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- Newsgroups: rec.arts.comics.info,rec.answers,news.answers
- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!hookup!swrinde!cs.utexas.edu!uunet!leafusa!tyg
- From: tyg@hq.ileaf.com (Tom Galloway)
- Subject: Welcome to rec.arts.comics: Glossary
- Message-ID: <comics-faq-2-766189091@hq.ileaf.com>
- Followup-To: rec.arts.comics.misc
- Originator: tyg@valhalla
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- Reply-To: tyg@hq.ileaf.com (Tom Galloway)
- Organization: Black Ink Irregulars
- References: <comics-faq-1-766189091@hq.ileaf.com>
- Date: Tue, 12 Apr 1994 22:22:07 GMT
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.EDU
- Expires: Fri, 13 May 1994 04:00:00 GMT
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- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu rec.arts.comics.info:849 rec.answers:4864 news.answers:17984
-
- Posted-By: auto-faq 2.4
- Archive-name: comics/faq/part2
-
- WELCOME TO REC.ARTS.COMICS (part 2 of 7: the r.a.c. glossary)
- written by lots of different people
- edited by Paul A. Estin 1990-1993
- Tom Galloway 1993-present
-
- [last update: 11/30/93]
-
- 2. The USENET/ Rec.arts.comics lingo glossary:
-
- Terms defined here (a + before a term indicates a changed definition, a *
- indicates a new entry).
-
- bandwidth
- btw
- FAQ
- flame
- flame war
- FYI
- IMHO
- IMPO
- kill file
- newbie
- signal-to-noise ratio
- SOL
- wrt
- :-)
- Alternative Squiddy
- ashcan
- CBG
- comix
- Crisis
- CSN
- dangling plotline/dangler
- fanboy/fangirl
- fourth wall
- furry
- JLA, JLE, JLI, JLUTB
- LNH
- LSH
- OHOTMUDE
- PAD
- patch
- phonebook
- pod person/pod
- pogs/milk caps
- post-Crisis
- pre-Crisis
- retcon
- spoiler
- Squiddy
- Suicide Squid
- TMNT
-
- General Usenet terms:
-
- bandwidth = analogous to a radio bandwidth (frequency), referring to
- the resources needed to propagate posts. Usually used in the
- phrase "stop wasting bandwidth", which means simply "don't post
- if you don't have anything relevant to say."
- btw = by the way
- FAQ = Frequently Asked Questions; topics which have come up repeatedly with
- answers to try to avoid having them come up again. See part 3.
- flame = an inflammatory, insulting post
- flame war = a flame response to a flame responding to a flame...
- FYI = for your information
- IMHO = in my humble (or honest) opinion
- IMPO = in my personal (or pompous) opinion
- kill file = a file usable in the "rn" and "nn" news programs that one can
- keep to "filter out" disliked topics, keywords, or posters
- newbie = [General] anyone new to Usenet or a particular newsgroup.
- [Specific] anyone who makes a netiquette mistake showing that
- they've not bothered to learn the customs of either Usenet or
- the newsgroup they're posting to.
- signal-to-noise ratio = in a newsgroup, the proportion of useful articles
- to useless ones (such as flames). We like to keep the signal
- relatively high and the noise very low.
- SOL = shit out of luck
- wrt = with respect to
- :-) = a "smiley", used to indicate humor or sarcasm
-
- Specific R.a.c terms:
-
- Alternative Squiddy = The sillier and more net oriented annual r.a.c.
- awards. See "Squiddy" for more detail.
- ashcan = a half-sized (4" x 5"), typically black and white,
- promotional copy of a comic book. Originally, ashcans were
- produced to claim trademarks. Today, ashcans are produced more as
- a promotion than to gain guardianship of intellectual property.
- CBG = Comic Buyers' Guide, a weekly newspaper
- comix = independent, non-mainstream comics, such as _Yummy Fur_ or
- _Desert Peach_.
- Crisis = the Crisis on Infinite Earths (usually). (See the Frequently
- Asked Questions (FAQ) in part 3)
- CSN = Comic Shop News, a free weekly hype sheet
- dangling plotline/dangler = an unresolved plotline or mystery which an
- author has apparently forgotten about, since it hasn't been
- mentioned in a long time.
- fanboy/fangirl = a rabidly devoted fan, often said to be "drooling". This
- can be used in a general sense, or a specific sense, such as X-Men
- fanboy, Sandgirl, Image fanboy, etc.
- fourth wall = originally used with reference to stage sets, this
- term refers to the imaginary wall between the characters and
- the audience. "Breaking the fourth wall" refers to comics
- in which the characters are aware that they exist in a comic
- book, sometimes for the purpose of humor.
- furry = an anthropomorphic animal, such as Mickey Mouse, Cerebus, or Omaha
- JLA, JLE, JLI, JLUTB = the popular DC super-hero groups "Justice League
- America", "Justice League Europe", "Justice League International",
- and for those tired of them, the hypothetical "Justice League
- Up-the-Butt"
- LNH = Legion of Net Heroes, a parody of sorts of...
- LSH = Legion of Super-heroes (a DC comic book)
- OHOTMUDE = Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe, Deluxe Edition
- PAD = Peter A. David, a comics writer known to read r.a.c
- patch = see retcon
- phonebook = name for the collections of 20-25 issues of Cerebus, so called
- because they're the thickness of the phonebook for a large city.
- Sometimes applied to other hefty collections, but most often to
- Cerebus.
- pod person/pod = a character who has been taken over by a
- new writer and/or editor and immediately acts very inconsistently
- with previous characterization, with no explanation given for the
- change, and no change noticed by other characters in the book. The
- term is from the movie Invasion of the Body Snatchers, where aliens
- grew duplicates of people in giant pods. First use of 'pod' was in
- reference to the changeover after Keith Giffen left the JLI titles,
- concerning the characters Fire, Ice, Max, and Oberon.
- pogs/milk caps = Round, approximately 1-2.5 inches in diameter, and
- cardboard, pogs are the element of a game from Hawaii. While the
- game involves stacking the pogs and flipping another to knock them
- over, on the continent in recent months, they have simply become
- another alternative to trading cards, bearing art and/or text
- concerning super-heroes. Many here consider pogs on the mainland an
- example of a manufactured fad.
- post-Crisis = events/history/characters in the DC Universe as they existed
- *after* the Crisis on Infinite Earths. (See the "Frequently-Asked
- Questions" section in part 3.)
- pre-Crisis = events/history/characters in the DC Universe as they existed
- *prior* to the Crisis on Infinite Earths. (See the "Frequently-
- Asked Questions" section in part 3.)
- retcon = to retroactively change the continuity of a character or title.
- (This term, a r.a.c favorite, was coined by Damian Cugley).
- Originally, the term "retcon" was used only in cases where the
- interpretation of "facts" from earlier stories is changed, but the
- facts themselves are preserved. For example, Alan Moore took took
- Swamp Thing, previously considered to be a man transformed into a
- plant creature, and with minimal changes to facts presented in
- previous stories, wrote Swamp Thing to be a "plant elemental", one
- of a long line of such beings.
- A "patch" was the term used (taken from programmer's
- jargon) to mean an actual change, rather than merely filling in
- details.
- These days, however, "retcon" is used increasingly to mean
- changes to history as well as to retroactive continuity. So, to
- "retcon" is to change history, so that something that had existed
- in the continuity of the fictional universe, not ONLY doesn't exist
- now, but in the fictional history, NEVER HAS existed. This can be
- true of an event, of a character, or whatever. For example, if
- Hawkman appears in the Justice League, and then years later a
- writer decides that "No, Hawkman just came to Earth, he was *never*
- in the Justice League," that's a retcon.
- Retcon is also listed in the New Hacker's Dictionary, with
- credit given to r.a.c.. In the second edition, this is disputed.
- In the third edition, should there be one, there will likely be a
- dispute of the dispute...
- spoiler = any item which "gives away" information about a comic. Proper
- netiquette is to give a "Spolier Warning" first, to allow people to
- avoid the spoiler if they wish to not have their surprise ruined.
- Squiddy = what some people call the annual r.a.c. Awards. See section 3
- for why this is the case. These are the more formal and serious
- categories.
- Suicide Squid = See the FAQ in part 3.
- TMNT = Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
-
- [end of part 2]
-
- "There are no net.gods, just some people with bigger mouths than others."
- -- Dan'l DanehyOakes, net.roach
- tyg tyg@hq.ileaf.com
-