I Was a Teenage Tax Consultant

I Was a Teenage Tax Consultant is a series published in the British comic anthology 2000 AD in 1997. It was created by John Wagner and Ian Gibson and was advertised as one of the strangest stories ever published in 2000 AD.[1] The series was originally scripted in 1991 and is, unlike most series published in 2000 AD, creator-owned.

I Was a Teenage Tax Conultant
Created byJohn Wagner
Ian Gibson
Publication information
PublisherOriginally IPC Media (Fleetway) until 1999, thereafter Rebellion Developments
ScheduleWeekly
Genre
Publication dateJuly – September 1997
Creative team
Writer(s)John Wagner
Artist(s)Ian Gibson
Editor(s)Tharg (David Bishop)

The opening splash page doubles an imitation film poster that includes billings for the characters and creators as well as a notice that the artwork is in “Superwidestrip”, a spoof of 1950s widescreen film formats like CinemaScope. The artwork for I Was a Teenage Tax Consultant was not completed before the comic changed size to A4 so every page had to include a banner across the top of each page.[2]

Plot summary

The premise is a parody of the 1957 horror film I Was a Teenage Werewolf. A rebel biker called Jimmy Root is bitten by rabid tax consultant. Afterwards, whenever there is a full moon, Jimmy transforms into a nerdish tax consultant who harangues people in a complicated legalese about their finances. After a number of transformations and a visit to an institution dedicated to grotesque occupational disorders Jimmy and his girlfriend abscond to a remote island where his tax consultant alter-ego cannot pester people.

gollark: I thought it used the three disks as one megadisk?
gollark: You could suggest to the OC developers that they add a "JBOD" mode.
gollark: Maybe appends an "e" or something, too.
gollark: We could have a bot for that, might be useful.
gollark: > RAID 4 consists of block-level striping with a dedicated parity disk. As a result of its layout, RAID 4 provides good performance of random reads, while the performance of random writes is low due to the need to write all parity data to a single disk.[20]

References

  1. 2000 AD (1997) 2000 AD, #1050
  2. Bishop, David (16 February 2007). "28 Days of 2000 AD #16.1: Dark Bish-OP Pt. 3". Vicious Imagery. Retrieved 25 April 2016.
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