Off-screen, it appears he has developed a feud with Noah, who has taken to calling him "the anti-me". In Haute Camp-ture, Justin has little involvement during his stay at Playa Des Losers other than taking a dive into the pool. Justin fails to win immunity for his team and was voted off in this episode because Heather convinced her alliance (Beth and Lindsay), Owen (whom she bribed with cake), and Izzy to vote him off. In the talent show, he proceeds to pose on stage and pour water on himself. In Not Quite Famous, Justin is unanimously selected by his team to compete in the talent show after extinguishing a fire, then getting a letting a drop of water fall on his chest which sizzles from his hotness. He is later caught and Chris disqualified him from the challenge. However, Justin did show some underhandedness in The Big Sleep, where he cheats by painting on his closed eyelids to feign staying awake. Justin barely speaks during his time on the island, leaving his character largely a mystery though he always remains irresistible to all the female campers, especially Katie and Sadie. However, the sharks too are affected by his looks and rather than attacking, carry him onto land. He does not land in the safe zone and is approached by some sharks. In Not So Happy Campers - Part 2, Justin joins his team in the first challenge and jumps off the thousand foot cliff into the lake. He ends up being placed on the Screaming Gophers. Justin arrives with the rest of the cast in Not So Happy Campers - Part 1, where his arrival makes more than half the girls, along with Owen, gush over his looks. Chris informs Justin that he was only chosen to be a Total Drama Island contestant because of his looks, which Justin has no problem with. Despite his faults, Justin isn't necessarily always mean-spirited and tends to be friendly and social towards most of the other contestants. Because of his vanity, he often overreacts to even the smallest injury to his face, instantly believing himself to be hideous, and jumping to wild conclusions, such as having to join the circus due to looking like a "freak." Justin is also perfectly aware of how much he relies on his looks and isn't anything without them, knowing he lacks both the intelligence and the talent to make it in the world. Deep down, however, it appears Justin is insecure and not as confident as he often acts. He is also a bit lazy and consistently finds excuses to get out of doing challenges, believing them to be bad for his looks. He is manipulative, using his looks to get something he wants or to get out of something he doesn't want to do on many occasions. When he returns for season two, a new side of his personality is seen. Throughout the first season, Justin speaks very little, and so not much is known about him at first. Justin is extremely vain and often can be found looking at himself in his mirror. The second he is introduced as a contestant, Chris admits to everyone that the only reason Justin was selected to be on Total Drama was because of his looks, a fact which he is perfectly fine with knowing. He is so handsome that he can make everyone around, whether they are male or female, human or animal, stop dead in their tracks at the mere sight of him. Justin is a supermodel of incredible beauty. He was seen with the original contestants on a yacht in the first episode of Total Drama: Revenge of the Island. He did not compete on Total Drama World Tour, but appeared in the peanut gallery on the Total Drama World Tour Aftermath. He was also a cast member on Total Drama Action, where he was the main antagonist for the first half of the season until Courtney's debut, and was a member of the Killer Grips. Want to really dig in? We have an entire course devoted to the dramatic monologue.Justin was a camper on Total Drama Island as a member of the Screaming Gophers. His most famous work is "My Last Duchess," in which the speaker tells a houseguest all about his wife-whom he probably had killed for being a flirt. (Bridget, when you post "It's a shame that some people think they can rock a French braid," we all know you're talking about Sarah.)ĭramatic monologues hit their peak popularity during the Victorian Era, and Robert Browning was pretty much the Michael Jordan of the form. In that respect, they have a lot in common with passive-aggressive Facebook statuses. Dramatic monologues also commonly address a specific person (or persons) whose identity is made clear only through context clues. Poets often use the speaker in a dramatic monologue to express views that are different from their own. They're meant to be theatrically read to an audience-hence the "dramatic" part-and they contain the words and feelings of a single speaker, hence the "monologue" part. The term dramatic monologue is a little misleading because dramatic monologues are usually poems.
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