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View Full Version : GT Battle Royale Round 2: Taz vs Jay Sherman


BreakABone
04-12-2010, 01:06 PM
Now that we have cut the playing field in half, the match-ups become tougher, and the characters more battle wary.

Ladies and gentlemen, let the battle continue!
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Tasmanian Devil (Taz)
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/c/c4/Taz-Looney_Tunes.svg/169px-Taz-Looney_Tunes.svg.png
Robert McKimson based the character on the real-life Tasmanian Devil. The most noticeable resemblance between the Australian marsupial and McKimson's creation is their ravenous appetites and crazed behavior. Although the bipedal Tasmanian Devil's appearance does not resemble its marsupial inspiration, it contains multilayered references to other "devils": he has horn-shaped fur on his head (similar to the Devil's appearance) and whirls about like a dust devil (similar in appearance to a tornado) which sounds like several motors whirring in unison. Taz is constantly voracious, animate or inanimate. His efforts to find more food are always a central plot device of his cartoons. His hydrophobia serves as an internal antagonist quite often.

Jay Sherman
http://trendliest.files.wordpress.com/2008/06/url.jpg

"New York's third most popular early-morning cable-TV film critic," 36-year-old Jay Prescott Sherman is the host of Phillips Broadcasting's Coming Attractions. His catch phrases include his exclamation of surprise ("Hotchie motchie!"), his common putdown of sub-par films ("It stinks!") and his distinctive cough/sneeze ("Acch-um!"). He is known for his surly and sarcastic putdowns of nearly every film he sees (an act that has earned him disdain from the public and rather low ratings). His favorite films are usually Golden-Age classics and foreign films such as The Red Balloon, Citizen Kane, and Mr. Smith Goes to Washington. He often uses the "Shermometer" to measure the films he reviews, or a list of diseases he would rather have than see a movie. He has been known to rate films on a numerical scale, in which his highest score is seven out of ten. Most of his dislike for films comes from a love for cinema that has been disillusioned by seeing the commercialism that has overtaken the film industry.

BreakABone
04-13-2010, 03:38 PM
Jay Sherman moves on.