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Foxtrot


 

FoxTrot is a daily American comic strip by cartoonist Bill Amend, which began syndication on April 10, 1988. It centers around the daily life (which isn't all that normal) of the Fox family. In addition to typical "family" humor, the strip has many stories built around fandom, nerdiness and Internet culture. It is syndicated by Universal Press Syndicate.

Characters

The Fox Family

The Fox family lives at 1254 North Elm Street, the specific city being a mystery. Older comics suggest the family lives in Kansas City, Missouri, as Peter and Roger are big Chiefs fans. This would also match the publisher of the FoxTrot books, Andrews McMeel, which is based in Kansas City. However, the newer comics (starting with "Think iFruity") would suggest the family is in Chicago, as that is the airport Roger uses for business trips. Also, a previous strip, in which Andy attended a Chicago Bulls game and met Michael Jordan provides additional evidence. It has also been suggested by fans that the Foxes live in Hillsdale, Illinois (a suburb of the quad cities), as in an early strip Paige and Andy were shopping at Hillsdale Shopping Center (the Hillsdale theory is supported by the fact that the high school sports teams have an "H" somewhere on their uniforms).

Related Topics:
Kansas City - Missouri - Chiefs - Chicago - Chicago Bulls - Michael Jordan

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Roger Fox is the father and a not-too-bright corporate slave. He is 45 years old and was born in Chicago. He went to college at Willot as an English major, a parody of Williams College, rival school to Bill Amend's alma mater Amherst. Roger is a fan of sports and chess, though any time he attempts to play either of them, he finds himself either losing (chess) or breaking bones (sports). He often indulges in foods of all kinds (despite the dubious cuisine Andy produces, he remains perpetually overweight). Once described as "still trying to catch up with the technology of the 1970s," Roger can practically destroy a computer just by touching it and when he tries to barbecue, all too often he ends up burning the food (and himself). In the July 2, 2000 strip, the Fox children actually watched Roger grill their Fourth of July dinner as their fireworks show. His ideas of a good family vacation are quite similar to those of Calvin's father (from Calvin and Hobbes). In addition, he is an infomercial addict, often buying into the schemes of greedy sellers.(He once bought a $200 pamphlet on how to get rich from "Willy Millions", a supposed parody of Matthew Lesko). Roger is the only member of the family who insists on going out on camping trips. Every couple years, he takes the family to Uncle Ralph's cabin. All the other years they go on some other wacky vacation. Though he's not an idiot, Roger is probably the primary cast member who is most oblivious to the world around him. Nonetheless, he has managed to be the family's primary breadwinner from day one.

Related Topics:
Father - Corporate - Chicago - English - Chess - Cuisine - Computer - Barbecue - Firework - Vacation - Calvin and Hobbes - Infomercial - Matthew Lesko

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Andrea "Andy" Fox is a stay-at-home mother; earlier strips showed her employed as a freelance writer or columnist for the newspaper, but nowadays she mostly just monitors her unwieldy brood. When she was an English major in college, someone used to slip anonymous love notes under her door. Her paramour, unfortunately, "turned out to be a real nerd" —but she married him anyway. She is now 42 years old and the center of the household: without her, it would (and did) "collapse in a day or two." More often than not, Andy cooks absurd "health-food" meals, such as lima bean cobbler or tofu curry. At the other end of the food spectrum, she has a monster sweet tooth and has absolutely no problem gobbling up the snacks Roger and the kids try to hold on to. A miser when it comes to heating, she insists on keeping the thermostat extremely low during the winter months, often low enough to freeze soft drinks, milk, hot chocolate, oxygen and electronic devices. For the most part, Andy keeps the family grounded and acts as a straight man to their antics, although she has been known to crack under pressure, usually during the course of visits from her mother. In one strip Andy competes with her mother thinking that she is the world's largest "Wannabe". Many of her storylines center around new obsessions—collecting "Bitty Babies," the movie Titanic, the Nintendo DS game Nintendogs, and her Mango-Kiwi-colored iFruit computer. For a week or so, Andy went on her mid-life crisis by getting the feeling of turning 42. She went on a shopping spree with Paige that ended up not going too well.

Related Topics:
Freelance - Columnist - English - Paramour - Health-food - Lima bean - Cobbler - Tofu - Curry - Thermostat - Soft drink - Milk - Hot chocolate - Oxygen - Straight man - Bitty Babies - Titanic - Nintendo DS - Nintendogs - IFruit

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Peter Fox, the oldest child at 16, is a junior in high school. He habitually procrastinates on schoolwork until the last minute ("I should start on my book report. Ah, there's always tomorrow. I suppose I'll need a book. How late is the library open?" or working on a semester essay that was due last year). He is a sports fan and likes to pretend he is a football/baseball/basketball star, although in truth he is generally relegated to bench-warming, if he makes the team at all. Peter also entertains fantasies of becoming the lead guitarist in a rock band one day like his idol, Bruce Springsteen. Whenever Peter plays his guitar, the rest of the family is unhappy for two reasons. Peter is very loud when he plays music, often shattering dishes and windows. The volume of his music is even worse when one considers that he is not very good at playing the guitar, and his singing isn't much better. He is capable of ingesting massive amounts of food, but never gains a pound. In fact, Peter will sometimes eat to try to gain weight. Peter usually works a summer job at the local movie theater as a janitor and ticket collector, although he often blows his entire paycheck on food from the concession stand. Peter met his girlfriend Denise in the comic's first year and has been dating her ever since. Early on, his tendency to get the "wandering eye" and still lust after other girls caused a good deal of friction between him and the hotly jealous Denise, but he appears to have settled down since. He wears a blue and white baseball cap with the letter A on it which appears to be for Amend's alma mater, Amherst, a grey sweatshirt, and blue jeans almost daily. Despite his typical adolescent-macho fantasies and fixations, Peter also shows (oft-suppressed) signs of sensitivity (such as his devotion to Denise, his blind girlfriend) and being a good student.

Related Topics:
High school - Procrastinates - Football - Baseball - Basketball - Star - Rock band - Bruce Springsteen - Loud - Sing - Movie theater - Janitor - Denise - Baseball cap - A - Sweatshirt - Blue jeans

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Paige Fox is the 14-year old, junk-food-craving (though not to the extent of her mother), style-obsessed sister and a freshman in high school. She is always depicted with a ponytail. It has been suggested in the strip many times that Paige get a new hairstyle. Sometimes these suggestions follow another character's antics, such as when Peter blew bubble gum in Paige's hair or when Quincy bit her ponytail. When Amend was asked if it would happen, he said probably not, because no one would recognize Paige otherwise. Paige can't get herself a prom date, unless one counts geeky Morton Goldthwait (which Paige does not; yet when trying to avoid Goldthwait's request to go to the prom, she showed anger when he didn't ask). Most of her jokes center around the idiosyncrasies of high-school popular culture, as well as Jason's attempts to annoy her (which mostly end with her beating him up). Her frequent attempts to cook only yield charcoal and smoke. Unlike Peter, Paige does not have a single object of her affections, though her naptime dreams often feature a dashing French hunk named Pierre (though in one strip her "debate" whether to take Spanish or French for high school consisted of a dream that had a brawl between Pierre and a Spanish equivalent named Juan Carlos). However, Pierre has not appeared in the strip for a while. Math - especially word problems - is the bane of Paige's existence, and she is frequently depicted in the strip struggling with her geometry homework. Paige often has to ask Jason for help with her math, but unless she agrees to pay him a hefty sum for it, Jason will often give her incorrect or "joke" answers on purpose.

Related Topics:
Freshman - High school - Ponytail - Quincy - Prom - Morton Goldthwait - Popular culture - Charcoal - Smoke - Pierre

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Jason Fox is a 10-year old, incredibly brilliant little brother with a massive ego. He likes to refer to himself as " Jason the great," " Jason the wonderful and magnificent," or many other variations. His life mission appears to be to annoy Paige, which often results in her beating him up and breaking his glasses. Ironically, Jason is never seen without them on. Jason has frequently tutored Paige in math, though he prefers to be referred to as a "math consultant". He is smart enough to know the average temperature on Venus and to solve complex equations that most adults would find staggering, but at the same time believes that Santa Claus and the X-Files are real. He is also a genius with all things computerized, having once written his own Internet browser and, another time, crashed the entire Internet itself (by accident) with a "Darth Jason" virus. He also wrote his own operating system, "Jasondows", which is nearly impossible to uninstall. In the 7 May 2005 strip, he Wikipedia by adding a picture of his sister to the "warthog" article (an act quickly imitated by FoxTrot readers: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Warthog&oldid=13377916). This was also attempted on the article for rabies, albeit unsuccessfully http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Rabies&oldid=13389605. Jason can also be found frequently entertaining outrageous schemes to either earn or spend huge amounts of money: he once attempted to set up a dinosaur-themed hotel in Las Vegas and build a skyscraper comic book shop—only to scrap that plan, as it would take up space that was already reserved for his Star Wars-themed amusement park, including a life-sized Death Star ride. Once, he tried to give up geekiness, due to learning girls found nerds sexy, but soon found it too unnatural. Jason's favorite activities besides bothering Paige (and sometimes the others) are playing video and computer games, such as Doomathon, in which he joins an Internet league with names such as Jason_Postal_Worker, drawing Slugman cartoons, obsessing over movies such as Lord of the Rings and Star Wars, and maintaining romantic tension between himself and Eileen. Though Jason has no interest in sports (and cannot tell the difference between a football and a baseball), he enjoys competing with his older brother in unusual challenges (such as TV Channel Russian Roulette and eating a meal in the fewest bites).

Related Topics:
Glasses - Tutor - Venus - Santa Claus - X-Files - 7 May - 2005 - Wikipedia - Warthog - Hotel - Las Vegas - Comic book - Star Wars - Death Star - Video - Computer game - Slugman - Lord of the Rings - Eileen

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Quincy is Jason's pet iguana. Quincy specializes in two fields: chewing on things (usually something of Paige's, including her clothes, her shoes, and her autographed "Backsync Boys" photo) and scaring the wits out of Paige. Jason's hypothesis that he could conjure a similar reaction out of all girls was disproven when he brought Quincy to school for show and tell, and Miss O'Malley, his teacher, thought Quincy was cute. Paige once saved him from choking on a shoelace while Jason was out of the house. Quincy is a frequent observer of the Fox household antics, but he has only ever shown three facial expressions: his standard, calm-eyed gaze; a scrambling panic when Jason throws him in the air; and dizziness after landing. He is by far the most unflappable member of the household. As a rule, Quincy does not think or in any way react in a human fashion to the events around him, making him very unusual among comic strip animals.

Related Topics:
Iguana - Show and tell - Miss O'Malley - Shoelace

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The iFruit is a computer Andy purchaced in a 1999 storyline, after Roger's disastrous attempt at earning a living through online trading ended with him selling the family's old computer. It is based on the original Apple iMac. The iFruit can talk, criticize font selection and even change the wallpaper (of the room). Though initially mortal enemies with the geeky Jason due to its emphasis on ease of use, Jason grows attached to it, especially after matching color schemes (or "flavors", with the Fox family's iFruit being mango-kiwi) persuades his mother to buy all manners of peripherals, such as scanners and CD-ROM burners. The iFruit once beat Roger in chess 250,000 times in a row; the one time Roger beat it, Andy was convinced to call the repair center. Evidently, it is made of bullet-proof plastic, and is durable enough that even Roger cannot damage it.

Related Topics:
Apple - IMac - Font - Scanners - Chess

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Recurring characters who are not part of the Fox family

J. P. Pembrook is the CEO of Roger's company, who – unbeknownst to him – has his million-dollar deals analyzed by a ten-year-old (i.e. Jason). We never see his face, only his hands; given his ruthless personality, that may be a good thing. He has won the Iron Fist Award and the Golden Gallows Award, according to trophies seldom seen on his desk. His first two initials seem to be a nod towards financier J. P. Morgan.

Related Topics:
CEO - Never see his face - Financier - J. P. Morgan

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Fred is Roger's friend at work. Fred often plays golf with him (and always wins). Roger apparently considers Fred to be an authority on everything (if Fred says something's popular then it is).

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Steve Riley is Peter's best friend from high school. He owns an electric guitar and amp set that Peter sometimes borrows, much to his parents' dismay. Steve also has a job at the local pizza parlor.

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Denise Russo is Peter's blind girlfriend. Denise's parents have been heard to speak, but have never been shown on Peter's visits to Denise's house. Denise is clearly the one in control of the relationship. Once Peter attempted to break up with her, but that ended in failure.

Related Topics:
Blind - Girlfriend

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Denise's blindness has never been exploited in the strip, but has often been a source of tasteful humor. On her first date with Peter, she asked to "read" his face with her hands, explaining that it was "like reading Braille, in a way." When Peter asked what it said, she replied, "R...O...B...E...R...T...R...E...D...F...O...R...D." One strip had Peter driving fast and recklessly while Denise cringed in the passenger seat, finally saying, "Peter, if the intent of your driving is to make me GLAD I can't see..." Denise has not appeared in the strip for over a year.

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Nicole is Paige's best friend, also fashion-obsessed but somewhat more level-headed than Paige. She seems to have better luck with boys than Paige (which doesn't say much), which has caused problems in their relationship a few times.

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Literally the boy of Paige's dreams, Pierre is a perfect French lover who appears in Paige's daydreams. Usually when he appears, the last panel shows Jason doing something she would freak out at. For example, if Paige is dreaming of kissing Pierre, in actuality it might be Jason holding Quincy up to her lips. Usually, all Paige says to Pierre's antics is "Ooo, Pierre!" Once Paige dreamed about Pierre at school and mentioned his name out loud just when the teacher asked for the capital of South Dakota (Pierre). Pierre fans should look to pages 187-192 of Enormously FoxTrot, there is a special collection of Paige and Pierre art panels.

Related Topics:
Dream - French - Daydream - Kiss - Capital - South Dakota - Pierre

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Morton Goldthwait is the "biggest geek in school" according to Paige. Apparently, the entire science department calls him "Sir". He has a crush on her and hasn't given up, despite what she thinks of him. Morton even invited Paige to a Halloween party he held one year. He took the SATs as a freshman and was mad he got a 1590 (one raw score below perfect). He is also a counselor at Camp Bohrmore over the summer, and rules his cabin with an iron fist. Jason and Marcus once had the misfortune of being assigned to Goldthwait's cabin. Until he learned of Morton's crush on Paige, Jason had planned to set Morton up on a date with Paige as revenge.

Related Topics:
Geek - Crush - SAT - Counselor

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Marcus Jones is Jason's best friend, with whom often he emulates Star Trek and bothers Paige (though he does not hate her as much as Jason does). He also enjoys video games, and he plays Dungeons and Dragons and Houses and Humans with Jason on occasion. Like Jason, Marcus enjoys school, dislikes being outside and doesn't like girls, but his dislike of girls doesn't seem as strong as Jason's. Marcus has four sisters (Doreen, Lisa, Lana, Cybil). His mother is a nurse, and his father is a scientist of some sort. All members of Marcus' family, save Marcus himself, are unseen characters. He is African-American.

Related Topics:
Star Trek - Dungeons and Dragons - Nurse - Unseen character

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Eileen Jacobson is Jason's sometimes nemesis, sometimes semi-friend, whom he doesn't want to admit he secretly likes. A Harry Potter fan, Eileen didn't appear in the comic until 1995, when she got a higher grade than Jason on a math test, and ended up going out for ice cream with him. Eileen also showed up when Jason and Marcus went to summer camp. She has made quite a few appearances since and Jason eventually admitted he liked her. However, Jason's constant insistence on hiding their relationship began to annoy Eileen. As a result, she became angry at Jason and they decided to stop being a couple. It seems she still has feelings for Jason, though, since she has tricked Jason into spending time with her in exchange for something Jason wants (for example, the time Eileen made Jason be her partner on a field trip to the science museum in exchange for a holo-foil Charizard Pokemon card). She has also tricked him in World of Warcraft by picking a male name on the same server as him then befriending him there... and then making sure he found out it was her!

Related Topics:
Nemesis - Harry Potter - Fan - 1995 - Ice cream - Summer camp - World of Warcraft

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Miss O'Malley has been Jason and Marcus' teacher since 1991. She's the replacement for Jason and Marcus' former teacher, Ms. Grinchley. Considerably younger and more "on the ball" than Ms. Grinchley, she appears to have a marginally better handle on Jason as well, much to his dismay. This seems to encourage Jason to try even harder to get under her skin. Sometimes Jason succeeds (as when, since he wasn't sure which math chapter Miss O'Malley had assigned for homework, he proceeded to do a problem set from every math and science textbook he could find), and sometimes he fails (as when he brought Quincy in for show-and-tell, thinking Quincy would frighten Miss O'Malley, and she instead thought he was cute).

Related Topics:
Teacher - 1991

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Slug Man and Leech Boy are comic book characters created by Jason in a Batman parody. Slug Man and Leech Boy are almost always fighting their arch-enemy, Paige-O-Tron, the most evil robot in the universe (although they once were said to have had an "epic battle with Gargantutron last summer", Gargantutron being a cookie monster that Jason made; Jason has also drawn a comic story titled "Slug-Man Battles Miss Grinchley"). Jason has tried to sell Slug Man and Leech Boy merchandise several times. He has also made Slug Man wall calendars and once wallpapered his room with Slug Man comics. There is an entire Slug Man comic (The Adventures of Slug Man: "The Final Confrontation III") at the end of the FoxTrot en masse anthology, which also features a fake advertisement for Slug Man products, all made by Jason.

Related Topics:
Comic book - Batman - Parody - Wall calendar - Wallpaper - Advertisement

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Katherine "Katie" O'Dell: Katie is the toddler daughter of the eccentric Mrs. O'Dell, for whom Paige often babysits. She is portrayed as being a typical hyperactive toddler who makes a fuss and spits her food out (all over Paige's face) when she's fed and is obsessed with "Blue's Clues." Almost every time Paige has baby-sat Katie, the little girl has turned out to be too much for Paige to handle. On one occasion, Katie overheard an expletive uttered on the "Jerzy Spaniel" (a takeoff on "Jerry Springer") talk show while Paige was watching, and proceeded to say the offending word over and over, causing Paige to get into major trouble with Mrs. O'Dell (she was only paid a penny for that babysitting session). On another occasion, Katie chopped up her pretty new dress with a pair of scissors while Paige was napping, and Paige ended up having to buy Katie a new dress with her own babysitting pay. Katie also seems to be the only character in Foxtrot to grow up.

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Recurring characters who do not appear often

Grandma: Andy's mother, whom everybody loves and calls perfect, especially in comparison to Andy herself. Needless to say, this doesn't make Andy herself feel very good, and their feud has been going on since Andy was in seventh grade (when Andy would be scolded by her mother in front of her friends, and her friends took her mother's side). Grandma's real name is not known (since she is Andy's mother, her last name wouldn't be Fox, but rather Andy's maiden name). The two appeared to have made peace on their first meeting, but affairs have relapsed since then (probably because Grandma is simply too interesting a character to be discarded after a single use).

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Phoebe Wu: A friend of Eileen. They met at Camp Bohrmore Science Camp in 1997. She kept a journal for her time at camp, even saving samples of the food (which never was in very good shape; especialy 3 years after camp). Although initially bitter rivals with Jason and Marcus, the four eventually formed a "Ultra-Secret Friendship Club" while at camp, something the two boys have had varying cause to regret since then. Phoebe is Chinese-American.

Related Topics:
Journal - Food

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Eugene Wu: Phoebe's arrogant brother. His friends call him The Brain--or at least, they would, if he had any friends. He once arrived in Jason and Marcus's neighborhood along with his sister Phoebe, and then succeeded in breaking the Jason, Marcus, Eileen, and Phoebe's friendship club by stealing Phoebe's camp journal and planting clues pointing to members of the club. It is implied that an IQ test showed that Phoebe is technically smarter than Eugene, and as a result Eugene struggles to prove that he is not inferior to his sister.

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Miss Rockbottom: Paige's gym teacher. Paige once called her a "power-hungry neo-Nazi fascist tub of lard," but believes she took it as a compliment.

Related Topics:
Neo-Nazi - Fascist - Lard

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Dr. Ting: Paige's biology teacher, who has come to rely on her lab reports as a source of weekend entertainment.

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Hawkins: A camper at Camp Bohrmore when Jason attends. He rarely gets out and has a 50-digit-long encryption code. Jason caught one of his viruses once, and Hawkins gave Jason his list of internet aliases, which includes The Night Ninja.

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Mr. Martini: The principal of Jason and Marcus' school. He is seen very infrequently, typically when Jason is in trouble. Jason did see Mr. Martini voluntarily one time to ask what happened to his comic strip that was going to appear in the school newspaper.

Related Topics:
Principal - Newspaper

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Fauntleroy: A dog Peter had to baby sit a few occasions. Although his head is smaller than a baseball, Peter always get numerous bites & scratches, as this is a very vicious dog.

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Characters who no longer appear in the strip

Linda Downer: Peter's unrequited crush before he met Denise, has not appeared since 1988. Apparently a friend of Paige.

Related Topics:
Crush - 1988

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Miss Grinchley: Jason and Marcus' teacher before Miss O'Malley. Despite her name, she does not seem reminiscent of the Grinch. It is implied that she used to "go bonkers" in response to Jason's antics in class (which, of course, encouraged Jason to misbehave even more). Miss O'Malley replaced Miss Grinchley after she retired in 1991.

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Skip Riley: Roger's summer intern in 1990, the ultimate sycophant, who even called Roger his "light and inspiration", before jumping ship to become an intern for Charles Diggs, the head of Roger's department.

Related Topics:
1990 - Sycophant

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Squishy and Squashy, the Talking Roadkill Brothers: The titular characters of a comic strip that Jason did for his school newspaper in 1992, with the intent of making merchandising profit off of it. They were never actually seen, but Jason has revealed that they were secretly vampires. Unfortunately for Jason, censorship prevented the strip from running.

Related Topics:
1992 - Vampires - Censorship

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The Tamagrouchy: Paige received a Tamagrouchy from her father in August 1997. It is similar to a Tamagotchi, requiring to be fed and played with, except that it is grouchy. It often insults Paige, and actually has conversations with people, which goes beyond what a normal Tamagotchi could do. It has extremely complicated instructions (to give it a glass of water, you must press buttons A and C together, then hold button B for three seconds, then tap button C twice, them press button A, then button C, then press button B, then do the whole process backward). It will also annoy Paige. Once, it pretended it was on Moscow time when Paige was trying to go to sleep, and it whined that it wanted breakfast. When Paige threatened to neglect it and let it die, it claimed that unlike Tamagotchis, Tamagrouchys become immortal if neglected. Paige eventually was so annoyed by the toy that she gave it to Jason to reprogram it, with somewhat disastrous results.

Related Topics:
August - Tamagotchi - Moscow - Immortal

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