Chris Jenkins: Difference between revisions

From Unofficial Homecoming Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Felderburg
No edit summary
(Info from Corlett arc)
 
Line 5: Line 5:
==Overview==
==Overview==


Chris Jenkins is an attorney who advertises on many of the billboards around Paragon City.  He is the grandson of [[Maria Jenkins]]{{Citation needed}}.
Chris Jenkins is an attorney who advertises on many of the billboards around Paragon City.   
 
[[File:Chris Jenkins.png|thumb|200px|right|{{center|Chris Jenkins, Esq.}}]]
 
[[Ashling Corlett]]'s [[Story Arc]], [[Ashling Corlett#Only Love Can Hurt Like This|Only Love Can Hurt Like This]], seems to confirm that he is the grandson of [[Maria Jenkins]]. It also suggests he may be the same character as [[Jenkins]], because his group is listed as "Arachnos Spy" when he appears in the final mission of that [[Story Arc]].


==Basis in real life==
==Basis in real life==


Jenkins's billboards are a parody of the numerous real-life attorney-at-law advertisements present in the U.S.A.  Although meant to get a laugh, these ads appear to be one of the few places that the realistic effects of superheroic actions are referenced.
Jenkins's billboards are a parody of the numerous real-life attorney-at-law advertisements present in the U.S.A.  Although meant to get a laugh, these ads appear to be one of the few places that the realistic effects of superheroic actions are referenced.

Latest revision as of 19:32, 25 July 2024

This article is a stub. You can help the Wiki by expanding it.

Chris jenkins ad.png

Overview

Chris Jenkins is an attorney who advertises on many of the billboards around Paragon City.

Chris Jenkins, Esq.

Ashling Corlett's Story Arc, Only Love Can Hurt Like This, seems to confirm that he is the grandson of Maria Jenkins. It also suggests he may be the same character as Jenkins, because his group is listed as "Arachnos Spy" when he appears in the final mission of that Story Arc.

Basis in real life

Jenkins's billboards are a parody of the numerous real-life attorney-at-law advertisements present in the U.S.A. Although meant to get a laugh, these ads appear to be one of the few places that the realistic effects of superheroic actions are referenced.