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Analog (Magazine)

 Analog (Magazine)
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TVTItem
 Analog (Magazine)
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Analog (Magazine)
 Analog (Magazine)
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Analog
 Analog (Magazine)
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Among the oldest Science Fiction magazine, Analog has been around since January 1930, making it Older Than Television. Under its original title, Astounding Stories of Super-Science, it was designed as a rival to Amazing Stories. It remains one of the only pulps to have survived multiple transitions, such as moving from newsstands to big bookstore magazine racks, and the arrival of the internet: https://www.analogsf.com/For most of its history, the magazine has been digest-sized.note In the early 1960s, Analog switched to bedsheet-size for twelve issues, but it proved too expensive. Since The New '10s, the magazine has been a bit larger, but still usually under 500 pages per volume. When John W. Campbell was Chief Editor, Analog led America in what fans and historians call the Golden Age Of Science Fiction. Even today, the magazine is popular enough to distribute copies throughout the international anglosphere.The magazine, in an effort to stay fresh for new audiences, is always looking for new authors, including then-newcomers such as Orson Scott Card and Joe Haldeman in the 1970s, Greg Bear and Timothy Zahn in the 1980s, and Michael A Burstein and Rajnar Vajra in the 1990s.
 Analog (Magazine)
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2023-08-31T18:58:28Z
 Analog (Magazine)
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2023-08-31T18:58:28Z
 Analog (Magazine)
processingComment
Dropped link to Lensman: Not a Feature - ITEM
 Analog (Magazine)
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Dropped link to RobotsHaveNoTails: Not a Feature - ITEM
 Analog (Magazine)
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Dropped link to SerialNovel: Not a Feature - ITEM
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Dropped link to SixDecadesTheBestOfAnalog: Not a Feature - ITEM
 Analog (Magazine)
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DBTropes
 Analog (Magazine) / int_1312305b
type
Letters to the Editor
 Analog (Magazine) / int_1312305b
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Letters to the Editor: In April 1930, the magazine began publishing letters that had been sent in by fans. Fans such as, Isaac Asimov, Lester del Rey, Damon Knight, and Donald A Wollheim. They were often used as a way to correspond with people you had never met and included your address so that private correspondences could occur as well. This culture of communication in magazines like Astounding Stories were the source of mailing lists.
 Analog (Magazine) / int_1312305b
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 Analog (Magazine) / int_13d2ffe1
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Humanity Is Superior
 Analog (Magazine) / int_13d2ffe1
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Humanity Is Superior: John W. Campbell had Enforced this idea while Chief Editor of the magazine. He required that any story involving aliens must show them to be inferior to humans and this was often assumed to reflect his personal bias that white men were superior to other races.
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 Analog (Magazine) / int_1c0eff4b
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Thinker Pose
 Analog (Magazine) / int_1c0eff4b
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Thinker Pose: The October 1957 issue has this cover. The subversion is that the Master Computer is implied to be doing the thinking for the white-labcoated scientist with their head upon their fist.
 Analog (Magazine) / int_1c0eff4b
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 Analog (Magazine) / int_1c26120d
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New Season, New Name
 Analog (Magazine) / int_1c26120d
comment
Given how large the original title made Astounding compared to the rest of the title (Astounding Stories), you could be forgiven for assuming the title was simply one word. The changes to the title only reinforce the idea that the magazine is simply Astounding.
 Analog (Magazine) / int_1c26120d
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 Analog (Magazine) / int_1e1f2e51
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Raygun Gothic
 Analog (Magazine) / int_1e1f2e51
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Raygun Gothic: Many early covers of the magazine featured silver rocketships with sleek designs, space stations with clear domes to see the planet they orbit, and people standing next to round doors with shiny metallic spacesuits.
 Analog (Magazine) / int_1e1f2e51
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 Analog (Magazine) / int_21c05222
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Long-Runners
 Analog (Magazine) / int_21c05222
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Long-Runners: This magazine has remained in print since January 1930, with monthly or semi-monthly issues every year.
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 Analog (Magazine) / int_28ae9dbf
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Pen Name
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Pen Name: Edward E. Smith, PhD. was the name used for E. E. "Doc" Smith when publishing Galactic Patrol, as well as other Lensman stories.
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 Analog (Magazine) / int_3c5ae1a1
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Schizo Tech
 Analog (Magazine) / int_3c5ae1a1
comment
Schizo Tech: One very representative example is a short story in an issue of Analog, in which the most advanced two species in the universe can use black holes as a source of energy and have more Wave Motion Guns than you can imagine, but are surprised and, for one of the two species (both flew around in gigantic spaceships), destroyed by a lucky shot from a device consisting of a long tube, a titanium coated projectile, and an explosive, i.e., a gun. Apparently, only humans are brutish enough to come up with the idea.
 Analog (Magazine) / int_3c5ae1a1
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 Analog (Magazine) / int_418a10e2
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Motion Blur
 Analog (Magazine) / int_418a10e2
comment
Motion Blur: The cover of the January 1934 issue, advertising Donald Wandrei's "Colossus", has a foreground ship with blur and lines indicating that it is moving from the lower right to upper left of the page. In the background, many other ships are shown to be moving in the opposite direction based on the way their lines fade out and the presence of a blob at the forefront of the line. The cover of the May 1935 issue, advertising John Russell Fearn's "Earths Mausoleum", has a yellow cigar-shaped rocket with lines and blurring to indicate that it is moving quickly to the tower in the background. The cover of the September 1935 issue, advertising John Russell Fearn's "The Blue Infinity", gives motion lines to the earth, implying that it is getting towed through the yellow tunnel by the purple ray, leaving the stars in the background motionless. The cover of the October 1935 issue, advertising Nat Schachmer's "I Am Not God", has a Swirly Energy Thingy with motion lines, both behind and in front of the foreground figure in a deep-sea diving suit. The cover of the November 1935 issue, advertising Stanley G Weinbaum's "The Red Peri" and Charles Willard Diffin's Blue Magic, has two rockets shown to be moving in opposite directions by using blur and motion lines going in opposite directions.
 Analog (Magazine) / int_418a10e2
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 Analog (Magazine) / int_44bd31e2
type
Trope Codifier
 Analog (Magazine) / int_44bd31e2
comment
Trope Codifier: In his role as Chief Editor for the magazine, John W. Campbell became the major codifier for Golden Age Science Fiction as a genre. His editorship standardized the use of tropes such as Humanity Is Superior (and specifically the White Male Lead), Humans Are Psychic in the Future and a certain mandatory hardness, and the authors he nurtured retained his influence long after his death.
 Analog (Magazine) / int_44bd31e2
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Analog (Magazine) / int_44bd31e2
 Analog (Magazine) / int_4eb66c8d
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White Male Lead
 Analog (Magazine) / int_4eb66c8d
comment
White Male Lead: John W. Campbell Enforced this idea while Chief Editor of the magazine. He was very clear in his opinion that the Northern European male was the pinnacle of all beings, and rarely accepted a story with any other kind of lead.
 Analog (Magazine) / int_4eb66c8d
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 Analog (Magazine) / int_5744f019
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Lucky Charms Title
 Analog (Magazine) / int_5744f019
comment
Lucky Charms Title: The magazine was (relatively briefly) officially known as Analog Science Fiction [symbol] Science Fact. The symbol, resembling a right-pointing arrow superimposed on a ⋂ (inverted U), was invented by editor John W. Campbell to represent "Analogous to", because they were changing the name.
 Analog (Magazine) / int_5744f019
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 Analog (Magazine)
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 Analog (Magazine) / int_71105dfc
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Everybody Smokes
 Analog (Magazine) / int_71105dfc
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Everybody Smokes: Because the magazine began in the 1930s, smoking ads were a common component, advertising for their ability to "keep out throat dangers".
 Analog (Magazine) / int_71105dfc
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 Analog (Magazine) / int_72601f48
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Ominous Message from the Future
 Analog (Magazine) / int_72601f48
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Ominous Message from the Future: The November 1948 issue published a reader's letter reviewing the stories in the November 1949 issue. Chief Editor John W. Campbell went along with the joke by commissioning the authors mentioned to write stories under the titles given in the letter, thus making the actual November 1949 magazine resemble the imaginary one as closely as possible.
 Analog (Magazine) / int_72601f48
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Analog (Magazine) / int_72601f48
 Analog (Magazine) / int_792b908d
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Please Subscribe to Our Channel
 Analog (Magazine) / int_792b908d
comment
Please Subscribe to Our Channel: At the end of each issue is a reminder to subscribe to the magazine, offering a discount for subscriptions instead of full newsstand price. Some issues would have more advertising than just the end-of-issue reminder.
 Analog (Magazine) / int_792b908d
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 Analog (Magazine)
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Analog (Magazine) / int_792b908d
 Analog (Magazine) / int_974a9fe0
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On the Next
 Analog (Magazine) / int_974a9fe0
comment
On the Next: To fill space at the end of stories, early issues of the magazine would include self-advertisements, such as "Send your letters to Amazing Stories" or "IN THE NEXT ISSUE", to entice the readers to pick up the next issue with Taglines and personal investment. This type of self-advertising developed into a dedicated column called "In Times To Come", informing readers what would be included in upcoming issues.
 Analog (Magazine) / int_974a9fe0
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Analog (Magazine) / int_974a9fe0
 Analog (Magazine) / int_d09eafbc
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Floating Head Syndrome
 Analog (Magazine) / int_d09eafbc
comment
Floating Head Syndrome: The cover of the April 1944 issue, advertising A.E. van Vogt's "The Changeling", has a central face/head with normal colouration for a caucasion, and six others heads that are monochrome imitations of the central face with slight changes, implying the ability to change shape. The cover of the June 1951 issue, advertising Eric Frank Russell's ". . .And Then There Were None", had seven floating heads and a floating bicycle above a landscape of a lake and mountains. The cover of the July 1951 issue, advertising James Schmitz's "The End Of The Line", has a male and female face floating in front of a vertical cigar-shaped silver rocket where people were in line to board. The cover of the August 1951 issue, advertising MC Pease's "City Of The Phoenix", has a disembodied head and two disembodied hands that overlook a spiral galaxy. The cover of the April 1952 issue, advertising Walter M. Miller, Jr.'s "Dumb Waiter", has the heads of a man and woman staring imperiously down at a boy on a bicycle. The cover of the September 1960 issue, advertising David Gordon's "By Proxy", shows a human face floating in front of a blue-skinned alien face, both above a horizontal cigar-shaped white and red rocket on stilts like a boat. The cover of the May 1970 issue, advertising John Dalmas's "But Mainly By Cunning", has the floating heads of a wolf and a woman in the background sky above a viking-inspired knight on horseback. The cover of the March 1974 issue, advertising Jerry Pournelle's "High Justice", had a female face with a blue-green tint in the background.
 Analog (Magazine) / int_d09eafbc
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 Analog (Magazine) / int_d0f0a80d
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One-Word Title
 Analog (Magazine) / int_d0f0a80d
comment
One-Word Title: Given how large the original title made Astounding compared to the rest of the title (Astounding Stories), you could be forgiven for assuming the title was simply one word. The changes to the title only reinforce the idea that the magazine is simply Astounding. Analog still sometimes shows up with a subtitle (such as Analog Science Fiction and Fact), but the cover usually shows only the one word prominently enough to be associated with a title.
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 Analog (Magazine) / int_dd91f8d8
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Audience Participation
 Analog (Magazine) / int_dd91f8d8
comment
Audience Participation: Several columns were developed that include unpaid reader submissions. The "Analytical Laboratory" is a tally of reader votes for the best stories of previous issues. "Brass Tacks" is a column where readers share their opinions on the magazine's quality (often praising/bashing specific stories), while "Science Discussions" is usually more of a direct back-and-forth about Non-Fiction things, such as one of the essays in the magazine from half a year ago.
 Analog (Magazine) / int_dd91f8d8
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 Analog (Magazine) / int_eae0129f
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Anti-Advice
 Analog (Magazine) / int_eae0129f
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Anti-Advice: One story from the 1970s featured an Obstructive Bureaucrat type who has been asked to consult on a project. He's pretty clearly suffering from cranial-recto inversion, but the project personnel seem to be taking him dead seriously. It turns out that the bureaucrat has been scientifically identified as someone who is always, always wrongheaded and therefore the project personnel know to do the exact opposite of his suggestions. Now that he and the other "canaries" have been identified and isolated in similar jobs, human progress is taking off like a rocket.
 Analog (Magazine) / int_eae0129f
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 Analog (Magazine) / int_f51f4509
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Tagline
 Analog (Magazine) / int_f51f4509
comment
Tagline: Some of the covers contain the following self-advertising; "The Largest Circulation of any Science-Fiction Magazine".
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 Analog (Magazine) / int_fc225bec
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Artistic License – Physics
 Analog (Magazine) / int_fc225bec
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Artistic License – Physics: The magazine has a long-running, but sporadic, series of short-short stories with the series title of "Probability Zero", stories which sound plausible but aren't, because of deliberate (and usually subtle) scientific errors, ones that are required to make the story interesting.
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Analog (Magazine)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Analog (Magazine)
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After the End / int_6277095a
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Alien Sky / int_6277095a
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Amazing Technicolor Population / int_6277095a
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Anti-Advice / int_6277095a
 Analog (Magazine)
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Artistic License – Physics / int_6277095a
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Aside Glance / int_6277095a
 Analog (Magazine)
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Audience Participation / int_6277095a
 Analog (Magazine)
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Badass Cape / int_6277095a
 Analog (Magazine)
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Big Creepy-Crawlies / int_6277095a
 Analog (Magazine)
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Everybody Smokes / int_6277095a
 Analog (Magazine)
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Eye on a Stalk / int_6277095a
 Analog (Magazine)
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Fiction as Cover-Up / int_6277095a
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Fishbowl Helmet / int_6277095a
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Floating Head Syndrome / int_6277095a
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Forced Perspective / int_6277095a
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Gratuitous Laboratory Flasks / int_6277095a
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Holy Halo / int_6277095a
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Homage / int_6277095a
 Analog (Magazine)
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Humanity Is Superior / int_6277095a
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Intro-Only Point of View / int_6277095a
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Killer Gorilla / int_6277095a
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Latex Space Suit / int_6277095a
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Letters to the Editor / int_6277095a
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Lizard Folk / int_6277095a
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Lucky Charms Title / int_6277095a
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Magazine Decay / int_6277095a
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Man in a Kilt / int_6277095a
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More than Three Dimensions / int_6277095a
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Motion Blur / int_6277095a
 Analog (Magazine)
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Multi-Armed and Dangerous / int_6277095a
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Multiple Head Case / int_6277095a
 Analog (Magazine)
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New Season, New Name / int_6277095a
 Analog (Magazine)
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Oddly Shaped Sword / int_6277095a
 Analog (Magazine)
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Ominous Message from the Future / int_6277095a
 Analog (Magazine)
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On the Next / int_6277095a
 Analog (Magazine)
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One-Word Title / int_6277095a
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Our Doors Are Different / int_6277095a
 Analog (Magazine)
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Our Giants Are Bigger / int_6277095a
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Patriotic Fervor / int_6277095a
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Please Subscribe to Our Channel / int_6277095a
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Pop Culture Urban Legends / int_6277095a
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Power Glows / int_6277095a
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Professional Gambler / int_6277095a
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Ray Gun / int_6277095a
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Raygun Gothic / int_6277095a
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Schizo Tech / int_6277095a
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Science Marches On / int_6277095a
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 Analog (Magazine)
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SkeleBot 9000 / int_6277095a
 Analog (Magazine)
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Speed Echoes / int_6277095a
 Analog (Magazine)
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 Analog (Magazine)
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Stripperiffic / int_6277095a
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Tagline / int_6277095a
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The Great Depression / int_6277095a
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Thinker Pose / int_6277095a
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To Be Continued / int_6277095a
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Trope Codifier / int_6277095a
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Underwear of Power / int_6277095a
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Visible Invisibility / int_6277095a
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White Male Lead / int_6277095a
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Working Title / int_6277095a