Ms. Fanservice/Comic Books: Difference between revisions

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* [[Red Sonja]].
* [[Red Sonja]].
* Recently subverted with [[Supergirl|Power Girl]] in ''[[Justice Society of America]]'': [[Most Common Superpower|her body]] hasn't changed, but she's finally come into her own as a successful warrior and leader, to the point that she is now chairwoman of the JSA. She still provides plenty of fanservice though.
* Recently subverted with [[Supergirl|Power Girl]] in ''[[Justice Society of America]]'': [[Most Common Superpower|her body]] hasn't changed, but she's finally come into her own as a successful warrior and leader, to the point that she is now chairwoman of the JSA. She still provides plenty of fanservice though.
* [[Empowered (Comic Book)|Empowered]] herself is arguably a deconstruction of this trope, being a [[Faux Action Girl]] whose suit [[Vapor Wear|tends to rip up at the worst possible moment]] and [[Fetish Fuel|being tied up and gagged]], and thus the center of many people's attention left her in a neurotic mess of self-esteem and body-image issues, and yes -- she does provide most of the fanservice in the series, and [[Meta Guy|is fully aware of that, making her an even bigger neurotic mess]].
* [[Empowered]] herself is arguably a deconstruction of this trope, being a [[Faux Action Girl]] whose suit [[Vapor Wear|tends to rip up at the worst possible moment]] and [[Fetish Fuel|being tied up and gagged]], and thus the center of many people's attention left her in a neurotic mess of self-esteem and body-image issues, and yes -- she does provide most of the fanservice in the series, and [[Meta Guy|is fully aware of that, making her an even bigger neurotic mess]].
** Ocelotina on the other hand intentionally plays to this trope, pretending to be a superheroine and getting into the same situtations Emp does for profit.
** Ocelotina on the other hand intentionally plays to this trope, pretending to be a superheroine and getting into the same situtations Emp does for profit.
* ''[[Archie Comics]]'': Cheryl Blossom defined this in the 1980s (where it got her written out of the books) and '90s, where she was basically red hair on Pamela Anderson's face and body (the ones ''she'' had in the 1990s). Melody was this for [[Josie and the Pussy Cats]], wearing the skimpiest outfits and drawing all the male attention.
* ''[[Archie Comics]]'': Cheryl Blossom defined this in the 1980s (where it got her written out of the books) and '90s, where she was basically red hair on Pamela Anderson's face and body (the ones ''she'' had in the 1990s). Melody was this for [[Josie and the Pussy Cats]], wearing the skimpiest outfits and drawing all the male attention.