Cult following  

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-{{Template}}+[[Image:Véritable portrait de Monsieur Ubu, par Alfred Jarry (1896).png|thumb|left|200px|
-A '''cult following''' is a group of [[fan (person)|fans]] devoted to a specific area of [[pop culture]]. Cult followings most often develop around [[cult television|television shows]], [[cult film|films]], [[cult fiction|books]], and [[cult radio|radio]] programs. Some [[comic book]]s, [[video game]]s, [[musician]]s and [[writer]]s also gain cult followings. Non-media items may also have what could be considered cult followings, for example the [[Apple|Apple computers]].+This page ''{{PAGENAME}}'' is part of the [[publication bias list of the Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia]], presented by [[Alfred Jarry]].]]
 +{| class="toccolours" style="float: left; margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 2em; font-size: 85%; background:#c6dbf7; color:black; width:30em; max-width: 40%;" cellspacing="5"
 +| style="text-align: left;" |
 +"A [[cult following]] is a group of [[fan]]s devoted to a [[cult of personality|specific person]] or [[cultural artifact]]s such as [[cult film]]s, [[cult fiction]] or [[underground music]]. These dedicated followings are usually [[minority|relatively small]] and pertain to items that don't have broad mainstream appeal due to their [[non-mainstream]] [[subject matter]] or [[experimental]] style.
-Cult followings are often dedicated enough that many people of similar interest are familiar with one another due to convention gatherings, concerts, message boards, Internet chat rooms, word of mouth, or shops featuring related items. +In literature, one might refer to "cult books" or "cult fiction", in cinema, one refers to "cult movies", "cult cinema" or "cult films", in music one refers not to cult, but to "underground music" or "[[alternative music]]".
-These dedicated followings are usually relatively small and pertain to items that don't have broad [[mainstream]] appeal. An exception is ''[[Star Trek]]'', whose followers call themselves "[[Trekkie]]s" or "Trekkers". ''Star Trek'' has an extremely large following but can still be considered 'cult' due to the intense loyalty the franchise inspires. +Fans of [[cult]] items have a [[religious]], idolatrous and fetishistic devotion -- appropriately so because the terms ''[[Cult (religious practice)|cult]]'', ''[[fetish]]'' and ''[[idol]]'' have their origins in [[primitive religion]]. Cult items never belong to the [[mainstream]] and the [[devotion]] of their fans is often [[obsessive]]. Cult items generally don't gain that status until some time after their [[Art release|release]] and certain genres such as [[horror]], [[erotica]] and [[science fiction]] attract cults more readily than others. In literary and cinematic fiction, cult items often feature '[[subversive]]' elements such as references to non-normative forms of sexuality and as such have been [[censored]] or [[banned]]. Lastly, cult items are are avidly [[collect]]ed." --Sholem Stein
 +<hr>
 +"Any list of [[cult film]]s will include, by decade, ''[[Le Voyage dans la Lune]]'' (1902), ''[[The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari]]'' (1919), ''[[Un Chien Andalou]]'' (1929), ''[[Freaks (1932 film)|Freaks]]'' (1932), ''[[La Main du diable]]'' (1943), ''[[Les Vacances de Monsieur Hulot]]'' (1953), ''[[Peeping Tom (film)|Peeping Tom]]'' (1960), ''[[A Clockwork Orange (film)|A Clockwork Orange]]'' (1971), ''[[Videodrome]]'' (1983), ''[[Audition (film)|Audition]]'' (1999), ''[[Russian Ark]]'' (2002)and ''[[Joker (2019 film)|Joker]]'' (2019)."--Sholem Stein
 +<hr>
 +"Any list of [[cult fiction]] will feature [[Lucian]], [[Apuleius]], [[Rabelais]], [[Brantôme]], [[Laurence Sterne|Sterne]], [[Marquis de Sade|Sade]], [[De Quincey]], [[Poe]], [[Baudelaire]], [[Zola]], [[Kafka]], [[Lovecraft]], [[Céline]], [[Bataille]], [[Borges]], [[Simenon]], [[Cortazar]], [[Burroughs]], [[Vonnegut]], [[Saramago]], [[Martin Amis|Amis]] and [[Houellebecq]]."--Sholem Stein
 +<hr>
 +"The [[Nurse with Wound list]] (1979) and [[100 Records that Set the World on Fire (While No One Was Listening)]] (1998) are the best guide to 'cult music' (here used analogously to [[cult fiction]] and [[cult film]]s)."--Sholem Stein
 +|}
 +[[Image:Index Librorum Prohibitorum.jpg|thumb|200px|right|The ''[[Index Librorum Prohibitorum]]'' ("[[banned books|List of Prohibited Books]]") listed the [[cult]] books of their time, thereby demonstrating the ambiguous relationship between [[censor]] and [[succès de scandale]].]]
 +{{Template}}
-"Cult following" is also used to describe the more obsessive fans of established mainstream performers. For example, many persons have been interested in [[Michael Jackson]]'s music or in [[Walt Disney Pictures|Disney]] films, but some fans take their interest to extreme levels, [[hoarding]] vast amounts of collectables. Some such "cult fans" occasionally veer into [[obsessive-compulsive disorder]]s or [[stalking]]; however, cult followings do not necessitate that individuals partake in cultish activities.+A '''cult following''' refers to a group of [[Fan (person)|fans]] who are highly dedicated to a piece of [[artwork]] in various [[List of art media|media]], often referred to as a '''cult classic'''. A film, book, musical artist, television series, or video game, among other things, is said to have a cult following when it has a small but very passionate fanbase. A common component of cult followings is the emotional attachment the fans have to the object of the cult following, often identifying themselves and other fans as members of a [[community]]. Cult followings are also commonly associated with niche markets. Cult media are often associated with [[Subculture|underground culture]], and are considered too [[:wikt:eccentric|eccentric]] or [[anti-establishment|subversive]] to be appreciated by the [[general public]] or to be commercially successful.
 + 
 +Many cult fans express their devotion with a level of irony when describing entertainment that falls under this realm, in that something is so bad, it's good. Sometimes, these cult followings cross the border to [[camp (style)|camp]] followings. Fans may become involved in a [[subculture]] of [[fandom]], either via [[Fan convention|conventions]], [[online communities]] or through activities such as writing [[Fan fiction|series-related fiction]], costume creation, replica prop and model building, or creating their own audio or video productions from the formats and characters.
Cult followings establish their own [[canon (fiction)|canon]]s and cherish the notion of [[cult classic]]s, which are individual items with cult followings. Cult followings are usually generated through a film or television show having targeted a particular genre, typically [[fantasy]], sci-fi, comedy or horror, but occasionally other types of films or TV series will produce a cult following. Cult followings establish their own [[canon (fiction)|canon]]s and cherish the notion of [[cult classic]]s, which are individual items with cult followings. Cult followings are usually generated through a film or television show having targeted a particular genre, typically [[fantasy]], sci-fi, comedy or horror, but occasionally other types of films or TV series will produce a cult following.
While ''cult followings'' are unquestionably more prevalent among the uncritical, examples of this phenomenon exist in serious culture as well, especially among certain sub-segments of the public, such as gay men and other cultural minorities. Thus we find cults of certain writers, such as [[Yukio Mishima]], [[Colette]], or [[Simone de Beauvoir]]; composers like [[Erik Satie]] or [[Edgar Varèse]]; or performers, like [[Maria Callas]]. While ''cult followings'' are unquestionably more prevalent among the uncritical, examples of this phenomenon exist in serious culture as well, especially among certain sub-segments of the public, such as gay men and other cultural minorities. Thus we find cults of certain writers, such as [[Yukio Mishima]], [[Colette]], or [[Simone de Beauvoir]]; composers like [[Erik Satie]] or [[Edgar Varèse]]; or performers, like [[Maria Callas]].
 +
 +A [[cult]] following is a group of [[fan]]s devoted to a [[people|specific persons]] or [[cultural artifact]]s, examples are [[cult film|film]]s, [[television]] or [[radio program]]s, [[cult fiction|novel]]s, [[musician]]s, [[writer]]s and [[film director]]s. These dedicated followings are usually [[minority|relatively small]] and pertain to items that don't have broad mainstream appeal due to their [[underground]] subject matter or [[experimental]] style. In literature, one might refer to "cult books" or "cult fiction", in cinema, one refers to "cult movies", "cult cinema" or "cult films", in music one refers not to cult, but to '[[underground music]]' or '[[alternative music]]'.
 +
 +== Etymology==
 +From ''cult'' and ''following''. Cult is derived from Latin ''[[cultus]]'', see [[cult (religious practice)]], many fans of cult items have a religious, idolatrous and [[fetishistic]] [[devotion]] -- appropriately so because the terms [[cult]], [[fetish]] and [[idol]] have their origins in '[[primitive religion|primitive religion]].
 +
 +The term "cult" first appeared in [[English language|English]] in 1617, derived from the French ''culte'', meaning "[[worship]]" or "a particular form of worship" which in turn originated from the [[Latin]] word '''''cultus''''' meaning "care, cultivation, worship," originally "tended, cultivated," as in the past participle of ''colere'' "to till the soil". In French, for example, sections in newspapers giving the schedule of worship at [[Catholic church]]es are headed ''Culte Catholique''; the section giving the schedule of Protestant churches is headed ''culte réformé''.
 +
 +The meaning "devotion to a person or thing" is from 1829. Starting about 1920, ''"cult"'' acquired an additional six or more connotatively positive and negative definitions that are separately discussed in the article [[Cult]].
 +
 +==Examples==
 +There is not always a clear difference between cult and [[mainstream]] media. The film ''[[Pink Flamingos]]'' is known for its disgusting scenes, and only a small number of people are drawn to this movie. Therefore it can be classified as a [[cult movie]]. Franchises such as ''[[Seinfeld]]'', ''[[Star Trek (franchise)|Star Trek]]'', ''[[Star Wars]]'', ''[[Harry Potter]]'', ''[[The Hunger Games trilogy|The Hunger Games]]'', and ''[[The Rocky Horror Picture Show]]'' have core groups of fanatical followers but still attract mass audiences, so some (e.g. actor [[Bruce Campbell]], see below), argue they cannot be considered true cult films. Professors Xavier Mendik and Ernest Mathijs, authors of ''100 Cult Films'', argue that the devoted following among these films make them cult classics.
 +
 +Some cults are only popular within a certain [[subculture]]. The film ''[[Woodstock (film)|Woodstock]]'' is especially loved within the [[hippie]] subculture. ''[[A Clockwork Orange (film)|A Clockwork Orange]]'' has a cult following of [[Punk subculture|punk]]s, [[skinhead]]s and other groups. Certain [[mainstream]] icons can become cult icons in a different context for certain people. ''[[Reefer Madness]]'' was originally intended to warn youth against the use of [[marijuana]], but due to its ridiculous plot and cheap look, it is now often watched by audiences consisting of [[cannabis smoking|marijuana-smokers]] and has gained a cult following.
 +
 +Actor [[Bruce Campbell]] (he himself called "The King of B-Movies", and maintaining a dedicated cult following for films such as ''[[The Evil Dead]]'') once contrasted "mainstream films" and "cult films" by defining the former as "a film that 1,000 people watch 100 times" and the latter as "a film that 100 people watch 1,000 times".
 +
 +[[Quentin Tarantino]]'s films borrow stylistically from classic cult movies, but are appreciated by a large audience, and therefore lie somewhere between cult and mainstream. Certain cult phenomena can grow to such proportions that they become [[mainstream]].
 +
 +It often takes a few years before a cult starts to form around a particular film or band. [[Captain Beefheart]]'s album ''[[Trout Mask Replica]]'', [[Jim Carrey]]'s film ''[[The Cable Guy]]'' and the TV series ''[[The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show]]'' were originally not very successful, but as time went by built up a cult following. In some cases this cult status is unexpected, like the [[Disney]] film ''[[Fantasia (film)|Fantasia]]'' (1940), which was a [[Box office bomb|flop]] at its release, but was re-appreciated by fans of [[psychedelic]]a in the 1960s. Some films, especially from within the science fiction and horror genres, were produced with the specific goal of achieving cult status, like the drug oriented movie ''[[Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (film)|Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas]]'', and most films by [[Terry Gilliam]]. Other examples which fall into the category of "intentional cult film" are ''[[Repo Man (film)|Repo Man]]'' (1984), ''[[The Toxic Avenger (film)|The Toxic Avenger]]'' (1984), the sequence of ''[[The Evil Dead (franchise)|The Evil Dead]]'' horror films beginning in 1981, and ''[[Brazil (film)|Brazil]]'' (1985).
 +
 +Many cancelled television shows (especially ones that had a short run life) see new life in a fan following. One notable example is ''[[Invader Zim]]'', an animated show that aired for 2 seasons on Nickelodeon before being cancelled. The series enjoys a good life on DVD, and many specialty stores such as [[Hot Topic]] sell clothing and merchandise associated with it. Another examples are ''[[Roswell (TV series)|Roswell]]'' and ''[[Joan Of Arcadia]]'', which had short life, but a large fan base until now.
 +Long-running TV series such as ''[[The X-Files]]'', ''[[Buffy the Vampire Slayer (TV series)|Buffy the Vampire Slayer]]'', ''[[Chuck (TV series)|Chuck]]'' and ''[[Lost (TV series)|Lost]]'' also have huge cult followings.
 +
 +In a [[BBC]] review of ''[[Farscape]]'' episode "Throne for a Loss", Richard Manning, the review writer said "­Farscape is now officially a cult series because it's being shown out of sequence." The episode in question was actually shown as the second episode, after the premiere; despite originally being intended as the fifth episode to be shown.
 +
 +[[Anime]], [[manga]], [[kung fu]] films and [[kaiju]] are mainstream entertainment in [[Japan]], but elsewhere are generally appreciated by a cult audience. ''[[Doctor Who]]'' is a [[prime time]] family show in [[Great Britain]], but during a 15-year period out of production, gained cult status among fans; it is also a cult series in the US. Also, the animated pre-school show ''[[Pocoyo]]'' has attracted a reasonably large cult following among viewers older than its target audience due to the show's humour and its narrator, [[Stephen Fry]].
 +
 +== Defining cult items ==
 +* Cult items are in the eye of the beholders.
 +* Cult items are may or may not be mainstream.
 +* Cult items attract obsessive fans
 +* Cult items generally don't gain that status until some time after their release.
 +* An item that attracts too large a number of fans cannot be regarded as a cult item.
 +* In fiction, items of certain genres (horror, science fiction) are more likely to be regarded as "cult" items.
 +* The attraction of cult items is sometimes totally different to the original intentions of the author.
 +* In fiction, cult items often contain "subversive" elements like references to homosexuality.
 +* Cult items are collectible and are avidly collected.
 +
 +
==See also== ==See also==
 +:''[[cult (religious practice)]]''
 +* [[Cult fiction]]
 +** [[Cult poetry]]
 +* [[Cult director]]
 +* [[Cult figure]]
 +* [[Cult film]]
 +** [[Cult movie stars]]
 +* [[Cult objects]] (product design)
 +* [[Cult radio]]
 +* [[Cult television]]
 +*[[Cult computer and video games|Cult video games]]
 +* A [[cult of personality]] is sometimes used to refer to a political leader and his following, voluntary or otherwise.
*[[Otaku]] *[[Otaku]]
 +*[[One-hit wonder]]
*[[Sleeper hit]] *[[Sleeper hit]]
*[[Underground music]] *[[Underground music]]
 +
 +
{{GFDL}} {{GFDL}}
 +[[Category:Non-mainstream]]

Current revision

 This page Cult following is part of the publication bias list of the Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia, presented by Alfred Jarry.
Enlarge
This page Cult following is part of the publication bias list of the Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia, presented by Alfred Jarry.

"A cult following is a group of fans devoted to a specific person or cultural artifacts such as cult films, cult fiction or underground music. These dedicated followings are usually relatively small and pertain to items that don't have broad mainstream appeal due to their non-mainstream subject matter or experimental style.

In literature, one might refer to "cult books" or "cult fiction", in cinema, one refers to "cult movies", "cult cinema" or "cult films", in music one refers not to cult, but to "underground music" or "alternative music".

Fans of cult items have a religious, idolatrous and fetishistic devotion -- appropriately so because the terms cult, fetish and idol have their origins in primitive religion. Cult items never belong to the mainstream and the devotion of their fans is often obsessive. Cult items generally don't gain that status until some time after their release and certain genres such as horror, erotica and science fiction attract cults more readily than others. In literary and cinematic fiction, cult items often feature 'subversive' elements such as references to non-normative forms of sexuality and as such have been censored or banned. Lastly, cult items are are avidly collected." --Sholem Stein


"Any list of cult films will include, by decade, Le Voyage dans la Lune (1902), The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1919), Un Chien Andalou (1929), Freaks (1932), La Main du diable (1943), Les Vacances de Monsieur Hulot (1953), Peeping Tom (1960), A Clockwork Orange (1971), Videodrome (1983), Audition (1999), Russian Ark (2002)and Joker (2019)."--Sholem Stein


"Any list of cult fiction will feature Lucian, Apuleius, Rabelais, Brantôme, Sterne, Sade, De Quincey, Poe, Baudelaire, Zola, Kafka, Lovecraft, Céline, Bataille, Borges, Simenon, Cortazar, Burroughs, Vonnegut, Saramago, Amis and Houellebecq."--Sholem Stein


"The Nurse with Wound list (1979) and 100 Records that Set the World on Fire (While No One Was Listening) (1998) are the best guide to 'cult music' (here used analogously to cult fiction and cult films)."--Sholem Stein

The Index Librorum Prohibitorum ("List of Prohibited Books") listed the cult books of their time, thereby demonstrating the ambiguous relationship between censor and succès de scandale.
Enlarge
The Index Librorum Prohibitorum ("List of Prohibited Books") listed the cult books of their time, thereby demonstrating the ambiguous relationship between censor and succès de scandale.

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A cult following refers to a group of fans who are highly dedicated to a piece of artwork in various media, often referred to as a cult classic. A film, book, musical artist, television series, or video game, among other things, is said to have a cult following when it has a small but very passionate fanbase. A common component of cult followings is the emotional attachment the fans have to the object of the cult following, often identifying themselves and other fans as members of a community. Cult followings are also commonly associated with niche markets. Cult media are often associated with underground culture, and are considered too eccentric or subversive to be appreciated by the general public or to be commercially successful.

Many cult fans express their devotion with a level of irony when describing entertainment that falls under this realm, in that something is so bad, it's good. Sometimes, these cult followings cross the border to camp followings. Fans may become involved in a subculture of fandom, either via conventions, online communities or through activities such as writing series-related fiction, costume creation, replica prop and model building, or creating their own audio or video productions from the formats and characters.

Cult followings establish their own canons and cherish the notion of cult classics, which are individual items with cult followings. Cult followings are usually generated through a film or television show having targeted a particular genre, typically fantasy, sci-fi, comedy or horror, but occasionally other types of films or TV series will produce a cult following.

While cult followings are unquestionably more prevalent among the uncritical, examples of this phenomenon exist in serious culture as well, especially among certain sub-segments of the public, such as gay men and other cultural minorities. Thus we find cults of certain writers, such as Yukio Mishima, Colette, or Simone de Beauvoir; composers like Erik Satie or Edgar Varèse; or performers, like Maria Callas.

A cult following is a group of fans devoted to a specific persons or cultural artifacts, examples are films, television or radio programs, novels, musicians, writers and film directors. These dedicated followings are usually relatively small and pertain to items that don't have broad mainstream appeal due to their underground subject matter or experimental style. In literature, one might refer to "cult books" or "cult fiction", in cinema, one refers to "cult movies", "cult cinema" or "cult films", in music one refers not to cult, but to 'underground music' or 'alternative music'.

Contents

Etymology

From cult and following. Cult is derived from Latin cultus, see cult (religious practice), many fans of cult items have a religious, idolatrous and fetishistic devotion -- appropriately so because the terms cult, fetish and idol have their origins in 'primitive religion.

The term "cult" first appeared in English in 1617, derived from the French culte, meaning "worship" or "a particular form of worship" which in turn originated from the Latin word cultus meaning "care, cultivation, worship," originally "tended, cultivated," as in the past participle of colere "to till the soil". In French, for example, sections in newspapers giving the schedule of worship at Catholic churches are headed Culte Catholique; the section giving the schedule of Protestant churches is headed culte réformé.

The meaning "devotion to a person or thing" is from 1829. Starting about 1920, "cult" acquired an additional six or more connotatively positive and negative definitions that are separately discussed in the article Cult.

Examples

There is not always a clear difference between cult and mainstream media. The film Pink Flamingos is known for its disgusting scenes, and only a small number of people are drawn to this movie. Therefore it can be classified as a cult movie. Franchises such as Seinfeld, Star Trek, Star Wars, Harry Potter, The Hunger Games, and The Rocky Horror Picture Show have core groups of fanatical followers but still attract mass audiences, so some (e.g. actor Bruce Campbell, see below), argue they cannot be considered true cult films. Professors Xavier Mendik and Ernest Mathijs, authors of 100 Cult Films, argue that the devoted following among these films make them cult classics.

Some cults are only popular within a certain subculture. The film Woodstock is especially loved within the hippie subculture. A Clockwork Orange has a cult following of punks, skinheads and other groups. Certain mainstream icons can become cult icons in a different context for certain people. Reefer Madness was originally intended to warn youth against the use of marijuana, but due to its ridiculous plot and cheap look, it is now often watched by audiences consisting of marijuana-smokers and has gained a cult following.

Actor Bruce Campbell (he himself called "The King of B-Movies", and maintaining a dedicated cult following for films such as The Evil Dead) once contrasted "mainstream films" and "cult films" by defining the former as "a film that 1,000 people watch 100 times" and the latter as "a film that 100 people watch 1,000 times".

Quentin Tarantino's films borrow stylistically from classic cult movies, but are appreciated by a large audience, and therefore lie somewhere between cult and mainstream. Certain cult phenomena can grow to such proportions that they become mainstream.

It often takes a few years before a cult starts to form around a particular film or band. Captain Beefheart's album Trout Mask Replica, Jim Carrey's film The Cable Guy and the TV series The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show were originally not very successful, but as time went by built up a cult following. In some cases this cult status is unexpected, like the Disney film Fantasia (1940), which was a flop at its release, but was re-appreciated by fans of psychedelica in the 1960s. Some films, especially from within the science fiction and horror genres, were produced with the specific goal of achieving cult status, like the drug oriented movie Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, and most films by Terry Gilliam. Other examples which fall into the category of "intentional cult film" are Repo Man (1984), The Toxic Avenger (1984), the sequence of The Evil Dead horror films beginning in 1981, and Brazil (1985).

Many cancelled television shows (especially ones that had a short run life) see new life in a fan following. One notable example is Invader Zim, an animated show that aired for 2 seasons on Nickelodeon before being cancelled. The series enjoys a good life on DVD, and many specialty stores such as Hot Topic sell clothing and merchandise associated with it. Another examples are Roswell and Joan Of Arcadia, which had short life, but a large fan base until now. Long-running TV series such as The X-Files, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Chuck and Lost also have huge cult followings.

In a BBC review of Farscape episode "Throne for a Loss", Richard Manning, the review writer said "­Farscape is now officially a cult series because it's being shown out of sequence." The episode in question was actually shown as the second episode, after the premiere; despite originally being intended as the fifth episode to be shown.

Anime, manga, kung fu films and kaiju are mainstream entertainment in Japan, but elsewhere are generally appreciated by a cult audience. Doctor Who is a prime time family show in Great Britain, but during a 15-year period out of production, gained cult status among fans; it is also a cult series in the US. Also, the animated pre-school show Pocoyo has attracted a reasonably large cult following among viewers older than its target audience due to the show's humour and its narrator, Stephen Fry.

Defining cult items

  • Cult items are in the eye of the beholders.
  • Cult items are may or may not be mainstream.
  • Cult items attract obsessive fans
  • Cult items generally don't gain that status until some time after their release.
  • An item that attracts too large a number of fans cannot be regarded as a cult item.
  • In fiction, items of certain genres (horror, science fiction) are more likely to be regarded as "cult" items.
  • The attraction of cult items is sometimes totally different to the original intentions of the author.
  • In fiction, cult items often contain "subversive" elements like references to homosexuality.
  • Cult items are collectible and are avidly collected.


See also

cult (religious practice)





Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Cult following" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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