Buffy: “The hardest thing in this world is to live in it. Be brave. Live.”
This is the most iconic Buffy quote - "The hardest thing in this world is to live in it. Be brave. Live."
"Strong is fighting."
Buffy: "Strong is fighting. It's hard and it's painful, and it's every day. It's what we have to do. And we can do it together."
The doctor explains to her parents that she's been catatonic from schizophrenia for all of the past six years, except for the brief period of lucidity which Buffy dimly remembers as her time in "heaven," and that her life as the Slayer has been an elaborate improvised hallucination she has constructed for herself in ...
Buffy Summers was an illusory version of the original Buffy, stuck in a world where she was instead in a mental hospital as a patient with schizophrenia.
Season nine continues, after issue five's cliffhanger revelation that the Slayer was pregnant, with Buffy deciding what to do about the unwanted pregnancy – the result of a drunken night at a party. Eventually she decides to have an abortion. "I want to do something.
During their marriage Whedon cheated on his then wife, Kai Cole, on numerous occasions including with colleagues on the set of Buffy. Whedon has been accused of humiliating a writer for the hit-show and allegations of misconduct were made by Buffy actress Charisma Carpenter who played the character Cordelia.
Why "Earshot" Was Banned From Airing On The WB. On April 20, 1999, a mass shooting occurred in Littleton, Colorado at Columbine High School.
After a visit from her ex-boyfriend Riley, Buffy broke off their relationship, and told him that she couldn't love him and was only using him to "feel alive." Buffy admitted that while she did have feelings for Spike, she did not love him, and told him that their relationship couldn't have been real to him because ...
Angel told Buffy this at the last minute. He confessed he loved her completely, but they couldn't be together when it cost her life and the people they still needed to help against the evil forces.
'Poker Face's Natasha Lyonne says she was first pick to play Buffy the Vampire Slayer - but turned it down. Lyonne went on to slay in plenty of other meaty roles, though!
The big moments are gonna come, you can't help that. It's what you do afterwards that counts. That's when you find out who you are.
Buffy Summers : The spirit guide told me, that death is my gift. I guess that means a Slayer really is just a killer, after all. Rupert Giles : I think you're wrong about that.
Food, water, shelter… these are just some of the things we need in order to survive. In addition to the essentials however, there are plenty of items that make life more enjoyable.
Tooth enamel is the first line of defense your teeth have against plaque and cavities. It is the white, visible part of the tooth and it is also the hardest part of the human body.
Buffy the Last Vampire Slayer Teases Spike As The Hero's True Love.
Buffy – a young woman whose mystical powers allowed her to battle evil forces – dated Angel during the show's first three series, before she ultimately chose vampire and initial villain Spike (James Marsters) to be her partner.
Spike has a punk look which strongly resembles English rock musician Billy Idol; humorously, Buffy claims that Billy Idol in fact stole his look from Spike.
Season seven episode "Conversations with Dead People" is the only Buffy episode in which Xander does not appear. In the episode "Dirty Girls", Xander's left eye is gouged out by the evil preacher Caleb (Nathan Fillion), and he begins wearing an eyepatch.
The Master (Season 1)
The Master was Buffy's first-ever Big Bad (a season-long antagonist), and as evil villains go, he wasn't that bad. He was one of the oldest vampires in the show's history, and most other vampires seemed to fear and/or respect him.
The series premiered on March 10, 1997, on The WB and concluded on May 20, 2003, on UPN. The series narrative follows Buffy Summers (played by Sarah Michelle Gellar), the latest in a line of young women known as "Vampire Slayers", or simply "Slayers".
Season 6
Season 6 is the darkest Buffy ever got, with a heavy addiction subplot and an attempted assault scene that I still can't get through. But it does have the zaniest villains, known as “The Trio,” two emotionally stunted nerds led by a cold–blooded misogynist who gets scarier the older I get.
Snyder (along with Police Chief Bob Munroe) turns out to be one of the many people Mayor Richard Wilkins had put in place to cover up supernatural activities in Sunnydale ("School Hard", "I Only Have Eyes For You"), and he was hostile towards Buffy because Wilkins had so ordered him.
Twenty-five years on, Buffy is much more than disgraced show-runners (more on which later) or even the resurgence of its distinctive nineties fashion. This is a show which utterly redefined the way we view female-led drama and foregrounded a feminism which was remarkably nuanced and subtly game-changing.