Talk:Cole Genie/@comment-24263977-20140203044647/@comment-10860529-20140203104153

Ladies and gentlemen, the more you know~

It's a fact that many easily forget, unfortunately, including myself in this situation. ^^ Although it can stand on its own, and Aladdin among other stories from One Thousand and One Nights'' have been known to be told separately, you're more than right.

It makes me wonder how the show might handle Arabian Nights and the tales within it, though. Would Aladdin and others be treated as fictional stories as they truely are (though not "real" in the Enchanted forest realm)? Earlier versions had less stories or "nights" to them, though more tales were included due to the influences of other writers and translators - perhaps this would mean that the child of Scherazade would be expected to act as both a fairy tale character and a narrator for "real life" events as a means to evade execution (or would it be whoever is chosen to marry them who does instead)?