Talk:english paper
From Homestar Runner Wiki
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Based on this, please do not add the fact again to this article. Instead, if you think you have a very good reason why we should, please post it here. Thanks.{{User:Loafing/sig}} 21:02, 6 July 2007 (UTC) | Based on this, please do not add the fact again to this article. Instead, if you think you have a very good reason why we should, please post it here. Thanks.{{User:Loafing/sig}} 21:02, 6 July 2007 (UTC) | ||
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+ | == Battery diagram == | ||
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+ | H*R is a social commentary. It has already been known to mimic and implement things found in the real world to make references that its viewers can catch (For example, the game Trogdor uses the Konami Code). These instructions are of a serious nature, and it is very unlikely for battery manufactures to imitate an internet cartoon such as Homestar Runner for no obvious reason. | ||
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+ | Furthermore, just because this I just so happened to come across this picture doesn't mean that it is the only one of its type, and also doesn't rule out the possibility that The Brothes Chaps simply made their own version of the image. They may have thouht that this was the perfect image for imitation as it is a bunch of lines and therefore easy to animate. This would fit with my "Social Commentary" theory. | ||
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+ | This picture may have been made long before this toon was released. | ||
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+ | Judging from the abundance of obscure references to the real world, H*R is likely copying a funny diagram from an actual product. Therefore, the paragraph about the sighting at Engrish.com belongs in the real world references section. |
Revision as of 22:12, 6 July 2007
Contents |
Font?
What font is used to type out the paper? Some sort of typewriter font obviously, but it'd be good for accurate reproductions.
- In the Word document, or the email? In the Word document it's just Times New Roman. — User:ACupOfCoffee@ 14:27, 20 February 2006 (UTC)
In the actual email. It's different in the word document, obviously.
- It looks like it might be either EF Raleigh Light or Lucida Typewriter, but I can't really tell. That's the best I could do from the Search by Sight feature on fonts.com. Can anaybody else really tell? — User:ACupOfCoffee@ 21:13, 20 February 2006 (UTC)
$2.53
Is the 2.53$ significant?
- It's written "$2.53", and I don't see how. Really, some people read REALLY far into the silliest things... --Jay 21:25, 19 Jan 2005 (MST)
Wrestleman
The fun facts say that this is the first time Strong Bad is referred to as a wrestle man. Where? There's no mention of "wrestle man" in the transcript or anything. 24.193.240.27 06:38, 10 Jun 2005 (UTC)
- In the Easter egg. --Jay (Gobble) 06:42, 10 Jun 2005 (UTC)
eBay
Does anyone have a link to the actual eBay auction? I'd like to check that out. Alcnolien 20:11, 29 November 2005 (UTC)
- I kind of doubt it still exists; I believe eBay takes closed auctions offline. More to the point, is there any proof that the original auction and/or the comments originated from TBC, or were they a fan stunt? Granted, the wording right now uses the passive tense to avoid making that claim, but it seems to be implied. —AbdiViklas 20:34, 29 November 2005 (UTC)
- We should look into this. Do we know what the seller's username was? If so, we could look into selling history. Alcnolien 02:43, 30 November 2005 (UTC)
"All right" is two words
Since this email is about an English paper, and given how Strong Bad often likes to make fun of email writers' bad spelling, this seems like a good place to point out that Strong Bad makes the common mistake of using "alright" as a word. We spent an entire day (well, the 45 minutes of the class) in high school English about this. Some argue that this error has been made so often by so many that it is now legit. See the usage note in Dictionary.com for more info.
Now I'll go back to my own little world where this sort of thing matters.
Battery Diagram found on Engrish.com
Today Engrish.com updated with a sign using the same diagram used in this email. Odd, isn't it?
- I noticed that too. It's allegedly from Austria, though I think the authenticity is questionable, considering how easy it would be to produce.
- It's right here.--Eric the Rexman 20:36, 4 November 2006 (UTC)
- According to http://www.consumating.com/profiles/CobaltCube (the website linked on the engrish page) the photo was featured in the submitter's "question of the week" for July 24th 2006.
- It's right here.--Eric the Rexman 20:36, 4 November 2006 (UTC)
This fact has been added and removed a few times now. The consensus of a discussion on IRC was that we have to assume that the H*R version is the original. Mainly because of two reasons:
- english paper was released 3 years before the other sightings
- The version in english paper looks identical to the one from Engrish.com, yet is a vector graphic. This means that it is most likely the original, and the Engrish sighting is a direct copy.
Based on this, please do not add the fact again to this article. Instead, if you think you have a very good reason why we should, please post it here. Thanks. Loafing 21:02, 6 July 2007 (UTC)
Battery diagram
H*R is a social commentary. It has already been known to mimic and implement things found in the real world to make references that its viewers can catch (For example, the game Trogdor uses the Konami Code). These instructions are of a serious nature, and it is very unlikely for battery manufactures to imitate an internet cartoon such as Homestar Runner for no obvious reason.
Furthermore, just because this I just so happened to come across this picture doesn't mean that it is the only one of its type, and also doesn't rule out the possibility that The Brothes Chaps simply made their own version of the image. They may have thouht that this was the perfect image for imitation as it is a bunch of lines and therefore easy to animate. This would fit with my "Social Commentary" theory.
This picture may have been made long before this toon was released.
Judging from the abundance of obscure references to the real world, H*R is likely copying a funny diagram from an actual product. Therefore, the paragraph about the sighting at Engrish.com belongs in the real world references section.