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Scary Go Round

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2002 webcomic by John Allison

Scary Go Round
Panel from 2006 featuring (from left to right) Shelley, Amy and Erin
Author(s)John Allison
Websitescarygoround.com
Current status/scheduleEnded
Launch date4 June 2002 (2002-06-04)
End date11 September 2009 (2009-09-11)
Genre(s)Paranormal, comedy
Preceded byBobbins
Followed byBad Machinery

Scary Go Round is a webcomic byJohn Allison. Running from 2002 to 2009, it is set in the fictional North Yorkshire town of Tackleford and follows university students battling fantasy and science fiction threats to the town. The comic was a successor to Allison's first comic,Bobbins, and was followed byBad Machinery, all of which take place in the same general setting.

The comic received praise from multiple British newspapers, and it won theWeb Cartoonists' Choice Award for best comic in 2005.

History

[edit]

Scary Go Round began in 2002.[1][2] It followed on from Allison's first webcomic,Bobbins, and features many of the same characters.[3] According to Allison,Scary Go Round was originally intended to run at the same time asBobbins, but Allison said that he endedBobbins for several reasons: to leaveKeenspot, to focus onScary Go Round, and becauseScary Go Round was a "clean slate" to write compared toBobbins which he called "a big mess".[4][5] By contrast,Scary Go Round was intended from the start to be a work that could be printed in book form.[4]

Scary Go Round first appeared onModern Tales, but Allison said that joining the service was "a straight out mistake" and by 2003 had movedScary Go Round off Modern Tales and onto its own website.[4] In an interview in 2004, Allison said thatScary Go Round made up the majority of his income;[6] and in a later interview he said it was "his living".[7]

Scary Go Round was created in vector graphics programAdobe Illustrator, as opposed to earlier comics by Allison which he drew by hand on paper.[4][6]

Scary Go Round ended in 2009. Allison said that he felt is work was becoming uninspired: "I had a lot of characters that I didn't care about, and I was making whole runs of strips about characters that people didn't really like... Seven and a half years is a long time and I had lost perspective and direction. I was also losing readers for the last year and it was evident that changes had to be made."Scary Go Round was succeeded in the same year byBad Machinery, another webcomic in the same setting focusing on younger characters.Bad Machinery was initially published on the scarygoround.com site.[8]

Allison has also used the term "Scary Go Round" to refer generally to his works that are connected to the same setting. As of 2021, the scarygoround.com site no longer hosts theScary Go Round comics; instead the main page links to the various comics produced by Allison as well as to a site where PDFs ofScary Go Round can be purchased.[9]

Premise

[edit]

The characters inScary Go Round are a group of students at Tackleford University.[10] The city of Tackleford, a fictional town in North Yorkshire,[11] constantly finds itself under attack by superhero-comic-style threats such as samurai, werewolves, giant robots, dimensional doorways, Bible-thumping witches, shy zombies and polite biker gangs.[10][3]

The comic initially followed the lives of the barmaids Tessa Davies and Rachel Dukakis-Monteforte, but soon changed focus to another set of characters entirely, including Amy Chilton and Shelley Winters.[citation needed]

Characters

[edit]
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Adults
  • Shelley Winters: Daft and whimsical, Shelley is the unofficialprotagonist ofScary Go Round. She is ranked No. 4 in the country for being disaster-prone, even dying on more than one occasion, and has a deep love for jam. Over the course of the strip she has held many jobs, ranging from mayor's assistant to newspaper reporter to a waitress. The final SGR strip shows her leaving for London and a job with the Ministry of History.
  • Amy Chilton: Tattooed, pink-haired friend of Shelley and daughter of journalism professor Len Pickering. Amy began the strip as a spoiled art student but has since become the most level-headed and successful of the main adult characters. She continues inBad Machinery as Amy Beckwith-Chilton, married to Ryan Beckwith.
  • Ryan Beckwith: Aimless, good-natured friend of Amy and Shelley, given to buffoonish musings and Americanisms. He continues inBad Machinery, married to Amy Chilton.
  • Tim Jones: This suave genius inventor was for many years the anchor of the cast: older brother figure to Shelley and Ryan, crush object of Amy, mentor to The Boy, and mayor of the town. He was exiled to Wales in 2006 and didn't appear again during the comic's run.
  • Riley Beckwith: Ryan's sister and Tim's wife, Riley's low opinion of the main cast led her to concoct a successful scheme to remove herself and Tim from the other characters' orbit. She's a dedicated believer in aliens.
  • Tessa and Rachel: These two barmaids were the original protagonists ofScary Go Round, but as the current cast came to dominate the proceedings, they first became villains and then were dispensed with (in Rachel's case, viaimmolation).
  • Gibbous Moon: A recurring character, a marine biologist and short-term love interest for Ryan, first introduced interning on an evil island, repenting after leaving with Shelley. Written out when revealed to be running an underground smuggling ring, and sent to jail.
Teenagers
  • Eustace Boyce, aka "The Boy": Nebbishy former assistant to one-time major character Tim Jones, The Boy and his girlfriend Dark Esther (see below) serve as protagonists of the story arcs that focus on the teenage cast. Lost his virginity to Esther de Groot in a caravan in Wales.
  • Esther de Groot, aka "Dark Esther": Adolescent goth. Lost her virginity to The Boy in a caravan in Wales, before they became a couple which would last until the end of the series. Esther would go on to be the principal character in Allison's later seriesGiant Days, centred around her time at university.
  • Erin Winters: Shelley's intelligent, sensible, serious sister. Erin was put under a spell by villain Bob Crowley that led her to follow him into a bleak hell dimension from which the creator ofScary Go Round asserts she will not return.[12] As of the new comic Bad Machinery it appears she has returned as a newspaper journalist, at least temporarily.

Print collections

[edit]
This sectiondoes notcite anysources. Please helpimprove this section byadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged andremoved.(February 2020) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
  • Looks Brains and Everything – The first Scary Go Round collection : strips from 27 August 2002 to 28 February 2003
  • Blame The Sky – The second Scary Go Round collection : strips from 4 March 2003 to 27 March 2004
  • Skellington – The 3rd Scary Go Round collection : strips from 9 May 2004 to 11 March 2005
  • The Retribution Index – The 4th Scary Go Round collection : strips from 14 March 2005 to 17 February 2006
  • Great Aches – The 5th Scary Go Round collection : strips from 27 February 2006 to 22 December 2006
  • Ahoy Hoy! – The 6th Scary Go Round collection : strips from 1 January 2007 to 2 November 2007
  • Peloton – The 7th Scary Go Round collection : strips from 5 November 2007 to 5 September 2008
  • Recklessly Yours – The 8th and Final Scary Go Round collection : strips from 8 September 2008 to 11 September 2009

Reception

[edit]

Writing forThe Sunday Times in 2006, Danny O'Brien calledScary Go Round one of the "coolest strips online", describing it as "postmodern British Horror" which was "subtle and stylishly drawn, with a bold cartoon edge". O'Brien said that the comic "reek[s] of cool Britannia" and that the dialogue "ma[de] a pleasant change from the nonstop Americana of most comics".[10]

Also in 2006, James Eagle wrote for the British newspaperMorning Star thatScary Go Round was "brilliant", "bonkers", and "the best British strip that I've yet found".[13]

Writing forWizard magazine in 2006, Brian Warmoth said thatScary Go Round "stitches a world of frightfully bizarre and at times even Lovecraftian happenings together with a brilliantly quirky cast indicative of his understatedly British sense of humor."[14]

Michael Whitney reviewedScary Go Round in 2004 for theblogThe Webcomics Examiner. Whitney said that compared to vector art used inBobbins, "The paper dolls loosened up. The figures were squashed and stretched to make them feel more natural." Whitney said thatScary Go Round "decoupled" theBobbins characters from gag humor, relationship obsession and reality: "They meander into stories full of zombies, witches and inter-dimensional doorways." Whitney added that despite the horror elements of the setting, "the characters take their circumstances too well to let us feel that they're facing a genuine threat in a horror story sense... The tone is too silly for genuinely dire consequences, which may be why Allison fielded some angry response when he killed off a popular character, Shelley, early in the strip." (Shelley would return to life in a later storyline.)[3]

Awards

[edit]

Scary Go Round won theWeb Cartoonists' Choice Award for Outstanding Comic in 2005.[15] It also won Outstanding Original Digital Art in 2003[16] and jointly won Outstanding Art in 2004 (tied withMac Hall),[17] and was nominated for a further 18 awards over the WCCA's history.[16][17][15][18][19][20][21]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Tyrrell, Gary (6 December 2017)."Chaos Abounds".Fleen. Retrieved1 February 2021.
  2. ^"Mo/Tu/Th/Fr Comic by John Allison". Scary Go Round. 4 June 2002. Retrieved25 June 2009.
  3. ^abcWhitney, Michael (August 2004)."Laboratory and Obsession".The Webcomics Examiner. Archived fromthe original on 10 August 2004.
  4. ^abcdFitzgerald, Leah (March 2003)."Scary Go Chat: An online interview with John Allison by Leah Fitzgerald".Comixtalk. Archived fromthe original on 24 October 2007.
  5. ^Leaver, Tama (27 July 2005)."Webcomics: Interviews with John Allison & Jeph Jacques".ponderance.blogspot.com. Retrieved1 February 2021.
  6. ^abGerding, Stephen (29 September 2004)."Scary-Go-Round: A John Allison Interview". Archived fromthe original on 19 August 2011.
  7. ^Raffe, Jon."John Allison and his Scary-Go-Round".Thunder Chunky.Archived from the original on 30 June 2007. Retrieved1 February 2021.
  8. ^"John Allison's "Bad Machinery"".CBR. 28 December 2009. Retrieved1 February 2021.
  9. ^"Scary Go Round Comics by John Allison".www.scarygoround.com. Retrieved1 February 2021.
  10. ^abcO'Brien, Danny (26 February 2006)."The tooniverse explodes; Site test".The Sunday Times.
  11. ^Allison, John (16 February 2009)."True Stories: Proud Mum Hits Back at Bullies".Scary Go Round. Archived fromthe original on 26 July 2011.
  12. ^Allison, John (6 April 2008)."A hundred dance moves per minute: The magic hour". Retrieved11 September 2009.
  13. ^Eagle, James (6 May 2006). "Wired: Net some of the best cartoons".Morning Star. p. 9.
  14. ^Warmoth, Brian (22 December 2006)."A Ride on the 'Scary Go Round'".Wizard magazine. Archived fromthe original on 6 January 2007.
  15. ^ab"2005 Results".ccawards.com. Archived fromthe original on 3 March 2016.
  16. ^ab"The 2003 Cartoonist's Choice Awards".ccawards.com. Archived fromthe original on 5 March 2016. Retrieved1 February 2021.
  17. ^ab"2004 Results".ccawards.com. Archived fromthe original on 4 March 2016.
  18. ^"Outstanding Comic presented by Tom Brazleton of Theater Hopper".ccawards.com. Archived fromthe original on 8 March 2016.
  19. ^"Outstanding Character Writing by Ben Gamboa of Tweep and M.Neils of Pocket Kitten".ccawards.com. Archived fromthe original on 31 July 2016.
  20. ^"2007 Results".ccawards.com. Archived fromthe original on 24 July 2007.
  21. ^"Here are your 2008 WCCA Winners!".ccawards.com. Archived fromthe original on 6 March 2016.

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toScary Go Round.
Wikiquote has quotations related toScary Go Round.
  • Official website (theScary Go Round series is no longer available at this site, but instead it has links to buy PDFs of the series)
Webcomics
Print comics
Dumbrella comics
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