The Hero of Three Faces by Paul Gadzikowski | Fanfiction but it's comic strips. Stick figures but they're triangles. | Not endorsed by the owners of the intellectual properties saluted, does not infringe on the markets of said property owners. MAY CONTAIN UNMARKED SPOILERS. | Updates: usually daily about 19:00 US Central, with annual summer hiatus. Thanks for reading. |
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The Doctor, the Master, the Rani (Doctor Who).
After adding some temporary and some permanent notations in this space to a few panels' pages for a variety of reasons over the years, I've decided some proper annotations beyond the cast captions might be in order for some cartoons and might be fun, so I'll be adding permanent annotations in this space to some pages. This paragraph on the origin of annotations now appears in annotations on the first panel of the first cartoons in production and chronological order, and this paragraph will appear on the front page for a time as an announcement. Annotations will be added to panels if and when I decide a given cartoon warrants or inspires one, on no schedule and with no additional notice than the annotation itself, and not necessarily on any given new cartoon at the time of its initial appearance. If you've a mind, you can request annotation on your favorite(s) at paul@arthurkingoftimeandspace.com and I'll add one if I have anything to say about that cartoon. (Or if you find the annotations objectionable for some reason let me know that, and I'll take it under consideration.) The chronologically first The Hero of Three Faces cartoon is set in the prehistory (during the protagonist's Time Lord Academy days) of the continuity of Doctor Who, which since 1981 is my favorite franchise for writing and drawing fanfiction - or my favorite fandom as fandom these days is wont to express it. It's a send-up of the first cartoon Charles M. Schulz published for Peanuts, a formative influence of my youth. The Rani's actions in the cartoon are an allusion to dialog in Mark of the Rani. The better to simulate the motion picture screen where most of the characters I salute here originate, in this site's format, cartoons with more than one panel are in a "panel-per-screen" format for which there is a convenient tutorial here. |