Difference between revisions of "2744: Fanservice"

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(Explanation: Adding link to How to annoy)
(Explanation: Rearranged to prioritise the actual explanation, rather than references to other comics.)
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==Explanation==
 
==Explanation==
 
{{incomplete|Created by an HVAC ROCK BAND - Please change this comment when editing this page. Do NOT delete this tag too soon.}}
 
{{incomplete|Created by an HVAC ROCK BAND - Please change this comment when editing this page. Do NOT delete this tag too soon.}}
This comic is another comic on [[:Category:How to annoy|How to annoy]] people. It is exactly the same as [[2036: Edgelord]], only with different text, where [[Cueball]] annoys [[White Hat]], and in [[2654: Chemtrails]] it is just [[Ponytail]] that is the target.
 
  
In all three of these comics, a modern slang term or just a commonly used word ("chemtrails" was the case in [[2654]]) is used to describe a job, and while the slang or word seems accurate, it isn't the normally used term for the job. Previously a graph theory PHD was labeled an "edgelord", a reference to how mathematical graphs have edges, but this time a turbine maintenance engineer is called out for doing a lot of fanservice, as in, literally servicing/maintaining a huge fan (with which turbines are often inaccurately conflated). In the other comic, trails of ant pheromones were labeled as "chemtrails", a reference to how pheromones are chemicals.{{citation needed}}
+
This comic is another comic on [[:Category:How to annoy|How to annoy]] people, where a modern slang term, or just a commonly used word is used to describe a job, and while the slang or word seems applicable, it implies something completely different to the job in question.
  
A second order of dissonance is introduced from the difference between fans and turbines, which are designed to work towards opposite purposes. Randall has previously touched on wind turbines ''not'' being fans, most notably in [[1378: Turbine]].
+
{{wiktionary|fanservice|Fanservice}} is a term often used to describe certain decisions made in TV or film productions that make some form of knowing nod to the viewers that isn't necessary to the plot or visualization of the work. It can just mean inserting obscure details of the work's back-history, to spark gleeful recognition amongst the more devoted fans, or it could be increasing the ridiculousness of character's behavior (often due to one or other overly contrived reason) to live up to their stereotype. A frequent form of this is the {{tvtropes|MsFanservice|Ms. Fanservice}} trope, where the more glamorous female characters find themselves in more figure-hugging clothing, clothing that actually covers {{tvtropes|ChainmailBikini|much less of their figure}} than should be practical, or even find themselves shoehorned into a situation where they {{tvtropes|CensorSuds|aren't wearing}} even their 'normal' skimpy outfit.
  
{{wiktionary|fanservice|Fanservice}} is a term often used to describe certain decisions made in TV or film productions that make some form of knowing nod to the viewers that isn't necessary to the plot or visualization of the work. It can just mean inserting obscure details of the work's back-history, to spark gleeful recognition amongst the more devoted fans, or it could be increasing the ridiculousness of character's behavior (often due to one or other overly contrived reason) to live up to their stereotype. A frequent form of this is the {{tvtropes|MsFanservice|Ms. Fanservice}} trope, where the more glamorous female characters find themselves in more figurehugging clothing, clothing that actually covers {{tvtropes|ChainmailBikini|much less of their figure}} than should be practical or even find themselves shoehorned into a situation where they {{tvtropes|CensorSuds|aren't wearing}} even their 'normal' skimpy outfit.
+
Here, a turbine maintenance engineer is called out for doing a lot of fanservice, as in, literally servicing/maintaining a huge fan (with which turbines are often inaccurately conflated). A second order of dissonance is introduced from the difference between fans and turbines, which are designed to work towards opposite purposes. Randall has previously touched on wind turbines ''not'' being fans, most notably in [[1378: Turbine]].
  
 
In the title text, Cueball refers to HVAC (a term for the unified <u>H</u>eating, <u>V</u>entilation, and <u>A</u>ir <u>C</u>onditioning systems of a given building) as "the fandom." Normally, "fandom" means the group of fans of something, but here refers to a system that relies on lots of fans.
 
In the title text, Cueball refers to HVAC (a term for the unified <u>H</u>eating, <u>V</u>entilation, and <u>A</u>ir <u>C</u>onditioning systems of a given building) as "the fandom." Normally, "fandom" means the group of fans of something, but here refers to a system that relies on lots of fans.
 +
 +
This takes the same form as [[2036: Edgelord]], only with different text, where [[Cueball]] annoys [[White Hat]], and in [[2654: Chemtrails]] it is [[Ponytail]] that is the target. In these, a graph theory PHD was labeled an "edgelord", a reference to how mathematical graphs have edges, and trails of ant pheromones were labeled as "chemtrails", a reference to how pheromones are chemicals.{{citation needed}}
  
 
==Transcript==
 
==Transcript==

Revision as of 09:56, 2 March 2023

Fanservice
I was eventually kicked out of my architectural engineering program because I wouldn't stop referring to HVAC as "the fandom."
Title text: I was eventually kicked out of my architectural engineering program because I wouldn't stop referring to HVAC as "the fandom."

Explanation

Ambox notice.png This explanation may be incomplete or incorrect: Created by an HVAC ROCK BAND - Please change this comment when editing this page. Do NOT delete this tag too soon.
If you can address this issue, please edit the page! Thanks.

This comic is another comic on How to annoy people, where a modern slang term, or just a commonly used word is used to describe a job, and while the slang or word seems applicable, it implies something completely different to the job in question.

Fanservice is a term often used to describe certain decisions made in TV or film productions that make some form of knowing nod to the viewers that isn't necessary to the plot or visualization of the work. It can just mean inserting obscure details of the work's back-history, to spark gleeful recognition amongst the more devoted fans, or it could be increasing the ridiculousness of character's behavior (often due to one or other overly contrived reason) to live up to their stereotype. A frequent form of this is the Ms. Fanservice trope, where the more glamorous female characters find themselves in more figure-hugging clothing, clothing that actually covers much less of their figure than should be practical, or even find themselves shoehorned into a situation where they aren't wearing even their 'normal' skimpy outfit.

Here, a turbine maintenance engineer is called out for doing a lot of fanservice, as in, literally servicing/maintaining a huge fan (with which turbines are often inaccurately conflated). A second order of dissonance is introduced from the difference between fans and turbines, which are designed to work towards opposite purposes. Randall has previously touched on wind turbines not being fans, most notably in 1378: Turbine.

In the title text, Cueball refers to HVAC (a term for the unified Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning systems of a given building) as "the fandom." Normally, "fandom" means the group of fans of something, but here refers to a system that relies on lots of fans.

This takes the same form as 2036: Edgelord, only with different text, where Cueball annoys White Hat, and in 2654: Chemtrails it is Ponytail that is the target. In these, a graph theory PHD was labeled an "edgelord", a reference to how mathematical graphs have edges, and trails of ant pheromones were labeled as "chemtrails", a reference to how pheromones are chemicals.[citation needed]

Transcript

[Cueball is talking to White Hat, who has his hands balled into fists and has small lines above his head to indicate he is yelling his response back at Cueball.]
Cueball: So, I hear you do a lot of fanservice.
White Hat: No!
[Caption below the panel:]
How to annoy a turbine maintenance engineer


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Discussion

I don’t want to be that guy but “I got to the explanation so early that its only 1 sentence!” 172.70.174.43

I also don't want to be that other guy, but while I was composing my "there wasn't anything yet, let's put something there" text, something actually appeared. (Though it just appended my bit, didn't give me Edit Conflict warning.) I'll let someone else mish-mash the useful bits of both fresh-starts together, though. Might be that none of my contribution is worthwhile.
(I took quite a while trying to decide whether to make a joke that if he was a specialist in air-movement devices, without necessarily branching out into any air-conditioning elements, then <something something, insert some useful words here> OnlyFans! So then I obviously eventually decided it wasn't worth it. ;) ) 172.70.90.100 16:47, 1 March 2023 (UTC)
New recurring subject?

First we had 2036: Edgelord. Then we had 2654: Chemtrails. Now we have this comic. They all start with "So, I hear" and end with "How to annoy". So I think that a new recurring subject has been established. I'm thinking it should be called something like "How To Annoy Comics". Silver (talk) 16:40, 1 March 2023 (UTC)

Might be best wait for a third one, or more. A category of two is a bit of a stretch. Someone pointed out the prior one, so should be easier to pick up all three+ examples when it becomes a more definite 'thing'.
And if we were to call it "How to annoy" (say) and then the actual third is very similar but actually ends "How to confuse" then the category is already non-descriptive. 172.70.162.46 16:55, 1 March 2023 (UTC)
There are 3 aren’t there? 172.70.38.150 17:40, 1 March 2023 (UTC)
There were two originally (I'd forgotten the chemtrails one, myself, when first thinking of this) and, yes, there's now three identified "So I hear/How to annoy"s. Might have crossed the threshold. But leaving that decision to someone who can do something about it. 172.70.90.253 18:12, 1 March 2023 (UTC)
Agreed. --172.70.38.77 18:46, 1 March 2023 (UTC)
I also agreed and could see that there where already 6 comics about how to Annoy. So I think the Category:How to annoy is well named, and should also include those other comics that are not completely similar to this one. And thus I have created the page and made some description. Also this is similar to other categories like My Bobby, fun facts and protip. So I linked to them from the new category and vise versa. --Kynde (talk) 09:26, 2 March 2023 (UTC)
Thanks. --172.70.42.157 13:29, 2 March 2023 (UTC)
Made some rephrasings in the Category (you may have already noticed). I'm also not sure if there should necessary be any "and at this point, we created the category" spiel in describing the category. It seems a bit self-referential.
My ideal way of "explaining the category" would be that the three (or more, given Fan Service is almost exactly the same Cueball vs Annoyed, but with others involved) of the most common form could be listed (chronologically) as being one person saying something that annoys another. If we can be sure it will be promptly updated if/when further core-archetype examples appear (the list of membership is automatic, of course).
Then others (currently Normal + Spiral) could be listed explicitly, if they start to hold similar forms (mathematical plots?), or the fact that there are also other forms is sufficient note. (But this could lead to effectively listing everything twice. Narratively then the auto-list. Breaking out into sub-cats would be better if that got too crazy.)
Ditto with other Categories that have a "And then we realised that..." sort of form. Nicely expounded, often very well written, but I'm not sure it has the right tone. IMO, YMMV. 172.70.162.46 13:43, 2 March 2023 (UTC)

Should the connection to 2036: Edgelord be at the start of the explanation? --Purah126 (talk) 19:05, 1 March 2023 (UTC)

Yes. --Kynde (talk) 09:26, 2 March 2023 (UTC)

You know, I always assumed HVAC was "High Voltage Air Conditioning" (though deciding that they should have meant high wattage), i.e. the big strap-on AC units that tends to be found on business/communal buildings rather than a much more simple desk fans and radiators (here in the UK, individual housing tends to not have AC so much, though these days heat-pumps are being integrated into central-heating systems, to look like HVAC units). 172.70.86.128 14:13, 2 March 2023 (UTC)

No, you are thinking of Heating and Ventilation using Direct Current (HVDC). 172.69.138.81 10:53, 3 March 2023 (UTC)