WhirlGirl debuted in 1997 as an online sci-fi series about a reluctant superheroine battling an evil "mediatech" empire in 2077 Southern California. The title character -- dubbed "a real revolutionary for a virtual age" -- balanced freedom-fighting with realistic personal concerns like dating and having friends.
Initially launched as a web comic with light animation and short bursts of music and sound effects, WhirlGirl ultimately became the first regularly scheduled web series using Flash animation, and went on to achieve a variety of industry firsts over a 100-webisode career, including: syndication partnerships with major websites, a distribution partnership with a premium cable network, a web television simulcast, cross-media advertising campaigns, and licensing and merchandising agreements. [1] [2]
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Characters
editKia Cross was the only daughter of mid-21st century revolutionary leader Morgan Cross. After Morgan was captured and destroyed by forces working for ZoneWerks, an evil media/technology corporation run by Ty Harden, Kia was brainwashed and dispatched to a life of quiet servitude. Flash forward: Years later, as the programming wears off, Kia recalls her mother's work and transforms herself into a superheroine. Armed with a trademark weapon (the whirlblade) and a signature fighting move (the spin kick), she resumes the fight for freedom.
WhirlGirl's allies include Stekatta "Kat" Tressner, a stylish gear-head with a thing for WhirlGirl, and teenager Sid X, who can control computers telepathically with a "cybernetic crystal" implanted in his forehead. Victoria Thalios leads the "FreeVox" rebel group, which WhirlGirl often defends.
WhirlGirl's primary foe, Ty Harden, not only runs the evil ZoneWerks empire; he is also Sid X's estranged father. Harden relies on Axxen Baines, a sadist who heads the ZoneWerks security apparatus.
Guest Characters
editIn a September 1999 webisode, magicians Penn & Teller appeared as animated versions of themselves in a futuristic Las Vegas. [3]
In May 2000, WhirlGirl teamed up with the hero of the SciFi (now Syfy) Channel's Barbarian Moron cartoon in a series of webisodes that appeared on both the Showtime and SciFi websites. [4]
References
edit- ^ Karl Cohen, "Milestones Of The Animation Industry In The 20th Century", Animation World Network, 2000-01-01
- ^ Paula Aquilina, "Teen cyberseries gear up for TV crossover", Kidscreen, 1999-04-01
- ^ Judith Cockman, "Penn & Teller Guest Star On WhirlGirl, Animation World Magazine, October 1999
- ^ Press release, "SHO.com And SCIFI.COM Announce Popular Online Flash Comics Featured In Unique Crossover Episodes" Market Wire, May 2000
External links
edit- Official website - WhirlGirl