tracking: liikelightning

YOU KNOW LEGENDS NEVER DIE
( featuring muses from pretty in pink, the breakfast club, back to the future,
daria, kim possible, ghostbusters, one tree hill, and star wars. )

YOU KNOW LEGENDS NEVER DIE
( featuring muses from pretty in pink, the breakfast club, back to the future,
daria, kim possible, ghostbusters, one tree hill, and star wars. )
- “Does that answer your question?”
- “When you grow up, your heart dies.”
- “Good God, are we gonna end up like our parents?”
- “I think it’s fine for a guy to be a virgin.”
- “I can’t believe you can’t get me out of this…”
- “I think your old man and my old man should get together and go bowling.”
- “You shouldn’t have done that.”
- “What did your parents do to you?”
- “They ignore me.”
- “I don’t think either of them give a shit about me.”
- “They just use me to get back at each other.”
- “It’s not funny!”
- “Is this the first time or the last time we have to do this?”
- “You figure out a way to study.”
- “I’ll make it up to you.”
- “Ditching class to go shopping doesn’t make you a defective.”
- “Guys screw around. Nothing wrong with that.”
- “Mom already reemed me, alright?”
- “You’re a big coward!”
- “I’ve seen her dehydrated. It’s pretty gross.”
- “It’ll be anarchy!”
- “I’m in the math club…”
- “What are you babbling about?”
- “You wouldn’t know anything about it.”
- “You never competed in your whole life!”
- “You don’t have any goals.”
- “Everyone just shhhhh!”
- “Hey, keep your fuckin’ hands off me!”
- “Alright, what about your family?”
- “You wanna come over sometime?”
- “It’s all a part of your image, I don’t believe a word of it.”
- “We’re dead!”
- “Don’t you want to hear my excuse?”
- “What did you want to be when you were young?”
- “Who do you like better, your mom or your dad?”
- “They think I’m a big fuckin’ joke…”
- “I’ve done just about everything there is except for a few things that are illegal.”
- “Come on, answer the question!”
- “I’m a compulsive liar.”
- “Neither of you is any better than the other one.”
- “Everybody can do something.”
- “Did your Daddy buy you those?”
- “So on Monday… what happens?”
- “I’m telling the truth, that makes me a bitch?”
- “You think I don’t understand pressure?”
- “Everything’s ruined for me.”
- “Killing yourself is not an option!”
- “Watch yourself, young lady.”
- “Wake up!”
- “Hey, you grounded tonight?”
- “It’s like, any minute, divorce.”
- “You’re just feeling sorry for yourself.”
- “You never answered the question.”
- “See you next Saturday…”

“You ever notice how Mrs. Citizen Brown One never has a hair out of place? It’s like it’s a wig that she has GLUED ON or something.” Her tone is conversational as she finishes off the last of the can of paint in her hand – enough to finish her slipshod message on the side of the old diner: CITIZEN BROWN IS WATCHING YOU. A little literary and still, painfully accurate.
“ANYWAY. I need to go for a supply run while this dries. You in?”

tfw the boy ur crushing on turns out to be a mutant cat person who wants to consume ur life force


@tannen pls don’t eat my child but also
i’m all for violence/angst just putting that out there as a psa to everyone
Hey there! My name is Blythe, I’m a 23 year old college student studying magazine journalism, and if you’re reading this I love you already. Right off the bat, I want to say that while I adore playing Jennifer Parker, I also run a few other roleplay blogs that call my attention – most often, it’s my Kim Possible blog. In addition to this, I am a full-time college student and my job as a resident takes up 28 hours a week (though it’s honestly more of a 24/7 kind of thing). I also work as an editor for a student-run magazine and run a film review blog for the same magazine. As such, I don’t always have a lot of time to devote to roleplay, but I do try my best to stay on top of things. All I ask is your patience.
Please note that this blog is MUTUALS ONLY. This goes for roleplaying, ask memes, shipping, etc. Please respect that.
THE MAIN POINTS
ON ICONS
MISCELLANEOUS

nicknames. jen
age. seventeen
birthdate. october 29, 1968
hometown. hill valley, california
face claim. claudia wells (main), elisabeth schue (secondary)
postives. polite, optimistic, caring
negatives. stubborn, easily overwhelmed, nosy
goals. attend college (preferably dartmouth), become a published author
fears. loss/abandonment without closure
hobbies. driving, cheerleading, writing
father. daniel ‘danny’ parker, jr.
mother. jane hart-parker (deceased)
Danny Parker, Jr. and Jane Hart met in college in the late 1950s while Danny was studying business and Jane was studying history. Despite not immediately hitting it off, the two grew close over their sophomore year and had been dating in a serious relationship by the time they had graduated in 1963. They were soon engaged and had gotten married in March of 1965. Shortly after, Jane had gotten hired at a nearby museum and Danny began working as a sales associate under a local retailer. Their family eventually expanded three years later––on October 29th, 1968 they welcomed their one and only child, Jennifer Jane Parker, into the world.
Jennifer was a fairly quiet child while growing up, content with reading or playing by herself in her room, though she wasn’t shy by any means. She got along well with her classmates once she was sent off to school, and maintained a close relationship with her mother while growing up. Danny would take Jennifer to school in the mornings, and Jane would be there every day by three to pick her up and take her home, where they would spend their time reading, listening to records, and dancing along to the music.
Jane first started showing signs of leukemia in December of 1975. Two weeks before Christmas, she had fallen ill with a fever and had been prone to waking up sweating in the middle of the night even after her fever had passed. Within less than two months, her appetite had noticeably shrunken and she had been coming home from the museum early due to feeling drowsy and tired. After much pushing from Danny, she went to her doctor who, after some routine testing, determined it was some sort of winter ‘bug’ and prescribed some antibiotics.
She didn’t return to the doctor again until June, when her lymph nodes had swelled and were tender to the touch. She assumed it was a minor infection. While the doctor had thought so at first, he referred her to a specialist just to be safe. A few standard tests were run, which lead to more tests, until there was a definitive answer to what was causing Jane Parker so much grief: Leukemia.
The news had struck a crushing blow to the Parker family, and despite it only being stage two, any treatment sought out was a temporary fix. Jane would be better for a few weeks, maybe a little over a month, before she was going back to the specialists and the hospital and the treatment. Soon enough, it seemed that Jennifer was spending more time after school at the hospital than she was at home.
By November 1978, the cancer had claimed Jane’s life.
Grief counselors that had met with the Parker family had recommended additional counseling for the family. While Danny had been reluctant at first, his mother, Betty Parker, had convinced him that it would be good––good for him, and good for Jennifer.
After her mother’s death, Jennifer began spending more time with her grandparents. When her grandpa, Danny Parker Sr., had passed away in the early spring of 1980, she grew very close with her grandmother, and began visiting her at least once a week. Betty Parker taught her granddaughter how to knit, sew, and cook during their visits.
While Jennifer and her father were never as close as she had once been with her mother, they still look out for each other. Jennifer helps out around the house with the cleaning and upkeep of things, often times organizing bills and taking care of the grocery shopping with her grandmother so that it’s less things weighing down on Danny at the end of the day.
v. 1985
First movie, set in 1985 both pre and post-time travel. Jennifer is a student at Hill Valley High. She maintains an average life for a normal 80’s teenager–her time is split between school, cheerleading practice, her boyfriend (Marty McFly), and maintaining the house while her father works.
v. lost in time
In a twist of events, Jennifer is the one who met up with Doc at the Twin Pines Mall parking lot on October 26th, 1985 and subsequently ended up going back to November 5th, 1955 after the Libyans showed up and killed Doc. Now she’s trying to make sense of everything, get Doc on her side, and figure out a way back home to 1985 before it’s too late – all while ensuring that she doesn’t alter history in the process. (Check out this handy dandy timeline for more detail!)
v. 1955
Instead of staying the night at her grandma’s on October 25, Jennifer went home with Marty to have dinner with the McFly family and work on homework before the ‘big weekend.’ Both fell asleep and woke up to Doc’s phone call–as such, Jennifer went along to Twin Pines Mall for Doc’s experiment, witnessed Doc getting shot by the Libyans, and promptly jumped in the DeLorean with Marty. Now both teenagers are stuck 30 years in the past, trying to lure Lorraine’s attention away from her future son and toward one meek George McFly.
v. 2015
Currently follows the events of the second film, but is subject to change.
v. biffhorrific
Follows the alternate 1985 timeline from the second film where Biff is rich, corrupt, and rules over Hill Valley with an iron fist.
v. 1885
Coming soon!
v. citizen brown
Due to mishaps involving one Edna Strickland in 1931, the 1986 Marty returns to is one similar to George Orwell’s fictional society in 1984 – Doc is no longer a scientist, but a politician known as ‘First Citizen Brown’ who has turned Hill Valley into a police state. Everything has changed, including Jennifer – going from your typical girl-next-door, she’s adopted a punk rock persona and is all about vandalism, debauchery, and anarchy.
v. back in time
Jennifer travels from various timelines for any variety of reasons (still under construction).
v. babysitting blues
Chris Parker is Jennifer’s Chicago-born and raised cousin. Okay, not Chicago Chicago, but a suburb of Chicago. When they stand next to each other, people tend to assume they’re fraternal twins. It used to get annoying; now they just roll with it.