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・ Helen Zerefos
・ Helen Zhu
・ Helen Zia
・ Helen Zille
・ Helen Zimmern
・ Helen's Babies
・ Helen's Babies (film)
・ Helen's Babies (novel)
・ Helen's Bay
・ Helen's Bay railway station
・ Helen's Reef
・ Helen's Tower
・ Helen's Trust
・ Helen, Georgia
・ Helen, Maryland
Helen, Sweetheart of the Internet
・ Helen, the Authoress
・ Helen, Washington
・ Helen, West Virginia
・ Helen-Ann Hartley
・ Helena
・ Helena (1924 film)
・ Helena (A Midsummer Night's Dream)
・ Helena (comics)
・ Helena (empress)
・ Helena (given name)
・ Helena (Machado de Assis novel)
・ Helena (niece of Justin II)
・ Helena (song)
・ Helena (Waugh novel)


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Helen, Sweetheart of the Internet : ウィキペディア英語版
Helen, Sweetheart of the Internet

''Helen, Sweetheart of the Internet'' is a comic strip which was drawn from 1996 through 2005 by American graphics artist Peter Zale. The strip describes a technically adept young woman who works at a technology firm. It was the first comic strip to make the leap from the Internet to newspaper syndication. It began online in 1996 and was syndicated to newspapers by Tribune Media Services beginning on 5 June 2000, and was removed from syndication after 25 December 2005.
==Characters and story==
Helen is a woman too young, too smart and too messed up by her precocity to ever live a normal life. Zale drew her as a very intelligent〔 buxom blond bombshell, casting her against the "dumb blonde" stereotype. Her looks, though, meant almost nothing to her, and her femininity only occurred to her as an afterthought and was usually applied with more aggressiveness than any man had ever seen, mostly upon her boyfriend Spencer Green, a character that Zale introduced in a strip which he syndicated with the College Press in the early 1990s.
Helen's programming skills and their warped application led to her being defined as a modern day mad scientist. Such things as making artificial intelligences without thinking it odd are common throughout the series.
A friendship with Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist Mike Peters led Zale into strip cartooning and away from his first love, comic books. He published his first continuing comic strips in ''The Chicago Maroon'' while an undergraduate at the University of Chicago.
Launched as an online-only comic in June 1996, ''Helen, Sweetheart of the Internet'' grew in popularity, receiving attention in ''The New York Times'', ''New Straits Times'',〔 ''HOW'', ''The Plain Dealer'' and other publications. It was syndicated by Tribune Media in 2000 simultaneous with McGraw-Hill's book collection, ''Techies Unite''. At its peak, it was published in 60 newspapers.〔(Stripper's Guide )〕
In 1998, Zale and Christopher Baldwin created what is believed to be the "first Internet comics crossover" with the webcomic Bruno.
Following publication of the Christmas Day 2005 segment of ''Helen'', Zale took leave of the strip in order to complete his MBA studies.
In 2014 the strip was pitched for development as a live-action television situation comedy also called ''Helen, Sweetheart of the Internet''.〔(Helen, Sweetheart of the Internet (website) )〕 The pilot was being developed for introduction in October 2014.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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