Comic Book Guy
| The Simpsons character | |
| Jeff "Comic Book Guy" Albertson | |
| Gender | Male |
|---|---|
| Hair color | Brown |
| Job | Proprietor of The Android's Dungeon & Baseball Card Shop |
| Relatives | Possibly parents from "Comic Book Guy's Book of Pop Culture". |
| First appearance | "Three Men and a Comic Book" |
| Voice actor | Hank Azaria |
Jeff Albertson, better known as Comic Book Guy, is a fictional character in the animated series The Simpsons, voiced by Hank Azaria. He is the proprietor of the comic book store, The Android's Dungeon & Baseball Card Shop.
Profile
Comic Book Guy is obese, nerdy, hairy and perhaps best known for his
Appropriate to his name, Comic Book Guy is obsessed with comic books. A science fiction buff, Comic Book Guy has a bumper sticker that reads "My Other Car Is The Millennium Falcon," given to him by a Harrison Ford lookalike. The license plate on his AMC Gremlin is NCC-1701, the registry number of Star Trek's USS Enterprise. The contents of his display case include, among other oddities, a photo of Sean Connery signed by Roger Moore and a very rare Mary Worth in which she advised a friend to commit suicide. He also owns a T-shirt that says "C:/DOS C:/DOS/RUN RUN/DOS/RUN" (Notice the incorrect usage of the forward slash. DOS directories are listed with a backslash). He is a member of the Springfield branch of Mensa, along with Principal Skinner, Dr. Hibbert, Lisa Simpson, Professor Frink, and Lindsey Naegle.
In the episode "Saddlesore Galactica", he wears a T-shirt saying "Worst Episode Ever" while criticising the ideals behind the Simpson family keeping a horse since it had already been done. Later on he even popped into the frame when it was mentioned that Marge might be developing a gambling problem saying "Hey, I'm watching you". After the credits of the same episode, his voice is heard declaring it "the worst episode ever".
In the Simpsons city of North Haverbrook there is a comic book shop named "Mylar Baggins" and the proprietor looks very similar to Comic Book Guy with the exception that his skin and hair are slightly darker. He also has a deep-rooted rivalry with a store similar to his - "Frodo's of Shelbyville". These shops could have had the same owner, as both rival store names refer to The Lord of the Rings character Frodo Baggins. In The Simpsons Movie Comic Book Guy says that his obsessive comic book collecting is a "life well spent".
The Android's Dungeon
Comic Book Guy is the owner of The Android's Dungeon, a local comic book store. Many of
the comics and toys he sells are of poor-quality, and often for very high prices. His store is his sanctuary, where he holds some
level of self-esteem, imperiously lording over pre-teen kids, like Bart Simpson and
Milhouse Van Houten, using a heavily sarcastic tone. When he was the target of
mockery while trying to return the Ultimate Belt, he sighed, "I must get back to my comic book store, where I dispense the
insults rather than absorb them". His store contains a section full of illegal videos
(which include Mr. Rogers drunk, Alien
Autopsy, Illegal Alien Autopsy, a
Romance
Comic Book Guy was once married—in an online role-playing game. He and his Internet wife contemplated having children, but that would have severely drained his power crystals. While part of an intellectual junta that briefly ran Springfield, he proposed plans to limit breeding to once every seven years (a reference to the Vulcan blood fever of mating, called Pon Farr), commenting that this would mean much less breeding for most, but for him, "much, much more". He was a virgin well into his forties when he became romantically involved with Principal Skinner's mother Agnes. (Chief Wiggum was notably repulsed when he and his officers stumbled upon the couple "in the act".) He later dated Edna Krabappel.
Name
A long-
References
- ^ this is a reference to an organization called the Klingon Language Institute who took the time to translate Hamlet into
Klingon after hearing the line "You haven't experienced
Shakespeare until you've read him in the original Klingon" in Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country - ^ "Homer and Ned's Hail Mary Pass". Steven Dean Moore (director), Tim Long (writer). The Simpsons. Fox. No. 8, season 16. Three minutes in.
- ^ Larry Carroll. "'Simpsons' Trivia, From Swearing Lisa To 'Burns-Sexual' Smithers", MTV, 2007-07-26. Retrieved on 2007-07-29.
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