories were created in direct reaction to Bryke's- by either accepting or rejecting the concepts/story they have presented.
Bryke created both A:TLA and TLOK but you have thrown out TLOK simply because it doesn't meet your standards. You are treating A:TLA as if Bryke weren't the ones who created it in the first place. Many of the ideas present in TLOK are from when Bryke originally devised the Avatar world (IIRC the story of the first Avatar was written back during A:TLA Book 2). They have just never had the opportunity to present these concepts until now.
There is nothing inherently inferior about a noncanonical derivative work. Elementary and Sherlock are modern reimaginings of the original series by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle which in turn have their own individual canon independent of the parent story that they're based upon.
Your argument pretty much boils down to "I can write a better story than Bryke therefore I should have the authority to declare what is and isn't canon."
You're free to reimagine the story Bryke has created but you can't declare it canon as your idea/stories were created in reaction to Bryke's- by either accepting or rejecting the concepts/story they have presented.
I agree I think.
We can get away with saying Dragonball GT isn't canon because Toriyama had nothing to do with it and there were a lot of inconsistencies. That's very different from what Korra is and has been.
Words of wisdom.If you accept it now it'll hurt less later. They can never hurt you if you know what they're up to.
Korra has been the most progressive character in the franchise.
Surely it's this newer sense of the word that's at issue, though, even if you want to say that really people should come up with a different word.
'Canon', as it's used among fans of some work of fiction, is about building on the conceit that in some sense the fictional story is real. People often interact with a work of fiction as if the author is reporting on events in some actual world. People take there to be a fact of the matter about the name of Harry Potter's red-haired friend, even though of course 'Ron Weasley' (or even 'Harry Potter') doesn't refer to any actual person.
When people like comics fans get into arguments about what is canon, they're not arguing about what any particular writer has said is official work. They're approaching the question as historians (historians with incredible biases, but still). What seems to happen is that the canon, in the old sense, gets treated as a bunch of potentially unreliable primary sources shedding light on the canonical fictional reality, in the new sense. The canon isn't a set of works but rather a consistent set of propositions that are to be teased out of the sometimes-inconsistent primary sources. The goal is not to say that "these are the official works" but to say that "this is how it actually happened", for this weird sense of 'actually'. You sometimes get arguments about the status of individual works, which can look like arguments about what's officially sanctioned, but this is about discrediting them as sources. More often works will be acknowledged as officially-sanctioned but their content will be recognized to have been superseded by some later retcon.
There are other possible approaches - other criteria for picking out the canonical story - but I don't think you can look at how fans actually use the term and say that debates about canonicity must be resolved by looking to what works are officially sanctioned. In many cases that's not even applicable.
No Avatar has actually done anything out of their own progressive views. Almost all of them, with the exception of Wan, have reacted to forces, even Aang. Korra's decision of keeping the the spirit portals open was actually hers, not her Uncle's. Granted, it's easier to make a decision after someone already made it for you, but that was more proactive than a lot of Aang's decisions.
Hmm, I'd say that Aang being unshaking in his passive philosophy against Ozai is a pretty progressive view considering everyone and their mother expected him to "take out" Ozai.
Inverse, maybe, but then again she is very much a character that things happen to rather than a character that does things for the world. But there is no arguing that things happened under her watch that changed the world, and despite my grievances with everything she was there.
I would still dispute the definition of canon as being 'technical', but I don't understand why the creator wouldn't be thought to have special authority. If Byrke for example, wrote a one-off comic strip where Zuko and Katara hook up, why wouldn't we defer to him when he says it wasn't intended to reflect something that actually happened in the universe and was just something that he posted to the internet for fun?
I completely understand and agree with the position that the author doesn't get special authority to proclaim the official interpretation of something in the content or canon that is otherwise ambiguous, but I think it's perfectly reasonable to say the creator has special authority in deciding what counts as officially created content and what does not.
Why should authority have anything to do with who can use stories most efficiently or most anything? Would it not be much simpler to defer to something like an intellectual property ownership model in terms of authority? Otherwise you could imagine a super-savant who has mastered all forms of media on a level eclipsing every other human. Presumably we would not say that person should have exclusive or superior authority over all content just because they can use it "best" relative to the rest of us.
If the use of 'canon' basically devolves into being a synonym for 'opinion', then it's not really helpful in practice. In fact, it just gets way more complicated. Should we discuss the show under the umbrella of our personal canons? Can our canons ignore certain episodes? Certain scenes or dialogue? Entire characters? It just seems entirely unnecessary and confusing, we need to have a common base from which to discuss content. Especially when the difference is basically "I think the TLA works better as a standalone series" as opposed to "My canon is the TLA as a standalone series".
Yeah, Veelk shouldn't put the word "canon" on a pedestal, so to say. Yeah, it would be awesome for a lot of the great fanfic and art to be what truly happens in the Avatar World, but it isn't.
End of story. If you don't like what the writers of the story wrote, or what they permit to be written about their world, then well... too bad. The truth is, a lot of canon material, in many franchises, suck. And it happens to the best of the world builders, from Tolkien to GRRM.
The more we get into this debate, the more I feel it is just semantics.Well that's why I mentioned the term "headcanon" as a term I think is already in use and more appropriate to situations where 'canon' might be used. Canon=/=internal consistency=/=authorial intent. And I don't think anything I said about 'canon' is incompatible with this description you offered about what fans are doing; an author dictated canon can only help this kind of process. If JK Rowling writes a short story that contradicts things that happened in the mainline series, it would only help fans struggling to figure how it can fit into the existing story if she mentions it was intended to be a creative exercise and not actually something that happened.
Won't jump too much in the is/isn't canon argument here but my personal opinion would be for it to exist so i can rake the authors over the coals for delivering such a lower tier story (shit tier if i'm feeling really annoyed) rather than ignoring it and giving them a pass of sorts.
Same thing is happening to Bungie with Destiny![]()
I'm sorry I got this conversation started
Iroh and Zuko betrayed the Fire Nation. He's always thought they were weak, but he didn't go and try to kill them over it until they betrayed the Fire Nation.He said as much about Iroh, and zuko when he turned on him, and they're not just fire nation but fire nation royalty. Even in that quote, he talks about it being 'his' world rather than the fire nations. I mean, fine, I guess you can say that he would hate the air nomads, but that hatred is rooted in their personal philosophies. He's a social darwinist, they're pacifists. He doesn't hate them because they're air nomads, but he hates things like compassion and that's what the air nomads promoted. I imagine he'd be more respectful of zaheers more violent methodology, even though he follows air nomad beliefs otherwise. So no, I don't think he thinks the fire nation is inherently better. His line of thinking is "The fire nation is the most powerful, therefore it is better" rather than "The Fire Nation is better, therefore it has the most power." which is the line of thinking a real racist would have.
I just don't see him caring about race that much. Racism is a lack of empathy for a specific race or ethnicity. Sociopaths don't need an excuse since they lack empathy for everyone. A racist sociopath is like a human murderer(that is, a murderer of humans). It's an unnecessary specification.
Inverse, maybe, but then again she is very much a character that things happen to rather than a character that does things for the world. But there is no arguing that things happened under her watch that changed the world, and despite my grievances with everything she was there.
Iroh and Zuko betrayed the Fire Nation. He's always thought they were weak, but he didn't go and try to kill them over it until they betrayed the Fire Nation.
He talks about the old world first, and then his new world.
I don't see Aang opening any spirit portals and restoring the airbender nation almost singlehandedly.
Bow down.
The Spirit World stuff and Vaatu/Raava didn't even exist back then so lol
Mike and Bryan actually wanted to introduce the spirits in AtLA, but I guess they realized that AS was convoluted enough as it was. And lore wise, they did exist in Aang's time, so Korra still has the advantage.
Well he's killing the other nations because he thinks theyre weak. He already has absolute power over the people in the Fire Nation, no one would question his decision if he did want Iroh and Zuko dead because they're weak, but he lets then live and only decides to kill them once theyve betrayed the Fire Nation. He doesnt think the air nomads should exist at all because theyre weak. Gaining power over the Earth Kingdom wouldn't work if you wipe out everyone. All you'd be left with is scorched earth and no one to have power over of that you didn't already have power over of.Why would he? His methodology is to gain power over things, not necessarily kill them. I imagine he'd be just as happy to enslave airbenders as kill them, were it possible. He sought to disempower Iroh and Zuko for being weak, and he did by taking over the throne and sending off his son on a journey that he thought would make him 'strong'.
His new world thing I always thought was when he'd rule the whole world rather than just the fire nation.
How is it her advantage? All of this stuff about allowing the worlds to join wasn't really made until Vaatu and Raava got put into the lore, and if they say "we actually wanted to put this in AtLA but didn't have time" I call bullshit they had more than plenty of episodes to at the least mention those two. Not to mention that Aang was off learning the elements and preparing to take down a super power Nazi army in a very specific date with what amounted to the rebel army. Korra didn't even explicitly do it herself, she fucked up and it happened and then it was all "maybe this isn't a bad thing" and by pure luck airbenders started to come back.
If you're talking spirits in general that's fine, we knew there was such a thing as being spiritual so it isn't impossible to understand that they wanted to expand on it.
Korra has been the most progressive character in the franchise.
I'm sorry I got this conversation started
Well he's killing the other nations because he thinks theyre weak. He already has absolute power over the people in the Fire Nation, no one would question his decision if he did want Iroh and Zuko dead because they're weak, but he lets then live and only decides to kill them once theyve betrayed the Fire Nation. He doesnt think the air nomads should exist at all because theyre weak. Gaining power over the Earth Kingdom wouldn't work if you wipe out everyone. All you'd be left with is scorched earth and no one to have power over of that you didn't already have power over of.
Why is that ban worthy? I'm really confused. Did something change, where people are getting banned for saying things? Confused.
It's not a matter of which was more capable or had the best chance of being progressive, dear sir, it's a matter of which one did more progressive actions.
Korra did more progressive actions.
By pure luck was penicillin and teflon discovered, among countless other progressive entities. Can't hold that against Korra that she didn't know airbenders would be reborn due to her actions, but you can credit her for her agency in the matter. She meant to lead the world into a new spiritual age, and she did.
The thread went a tad crazy with lewd stuff today and Gotchaye had to come in and fix it ha. He removed quite a few posts.
Like wat. As I said in my edited post, Amon really was destroyed by that point. He wasn't worth keeping around (like Zaheer). So I agree that killing him (or just getting him off the show for good), was probably the best thing for that character by that point.
He's a sociopath, not a homocidal maniac.
Well taking that big of a decision is a really legendary thing to do.
Even if you don't believe that as legendary, the way she was willing to sacrifice herself for the air nation is a story people in our world would certainly put in history books.
It was a joke.
Glad we cleared that up.