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Post by paxjax123 on Jul 18, 2012 14:52:53 GMT
A child, really.
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Post by goldenknots on Jul 18, 2012 14:57:14 GMT
Also, Coyote has horns in panel 1. I missed that. Wow. :)
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Post by Marnath on Jul 18, 2012 15:07:52 GMT
Haha, wow. That's not what I expected at all! ;D
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Post by blahzor on Jul 18, 2012 16:48:34 GMT
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Post by jombra on Jul 18, 2012 18:10:18 GMT
A lot of pages make me think this, but coyote scenes especially: This would be hell to animate.
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Post by Marnath on Jul 18, 2012 18:40:28 GMT
This page features the return of Coyote's handpaws. They also featured in the giving of the Giggleblade. He used them to pluck out the tooth and put the stone in to replace it.
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Post by grahamf on Jul 18, 2012 19:18:33 GMT
I wonder if Coyote is actually depressed, but he doesn't want to admit to that?
He could be putting on a happy mask, but he really wants a story or something to cheer him up?
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Post by TBeholder on Jul 18, 2012 19:35:57 GMT
Phew, so he was just kidding around. They did look like they play it by some rules (though not script)... Annie should totally cave here, just look at him Annie! And we all want to hear the big secret anyway... But he's obviously still playing. ;D So now she have to agree... but without making it look like pleading works all that easy. Ah, some hard training here.
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Necropaxx
Full Member
The natural choice for a shoulder to cry on.
Posts: 135
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Post by Necropaxx on Jul 18, 2012 19:42:12 GMT
Is Coyote part buffalo?
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Post by Laaxrun on Jul 18, 2012 19:49:41 GMT
Is Coyote part buffalo? Of course, and if you'd been paying attention you would know that ALL trickster gods are part buffalo!
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Post by aaroncampbell on Jul 18, 2012 20:07:12 GMT
Is Coyote part buffalo? Of course, and if you'd been paying attention you would know that ALL trickster gods are part buffalo! That's a load of bull!
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Post by SpitefulFox on Jul 18, 2012 20:11:19 GMT
I think for maximum impact and for great justice, Coyote's voice needs to be heard as John de Lancie's. Please tell me I'm not the only one who does.... Nope. He's still Mark Hamill to me.
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Post by curtis on Jul 18, 2012 21:33:19 GMT
I think for maximum impact and for great justice, Coyote's voice needs to be heard as John de Lancie's. Please tell me I'm not the only one who does.... I know it's tempting to make de Lancie do the voice of every chaotic neutral trickster god in existence, but I imagine something higher pitched and even more flippant in this case. I tend to read him with a voice in my head rather, but not exactly, like Him from Power Puff Girls. Friendlier, and without so many "otherworldly" effects, on the high bits but just as nasty when it pitches down on the rare times he says something vicious. www.youtube.com/watch?v=1B-ANZLRKM0&feature=related
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Rymdljus
Full Member
Beautiful songbird
Posts: 207
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Post by Rymdljus on Jul 18, 2012 22:14:09 GMT
This comic is seriously to wonderful for words.
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Post by FlyingMug on Jul 18, 2012 22:26:25 GMT
Of course, and if you'd been paying attention you would know that ALL trickster gods are part buffalo! That's a load of bull! Antimony is really brave for not hoofing it. Also, henceforth, I shall call him "Cowote".
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Post by Lightice on Jul 19, 2012 0:19:38 GMT
Couldn't resist. Angry!Coyote face appropriated. Is Coyote part buffalo? Isn't it bison, these days?
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Post by warrl on Jul 19, 2012 2:08:32 GMT
Couldn't resist. Angry!Coyote face appropriated. Is Coyote part buffalo? Isn't it bison, these days? Coyote failed to buffalo Annie, and she's not bison this either.
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Post by GK Sierra on Jul 19, 2012 5:35:49 GMT
Couldn't resist. Angry!Coyote face appropriated. Isn't it bison, these days? Coyote failed to buffalo Annie, and she's not bison this either. I see what you did there...
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pasko
Full Member
Objection!
Posts: 224
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Post by pasko on Jul 19, 2012 10:05:37 GMT
Coyote failed to buffalo Annie, and she's not bison this either. I see what you did there... Help for the non native english speakers? Buffalo == bluff ? Bison?
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faek
New Member
14
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Post by faek on Jul 19, 2012 11:03:38 GMT
I took it to mean "Buying This" , as in accepting the bluff.
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Post by FlyingMug on Jul 20, 2012 0:24:12 GMT
I see what you did there... Help for the non native english speakers? Buffalo == bluff ? Bison? Buffalo is also a verb, meaning to intimidate or confuse. After reading that, you might think that "buffalo" can be substituted for any word in the English language. This is in fact the case and we regularly buffalo Buffalo buffalo.
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Post by Mezzaphor on Jul 20, 2012 2:00:50 GMT
I think for maximum impact and for great justice, Coyote's voice needs to be heard as John de Lancie's. Please tell me I'm not the only one who does.... Nope. He's still Mark Hamill to me. Coyote is voiced by some currently-unknown VA. His performance as Coyote impossible to forget, and impossible to mistake for any other famous chaotic trickster characters.
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Post by arf on Jul 20, 2012 6:26:52 GMT
After reading that, you might think that "buffalo" can be substituted for any word in the English language. This is in fact the case and we regularly buffalo Buffalo buffalo. Ah Yes! 'Buffalo': the verbal organic substitute of choice for 'rhubarb'. You will find your rhubarb flourishes with occasional dressing of buffalo, and will soon provide you with huge quantities of lorem ipsum dolor sit amet,...
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Post by arf on Jul 20, 2012 6:36:28 GMT
...Of course, it will be interesting to see what Ysengrin is making of all this. (Quietly sidling off to change his treesuit?)
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Post by warrl on Jul 20, 2012 8:20:07 GMT
I see what you did there... Help for the non native english speakers? Buffalo == bluff ? Bison? Sorry, wordplay often doesn't translate well... "Buffalo" has been fairly well covered, although I'd put a strong emphasis on deception - such as intimidating when one is unable or unwilling to deliver on the threat. As in this case. "Bison" was purely a pun on "buyin'", as in believing, accepting, etc. And it fit because the American animals commonly called "buffalo" are actually two species (plus hybrids) of bison, NOT buffalo. (There's a third species of bison in Europe; the two species of buffalo are in Africa and Asia.) Oh, and scattered among the various US states there are fifteen cities named Buffalo - some of them in states where bison are not uncommon, and some of them large enough to support a zoo. So if you successfully bluff some bison from a herd in/near one of those cities, then you have buffaloed Buffalo buffalo.
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pasko
Full Member
Objection!
Posts: 224
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Post by pasko on Jul 20, 2012 17:32:28 GMT
this is gonna give me the headache of the month. Anyway thanks for the explanations
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