this post was submitted on 22 Feb 2025
80 points (98.8% liked)
Avatar: The Last Airbender
1452 readers
2 users here now
A community for all things related to Avatar: The Last Airbender, Legend of Korra, cartoon or live action TV, movies, comics, novels, etc.
Rules:
- Be kind, regardless of nation or tribe
- Credit artist(s) when possible
- Post relevant content
- No spoilers in title, mark spoilers
- No spamming or trolling
- Only relevant posts
- Let people like what they like
- Follow all Lemmy.world rules
Please report any rule violations.
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
No I'm the same, I can't stop thinking about the Avatar world, especially since the Seven Haven leaks. Going a bit meta, the Avatar and their cyclical nature/struggle is such a beautiful storytelling device.
Oh my gosh... I try not to go off on this anymore. But I do sometimes replace "Korra" with "Zuko" in whatever was said, or quote Bryke's response.
I thought he did a great job, especially with the Kyoshi novels! And yes, the Avatar picking up their past lives' mistakes is so poignant and cool. I'd dispute your assertion and argue that Aang "failed" later in life too, allowing things like corruption and anti-bender sentiment in Republic City to fester, tolerating the awful Earth Kingdom monarchy, letting long dissent within the White Lotus and their role fester into the Red Lotus and so on. He left a political mess, too, and his dogmatic pacifism was ultimately to blame. But this was largely implied background/subtext in LoK, never explicitly spelled out.
...Still, I do agree in the context of ATLA. Being in the unusual position of watching LoK first, still reeling from her recovery, I found it a bit odd that Aang never had to deal with that trauma, and didn't really have to compromise his pacifism in the end.
This is a weird thing... Last time I was on Reddit, they did idealize the Gaang. Flaws and mistakes were not really that. This is one of the reasons I left /r/thelastairbender behind.
True...
But I've also watched a few Viacom investor slides, and what makes me weary is that they are A: treating Avatar like a kids franchise, bucketing it with TMT, Spongebob and so on in presentations, and B: explicitly pushing sprawling, heavily monetized franchises.It makes me think they are going to push the writers towards a younger audience (with the twin post-Korra Avatars reportedly being 9 already raising my eyebrow. And with this, comes "family friendly" scrutiny, especially in the current political environment.
Oops. Here I am, rambling too.
But yeah, I'm excited too. Honestly I'm going to get a lot out of my system just writing fanon fantasies down before the premiere :/