Detention is a survival horror game set in 1960s Taiwan under martial law. With simple point and click mechanism, the player control characters who venture into the school beset by hostile supernatural events to uncover stories behind the haunted place. Incorporated religious elements based in Taiwanese/Chinese culture and mythology, the game provided players with unique graphics and gaming experience.
It was a starting position in a blue chip company but she was clearly out of her element… just out of school… bartended at the local hangout…nothing to do with what we were posting the position for… looking down at her resume I just had to ask her “miss, why do you think that this is the right position for you considering you have no experience in this field… more importantly why should I even consider you?”… I looked up from.her resume and she had already pulled down her clothes and was positioning on my desk to give her best response… Without taking my eyes off of her ass I fumbled for my phone and told my secretary to cancel the rest of the interviews…the position has been filled… in fact…do not disturb me for the rest of the day… i thought to myself that I had an ass to fill…
She just sat there… alone in detention..vulnerable… her kilt too short for class but not too short for what I had in mind… i crossed the line…finally…she didn’t flinch…my hands slowly crept up her thighs… she let me have my way…
Next up in the Inktober challenge of Darkly-Inclined characters is Shareena Wickett from Detention. Detention was a animated series that came out in 1999 and ran on Kids’ WB. Shareena Wickett was the protagonist of the show and was a darkly-inclined 6th grader who loved Gothic horror books and also tried doing a seance in one episode. She was another early Gothic type character I saw as a kid and I thought she was adorable. Unfortunately the show only had one season and I would recommend watching it but the show is hard to find though if you want to give it a try, there are two episodes on YouTube if you’re curious. :) —————————————————————————————————-
A youth care worker who quit his job at a Tucson detention center for unaccompanied minors is speaking out about inadequate facilities, untrained staff and inhumane policies, after witnessing the devastation of family separations firsthand. Antar Davidson says he quit after he was forced to tell three tearful children who were separated from their mother not to hug one another. The facility is run by Southwest Key, a nonprofit that operates 27 facilities and has recently signed a lease to detain hundreds of separated children, including many who are a younger than 12 years old, in what’s being called a “baby jail” in a former warehouse and homeless shelter in Houston.
Antar Davidson told Democracy Now!:
“I realized that if I were to continue with Southwest Key, at least here in this facility, that I’d be told to do things that were… against the code of all humans’ morality… We’re not talking about an organization that was good. We’re talking about an organization that, for the past five years, has made millions of dollars in basically the detention of youth.”