Knowledge (XXG)

User:Amazinglarry/Gilman

Source 📝

77:
Strips frequently ended with a witty one-liner from the Rominator, often including a deliberately corny math reference. For example, after the basketball incident, the Rominator says "Use your head to learn math, use math to learn to use your head." Other one-liners insulted Gilman's manhood, as in
65:
Each strip involved a confrontation between Gilman, n middle-school aged boy, and his math teacher, known as the Rominator, who possessed superhuman strength and intelligence despite being elderly. Gilman was an egotistical, smart-mouthed student who usually sought to outwit or defeat the Rominator,
90:
In the years since the strip's original run, several attempts have been made to publish Gilman Vs. The Rominator on the web. The strip's creator has made it known that he is vehemently opposed to online reproduction of his work, however, citing copyright infringement. In 1999, he mounted a legal
91:
challenge against the web site www.rominator.com, which hosted scans of the strip and facilitated fan trading of original strip pressings. The site was eventually shut down. This has led to a dearth of online material related to the strip, besides a few fan discussion forums and the occasional
40:
and published from 1990-1991. Each strip was hand-drawn in black ink and formatted on a single 8 1/2" x 11" sheet subdivided into boxes. The strips were printed on characteristic off-white high grade heavy stock paper and hand-numbered. The first few issues were hand-distributed for free for
53:. The strip's rapid rise in popularity led to allegations of "selling out" among hardcore fans, and Boeckeler chose to discontinue the strip in 1991 amidst this criticism. Despite its short run, the comic is viewed today as a 70:. Gilman Vs. The Rominator is thought to be the first appearance of this motif in printed media. Each strip featured a different form of death for Gilman. For example, in the popular strip 46, Gilman is 66:
but inevitably failed miserably. Gilman was killed by the Rominator at the end of every strip, but nonetheless reappeared in subsequent strips, a motif later made famous by the character Kenny in
41:
promotional purposes, and later issues were sold in underground comic stores. The first store to carry Gilman Vs. The Rominator was Mike's Sports Cards, located in southeastern
45:. After the comic gained popularity in the Midwest, it was picked up by several widely distributed magazines. The strip appeared in an issue of 103:
Gilman Vs. The Rominator is considered a classic "cult comic" and its influence can be seen in a variety of media. A few examples include:
74:
during a basketball game against the Rominator, and the strip ends with the Rominator shooting baskets using Gilman's head as the ball.
82:. After Gilman taunts the Rominator, the Rominator tosses Gilman into the lake and proclaims, "Now all your balls are in the lake!" 78:
strip 4, where Gilman and The Rominator participate in a golf tournament in which The Rominator loses all of his golf balls in a
57:, and original numbered pressings of the strip are collectible and are occasionally sold on online auction sites. 37: 115: 33: 17: 183: 111:'s crowd scenes, this was almost certainly intentional as Fisher was an acknowledged fan. 54: 46: 172: 50: 79: 71: 124:
Florida race car driver Jerome Watland has adopted the nickname "The Rominater".
108: 67: 121:
A computer repair shop in Phoenix, AZ run by a fan is called "Doc Rominator".
42: 107:
Figures clearly resembling Gilman and The Rominator can be seen in many of
114:
A software package for managing backed up Nintendo DS games is named
49:
and was published regularly in the British science fiction magazine
160: 92: 184:
http://www.karnac.com/FLAnews2007/117919597018805.shtml
159:
Interview with comic strip artist Brian R. Boeckeler,
173:http://mac.softpedia.com/get/Games/Rominator.shtml 155: 153: 26:Gilman Vs. The Rominator - Article in progress 8: 139: 137: 133: 7: 86:Controversy over online publication 24: 163:Radio, Appleton, Wisconsin, 1999. 147:, (Roundhouse Publishing, 2006) 1: 202: 30:Gilman Vs. The Rominator 118:after the character. 143:Hatfield, Charles. 145:Alternative Comics 38:Brian R. Boeckeler 34:underground comic 18:User:Amazinglarry 193: 186: 181: 175: 170: 164: 157: 148: 141: 201: 200: 196: 195: 194: 192: 191: 190: 189: 182: 178: 171: 167: 158: 151: 142: 135: 131: 101: 88: 63: 47:Guns & Ammo 22: 21: 20: 12: 11: 5: 199: 197: 188: 187: 176: 165: 149: 132: 130: 127: 126: 125: 122: 119: 112: 100: 97: 87: 84: 62: 59: 23: 15: 14: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 198: 185: 180: 177: 174: 169: 166: 162: 156: 154: 150: 146: 140: 138: 134: 128: 123: 120: 117: 113: 110: 106: 105: 104: 98: 96: 94: 85: 83: 81: 75: 73: 69: 60: 58: 56: 52: 51:Critical Wave 48: 44: 39: 35: 31: 27: 19: 179: 168: 144: 102: 89: 80:water hazard 76: 64: 55:cult classic 29: 28: 25: 109:Seth Fisher 72:decapitated 129:References 68:South Park 116:Rominator 99:Influence 95:auction. 43:Wisconsin 36:drawn by 32:was an 16:< 161:WLFM 93:eBay 61:Plot 152:^ 136:^

Index

User:Amazinglarry
underground comic
Brian R. Boeckeler
Wisconsin
Guns & Ammo
Critical Wave
cult classic
South Park
decapitated
water hazard
eBay
Seth Fisher
Rominator




WLFM
http://mac.softpedia.com/get/Games/Rominator.shtml
http://www.karnac.com/FLAnews2007/117919597018805.shtml

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.