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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/51244649.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:"If I don't kill one of you every now and then, you'll forget who I am." [[note]]Said after [[BadBoss shooting his first mate]] under the table, [[ForTheEvulz for seemingly no reason]]. However, the first mate, Israel Hands, [[OnlyAFleshWound lived]]. The shooting probably [[LifesavingMisfortune saved his life as it prevented him from taking part in Blackbeard's final battle]]. [[/note]]]]
3
4->''"Why fly a black flag, when a black beard will do?"''
5-->-- ''VideoGame/AssassinsCreedIVBlackFlag''
6
7'''''{{T|ropeCodifier}}he''''' {{Pirate}}.
8
9Born in the town of Bristol, (maybe), Edward Teach (or Edward Thatch) (circa 1680 – November 22, 1718), better known as Blackbeard, was the most famous pirate of [[UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfPiracy The Golden Age]]. He was not the richest, nor was his career the longest, and he probably wasn't even the meanest, but he set the standard for Golden Age piracy, codifying the image in popular culture. When we think of pirates, he is the first one to come to mind. Maybe because of his flair for drama, and his weaponization of the terrifying pirate image.
10
11Blackbeard's origins are sketchy; history records very few facts about his life before his pirate career began. English by nationality, he was most likely born in the port city of Bristol, sometime around 1680. His birth name is commonly given as "Edward Teach," but not even that is a certainty. Given that most accounts place him as being fully literate, there is a good chance that he came from at least some money. The earliest reliable historical mention of an "Edward Teach" was that of a privateer in the British Navy during the UsefulNotes/WarOfTheSpanishSuccession, circa 1714. He was apparently a good, if not particularly remarkable, sailor and seaman. After the end of the War, Teach, along with many privateers who now found themselves unemployed, migrated to the Caribbean and took on a full-time career in piracy. So many pirates did this, as a matter of fact, that they actually took over the Bahamian island of New Providence and declared it a "Pirate Republic." It was here that Teach hooked up with legendary privateer Benjamin Hornigold, and wound up commanding a ship under him.
12
13Between 1716 and 1717, Teach and Hornigold raided the Caribbean islands and the Carolina coast, growing in strength and reputation. Eventually they allied with a third pirate, Stede Bonnet, and between the three of them they became a serious threat to the southern British colonies. Toward the end of 1717, Hornigold was forced into retirement and Bonnet voluntarily stepped down from his command, leaving Teach the sole commander of the small fleet. Under Teach's command his crews became bolder, capturing more ships and cargo and increasing their size and strength. One such captured prize, a French frigate called ''La Concorde,'' was re-christened ''Queen Anne's Revenge'' and claimed as Teach's flagship. And around this time, Teach officially started being referred to as "Blackbeard."
14
15Over the course of 1717 and 1718, Blackbeard continued to raid and pillage, mostly around Florida and Hispaniola, taking more prizes and increasing the size of his fleet. By May of 1718, his fleet had grown so powerful that he successfully blockaded the port of Charleston, ransoming a shipload of high-society Charlestonites for... [[PragmaticVillainy medical supplies]].
16
17Shortly after the Blockade of Charleston, word came down that the British government was about to crack down ''hard'' on Caribbean piracy. The pirate-hunter Woodes Rogers was on his way with a fleet of warships, preparing to wipe New Providence clean... but any pirate who surrendered to the authorities before he got there would be offered a provisional pardon. Blackbeard and Bonnet were considering taking the pardon and going straight, but they were wary; the exact conditions of this blanket pardon were subject to the interpretation of the individual colonial governors, so they had to be very careful ''which'' local authority they decided to surrender to. They opted for North Carolina, since Governor Charles Eden was actively recruiting privateers, and they made a plan to test his honesty and leniency: they careened their ships on the coast, and Bonnet would head to Bath Town to seek the pardon, while Blackbeard would wait for him. Eden did in fact offer Bonnet a pardon and a privateer's commission, but once Bonnet returned he found that Blackbeard had double-crossed him: Blackbeard had scuttled the ships, marooned the crews, and taken off in a smaller ship with all the valuables he could carry. So pissed was Bonnet that he returned to his pirating ways to hunt down Blackbeard. He failed, and was captured and executed for his troubles. Meanwhile, Blackbeard also got a pardon and a commission as a privateer, operating out of North Carolina's Outer Banks.
18
19Of course, the line between "pirate" and "privateer" is pretty damned fine, and the Governors of other colonies were soon screaming for Blackbeard's head, claiming acts of piracy on vessels out of their ports. It's not unlikely either; privateers were ''supposed'' to only sack enemy ships, but some Governors would even allow the sacking of friendly merchant ships as long as they got a cut. In November of 1718, Governor Alexander Spotswood of Virginia sent Lieutenant Robert Maynard, commander of the ''Ranger,'' after him. Maynard tracked Blackbeard to Okracoke Island and engaged him in a ferocious battle. Fighting like a cornered beast, Blackbeard soaked up an ''insane'' amount of damage, and was finally brought down, taking ten members of Maynard's crew with him.
20
21Blackbeard has gone down in popular culture as the quintessential pirate. He has a reputation for cruelty as well as cunning. Indeed, his greatest talent might well have been the weaponizing of that reputation for cruelty, crafting an image for himself that was so fearsome that crews would just surrender without a fight if they saw him coming for them. Exactly how much of this reputation was real, how much was him playing it up, and how much was fabricated by the authorities to demonize him, may never be known. Indeed, there is no evidence of him committing a single murder until his LastStand. His reputation as a BadBoss who frightened his crew with eccentric actions and RefugeInAudacity ploys probably proved to be his undoing. He had a reputation for randomly killing or maiming whoever his first mate was at the time, and however exaggerated that might be, it wasn't beyond him to do so if it helped his image. One of his own crew-mates played a part in his final defeat.
22
23Among the pirates of the Golden Age, all colorful characters in their own rights, Blackbeard stands out on his own level. And he probably would have liked it that way.
24----
25!Tropes Associated with Blackbeard's portrayal in tales, and fiction include:
26
27* AwesomeButImpractical: ''Queen Anne's Revenge'' had a complement of three hundred men and, allegedly, up to forty guns on board. The former point made her a potential liability, as her relatively large size for a pirate ship required a larger crew complement, making it harder for him to crew the rest of his fleet. There are even some suggestions that he ran her around deliberately so as to disperse his crew to his fleet.
28* BadassBoast: His words to Maynard: "Damnation seize my soul if I give you quarters, or take any from you!"
29* BadassPacifist: There are no confirmed stories of Blackbeard himself killing or attacking anyone. His method of piracy was heavily based on intimidation and ruses.
30* BadBoss: According to ''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates'' by Captain Charles Johnson, Blackbeard's first mate Israel Hands was shot in the knee when Teach fired at another of his crew, missing him but striking Hands. Hands asked Teach for his reasons, whereupon Teach remarked that, "if he did not now and then kill one of them, they would forget who he was."
31* BlingOfWar: Blackbeard was not above dolling up his beard with ribbons and beads.
32* CaptainColorbeard: TropeCodifier, its common for stereotypical pirates to have a name like this due to Blackbeard's fame.
33* ChronicBackstabbingDisorder: He orchestrated Hornigold's "retirement" to get himself elected full commander of the fleet. Then Stede Bonnet found out the hard way what happens when you trust a guy named Blackbeard.
34* CoolShip: ''La Concorde'', a heavy 40-gun frigate that Blackbeard was lucky enough to capture intact and rename the ''Queen Anne's Revenge''. Considering most pirates were limited to small sloops and cutters, he would have been a fool not to make it his flagship.
35* DefiantToTheEnd: He had perhaps the most epic LastStand in the history of naval warfare, taking ten members of Maynard's crew - and a couple of Maynard's fingers - with him.
36* TheDragon: To Benjamin Hornigold...
37** DragonAscendant: ...until his retirement.
38** DragonWithAnAgenda: ...which he may or may not have had a hand in causing sooner than later
39* DragonInChief: Stede Bonnet, injured from a previous sea battle, struck an alliance with Blackbeard and allowed him to take temporary command of his vessel while he recovered. However, the more experienced and charismatic Blackbeard quickly turned the rookie captain's crew to his side and made Bonnet into his "guest," which is to say a captive in all but name and a captain in name only. The only reason the pretense a partnership was continued was because Bonnet never attempted to take back his authority while they sailed together.
40* TheDreaded: He deliberately cultivated this image to get people to surrender without a fight. And it worked.
41* DyingMomentOfAwesome: He went down swinging. And most likely swearing.
42* FireAndBrimstoneHell: One of the iconic stories revolves about his crew discussing their probable afterlife destination and deciding to see whether they could take it. They took some sulfur pots below decks and sealed it up to see how long they could take it. One by one, they broke and fled, gasping for air. Blackbeard, unsurprisingly, was the last to emerge, and he did not so much flee as saunter out, proud of his endurance.
43* FromNobodyToNightmare: Quite literally; on paper he doesn't even ''exist'' before 1714.
44* HistoricalVillainUpgrade: Zigzagged. Make no mistake, Blackbeard was not a nice man. But the tales of his cruelty were most likely exaggerated, either by the authorities or deliberately by himself.
45* KickTheDog: His relationship with Stede Bonnet. Blackbeard betrayed his trust, usurped command of his ship for nearly a year and, after the two had obtained royal pardons, robbed Bonnet's ship of all valuables and supplies and fled while Bonnet was briefly away getting a clearance to go privateering.
46* LargeAndInCharge: Contemporary accounts of Blackbeard indicate that he was very tall, and [[LeanAndMean "spare of frame;"]] his huge bushy beard probably made him look bigger than he actually was.
47* MadeOfIron: ''And how!'' It took something like twenty-five stab wounds and five point-blank pistol shots to even slow him down long enough for someone to sneak up behind him and run him through, before lopping his head off. There's even a (definitely dubious) legend that his headless corpse swam around his ship three times before stopping after it was tossed into the sea.
48* ManlyFacialHair: And he would hide plugs of smoldering incense in it, making him look like a flaming monster.
49* ManOnFire: He was known to put ''burning coals'' or lit cannon fuses in his beard to scare the hell out of people.
50* NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast: We can all agree that "Blackbeard" is a far more threatening name than "Edward Teach."
51* OffWithHisHead: And according to legend, his headless corpse swam a few laps around the boat afterward.
52* {{Pirate}}: Obviously.
53* PragmaticVillainy: What does Blackbeard want from Charleston? Gold? Rum? Women? No, just medicine for his crew; they're riddled with [=STDs=].
54* TheStarscream: To Benjamin Hornigold. Hornigold's refusal to prey on British ships (he was trying to maintain the illusion that he was still a lawful privateer) caused enough resentment among his crew that Blackbeard didn't have to do much pot-stirring to get him voted out of command, and himself voted in.
55* SurroundedByIdiots: Blackbeard was a shrewd and devious commander, but his crew were... well, rum-soaked pirates. During the Blockade of Charleston, when the men he sent to collect the ransom started running late, he landed himself to see what was going on, and to deal with any subterfuge on the part of the authorities. He found his men at a nearby tavern. Nothing bad had happened; they just got themselves blind stinking drunk at the first opportunity. It's hard to shed too many tears for the ones he marooned.
56* VillainsDyingGrace: He actually complimented the man who mortally wounded him. "Well done, lad. Well done."
57* YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness: Standard operating mode for Blackbeard toward his allies.
58----
59!Works Featuring Portrayals of Blackbeard Include:
60
61[[foldercontrol]]
62
63[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
64* There are two characters inspired by Blackbeard in ''Manga/OnePiece''. One is Edward Newgate, aka Whitebeard (he doesn't have an actual beard, but rather an impressive white mustache), a powerful pirate and member of the Four Emperors. The other is Marshall D. Teach, aka Blackbeard, a traitorous crew member of Whitebeard who [[spoiler:later kills him and takes his place as an Emperor, possibly becoming the BigBad of the entire story in the process]]. Notably, Whitebeard's last name and Blackbeard's first name combined form Edward Teach. In addition, a character Blackbeard kills off-screen for his Devil Fruit is named "Thatch," after a name the historical Blackbeard used on occasion when forced to go undercover.
65* ''Anime/SDGundamWorldHeroes'' has a character based off of Edward Teach named Edward Second V, second-in-command of Benjamin V2 Gundam, who's based off of the real Edward Teach’s captain Benjamin Hornigold. What's curious about this is that Edward and Benjamin are also based off of the Second V and the Victory 2 Gundam respectively, both of which are MidSeasonUpgrade[=s=] of the Victory Gundam from ''Anime/MobileSuitVictoryGundam'', with the Second V replacing the Victory 2 in the novelization.
66[[/folder]]
67
68[[folder:Comic Books]]
69* In ''Comicbook/{{Batman}}'' #4, Batman and Robin battle a gang lord named Thatch who impersonated the historical pirate Blackbeard. Thatch organized his gang to disguise themselves as pirates and often assaulted wealthy people on ships in the middle of the sea.
70* In one of the earliest adventures of ''ComicBook/FantasticFour1961'', the group is sent back in time to steal Blackbeard's treasure. [[spoiler:In doing so, however, Ben Grimm ends up inspiring the legend of Blackbeard in the first place.]]
71* In a special Halloween issue of the ''[[ComicBook/GargoylesDynamite Gargoyles]]'' Dynamite comics, Brooklyn's son Nashville goes out trick-or-treating as Blackbeard. According to him, the real Blackbeard was a gargoyle; [[TimeTravel he knows from personal experience]].
72[[/folder]]
73
74[[folder:Film -- Live-Action]]
75* ''Film/AnneOfTheIndies'': Blackbeard is mentor to Captain Anne Providence. He is portrayed as a BoisterousBruiser, but one with a vicious streak. When Anne defies him and refuses to hand over one of her crew to him (on the ground that the man has signed her articles and is therefore under her protection), Blackbeard swears vengeance and vows to hunt her down.
76* The patron saint of, and codifier of all things pirate in film, Robert Newton, portrayed him in the 1950s RKO movie ''Film/BlackbeardThePirate''. Newton, who effectively single-handedly created the modern perception of what pirates were with his portrayal of Long John Silver in the Disney version of ''Film/TreasureIsland1950'', was of course perfect casting for history's most notorious pirate.
77* ''Film/BlackbeardsGhost'': The spirit of Blackbeard (Creator/PeterUstinov) has been imprisoned in limbo by his wife, who happened to be a witch. A college track coach (played by Creator/DeanJones) unwittingly recites a magical incantation that makes the ghost of Blackbeard visible only to him. HilarityEnsues.
78* ''Film/PiratesOfTheCaribbeanOnStrangerTides'': Taking inspiration from the below-referenced book, Blackbeard here has already been resurrected by some means never explained, and is seeking the Fountain of Youth to permanently prolong his life.
79* ''Film/{{Pan}}'': Blackbeard serves as the main antagonist of Neverland, mining Pixie dust to restore his youth using slave labor.
80[[/folder]]
81
82[[folder:Literature]]
83* Blackbeard is one of the Americans summoned by Mr. Scratch to serve as the JuryOfTheDamned in ''Literature/TheDevilAndDanielWebster''.
84* ''Franchise/{{Garfield}}'s Ghost Stories'' had a story where Garfield comes face to face with Blackbeard's headless ghost.
85* ''Literature/TheLegendOfAnneBonny'': Blackbeard's exploits inspire the [[UsefulNotes/AnneBonny titular character]] to make her own fortune, though through less brutal piracy. In 1717, she uses her position as Governor Charles Eden's secretary to steal some of the stolen merchandise Blackbeard pays to Eden in exchange for protection. After she injures one of Teach's crewmembers, he forces [[SweetPollyOliver "Andy Cormack"]] to serve onboard the ''Queen Anne's Revenge'' that sets sail from Edenton. She escapes in Nassau and gets away with freeing two of Blackbeard's slave girls and stealing some of his loot. She later learns of Blackbeard's death at the hands of her archenemy Lieutenant Robert Maynard and hides his stolen loot which she uses to make life good for herself and her surviving loved ones many decades later.
86* ''Literature/OlogySeries'': Blackbeard is one of the famous pirates who's mentioned by Captain William Lubber, the narrator of ''Pirateology: A Pirate Hunter's Companion''. Notably, the female pirate Lubber is trying to catch, Arabella Drummond, is heavily implied to be Blackbeard's sister, cousin, or childhood sweetheart. She ended up starting her career as a pirate as she was trying to reach the Caribbean and find Blackbeard. She very nearly reached him during his final stand in Okracoke, but was unable to save him in time and embarked afterwards on her own raids to leave terror in her wake. She even [[RightHandCat owns a ship's cat she named Mr. Teach]].
87* ''Literature/OnStrangerTides'': Here, Blackbeard (called Edward ''Thatch'') is a voodoo shaman, who allies himself with Hurwood in an elaborate plot to [[spoiler:resurrect himself in another body after his death at Okracoke and abscond with his hidden riches.]]
88* ''Literature/PeterPan'': Captain James Hook is said to have been Blackbeard's boatswain. The 2006 AuthorizedSequel Literature/PeterPanInScarlet has a revived Hook state would never have served such an uneducated man and that all suggestions that he has are merely rumours started by his enemies.
89* Makes a brief cameo in ''[[Literature/PercyJacksonAndTheOlympians The Sea Of Monsters]]'', where it's revealed he didn't die at all, but was kept prisoner for centuries by Circe. Oh, and [[BeethovenWasAnAlienSpy he was a son of Ares]].
90* ''Literature/TreasureIsland'': Blackbeard is mentioned in passing, as characters discuss an incidence of his cruelty that inspired the sea shanty "Fifteen Men on a Dead Man's Chest." Dead Man's Chest is an actual place: a barren, coffin-shaped rock in the Virgin Islands. According to the story, Blackbeard left a bunch of mutineers there with nothing but a sword and a bottle of rum, then came back a month later to see what had happened. Nearly all of them had either starved to death or killed each other, but fifteen men had managed to stay alive... [[IAmAHumanitarian somehow...]]
91[[/folder]]
92
93[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
94* Creator/RayStevenson portrays Blackbeard in ''Series/BlackSails'' starting in season 3. Curiously, they don't portray his death as all the historical records claim. Rather, Woodes Rogers is the one who killed him. Rogers ordered Teach to be keelhauled, expecting a gruesome death, but Teach went three times when once would have killed anyone else, embarrassing Rogers to the point he just shot Teach in the head.
95* ''Series/{{Crossbones}}'': The central premise of the series is that Blackbeard (played by Creator/JohnMalkovich) faked his death and is now ruling a secret island kingdom.
96* Surprisingly, the ''actual'' Blackbeard has yet to appear on ''Series/DoctorWho'', but an imaginary version of him is summoned during the climatic PublicDomainCharacter-vs-PublicDomainCharacter battle of "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS6E2TheMindRobber The Mind Robber]]".
97* ''Series/TheGhostAndMrsMuir'': In "Not So Faust", Blackbeard is one of the three judges summoned by the Devil to serve as Claymore Gregg's JuryOfTheDamned.
98* He got a song in ''Series/HorribleHistories''. And [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q2IaNvAmBzU&ab_channel=HorribleHistories here]] it is.
99* He appears a few times in ''Series/LegendsOfTomorrow'', where he is depicted as a DirtyCoward who panics and sells out his comrades whenever he is in danger, which [[BrokenPedestal greatly disappoints Mick Rory]]. However, he can fight if pressed.
100* The Netflix docudrama ''Series/TheLostPirateKingdom'' has Blackbeard (played by James Oliver Wheatley) as one of its main characters. His portrayal is initially sympathetic, but he gradually undergoes a FaceHeelTurn over the course of the series, losing his mind to syphilis (which he may have had in real life, but we're really not sure) and eventually selling most of his black crewmen into slavery to make the deal with Eden (Blackbeard did sometimes sell the human cargo of seized slave ships, but there is no evidence he ever did this to members of his own crew). There are also some FanDisservice scenes of him injecting mercury into his penis.
101* He appears as a minor villain in a few episodes of ''Series/OnceUponATime'', notable as the only definitely real historical figure to appear in one of the show's fiction-inspiring otherworlds.
102* Blackbeard is a major character in the Creator/HBOMax comedy ''Series/OurFlagMeansDeath'', played by Creator/TaikaWaititi. The show focuses on his [[QueerRomance growing relationship]] with "Gentleman Pirate" Stede Bonnet, taking ''many'' [[ArtisticLicenseHistory historical liberties]] for comedic effect.
103[[/folder]]
104
105[[folder:Music]]
106* Referenced in the song "Jolly Roger" from Music/AdamAndTheAnts' album ''Music/KingsOfTheWildFrontier''.
107-->''Of all the pirates on the seas''\
108''The worst of them was UsefulNotes/{{Blackbeard}}''\
109''So damnable a fiend from Hell''\
110''He was the one they most feared''\
111''Any man who sailed with him''\
112''Was taking quite a chance''\
113''He'd hang them from the gallows''\
114''Just to see if they could dance, haha''
115[[/folder]]
116
117[[folder:Video Games]]
118* ''VideoGame/AssassinsCreedIVBlackFlag'' gives him a LighterAndSofter treatment that is closer to the historical record than any other popular culture portrayal. He's in fact highly heroic and friendly and his final stand is one of the TearJerker moments of the game featuring a line of dialogue that best encapsulates his romantic appeal:
119-->'''Blackbeard:''' In a world without gold, we might have been heroes.
120* ''VideoGame/BackStab'' gives Blackbeard a HistoricalHeroUpgrade where he's now one of the LaResistance leaders opposing the villain, Edmund Kane.
121* Blackbeard appears ''VideoGame/FateGrandOrder'' as a Rider-class Servant and as a major antagonist in the Okeanos singularity. This depiction of him is...a ''lot'' different than most. For one thing, unlike his historical self who was feared by all and used his reputation to intimidate his enemies, ''Fate's'' Blackbeard comes off as a complete buffoon to everyone who meets him, [[ObfuscatingStupidity which is partially something he does on purpose]], as he takes advantage of people not taking him seriously. These includes acting like a perverted {{Otaku}} with interests on little girls and speaking with LeetLingo. As a whole though, he's routinely treated as the resident ButtMonkey by not only the protagonists, [[TheFriendNobodyLikes but the other Servants working for him as well]].
122* ''VideoGame/OceansHeart'': Blackbeard is the main villain whose raid on Limestone and kidnapping of Hazel serves as the inciting incident for Tilia's quest. Given that this is a ConstructedWorld, he doesn't have that much in common with the real guy aside from his looks and role as a feared pirate captain.
123* ''VideoGame/SaintsRowGatOutOfHell'' features Blackbeard as one of the numerous occupants of Hell who Johnny Gat and Kinzie can recruit as an ally. He's sheltering from TheLegionsOfHell on his ship, and has {{Power Tattoo}}es and creepy GlowingEyes to make him instantly recognizable.
124* ''VideoGame/SidMeiersPirates'' features Blackbeard as the second most notorious pirate in the game (only beaten by Henry Morgan). As such, he plays the role of an OptionalBoss within the game, and defeating him serves as a great way to increase your own infamy. [[ShownTheirWork His face is even shrouded in smoke from the fuses hidden in his beard]].
125[[/folder]]
126
127[[folder:Webcomics]]
128* The main antagonist of webcomic ''Webcomic/WhispersInTheWind'' is Bailey Thatch. Although he has Blackbeard's name and infamous reputation, Bailey has none of Blackbeard's physical qualities. Facing him is Scarlet Maynard, also inspired by real figure Lieutenant Robert Maynard, the man who brought Blackbeard's head back to Virginia.
129[[/folder]]
130
131[[folder:Web Original]]
132* ''WebVideo/EpicRapBattlesOfHistory'': Battled UsefulNotes/AlCapone once.
133* ''WebAnimation/TheGentlemanPirate'' documents the life of Stede Bonnet, with a significant portion dedicated to the time period where he worked with (for a given sense of the phrase) Blackbeard.
134[[/folder]]
135
136[[folder:Western Animation]]
137* ''WesternAnimation/TheMask'': In a HalloweenEpisode, Skillit brings zombies of three former users of the mask. One of them is Blackbeard.
138* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'': Appeared among the JuryOfTheDamned in ''Treehouse Of Horror IV''. He was also the only British-born character among them. The rest were Americans.
139--> "Arrr! This chair be high, says I!"
140* ''WesternAnimation/SpongebobSquarepants'': The Flying Dutchman's appearance is unequivocally based on Blackbeard, although dealing with Spongebob and Patrick's brand of idiocy doesn't do much for his fearsome demeanor.
141* ''WesternAnimation/TimeSquad'': The guys visit Blackbeard to discover that he's an environmentalist who's more preoccupied with saving the whales than pirating.
142[[/folder]]

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