Kate Gregson (
vanillajello) wrote in
fandomhighdorms2009-08-18 01:27 pm
Entry tags:
Third Floor Common Room, Tuesday Evening
As promised, on Tuesday evening Kate came to the common room, armed with a soda bottle, chocolate, some fruit that she still had from the luau, and a dvd copy of meta forThe Breakfast Club.
She had chosen the movie after careful consideration from a vast array of high school movies. It seemed to be the best one when it came to showcasing the stereotypes she had lived with at her old school. And it had a young Judd Nelson, which didn’t hurt, either.
Kate set up the dvd, grabbed the remote, and sat down on the sofa with the best view of the TV. Then she munched idly on pieces of exotic fruit while she waited for Leto.
[OOC: Kate is here to watch the movie with Leto, but she’s completely botherable, and the post is of course open for all your common room evening needs!]
She had chosen the movie after careful consideration from a vast array of high school movies. It seemed to be the best one when it came to showcasing the stereotypes she had lived with at her old school. And it had a young Judd Nelson, which didn’t hurt, either.
Kate set up the dvd, grabbed the remote, and sat down on the sofa with the best view of the TV. Then she munched idly on pieces of exotic fruit while she waited for Leto.
[OOC: Kate is here to watch the movie with Leto, but she’s completely botherable, and the post is of course open for all your common room evening needs!]

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He brought a bow of dried fruit from his room - luckily Arthur hadn't eaten them all - and sat down on the sofa next to Kate.
"You realise my expectations are now quite high?" he said, smiling.
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She showed him the dvd cover. "This is what we'll be watching. Five kids, who all represent different high school stereotypes, spend a Saturday in detention together."
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"So, okay. First we have the princess and the jock," she said, poking at the two corresponding characters on the cover. "They're the popular people, so they pretty much rule over the school. Her family is rich, so she's influential, and he's an athlete, which for some reason makes him popular too." She shook her head and laughed. "I've never understood how that works, but that's just the way it is. It's better to be good at sports than to be good at academic things."
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She pointed at the last two characters. "And then there are the two misfits, the criminal, and the recluse. The criminal’s a troublemaker, always rebelling against something and trying to start fights. And the recluse, or the freak, is almost deliberately weird, which makes others stay away from her."
She smirked a little. "And this is me being brief. There's a lot more I could say."
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Welcome to teenage culture, Leto.
He nodded at her description. "And which category would you place yourself in?"
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She didn't really have to think about her category. "I'm the freak. Only not as deliberate in weirding people out as the one in the film."
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She pressed play on the remote and took a piece of chocolate. "These are my favourite opening credits ever," she noted. Kind of weird, considering they consisted of yellow text on a black background. "It's because of the song," she explained with a little smile, popping the chocolate into her mouth.
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Leto nodded, listening to the song with a look of concentration on his face. He was probably taking this a little too seriously.
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She glanced at him, and chuckled quietly.
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The David Bowie quote was on the screen by now:
...And these children
that you spit on
as they try to change their worlds
are immune to your consultations.
They're quite aware
of what they're going through...
"Just like I'm not really sure why that quote sounds so good to me," she added, gesturing at the screen.
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"They don't want it to happen, but they're worried it will."
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He glanced at Kate, then turned back to the TV.
"What is it about their parents that they fear they might become?"
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"The brain's parents want him to study even harder, the jock's dad wants him to be tough, the criminal has a violent dad, the princess thinks her parents only use her to get back at each other, and the recluse thinks her parents don't care about her," she listed. "I can understand why they wouldn't want to grow up to be like that."
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