Toph Beifong Foot Fetish

Toph Beifong Foot Fetish




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Toph Beifong Foot Fetish
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Toph BeiFong's Bare Feet Tease Published: Mar 16, 2020
A picture of Toph BeiFong teasing the viewers with her bare feet. Art by me Commission Requested by Avatar: The Last Airbender (c) Nickelodeon
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's general notability guideline . Please help to demonstrate the notability of the topic by citing reliable secondary sources that are independent of the topic and provide significant coverage of it beyond a mere trivial mention. If notability cannot be shown, the article is likely to be merged , redirected , or deleted . Find sources: "Toph Beifong" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR ( October 2021 ) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message )
Fictional character in Avatar: The Last Airbender
This section needs additional citations for verification . Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources . Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "Toph Beifong" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR ( June 2021 ) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message )
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— Toph Beifong ( Avatar: The Last Airbender )

^ Khan, Aina (September 1, 2020). " 'I've seen grown men cry' – why Avatar: The Last Airbender still touches millions" . The Guardian.

^ Avatar Extras for episode "The Blind Bandit".

^ Liu, Ed (April 22, 2008). "Toon Zone News Interviews Bryan Konietzko and Mike DiMartino on "Avatar" " . toonzone.net.

^ DVD commentary for "The Blind Bandit"

^ Jump up to: a b Konietzko, Bryan; DiMartino, Michael Dante (2010). Avatar, The Last Airbender: The Art of the Animated Series . Dark Horse. p. 97. ISBN 978-1-62115-798-4 .

^ DiMartino, Michae Dante; Konietzko, Bryan (2015). The Legend of Korra: The Art of the Animated Series Book Four: Balance . Dark Horse Books. p. 40. ISBN 978-1616556877 .

^ Jump up to: a b c d Director: Ethan Spaulding; Writer: Michael Dante DiMartino (2006-05-05). "The Blind Bandit" . Avatar: The Last Airbender . Season 2. Episode 6. Nickelodeon. Avatar: The Last Airbender. Episode Tanscript .

^ " The Chase ". Avatar: The Last Airbender . Season 2 (Book 2). Episode 8. 2006-05-26. Nickelodeon.

^ "8 Quotes by Toph Bei Fong" . lessreal . Retrieved November 4, 2014 .

^ "Official Google translation of 托" .

^ Van Hoey, Thomas (2016). The Blending of Bending: World-building in Avatar: The Last Airbender and Legend of Korra . p. 11.

^ "Avatar: Why Toph Was A Guy In The Ember Island Players" . screen Rant . September 24, 2020 . Retrieved September 24, 2020 .

^ "Synopsis of Avatar: The Last Airbender Episodes, "The Firebending Masters", Episode 13, Season 3" . Nickelodeon . Retrieved 2008-07-15 .

^ Director: Giancarlo Volpe; Writer: Michael Dante DiMartino, Bryan Konietzko (2006-05-26). "The Chase". Avatar: The Last Airbender . Season 2. Episode 8. Nickelodeon .

^ Director: Giancarlo Volpe; Writer: Michael Dante DiMartino, Bryan Konietzko (2006-07-14). "The Library". Avatar: The Last Airbender . Season 2. Episode 10. Nickelodeon .

^ Hedrick, Tim (writer) & MacMullan, Lauren (director). (September 22, 2006). "City of Walls and Secrets". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 2. Episode 14. Nickelodeon.

^ Estoesta, Joann, Wahlander, Lisa, Huebner, Andrew, Scheppke, Gary, MacMullan, Lauren, Mattila, Katie, Ridge, Justin, Volpe, Giancarlo (writers) & Spaulding, Ethan (director). (September 29, 2006). "The Tales of Ba Sing Se". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 2. Episode 15. Nickelodeon.

^ Hedrick, Tim (writer) & MacMullan, Lauren (director). (November 6, 2006). "Lake Laogai". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 2. Episode 17. Nickelodeon.

^ Avatar: The Last Airbender – The Promise , Part 1

^ Avatar: The Last Airbender – The Promise , Part 2

^ Avatar: The Last Airbender – The Promise , Part 3

^ Avatar: The Last Airbender – The Rift , Part 1

^ Avatar: The Last Airbender – The Rift , Part 2

^ Avatar: The Last Airbender – The Rift , Part 3

^ "Avatar: The Legend of Korra — Old Wounds — TV Eskimo" . TVEskimo . Retrieved November 4, 2014 .

^ " 'Legend of Korra' Season 3 Spoilers" . latintimes. 11 July 2014 . Retrieved November 4, 2014 .

^ Director:Melchior Zwyer; Writer: Michael Dante DiMartino (2014-12-05). "Operation Beifong". The Legend of Korra . Season 4. Episode 10. Nickelodeon.

^ Director: Lauren MacMullan; Writer: Tim Hedrick (2006-06-14). "The Desert" . Avatar: The Last Airbender . Season 2. Episode 11. Nickelodeon. Avatar: The Last Airbender. Episode Tanscript .

^ Director: Giancarlo Volpe; Writer: Michael Dante DiMartino (2007-11-23). "The Day of Black Sun Part 1: The Invasion" . Avatar: The Last Airbender . Season 3. Episode 10. Nickelodeon. Avatar: The Last Airbender. Episode Tanscript .

^ Director: Giancarlo Volpe; Writer: John O'Bryan (2006-06-14). "The Library". Avatar: The Last Airbender . Season 2. Episode 10. Nickelodeon.

^ Director: Ethan Spaulding; Writers: Michael Dante DiMartino, Joshua Hamilton (2006-09-15). "The Serpent's Pass". Avatar: The Last Airbender . Season 2. Episode 12. Nickelodeon.

^ The Lost Scrolls: Fire, page 159 of The Lost Scrolls Collection. The Lost Scrolls: Earth, page 93 of The Lost Scrolls Collection.

^ San Diego Comicon 2006 panel question and answer part 2 – Avatarspirit.net

^ Ching, Gene (2012). "Kisu on THE LEGEND OF KORRA" . Kung Fu Magazine . Archived from the original on April 15, 2012.

^ "Nickelodeon's Official Avatar: The Last Airbender Flash Site" . Nick.com . Retrieved December 2, 2006 .

^ Director: Ethan Spaulding; Writer: Elizabeth Welch Ehasz (April 7, 2006). " Return to Omashu ". Avatar: The Last Airbender . Season 2. Episode 3. Nickelodeon.

^ Ehasz, Aaron (writer) & Spaulding, Ethan (director). (June 2, 2006). "Bitter Work". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 2. Episode 9. Nickelodeon.

^ "Inside the Nicktoons Studio: Avatar: "Earth" Episode Clip" . Nickelodeon . Retrieved 2013-10-21 .

^ "Kisu – Filmography by TV Series" . IMDb . Retrieved 2013-10-21 .

^ Director: Giancarlo Volpe; Writers: Michael Dante DiMartino, Bryan Konietzko (2006-12-01). "The Guru". Avatar: The Last Airbender . Season 2. Episode 19. Nickelodeon.

^ Mammano, Michael (December 5, 2014). "The Legend of Korra: Operation Beifong Review" . Den of Geeks!.

^ Mammano, Michael (July 8, 2014). "The Legend of Korra: Old Wounds Review" . Den of Geeks!.


Toph Beifong ( Chinese : 北方拓芙 ; pinyin : Běifāng Tuòfú ) is a fictional character in Nickelodeon 's animated television series Avatar: The Last Airbender and its sequel The Legend of Korra , voiced by Jessie Flower in the original series and Kate Higgins and Philece Sampler in the sequel series.

Toph is recognized as a prodigy [1] of earthbending, which is the ability to telekinetically manipulate, reshape and control stone, sand, dirt, and, later, metal. Because she was born blind, and her parents believed that her condition limited her capacity to learn and use the skill safely, they had a tutor teach her only basic earthbending. She later learned more advanced earthbending secretly from the badgermoles (fictional blind creatures that naturally earthbend). She eventually becomes the first person to develop the ability to "bend" metal as well. Toph has been blind since birth, but from her observations of badgermoles, she had learned to locate objects and their movements by sensing their vibrations in the earth around her. She is introduced in the second season of Avatar , and travels with the protagonist Aang as his earthbending teacher. Toph is shown to have an abrasive, conceited and sometimes stubborn personality which leads to clashes with her peers. Toph proves herself a steadfast ally to Avatar Aang and eventually Avatar Korra .

Toph was initially conceived as a sixteen-year-old boy that was athletic and muscular, designed to be a foil to Sokka . Her prototype design is featured in the show's intro as the earthbender. [2] As the series progressed and the time came closer to introduce an earthbender who would join the main characters, head writer Aaron Ehasz suggested that they create contrast by designing a little girl who is able to defeat strong, adult earthbenders; some of the staff found this humorous, but it was initially rejected by Avatar co-creator Bryan Konietzko . Following several long discussions, Konietzko stopped fighting the idea and warmed up to it, after which Toph was made female and introduced into the series, becoming one of Konietzko's favorite characters. The character's original design was recycled into the appearances of minor characters The Boulder and Sud. [3] Her original design greatly influenced the appearance of Bolin in The Legend of Korra . Her Earth Rumble outfit, the clothing she wears for the majority of Avatar: The Last Airbender , was inspired by European fashion styles. [4] Her fancy dress was modeled after the traditional clothing of the Chinese Tang dynasty . [5]

Toph uses a unique fighting style of earthbending, based on the Southern Praying Mantis style. [5]

Toph was favored by the creators to return in The Legend of Korra after the appearances of both Katara and Zuko, DiMartino writing that it "never quite made sense" for there to be a trip to the swamp, where she was located, during the third season. In the following season, she was meant to serve as a foil to Korra with her "gruff mentoring style" contrasting the reserved Korra. Her design became a subject of difficulty for the staff, who wanted her to return to the size of her twelve-year-old self from the original series despite flashbacks in the earlier part of The Legend of Korra showing her as having grown in height. Konietzko was content with the staff's wishes but wanted her shortened height to come from her having become hunched since then. Artists had issues carrying out this design, resulting in multiple takes. [6]

Toph is fiercely independent, direct, belligerent, and practiced in taunting and insulting her opponents [7] and on occasion her friends, particularly Sokka. [8] On several occasions Toph appears picking her nose, spitting, and belching loudly. As she explained to Aang and his companions, she does this intentionally as a rebellion against the principles of refined culture that her aristocratic parents attempted to make her conform to. If the situation absolutely requires it, she actually knows how to behave in upper-class Earth Kingdom culture much better than Aang's companions do. She is usually covered in dirt, or as she calls it, "a healthy coating of earth". [9]

In her advanced age, despite retaining much of her strength as an earthbender, Toph refuses to take part in prolonged conflicts, admitting that she is too old and lacks the energy for such endeavors.

In "The Serpent's Pass", Toph's passport reads 土國頭等護照北方拓芙 (tǔ guó tóu děng hù zhào běi fāng tuò fú), which translates as "Earth Kingdom First Class Passport: Beifong Toph". Here, her name means "supported lotus", which matches her parents' view of their daughter as a flower in need of protection. In "Tales of Ba Sing Se", her name is written as 托夫 (Tuō Fū), which is the phonetic transcription based on the official guide for foreign names. In "The Earth King", her name is reverted to 拓芙 . Her last name Beifong ( 北方 ) is close to the Mandarin pronunciation of the word "North" (běi fāng). The word 托 (Tuō) also means "to support in one's palm", or "drag" and is the word used for child care , [10] [ better source needed ] and is also intended to sound like the English word " tough " and " toff " (meaning "upper class"). [11] [12] [ failed verification ]

Toph's parents view her blindness as a disability and therefore keep her concealed. [7] Despite her handicap, Toph has developed special skills by keeping company with the blind 'Badgermoles' that inhabited nearby caves. [13] By imitating their movements, Toph became a master of the martial art known as 'earthbending', but she kept her ability secret from her overprotective family. Toph fought frequently in Earth Rumble , an earthbending lei tai tournament resembling professional wrestling , under the alias "Blind Bandit". By the time Aang and his friends discover Toph at the tournament, she had become champion, holding a 42–0 win–loss record. [7] However, Aang unintentionally beats her in a match when he tries to talk to her, as she could not sense air currents. When her parents learn about this and confine her further, Toph runs away to accompany Aang and his friends as Aang's earthbending instructor, although her parents believe she was kidnapped by Aang. Toph nearly leaves the group after feuding with Katara over not contributing to the group's teamwork, though rejoins them following a meeting with Iroh and encountering Princess Azula for the first time. [14] Toph successfully begins Aang's training of earthbending and slows the descent of Wan Shi Tong's Library, where the group learns the date of the next Day of Black Sun and inadvertently gains an advantage over the Fire Nation, as it sinks, though fails to prevent Appa from being kidnapped by sandbenders. [15] Due to Appa being the group's transportation, they are forced to travel on foot, journeying through Serpent's Pass and preventing a drill from entering Ba Sing Se. Now in the city, she infiltrates the Earth Kingdom Royal Palace, meeting Dai Li, [16] bonds with Katara, [17] encounters Jet and reunites with Appa. [18] Toph also learns to metalbend after she is captured in a metal cage by people who were sent by her parents to retrieve her. She realizes that metal contains small amounts of earth, which she can manipulate. She quickly escapes and traps her captors in the same small cage.

After the events of the Book 2 finale, Toph, alongside Sokka, Katara and the Southern Water Tribe, captured a Fire Nation ship. Once in the Fire Nation, she assumed the identity of a regular Fire Nation girl.
In “The Runaway”, Toph uses her earthbending senses to foil a vendor's trick, and by bargaining and continuing to use her senses, she extracts more and more money from him. Katara is distressed by this, and scolds Toph for her immoral behavior, but later enlists her to pull a huge scam.
Katara fakes turning Toph over to the police in order to collect the reward money, with the assumption that Toph will metalbend her way out of prison and rejoin her. However, it is revealed that there is no reward money and the cells are made of wood, and Katara is shoved in jail alongside Toph. Aang and Sokka attempt to overtake their adversary Combustion Man, but Katara ends up busting herself and Toph out by being resourceful in her attempt to draw water for her bending.
Toph then is part of the invasion team, and she helps Aang get to Firelord Ozai's underground bunker. She later is seen riding on Appa after the invasion team's defeat.

In “The Western Air Temple”, she arrives at the Western Air Temple with the Gaang and meets Zuko. She is accepting of him at first, urging Katara and Sokka to accept his help, but after she is burned by him she too grows angry with him. When he reattempts to join their team, she happily accepts him on the grounds of Aang's acceptance.
In the finale, Toph helps Sokka and Suki attack a Fire Nation airship. Suki hops off the ship in order to help Toph and Sokka get to safety. Toph is nearly knocked off the burning ship and killed, but Sokka rescues her and they are promptly retrieved by Suki. She later celebrates the Firelord's defeat with her friends in Iroh's tea shop.

In The Promise trilogy, Toph is revealed to have established the Beifong Metalbending Academy, an instructional institution to help earthbenders learn metalbending, shortly after the end of the television series. She chooses her three students (Penga, The Dark One, and Ho Tun) on the basis of her meteorite bracelet shivering in their presence. [19] Though claiming her motives behind founding the school were due to her love of metalbending, in actuality she enjoys bossing people around. Initially worried her students are not capable of being metalbenders, they surprise her with their victory over Kunyo and his firebending students, renewing her confidence in them [20] and she participates in the battle for Yu Dao. [21]

In The Rift trilogy, Toph encounters her father for the first time since the series, [22] though he refuses to acknowledge her as his daughter. It is further revealed that her parents broke up after the people they sent to bring Toph back had failed. Toph prevents others from being killed by debris falling from the mine collapsing, [23] including her father, who reconciles with her as she saves everyone. Following this, she passes out and has her students assist Aang in his battle against the spirit of Old Iron. [24]

In The Legend of Korra , Toph is revealed to have founded Republic City's police force and taught the art of metalbending to her students. Two of her students were her daughters Lin and Suyin. [25] Her daughters mention in passing to Korra that they are actually half-sisters by two different fathers, but their identities were not revealed, and due to as-yet-unexplained reasons neither of Toph's daughters ever knew their fathers. [26] Due to her own strict upbringing, Toph raised the pair as a single parent with essentially no restrictions. But it caused both of them to feel that she was ignoring them as their mutual need for her attention caused them to react in different ways: the older and strict Lin followed in her mother's footsteps as a Republic City police officer while the free-spirited Suyin became a delinquent by hanging with the wrong crowd, which Lin disapproved of. Eventually, Lin caught Suyin driving the getaway car for her criminal friends after a jewel theft, during which Suyin accidentally scarred the right side of Lin's face. Although upset with her daughters for putting her in a tough situation, Toph was forced to look the other way and tear up the police report because of the controversy it would cause before sending Suyin away to live with her grandparents; Lin did not take this kindly. This ignites a rift between Toph and her daughters. Toph, feeling guilt over her questionable actions, retired the following year with Lin eventually succeeding her as Republic City's Chief of Police by the time of the first season.

In the third-season episodes, "The Metal Clan" and "Old Wounds", it is revealed that Toph made her peace with a repentant Suyin and spent some years living with Suyin
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