![]() Ten issues were released, seven released by Sir Fireball Electrozapper and three released by Lisosaurus (known originally for being a writer for the TTC Times, but perhaps best known for her moderation work on Toontown Rewritten). TTC Times: Rewritten brought back original TTC Times while introducing a new generation of TTC/MMOCers to the TTC Times. ![]() Just as Disney’s Toontown Online was rewritten, former Editor-in-Chief Sir Fireball Electrozapper decided to revive the TTC Times, with the approval of the original editors-in-chief. The original newsletter ultimately ran 195 issues, just falling short of an anniversary edition for issue #200.Įnter TTC Times: Rewritten. That is fifteen different people over the span of over four years. Toontown59153 (known to us all as Aust), Bubbles Ruffleseed (known to us as Jac), Good Ol Skippy Electrochomp, Frontier, Silly Corny Fiddlepop, ~CreativeDreamer~ (the first Group #1 Editor-in-Chief to take over for that kid), Tooney, The Monkey Man, Diddy, Sir Fireball Electrozapper, Da Furball Dude, Gekkouga64 (known at the time as Banana Man), Van Van, and littlesqueaks all were Editor-in-Chief for the original TTC Times at one point or another. Without the Editor-in-Chief for each group, the TTC Times wouldn’t have been posted on a weekly basis. The most important position of the newsletter, however, was Editor-in-Chief. How would the newsletter have taken off without the popularity of The Monkey Man’s hit comic? How would the newsletter have survived without great article and short story writers such as MachopMasta and Silly Rollie McMuffin? The storywriters and comic artists of the TTC Times gave the newsletter life. There were many writers that the TTC Times would simply not have survived without. The clan and newsletter combination made the TTCT community stronger than ever. Some members ended up with the highest-laffed toons they had ever had thanks to The Comic Cloning League. Some of the toons reached into the 110s of laff points. In 2010, The Comic Cloning League was born, and numerous Rons, Mattzerellas, Blobs, and more were running all around Toontown. The newsletter had become so huge, that eventually, the young boy running the Times decided to create a clan that focused more-so on playing Toontown, rather than simply writing about. The Times kept growing, and eventually hit 100 issues. Unique articles by unique and talented members. While the comics section of the newsletter was overwhelmingly popular, the rest of the newsletter became more and more skimmed over. ![]() “Cheeseland,” “Blob and Bleep,” “Sticky the Stickman,” “Comic Clash,” and “Elfman” all followed “Ron & Flipppy,” and all were hits. Group #1 saw its comics grow and grow in popularity, thanks to a new comic series by the name of “Ron & Flippy.” The comic was a smash hit, and readers began to read the Times primarily for its comics. Newsletters began to have themes every week to inspire creativity in the newsletter’s journalists, reviewers, storytellers, and comic artists. After all, how many fake Sports, Weather, and News columns could one come up with? After fifteen issues, a strong initial idea was being worn out.īring in Group #2 and a burst of creativity for the newsletter. This went on for fifteen issues – every other Saturday, a new issue was released. ![]() Then, every other Saturday, the boy would wake up at 8 or 9 AM, sit at the computer for three hours, and put together a new issue of the TTC Times. He would hop on his old home computer throughout the week to gather articles from interested members of the website. Nine years ago, on this day, a young boy decided to begin a newsletter on his favorite website. "If you like fake cheese and awesome writing, read the TTC Times, it's really exciting!” ~ Loopy Lemonspinner Issue #206 | TOONS OF THE WORLD, UNITE! | 10 jellybeans March 2017 - TTC Times 9 Year Anniversary! ![]()
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