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Off Model is a definition-only page now. Commented-out a zero context example. Print Long Runners is an index, not a trope.
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* OffModel:
** Ed Dodd was very talented when it comes to drawing animals, but sometimes his rendition of people... suffered. This was one of the reasons why the shots in the frame were zoomed in on an animal with the speech bubbles coming from an unseen human to the side of the panel, giving it the unintentionally hilarious effect of looking like the animals are the ones spewing exposition.
** Dodd's eventual replacement, Jack Elrod, was even ''worse'' at drawing humans -- his rendition of Rusty for instance has been nicknamed "the [[EldritchAbomination Elrod Abomination]]" by more than a few. Fortunately, Elrod was at least in the same league as Dodd was when it comes to drawing wildlife. The next artist, James Allen was somewhere in between Dodd and Elrod, with his human characters tending to look a little goofy, but at least stopping short of being outright terrifying. Jules Rivera, who followed on from Allen, has mostly managed to avert this trope by switching up the strip's art style to a highly stylized one which makes little attempt to make the characters look realistic.
* PietaPlagiarism: Happens a few times.
* PrintLongRunners
** Ed Dodd was very talented when it comes to drawing animals, but sometimes his rendition of people... suffered. This was one of the reasons why the shots in the frame were zoomed in on an animal with the speech bubbles coming from an unseen human to the side of the panel, giving it the unintentionally hilarious effect of looking like the animals are the ones spewing exposition.
** Dodd's eventual replacement, Jack Elrod, was even ''worse'' at drawing humans -- his rendition of Rusty for instance has been nicknamed "the [[EldritchAbomination Elrod Abomination]]" by more than a few. Fortunately, Elrod was at least in the same league as Dodd was when it comes to drawing wildlife. The next artist, James Allen was somewhere in between Dodd and Elrod, with his human characters tending to look a little goofy, but at least stopping short of being outright terrifying. Jules Rivera, who followed on from Allen, has mostly managed to avert this trope by switching up the strip's art style to a highly stylized one which makes little attempt to make the characters look realistic.
* PietaPlagiarism: Happens a few times.
* PrintLongRunners
to:
** Ed Dodd was very talented when it comes to drawing animals, but sometimes his rendition of people... suffered. This was one of the reasons why the shots in the frame were zoomed in on an animal with the speech bubbles coming from an unseen human to the side of the panel, giving it the unintentionally hilarious effect of looking like the animals are the ones spewing exposition.
** Dodd's eventual replacement, Jack Elrod, was even ''worse'' at drawing humans -- his rendition of Rusty for instance has been nicknamed "the [[EldritchAbomination Elrod Abomination]]" by more than a few. Fortunately, Elrod was at least in the same league as Dodd was when it comes to drawing wildlife. The next artist, James Allen was somewhere in between Dodd and Elrod, with his human characters tending to look a little goofy, but at least stopping short of being outright terrifying. Jules Rivera, who followed on from Allen, has mostly managed to avert this trope by switching up the strip's art style to a highly stylized one which makes little attempt to make the characters look realistic.
* PrintLongRunners
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Audience reaction
[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mt_5.png]]
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It's often poked fun at by people such as ''Blog/TheComicsCurmudgeon'' due to its over-the-top {{green aesop}}s. Also notable for [[{{Demonization}} demonizing]] the endangered elephant into something that ''is'' a danger to all in one strip.
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''Mark Trail'' is one of the PrintLongRunners of newspaper comics, first introduced in 1946, initially written and drawn by Ed Dodd (Jack Elrod succeeded Dodd in 1978, and James Allen in turn took over from Elrod in 2014, followed by Jules Rivera in 2020). The comic focuses on Mark Trail, a photojournalist and outdoorsman for a magazine. His assignments always lead him into danger and misadventures in the Lost Forest National Forest. Joined by his friends and family there, most strips had him discovering some environmentally unfriendly evil-doer that he would punch out, and then tell about the endangered animal of the week.
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''Mark Trail'' is one of the PrintLongRunners of newspaper comics, first introduced in 1946, initially written and drawn by Ed Dodd (Jack Elrod succeeded Dodd in 1978, and James Allen in turn took over from Elrod in 2014, followed by Jules Rivera in 2020). The comic focuses on Mark Trail, a photojournalist and outdoorsman for a magazine. His assignments always lead him into danger and misadventures in the Lost Forest National Forest. Joined by his friends and family there, most strips had him discovering some environmentally unfriendly evil-doer evildoer that he would punch out, and then tell talk about the endangered animal of the week.
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* AuthorOnBoard: In Rivera's run, many of the Sunday strips are less "tell the readers about an exotic animal" and more "lecture the readers about enviromental crises."
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* AuthorOnBoard: In Rivera's run, many of the Sunday strips are less "tell the readers about an exotic animal" and more "lecture the readers about enviromental environmental crises."
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* SpockSpeak: Contractions and informalities are apparantly forbidden in Lost Forest.
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* SpockSpeak: Contractions and informalities are apparantly apparently forbidden in Lost Forest.
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* TakeThat: One of the final storyline drawn by James Allen have Mark Trail joining a social media-obsessed explorer in a search for yeti, who later dies in an avalanche. Many fans pointed out that he looks [[https://joshreads.com/images/20/07/martin_mark.jpg suspiciously like a person]] that Allen was fighting with on Twitter at the time.
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* TakeThat: One of the final storyline storylines drawn by James Allen have has Mark Trail joining a social media-obsessed explorer in a search for yeti, who later dies in an avalanche. Many fans pointed out that he looks [[https://joshreads.com/images/20/07/martin_mark.jpg suspiciously like a person]] that Allen was fighting with on Twitter at the time.
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* MsFanservice: Cherry became much fonder of wearing swimsuits and revealing clothing during James Allen's run as artist.
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* MsFanservice: Cherry became much fonder of wearing swimsuits and revealing clothing during James Allen's run as artist.
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Added DiffLines:
* NatureLover: Mark loves the great outdoors.
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Added DiffLines:
* AuthorOnBoard: In Rivera's run, many of the Sunday strips are less "tell the readers about an exotic animal" and more "lecture the readers about enviromental crises."
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** After Jules Rivera took over, her first set of strips establishes that the current Mark is actually Mark Trail IV, with his ancestors representing each of the three previous artists who drew the strip. The James Allen version is Mark Trail III (aka Happy Trail), who is depicted as a polluting villain who screwed over the current Mark's childhood friend out of their farm land, likely a reference to James Allen being a climate change denier.
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** After Jules Rivera took over, her first set of strips establishes that the current Mark is actually Mark Trail IV, with his ancestors representing each of the three previous artists who drew the strip. The James Allen version is Mark Trail III (aka Happy Trail), who is depicted as a polluting villain hypocrite who screwed over the current Mark's childhood friend out of their farm land, likely a reference to James Allen being a climate change denier.
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Changed line(s) 33 (click to see context) from:
** After Jules Rivera took over, her first set of strips establishes that the current Mark is actually Mark Trail IV, with his ancestors representing each of the three previous artists who drew the strip. The James Allen version is represented as Mark Trail III (aka Happy Trail), who is depicted as a polluting villain who screwed over the current Mark's friend's family out of their farm land, likely a reference to James Allen being a climate change denier.
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** After Jules Rivera took over, her first set of strips establishes that the current Mark is actually Mark Trail IV, with his ancestors representing each of the three previous artists who drew the strip. The James Allen version is represented as Mark Trail III (aka Happy Trail), who is depicted as a polluting villain who screwed over the current Mark's friend's family childhood friend out of their farm land, likely a reference to James Allen being a climate change denier.