Last Stand at Thunder River November 5, 2016 Info Here-----Practice Day September 24th Monthly Match October 1st and 2nd 2016 Info Here-----Check the Events page for. Western Renegades - CASHBACK - You. Tube. Dance : Cashback. Choreographer : Bruno Moggia. Music : Austin Cunningham - Whose gonna bail out the workin' man. Style : 3. 2 counts- Tag - 2 walls / Novice. Presented for the first catalan country style contest in Cavaillon, France, in 2. Visit now our website : http: //www. Joe: Renegades (Western Animation). Some call them outlaws. Some call them heroes. But these determined men and women think of themselves only as ordinary Joes. And this is their story. Joe: Renegades is an Animated Series airing on The Hub. The show lasted for 2. November 2. 01. 0 to July, 2. Renegades changes things up by having the team being wanted fugitives for destroying a Cobra Industries pharmaceutical plant. The truth of the matter is that counter- intel agent Shana . They found bio- weapon research going on, but were discovered by Cobra agents. Western Spirit / WRJCA MALE Winter Program Update - Practice Match Squads. Wyoming Renegades is a 1954 Western film directed by Fred F. Sears and starring Phil Carey, Gene Evans and Martha Hyer. The film features Butch Cassidy as the leader of the Hole in the Wall Gang. The film was shot from June 21. Directed by Victor Fleming. With Warner Baxter, Myrna Loy, Noah Beery, Gregory Gaye. Four one-for-all and all-for-one privates in the French Foreign Legion are all in jail for disorderly conduct, but they break out and rejoin. Why drive out of the way to play? Did you know that Riverside Renegades is the only paintball field located in the city of Pittsburgh? We are just across the river from the Waterfront. Last of the Renegades (German: Winnetou – 2. Teil and also known as Winnetou: Last of the Renegades) is a 1964 German Western film directed by Harald Reinl and starring Lex Barker. The ensuing conflict resulted in the destruction of the plant and the evidence O'Hara was looking for. They are now on the run from both the government and Cobra operatives, all the while trying to expose Cobra Industries for the terrorist organization it truly is, with a stolen heavily armored Cobra Industries truck as their only home. They're pursued by Duke's old rival, Dashiell Fairborne, aka . Along the way they gather additional allies to combat Cobra and help people in need of their skills. Jeff Kline serves as the show's executive producer, with Hank Gilroy and Marty Isenberg, who previously worked on Hasbro properties Beast Machines and Transformers Animated. It now has a character sheet. Accidental Innuendo: In- Universe the Sheriff in 'Dreadnoks Rising' gets a doozy. Despite this, there's apparently no overcoming being allergic to a particular poison. Adaptation Distillation: The series draws from the original mythos, along with parts of the recent G. I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra film, using the movie's version of Ripcord, a younger Duke, and a look for Doctor Mindbender and Cobra Commander based upon the movies'. Adaptation Name Change: While otherwise based on his original incarnation (being an American soldier and Roadblock's cousin), Heavy Duty has . Falcon) had his last name changed to . Of a sort, as Stalker had . He is never caught off guard and when he vows vengence for a defeat he MEANS it. A Father to His Men: Destro is fiercely protective of his company and its employees, as is Duke to anyone who serves under him. All Just a Dream: If the Creative Closing Credits of the original Hub broadcast of the finale is to be believed, the entire series was RAH Duke's dream. Might as well be if the exec- mandated . Scarlet is shown putting it on in the first ep and later survives a hit because it was under her coat. A- Team Firing: Usually averted, since the main enemies tend to be Bio Vipers, who the Joes are free to shoot with impunity. The trope is lampshaded in . None of them hits a goddamn thing, before Flint yells at them that they need to get used to the new weapons. Awesome, but Impractical: Played with. The Coyote's gadgets have certainly saved the group on multiple occasions, but the maintenance of such a complicated piece of machinery for fugitives on the run can be problematic at times, even with a mechanic on hand. Badass Biker: Zartan and the Dreadnoks, of course. And now Snake Eyes. Badass Longcoat: The Baroness. The episode Rage gives Snake- Eyes one. He still has it in the next episode, and even continues to wear it on and off in future episodes. Bash Brothers: The three primary heirs of the Arashikage Dynasty, Snake Eyes, Storm Shadow and Jinx, all fight against Destro's mechs together. Made especially signficant due to Storm Shadows recent Heel. Every attempt fails utterly. The Big Guy: Roadblock. He looks to be about a foot taller than everyone else and is built like a tank. His younger cousin, Heavy Duty shares the family resemblance. Beware the Nice Ones: In an interesting take on this trope, both Tunnel Rat and Roadblock end up part of an experiment by M. A. R. S. Industries to incite the rage impulse in the brain in order to control mechs. The problem the experimenters were encountering was that all test subjects were getting exhausted and too unfocused to be efficient operators. Tunnel Rat did as well as anyone else but Roadblock proved to be able to keep somewhat cognitive and focused while under it's influence, yet still forced into an Unstoppable Rage. The implications is that despite his generally jovial nature Roadblock has the most experience with keeping his anger in check, and everyone else is grateful for that. When Flint is interrogating Roadblock he reminds the latter of his criminal past as Former Teen Rebel, something that greatly annoys Roadblock. His cousin sees him as the family screw- up and isn't surprised that he went AWOL after blowing up the COBRA building, implying that he may not have been that good at controlling his temper at one point. Blob Monster: The COBRA Bio- Vipers, which are giant amorphous piles of plant matter created by Mindbender. Subverted; it turns out he was Not Quite Dead, but we don't learn this until twenty episodes later, long after the finality of his . Scarlett occasionally calls him out on it. Interestingly enough, when the episode's goal is to gather some sort of evidence to clear the team's good name, their roles totally switch and Duke does the calling- out. Clean Cut: Ninja people, dear reader. Clear My Name: Being combined with The A- Team, this one's a given. Snake- Eyes as well, who was thought to have killed the Hard Master; his name is eventually cleared. Clothing Damage: Tends to happen to Snake Eyes, though never enough that we can see his face (though at one point a bit of his mouth was visible). Predictably, his ninja costume is always fully repaired the next episode, if not the very next scene. Firefly suffers some noticeable burns to his uniform after Snake Eyes sends his bomb back at him. Comic- Book Movies Don't Use Codenames: General Hawk is only referred to by his real name, Clayton Abernathy. Likewise, a flashback to Duke's past has Tripwire merely referred to by his real name, Tormod Skoog. Archibald Monev doesn't use the codename Doctor Venom. Otherwise, this is averted in three ways. The first being many characters including Duke himself, Flint, Lady Jaye, Heavy Duty, Snake Eyes, Stalker (shown in the same flashback as Tripwire, though modified to Stalker One), Shipwreck, Snow Job, Frost Bite, Wild Bill, Lift- Ticket, Red Star, Steeler, Jinx, and most of Cobra's other agents already had theirs before the series. The second is many other characters including Scarlett, Roadblock, Tunnel Rat, Ripcord, Destro, Breaker, Airtight, and Barbecue gain theirs over the course of the series. Thirdly, a few characters who don't outside of Tripwire and General Hawk aren't in the military: While this wouldn't affect Carl Greer as . Falcon, but is the brother of Duke like Falcon's animated counterpart. Heavy Duty is an American soldier and Roadbock's cousin like his original incarnation, but his real name is that of his film counterpart's, Hershel Dalton (as opposed to Lamont A. Morris). Conspicuous CG: The bio vipers and some vehicle scenes occasionally drift into this. Continuity Cameo: The show sticks in various other Joes and the occasional COBRA member as people the main characters encounter during their travels. Whether these cameo characters are addressed in- story by their real names or codenames depends on the situation. Carl Greer (Doc) also appears as the one treating the veterans at the local hospital. Part 2 also features Tormod Skoog (Tripwire) as the man Duke saves from a landmine in one flashback and Lonzo Wilkinson (Stalker) as the commanding officer in another. Farley Seward (Frostbite) appears in flashback as one of their friends who died in an avalanche. Snake- Eyes also encounters Timber and eventually leaves him with Moore. Kurt Schnurr (Airtight) and Dr. Archibald Monev (Doctor Venom) are the ones working on the Anaconda Strain. Schnurr is deliberately infected and eventually gets his trademark suit to prevent him from spreading it. Each episode works as its own story, but each episode often makes a reference to where they were or what they did in previous episodes. Cool Car: Major Bludd's Mad Max inspired ride and the Joe's commandeered van, the Coyote. Both also count as a Weaponized Car. Major Bludd's car is essentially the Thunder Machine from the RAH line (a Dreadnok vehicle). Which itself was Mad Max inspired. Cool vs. Awesome: Most of the show, but the shining example is when Snake Eyes, Jinx, and Storm Shadow put their differences aside to fight against a platoon of Cobra Mini- Mecha. It's so cool, you might die from watching it. Cult: Led by Tomax and Xamot. Curb- Stomp Battle: Iron Grenadiers with Powered Armor give the Joes one of these. Thenthe Mecha- Vipers show up. Darker and Edgier: While not even on the level of Resolute, this is a far cry from the kiddie- fied fare of the '8. Deadpan Snarker: Tunnel Rat. Duke gets a couple of good moments of this in . Their third appearance plays it straight, although justified by a design flaw that made them both smarter but lost their regeneration abilities after a headshot. Reverted when they are upgraded into a more deadly Mech- Viper. Tunnel Rat and Roadblock wind up in his clutches, with Roadblock providing the ideal brainwave pattern. Does This Remind You of Anything?: The opening Cobra Industries promo has Adam De. Cobray . Joe characters, but for The A- Team. Roadblock shares B. A.'s role as the Mr. Fixit and on occasion, the Scary Black Man (he's usually a Gentle Giant), while Flint and Lady Jaye fill the roles of Colonel Lynch and Captain Sosa respectively. Mindbender is a lot like The Headmaster, minus the leetspeak. Tunnel Rat is a human Rat Trap. Embarrassing Nickname: Heavy Duty got his moniker not from his tremendous stature or his numerous tours of service, but from his grandmother changing his diapers as a child. Evolving Credits: Many. Episode 1 and 2 had title cardd for Duke, Scarlett, Tunnel Rat, Roadblock and Ripcord. After Ripcord's death, he is replaced with Flint and Lady Jaye's title cards. It changes again when Ripcord turn out to be alive, leaving out Flint and Lady Jaye's title cards.
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