Age: 21
Avatar: The Last Airbender, known as Avatar: The Legend of Aang in some regions, is an American animated television series produced by Nickelodeon Animation Studios. It was co-created by Michael Dante DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko, with Aaron Ehasz as head writer. It aired on Nickelodeon for three seasons, from February 2005 to July 2008.[2] Avatar is set in an Asiatic-like world in which some people can manipulate one of the four elements—water, earth, fire, or air—with telekinetic variants of the Chinese martial arts known as "bending". The only individual who can bend all four elements, the "Avatar", is responsible for maintaining harmony between the world's four nations, and serves as the bridge between the spirit world and the physical world. The show is presented in a style that combines anime with American cartoons, and relies on the imagery of mainly East Asian culture, with some South Asian, New World, and Inuit and Sireniki influences. The series is centered around the journey of 12-year-old Aang, the current Avatar and last survivor of his nation, the Air Nomads, along with his friends Katara, Sokka, and later Toph, as they strive to end the Fire Nation's war against the other nations of the world. It also follows the story of Zuko—the exiled prince of the Fire Nation, seeking to restore his lost honor by capturing Aang, accompanied by his wise uncle Iroh—and later, that of his ambitious sister Azula. Avatar: The Last Airbender was commercially successful and acclaimed by audiences and critics, who lauded its characters, cultural references, art direction, soundtrack, humor, and themes. These include concepts rarely touched on in youth entertainment, such as war, genocide, imperialism, totalitarianism, and free choice.[3] It won five Annie Awards, a Genesis Award, a Primetime Emmy Award, a Kids' Choice Award, and a Peabody Award. Avatar has often been regarded as one of the greatest (animated) television series of all time. The extended Avatar franchise includes an ongoing comics series, a prequel novel series, an animated sequel series, and a live-action film, as well as an upcoming live-action remake of the show produced for Netflix.[4] The complete series was released on Blu-ray in June 2018 in honor of the 10th anniversary of its finale,[5] and was made available to stream on Netflix in the United States in May 2020,[6] on Paramount+ in June 2020,[7] and on Prime Video in January 2021.[8]
Avatar: The Last Airbender

Art Style Influences (Time-Period Accurate)
for Art Style Influences (Time-Period Accurate) in Skylanders Adventures
Suggested by tildeheart

On an ordinary day, a boy named Jacob "Jake" Becker finds a strange stone pedestal on his way home from school, and upon touching it, it activates and whisks him away to a magical world beyond his imagination! Upon his arrival, Jake is found and taken in by an elderly mage named Master Eon, who tells him that he is the portal master prophesied to save both this world and his own from evil, and begins his training as he tries to find a way back home ║ Remake of a fancast for a hypothetical Skylanders animated series based on the scrapped animated show pitched to Moonscoop/Splash Entertainment in 2011. Professional voice actors only, no celebrities (unless they have done a significant amount of voiceover work and not just stuff for big budget projects), don't cast white VAs as characters of color (and please read the descriptions to see what castings I want for them), there are separate roles for 2000s/early 2010s time period accurate casting and modern-day casting so please sort your castings accordingly. Casting deceased/retired VAs in time-period accurate roles is fine provided that they were alive and active in the industry during that time period. For further story info see here: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1rW-kdnxPpoFzFNzbBX7h-gms2SERw3f3gtqd6_4aRL4/





