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B.D. is a fictional character in Garry Trudeau's popular comic strip Doonesbury.In the comic strip, nobody is certain what "B.D." is short for (he gives his last name as "D"), but he was based on Brian Dowling, quarterback at Yale University, where Trudeau attended college.
The Daily Bugle (at one time The DB! ) [ 2 ] is a fictional New York City tabloid newspaper appearing as a plot element in American comic books published by Marvel Comics . The Daily Bugle is a regular fixture in the Marvel Universe , most prominently in Spider-Man comic titles and their derivative media.
BuzzFeed, Inc. is an American Internet media, news and entertainment company with a focus on digital media.Based in New York City, [2] BuzzFeed was founded in 2006 by Jonah Peretti and John S. Johnson III to focus on tracking viral content.
BuzzFeed Unsolved (also known as simply Unsolved) is a documentary entertainment web series created by Ryan Bergara for BuzzFeed that ran from February 4, 2016, to November 19, 2021. It first appeared on the YouTube channel BuzzFeed Blue and was later given its own flagship channel BuzzFeed Unsolved Network .
Deadliest Fiction, one of the oldest and most well-known battleboarding sites today. [1] [2]Battleboarding, also known as Versus Debating and "Who Would Win" Debating, [1] [3] [4] is an activity that involves discussing and debating around hypothetical fights between individuals; most popularly, fictional characters.
In 2014, BuzzFeed ranked Dust 81st in their "95 X-Men Members Ranked From Worst To Best" list. [23] In 2017, CBR.com ranked Dust 11th in their "15 Muslim Characters In Comics You Should Know" list. [24] In 2017, Den of Geek included Dust in their "40 X-Men Characters Who Haven’t Appeared in the Movies But Should" list. [22]
While at BuzzFeed, Ashley wrote the web series You Do You which aired on BuzzFeed Violet and was later sold to iTunes. [10] The series hit the number 1 slot on Apple's top chart after its release, beating out HBO's Silicon Valley season 2, TBS's Angie Tribeca season 1, and CBS's The Big Bang Theory season 9. [ 11 ]
A study on sound symbolism and its effect on character names conducted by researchers at Tsuda University, Tokyo discover that out of a sample size of 118 villainous characters from Dragon Ball, the consonants /g/ and /b/ were frequently used in their names and that there was a strong tendency to link "bad & male" characters with /ɡ/, which ...