Author Tract: Difference between revisions

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* ''[[iCarly]]'': [[Dan Schneider]] drops his Anti-[[Shipping]] anvil at the end of the episode ''iStart A Fan War'', basically mocking the fans who made his show popular online, and then following it up with Carly mouthing something that could have come from one of his blog posts, which basically boils down to 'shut up about romance and watch the show for the comedy'.
** He later expanded in his blog that he was in fact just mocking ship to ship combat and not shipping itself.
* ''[[Doctor Who]]'' has had several cases over the years, including "[[Doctor Who/Recap/S10 E5/E05 The Green Death|The Green Death]]" ([[Green Aesop]]), "[[Doctor Who/Recap/S22 E4/E04 The Two Doctors|The Two Doctors]]" (vegetarian), "[[Doctor Who/NS/Recap/NS/S1 E4/E04 Aliens of London|Aliens of London]]"/"[[Doctor Who/NS/Recap/NS/S1 E5/E05 World War Three|World War III]]", "[[Doctor Who/Recap/S15 E4/E04 The Sun Makers|The Sunmakers]]" (anti-tax), "[[Doctor Who/Recap/S9 E2/E02 The Curse of Peladon|The Curse of Peladon]]" (pro-EEC), "[[Doctor Who/Recap/S11 E4/E04 The Monster of Peladon|The Monster of Peladon]]", [[Doctor Who/Recap/S26 E1/E01 Battlefield|Battlefield]] (Nuclear weapons).
* ''[[Penn and Teller Bullshit]]'' is completely blatant about its skeptical and Libertarian agendas from the very first episode. Teller has said (aloud, with his voice) that he likes the show being totally biased, but still fair.
* Gene Roddenberry, the creator of ''[[Star Trek]]'', had a history of putting his atheist beliefs in his work, though this only became Anvilicious in ''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation|The Next Generation]]'' (there are several affirmative mentions of a belief in God by heroic human characters in the original series).
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== Web Comics ==
* [[MAG -ISA]] - this comic contains political and religious issues that reek of Jack Chick. The author is often suspected of being part of the "Christian Conservative Right Wing" but he is not if you read deeper into his work.
* ''[[Fans]]!'' is a little too vehement in its defense of fanboys. Claim that they're valuable, intelligent and worthwhile human beings, fine. Claim that fanboys have the [[Plot Tailored to the Party|specific combination of strengths]] that makes them the only ones capable of defending Earth, and that the biggest, geekiest fanboys alive will be revered by future generations as heroes who made all of society possible... that's taking things a bit too far.
** ''[[Shortpacked]]'' seems to take the opposite tack in its satire and often portrays fans with complaints of any sort as self-entitled morons. Not surprisingly, what is considered unfair and what is considered perfectly okay seems to coincide with the author's tastes...