Johnny The Rabbit

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Mica Withington

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Aug 5, 2024, 7:51:21 AM8/5/24
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Johnnyis a 20-years-old tall green rabbit, who lives in a tree house. He is a smart fast-talking rabbit. His best friend, David is a white duck, who is having a same age just like him. But, he is a dimwitted childish duck. The duo can play and work together by going to their own misadventures.

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Johnny Lightfoot is a character that appears in the Sonic the Comic series published by Fleetway Editions. He is one of the founding members of the Freedom Fighters. He was a constant presence in the strip from its earliest issues to his death in the final arc.


Johnny is a gray, anthropomorphic rabbit with blue eyes. Though initially portrayed as a diminutive rabbit, he adapted to a taller and more humanoid form Sonic the Comic #21 and onward. While a member of the Freedom Fighters, he wore white gloves, a pair of red and white sneakers, blue jeans, a white shirt, and a red leather jacket with a picture of Sonic's face on the back.


In Johnny's earliest (confirmed) appearance, he was one of two characters (with Porker Lewis) that accompanied Sonic and Tails into the Special Zone to learn about the origins of Sonic and Doctor Robotnik.[2] However, these four were tricked by Robotnik and transported forward in time by six months to find that Robotnik had conquered Mobius in their absence.[3]


Johnny became a founding member of the Freedom Fighters, and started to wear a red jacket, which served as his uniform while a member of the team. He also fought with a unique-looking staff-like weapon. He joined Sonic on yet another mission to the Special Zone, this time to rescue Amy Rose from the Egg Fortress,[4] and later argued that Amy should join the Freedom Fighters as she was not safe back in the Emerald Hill Zone.[5]


Unlike the other Freedom Fighters, Johnny never had much in the way of his solo adventures or major story lines. Once, while investigating reports of slave labour in the Cotton Factory Zone, he even expressed a desire to have his own solo adventure. Immediately after this comment, he was attacked by the Badnik army of Commander Brutus.[6] Johnny noticed that the Badniks had exceedingly poor aim, and managed to trick them into destroying the local wool factory, freeing the sheep workers. However, he was captured when Brutus himself caught Johnny by surprise, and the Trooper used a mind scanner to absorb a copy of Johnny's brainwaves. Brutus learned all of Johnny's secrets (including the location of the Emerald Hill Folk in the Mushroom Hill Zone),[7] but Johnny's personality soon began to take hold, turning Brutus good! Under the influence of Johnny's mind, Brutus destroyed all of his Trooper followers before managing to erase the copy of Johnny's brainwaves (along with all of Johnny's secrets). In the confusion, Johnny himself escaped unnoticed.[8] He would later be briefly turned into a Badnik Johnny by Brutus, only to be saved by Shortfuse the Cybernik.[9]


A storyline in later issues introduced a villain called Agent X, one of Robotnik's minions. After several appearances, Agent X sabotaged the Freedom Fighter's attack on Robotnik's old Flickies' Island base and, after capturing them, revealed himself to be Johnny. It soon turned out that it was not the real Johnny at all, as due to a rip in time and space, he had been captured and replaced by shadow-like aliens. Sonic saved Johnny from the shadow's home dimension and Agent X was destroyed.


The character of Johnny Lightfoot was killed in the final story arc of STC based on Sonic Adventure when he attempted to reconnect power to an object the characters needed to defeat the rampaging Chaos. As he reconnected the power, Chaos attacked him and killed him with a powerful blow.


Sonic was deeply affected by Johnny's death and left the Freedom Fighters for a time to cope. During this period, Sonic matured significantly and lost many of his old personality flaws. Upon his return, Sonic traveled back in time, hoping to destroy Chaos in the past so he could not kill Johnny in the present, only to end up nearly killing himself.


When Doctor Robotnik became all-powerful by absorbing the power of the Chaos Emeralds, he rewrote history so that Sonic the Hedgehog had never existed. In this alternate reality, Johnny never became a Freedom Fighter. In this alternate timeline, he and Amy Rose live in the Emerald Hill Zone, which is now an industrial Zone used to process radioactive waste for toxic chemical dumping. Johnny was the more cautious of the two, constantly worrying about being caught by one of Robotnik's traps, or by Troopers, or by Oscar the Pig and his Death Squad.[10]


Johnny Stewart pioneered the most powerful weapon in the war on predators more than 50 years ago. As the first person to successfully record the sound of wild rabbits, Stewart understood the importance of achieving just the right pitch and volume for attracting coyotes to the gun before anyone else had even conceived of using audio recordings. Today Johnny Stewart is still known for the most authentic wildlife sounds and deadliest electronic predator callers available.


One of the main players behind the High Desert Underground Music Fest is the Roof Rabbits' Johnny Bourbon. You can catch this trio of rockers performing on night two of the festival, for what is sure to be a high-octane affair.


Johnny Bourbon: Sam Fisher and Sean Garvin played in a band called Tuck and Roll for around 10 years. I met them years back and we played some shows together when I was doing Harley Bourbon. Sam eventually joined HB when TnR was more or less defunct. Then we started working on Roof Rabbits with Sean as a side project in early 2016. I had basically written the "Creature Comforts" album and the material didn't fit with HB.


At first, we thought we might just do it just to record the album, but it ended up working too well and so we stuck with it. Meanwhile HB split as our upright player moved to New York to work for the National Hockey League. So, continuing with the Rabbits just felt right. It felt refreshing and fun and we all needed that. We played our first show as a group on Halloween night 2016. We we're at the M&J Tavern dressed up like Spinal Tap and hadn't picked a name yet. Sam was wearing the tightest pants, so we jokingly referred to the band as Sam's Bulge that night.


JB: The name was more or less random at first. We threw around a few names after Halloween knowing we couldn't continue under our comedic moniker. The Roof Rabbits was one of the only names that was instantly agreed upon. At that moment we didn't have an inkling to the definition, which only confirmed it to be our destiny when we learned what it meant.


During World War I in Europe there were extreme food shortages and it was commonplace for a butcher or restaurant to sell you cat meat and tell you it was rabbit... Cat meat being passed off as rabbit became known as Roof Rabbit, and I've been told that if you order a rabbit dish in some parts of Italy, they still serve it with the foot on so you can be sure it's actually rabbit.


JB: It's great. There have been ongoing talks for quite some time about cross promotion between local bands for a long time, so coming together to produce a local comp CD that we're going to give away for free is a huge step for our local scene.


Inhibition of bone formation after surgery to correct craniosynostosis would alleviate the need for secondary surgeries and decrease morbidity and mortality. This study used a single dose of Noggin protein to prevent resynostosis and improve postoperative outcomes in a rabbit model of craniosynostosis. Introduction: Craniosynostosis is defined as the premature fusion of one or more of the cranial sutures, which causes secondary deformations of the cranial vault, cranial base, and brain. Current surgical intervention involves extirpation of the fused suture to allow unrestricted brain growth. However, resynostosis of the extirpated regions often occurs. Several bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs), well-described inducers of ossification, are involved in bone healing. This study tested the hypothesis that a postoperative treatment with Noggin, an extracellular BMP inhibitor, can inhibit resynostosis in a rabbit model of human familial nonsyndromic craniosynostosis. Materials and Methods: Thirty-one New Zealand white rabbits with bilateral coronal suture synostosis were divided into three groups: (1) suturectomy controls (n = 13); (2) suturectomy with BSA in a slow-resorbing collagen vehicle, (n = 8); and (3) suturectomy with Noggin in a slow-resorbing collagen vehicle (n = 10). At 10 days of age, a 3 x 15-mm coronal suturectomy was performed. The sites in groups 2 and 3 were immediately filled with BSA-loaded gel or Noggin-loaded gel, respectively. Serial 3D-CT scan reconstructions of the defects and standard radiographs were obtained at 10, 25, 42, and 84 days of age, and the sutures were harvested for histological analysis. Results: Radiographic analysis revealed that Noggin-treated animals had significantly greater coronal suture marker separation by 25 days and significantly greater craniofacial length at 84 days of age compared with controls. 3D-CT analysis revealed that Noggin treatment led to significantly greater defect areas through 84 days and to increased intracranial volumes at 84 days of age compared with other groups. Histological analysis supported CT data, showing that the untreated and BSA-treated groups had significant healing of the suturectomy site, whereas the Noggin-treated group had incomplete wound healing. Conclusions: These data support our hypothesis that inhibition of BMP activity using Noggin may prevent postoperative resynostosis in this rabbit model. These findings also suggest that Noggin therapy may have potential clinical use to prevent postoperative resynostosis in infants with craniosynostosis.

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