"Daria's cool," Butt-head informed Beavis. Although the trio just stood nearby when she was put under pressure to make her (first) decision and although she dumped one after another, Quinn never attempted to go steady with any other males aside from them, and in Daria's short story about her family in the future (in "Write Where it Hurts"), it was Jamie who had won Quinn's hand in marriage.One of the series' running gags was that other characters had extreme difficulty remembering Jamie's name; he was referred to as Jeremy, Jimmy, and Jameel, among other names. To Quinn, the three are simply a resource to be used. When Daria was drafted as a substitute teacher, she couldn't tell them apart and simply addressed each individual as "Jamie, Joey or Jeffy." Mr. O'Neill is a very, "Son, promise me you'll come back and see me some day when you've got the Lawndale's history teacher. Astoundingly, "At home, I'm Jodie. During the summer holidays, he ran the disastrous O'Neill suffers from an allergy to pollen, and carries an inhaler ("DeMartino has often found him supremely irritating, but in O'Neill also takes a strong interest in Daria's education and well-being, whether she likes it or not. "Brittany Taylor" redirects here. One of the school's only two black students, Jodie is a combo overacheiver and token black kid and knows both facts well, to the point that the demands both bring wear on her. Daria is also shown to be quite lazy and apathetic: she manages to get her high grades despite, as far as we can see, not working that hard. In "Take your favorite fandoms with you and never miss a beat. Her experience with romance appears to have been limited for most of her teenage life, until Her parents try repeatedly to make her more sociable and 'normal'. Has a bit of a Kevin's girlfriend. They are also the first characters in Quinn's group to learn that Daria is her sister (Daria introduces herself to them in "The Invitation" mostly as a way to further humiliate Quinn), and have even gone to her for help (in "Quinn the Brain", they ask her to help them get Quinn back to her normal self).We are using cookies for the best presentation of our site.
The perfect African-American teen. This is to say that she doesn't fit in all that well, and was often subject to ridicule - and would ridicule Daria has a high intelligence for her age group, knowing about a wide variety of subjects and noted to be both at the top of many classes and getting repeated A grades. Believe me, I'd like to be more like you." Her actual relationship with Tom Daria's personal style is considered off-putting by her mother and sister; Helen thinks she might be more popular with a less formidable look, and Quinn was delighted when she thought Daria had come to her for fashion advice in "Through A Lens, Darkly". One of his few defining traits is that he's bad with money, and has been overdrawn on his allowance since elementary school. He has a long-running romance with the science teacher, Ms. Barch. As such, he's forced to interact with Kevin on a regular basis, much to his dismay. It's revealed that her parents paid more attention to Daria as a child because of her troubles at school with the other kids. After Daria, Hankins continued to perform in theater, film, and voiceovers, and still works on smaller, more personal and independent projects.
Quinn chose alternately each of the three Js as her "steady" boyfriend (in "One J at a Time"), driven by the promise that having a steady boyfriend would make her mature (she was under the mistaken impression that Daria's dating Tom was part of her maturity, and Daria did not correct Quinn's assumption). A rich young man, Tom first came into Daria's life when he started dating Jane, and at first Daria hated his guts. Will burst into tears at the drop of a hat. Daria's best friend, also antisocial but in a more nonconformist way. Possibly they only get together because only they can put up with each other. Daria Morgendorffer is a fictional animated character from two of MTV's animated series: Beavis and Butt-head and Daria.In 2002, Daria placed at number 41 on TV Guide's list of the Top 50 Greatest Cartoon Characters of All Time for her role in the two shows. She has also written non-fiction, usually articles that launch a blistering attack on things she doesn't like: these include an article about her alienation (where she compares her class to "barnyard animals") in "Disaffecto", an article called "My So-Called Angst" in ""The Lost Girls" and "The Story of D" have work by Daria (non-fiction and fiction respectively) submitted for publication; in the first case, O'Neill did it without telling her, and in the latter Daria did it after pushing from Tom. I have low esteem for everyone else."