She is 4' tall 4'7" Including ears. In " Ear-sy Rider ", she wears a blue hooded jacket with the hood up after her hat was stolen. She wears the jacket again with the hood down in Ambergris to conceal the ambergris. In " Christmas in the Car " and " The Hauntening ", she wears a light blue jacket, which looks similar to the jacket worn in " My Fuzzy Valentine " and " Lobsterfest ", except with a hood.
Her nightwear sometimes consists of a light blue buttoned pajamas, and more often a light blue classic pajama set. She sometimes wears pink or yellow rabbit slippers.
Louise is a bright, mischievous, yet manipulative child, especially considering her place as the youngest in the family. Frequently seen giving her older siblings and sometimes adults advice and making quick-witted remarks, she displays many signs associated with high intelligence.
These include her tendencies towards being aloof and manipulative, but also encompasses her cunning, logic, and problem solving skills. She also tends to be very loud and often shouts at the top of her lungs to get her points across.
Despite Louise's mischievous nature she is not generally malicious. Though she loves a good prank, she never aims to hurt anybody. Despite this, she has been known to go overboard in episodes like " Topsy " and " Glued, Where's My Bob? Louise is shown to highly value her personal space and things and reacts with extreme prejudice when they are threatened.
She even proclaimed that in the event of her death nobody was to touch her stuff and that she would leave it all to her ghost " It Snakes a Village ". Louise can pick-locks, steals from and tricks her siblings but is always ready to help them when they need it, because despite her unwillingness to admit it, she tends to have a soft spot for the people she cares about. She is also very protective of the people she cares about. Louise is a fan of Japanese culture. She might also be interested in the Goth subculture, due to having spooky plush toys, animal skulls and watching Tim Burton films.
Also, in " The Frond Files ", Louise is seen wearing goth clothing and multiple earrings on her bunny ears. She can be something of a tomboy, often viewing typical "girly" things, like crushes, stickers, and dolls with disdain " Boyz 4 Now ", " Slumber Party ".
Louise frequently slaps people. There are more, but this is quite the list. This is mostly so there is a presented basis for the assumptions and instances I am drawing upon for my analysis. First, she becomes emotionally unstable when there is money involved. She is normally depicted as a calculating and conniving individual, but she loses the twisted fun streak all together and it becomes more visceral.
When she is selling art, she shouts at Andy and Ollie, her two friends working for her, demands they work in terrible conditions with awful hours, and then justifies her actions using typical abusive behavior speech. We see this abusive behavior surface again when the children discover a lump of ambergris. She also becomes even more ruthless than usual, cutting out her partners in an attempt to keep the money for herself. This parallel of addiction is shown again when she opens an illegal casino.
At first, she behaves as the bigwig casino owner depicted in so many casino movies. She is uncaring, manipulates her customers, and is aggressive towards cheaters. This changes when she squares off against Mr. Again, her behavior is absolutely shown to be the behavior of an addict, and this is cemented in her plan to go double or nothing to win the money back. Once she wins, she has to be restrained in order to not bet it all again. The treasure hunt episode early on showcases this behavior, but splits it into two parts.
The first portion is her willingness to share this money and discovery with her family. She invites Gene and Tina to help her find the money. She seems genuine in her offer. This starkly contrasts her general anger at her siblings inviting people to share in the money. Not only would she need to split the money, she sees this a violation of a family trust. The dream has only come true so far for a relative handful—and John Roberts, who voices Linda, is one of them.
That all led to a meeting with Loren Bouchard, and a role on Bob's Burgers playing a character much like the ones he created online. In , Roberts became the first member of the Bob's Burgers cast to earn an Emmy Award nomination for outstanding character voice-over performance.
The show's cast consists primarily of young, major players on the "alternative" comedy scene, such as Kristen Schaal Louise , Dan Mintz Tina , and Eugene Mirman Gene , along with voice acting legend H.
Jon Benjamin Bob. Also part of the cast is Academy Award-winning actor and theater star Kevin Kline. Bob's Burgers represents his first major voice work for a weekly animated TV series. They got him to join the cast in a very non-traditional way.
Kline's grown children live in New York and go to a lot of comedy shows, and are big fans of Mirman in particular. They brought their father along to some shows, and Kline and Mirman got along. As it turns out, Kline's manager was friends with the Bob's Burgers casting director, so the show went out on a limb and asked him if he'd be interested in the recurring role of Bob's eccentric millionaire landlord, Mr. Kline read the script, thought it was funny, and accepted.
The vast majority of animated TV series, past and present, do not record their actors doing their voice parts all at once. Rather, each individual actor goes into a recording studio and delivers lines one by one. Bob's Burgers is an exception—audio for each episode is collected from the entire cast all at once.
It's not quite a table read with microphones, or like shooting a live-action sitcom—some of the actors live in Los Angeles, and some live in New York, so a high-quality ISDN line is used to unite everybody. But it is all done live, with the actors feeding off each other. This gives the show a realistic, conversational feel—with plenty of room for improvisation —similar to Bouchard's previous natural-sounding series, Home Movies and Dr.
Katz: Professional Therapist. Even big celebrities popping in for an episode have to work this unique method of production into their busy schedules. Denizens of the Internet have a number of theories about why youngest Belcher child Louise always wears bunny ears. It's never quite explained why; maybe she has a bald spot she's hiding like her father , or the hat allows her to hide from the world in some small way.
The real reason is not so emotionally complicated. It was inspired by a manga—and later, anime—from Japan called Tekkonkinkreet. You get a little cognitive dissonance where you experience Louise both as a little girl and Bugs Bunny at the same time. That animal instinct is alive and well in Louise, as are references to Japanese pop culture in Bob's Burgers. Like any kid, Louise becomes obsessed with a card game called Burobu.
It's a slug version of Pokemon. Louise is close to collecting all the cards but needs a couple more. This is when audiences chastise Louise. Louise and the other kids were banned from trading cards in school. Louise couldn't wait for after school and sneakily trades cards while in the library.
To make matters worse, she buys fake cards online in order to trade for the valuable ones she's missing. In the end, she and the kids get caught and their cards are confiscated. Louise deserved this punishment for lying and for not being patient.
In a previous episode, Louise starts a feud with a teenager named Logan. He originally stole her most precious possession, her bunny ears. This created a solid rivalry. Bob desperately wants to get into the community garden run by Cynthia and the only way to do so would hurt Louise. He hires Logan to work at the restaurant which infuriates Louise.
She feels betrayed that Bob would hire her enemy just for a garden. He then proceeds to not take her feelings into account and calls his plants his "babies" while in front of his actually baby, Louise. Kids generally don't like school and the same goes for Louise. She sees the opportunity to get out of their half-day early before Thanksgiving break. This involves a lot of scheming and convincing Mr. Frond to let them host the annual play. The reason Louise deserved her guilty feeling is because of her manipulation.
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