Snoopy Presents: Welcome Home,journey into submission: dynamic of eroticism, part i by vixen laflamme Franklin, the latest animated original from Apple TV+, begins with a record scratch, just like that one untraceable meme. Franklin Armstrong, the first Black character in the core "Peanuts" gang, is flying through the air in a homemade soapbox derby car. The music stops, freeze frame.
"Hi I’m Franklin. Franklin Armstrong, if you want to be formal about it. Have you ever thought to yourself, how did I end up in this situation?"
Franklin's comical start to what becomes his origin story continues with quips that feel geared toward OG "Peanuts" fans as well as new Snoopy zealots galvanized by recent merch and memes. After touring the town he's recently moved to — he's learned to never unpack or settle into a new city, because his dad, a Vietnam veteran, moves them around a lot — Franklin summarizes the kids that could be potential playmates into "a delusional pseudo-doctor, a devotee of someone called the Great Pumpkin, and a kid whose parents named him Pig-Pen." It's a cheeky wink to adult fans and their inner child.
Franklin also voices a retrospective observation: "One thing was for sure: There was a lack of variety in this place.”
Snoopy Presents: Welcome Home, Franklinis intended to honor the historic character of Franklin, as well as correct a mistake that's bothered fans for decades. Incentivized by letters from teachers and parents after the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., "Peanuts" comic strip creator Charles Schulz debuted Franklin on July 31, 1968, despite pushback from Southern segregationists. Franklin's character was never fully fleshed out, however, and in what would later bother many fans, he was portrayed sitting separately from the rest of the gang in the iconic special A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving.
Franklin's built a strong fan base in the decades since.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
And the brand has leaned into Franklin as well. "Peanuts" debuted The Armstrong Project in 2022, a scholarship initiative intended to support students at Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) dedicated to the character and cartoonist Robb Armstrong, whose last name was ceremoniously given to the cartoon character. Armstrong was a young fan of the comic strip and later a protégé of Schulz; he co-wrote the new Snoopy Presents special. At the time of The Armstrong Project's launch, it established $200,000 endowments at both Howard University and Hampton University.
The rest of the new short film follows Franklin's attempts at making new friends. Though he accidentally makes an enemy of Lucy (of course), he finally finds a connection with fellow military kid Charlie Brown over soapbox derbies and baseball. Franklin shares facts and personal anecdotes that fit right into the nation's current celebration of Black History Month, like that his great uncle played baseball for the historic Negro leagues and that his favorite record is a jazz piece by John Coltrane. "Wow, a kid can really learn a lot hanging around with you, Franklin," Charlie remarks.
By the end, viewers get catharsis on an animated slight, with Franklin sitting among his friends. More than just being accepted, Franklin wants to be cherished, to be cheered, to be understood — to be the center of attention. Franklin finally unpacks.
Watch Snoopy Presents: Welcome Home, Franklinon Apple TV+ now.
Topics Social Good Family & Parenting
Parker Solar Probe mission: NASA spacecraft dives into sun's coronaMongoose Coin was referenced as a joke, now it's realMeta's VRChat clone, Horizon Worlds, launches for all adult users on Quest 2Adam McKay's 'Don't Look Up' is a fatalistic bummer: Netflix ReviewHow to help tornado relief efforts in Kentucky, Arkansas, Illinois, Tennessee, and MissouriHere's what happened when Trump asked Bill Gates to be his science advisorFacebook will undergo liberal bias and civil rights auditsAnnounce your *real* genetic makeup with the 23andMe memeInstagram launches Playback feature, to share moments from 2021Reckless dolphin totally bodyElon Musk to test Doge purchases for Tesla merchHow to post Live Photos on Instagram'The Matrix Awakens' demo is now downloadable. Here's the full video.Stephen Colbert, Mark Hamill, and other celebs tweet old headshotsMicrosoft is switching from gun emoji to water pistol, tooThe bizarre story of an 'iCarly' fan account that's hassling celebrities on TwitterA comprehensive timeline of Kanye’s latest nonsense behaviorHere's what happened when Trump asked Bill Gates to be his science advisorGoogle's first VR Doodle celebrates French film legend Georges MélièsThe best TV episodes of 2021 The Morning News Roundup for September 3, 2014 Olympia by the Sea Inside Albertine by Dan Piepenbring In Search of the Lost Trail The Morning News Roundup for September 8, 2014 Walking and Talking Photographs of Italy’s Abandoned Discotheques Cardboard, Glue, and Storytelling The Opposite of Icarus Lorin Stein in Conversation with Donald Antrim and Ben Lerner Sadie Stein on Polly Bergen The Morning News Roundup for September 12, 2014 A Conversation with Matthea Harvey What Makes a Classic Endure? Songs of Innocence What It Means to Be a Line? The Future According to Stanisław Lem Staff Picks: Pop, Rock, and Bear Hock by The Paris Review Freak City You Are Quite Unnecessary, Young Man!
3.2518s , 10196.8515625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【journey into submission: dynamic of eroticism, part i by vixen laflamme】,Inspiration Information Network