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Revision as of 21:51, 25 October 2014
Letters, numbers and other typographical symbols that talk.
Examples of Talking Typography include:
Advertising
- There was a clay-animated ad for Cadbury's Crunchie bars where a bar turned into the word "Crunchie". The letters didn't talk, though--they just ate each other. Nightmare Fuel?
Live Action TV
- Sesame Street loved these as well.
Toys
- Part of the wave of 1980s Transformers knockoffs were a line of letters and numbers that turn into robots. There may not have been a back-story.
Video Games
- Most of the characters in Three in Three, starting with the protagonist, Ms. 3.
- The Unown from Pokémon resemble the 26 letters of the Latin alphabet as well as a question mark and an exclamation point, but the only thing they can actually say are their own names.
Web Animation
- Charlie the Unicorn: Brought to you by the incredible singing Letter Y.
- Pixar Logo Gone Horribly Wrong!
Web Comics
- Adventures in ASCII.
- The Perry Bible Fellowship has a typically acerbic twist on this idea.
- Penny Arcade has a talking period, correcting trolls and addressing fan outrage. And this.
Western Animation
- The children's show Word World has animals that are made of CG letters.
- Re Boot featured numerous numerals throughout Mainframe, most prominently 7, 8 and 9.