#dr. sanchez
Is José Francisco Morales Rivera de la Cruz related to Guillermo de la Cruz or will Harvey Guillén only play a de la Cruz🤔🤔
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First look at Harvey Guillén as Dr. Sanchez, a character who works for Susan Sarandon's nefarious Victoria Kord!
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ABOUT:
Dr. Sanchez tells Shawn and Jack that Chet died because his heart wasn't strong enough. He says he is very sorry.
Libby Harper was friends with Missy Robinson, first flirting with Cory, but then she distracted Shawn (via seduction) so Missy could allure Cory in The Last Temptation of Cory. She later appears in First Girlfriends Club to reprove Shawn with Dana Pruitt and Jennifer Bassett for leaving her.
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I wish we saw more of Rick's therapy appointments on screen, but the brilliance of the writing is that his behavioral changes help you infer what they talk about. He's definitely processing his old trauma--he tells Summer that she reminds him of Diane and chooses Morty over a fantasy version of the past.
Family relationships come up, too. He's more overtly worried about Morty's safety, keeps him out of the riskier adventures, has a new "touch my grandson and die" policy that scares alien mobsters, shows Summer affection and becomes more of a father/grandfather instead of a drunken maniac.
He's still Rick--rude, crabby, drunk, depressed, haunted--but he's starting to grow up and treat people like human beings. Dr. Wong isn't always the best therapist, but she's the best therapist for him.
It's the opposite of The Sopranos (which is the greatest show ever made, imo.) We see Tony's therapy visits, and he mostly stops having panic attacks and has a few breakthroughs, but he continues his downward slide until he's an irredeemable monster at the end.
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this part of rick's character design
reblog. you agree.
stills yoinked from @rickandmortyscreenshots
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"being good is hard."
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I loved episode 8.
Rick is totally an "acts of service" man. All he needs to see is someone's crying daughter and he becomes completely self-sacrificial.
In fact, a lot of Rick's moments where he does something good and selfless are when other people are not around.
Whether it's because he thinks being good is a form of weakness he can't let other people see, or because he feels he doesn't deserve to be praised for doing something good it's almost always a thing he does in secret. So being able to don Piss Master's disguise and project the good deeds onto him kind of rids him of all that baggage.
And Dr. Wong was right- Rick was doing good!
The problem is Rick is still trauma dumping his stuff onto Morty. He should have gone to Dr. Wong with the suicide note to discuss it but instead he's still treating Morty like a peer. He needs a friend his own age that isn't a member of his family to talk to.
It's really, really sad that Rick feels he can't be honest with his family though. And I get it. When you have a history of bad behaviour and a lifetime of people telling you everything you do is wrong, sometimes you're not sure if standing up for yourself is the right thing to do. Because you've fucked up so much, so maybe they're right?
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ABOUT:
The desk sergeant gives Shawn the phone for his one phone call after he gets arrested for riding Mr. Turner's motorcycle. He is also present when Chet decides to return to Philadelpha to care for Shawn.
Dr. Sanchez tells Shawn and Jack that Chet died because his heart wasn't strong enough. He says he is very sorry.
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Hey guys! Today is my 30th birthday so I decided to art journal based on my 30 favorite comfort characters. They’re not in particular order since I like them equally. Some I have stickers for and some I don’t so I print and glued some. If you couldn’t read from images, here’s my list…
1. Wander (Wander Over Yonder)
2. Sam (Green Eggs and Ham)
3. Jasmine (Aladdin)
4. Rapunzel (Tangled)
5. Shrike (Monkey Wrench)
6. Cybersix
7. Pomni (The Amazing Digital Circus)
8. Sawyer (Cats Don’t Dance)
9. 2-D (Gorillaz)
10. Mordecai (Regular Show)
11. Baymax (Big Hero 6)
12. Sisu (Raya and the Last Dragon)
13. Ian (Onward)
14. Nomad (Nomad of Nowhere
15. Molly (The Ghost and Molly McGee)
16. Skipp (Ramshackle)
17. Molly (Epithet Erased)
18. Kid (Kid Cosmic)
19. Sunset (My Little Pony)
20. Megara (Hercules)
21. Wonder Woman
22. Scorpia (She-Ra: Princess of Power)
23. Nicely (Anytown specials: Gift of Winter and Witch’s Night Out)
24. Lamput
25. Mickey Mouse
26. Pinocchio
27. Dr. Flug (Villainous)
28. Melinda (Unicorn: Warriors Eternal)
29. Kitty Katswell (T.U.F.F. Puppy)
30. Mao Mao (Mao Mao: Heroes of Pure Heart)
Shout out to indie creators/crew @gooseworx, @zeddyzi @neatotito @zeurelart @jelloapocalypse
(Thank you for creating such amazing characters that gave me comfort)
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Rick and Morty has got to be one of the best representations of therapy because we don't see most of Rick's appointments, but we see how much they're helping him. He's not just ignoring Dr. Wong or talking in circles. Every episode shows how much he's learned.
He's gentler with his grandkids, handles the Unity confrontation with more maturity, tells Summer that she reminds him of Diane, gets protective over Dr. Wong, tries to keep Morty out of his crazier adventures, backs down when he's about to go off on somebody, and, in the end, chooses Morty over dwelling on the past.
He also shows regular signs of depression, such as drinking, sleeping a lot and not leaving the house--which isn't healthy either, but it's better than dragging his grandson on lowkey-suicidal adventures across the universe.
And all this because he finally decided to get help.
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