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jflaxman — Terrortubby

#alternate #alternative #black #cave #contemporary #cryptid #evolution #fantastic #fiction #fictional #freak #history #horror #humour #hunter #james #kids #monster #mutant #natural #nature #night #nightmare #nocturnal #parody #predator #satire #speculative #survival #teletubby
Published: 2014-12-16 22:37:29 +0000 UTC; Views: 96743; Favourites: 1063; Downloads: 171
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Description

The creatures known as Terrortubbies were purely the stuff of nightmares before the capture of live specimens replaced wild rumours with hard facts. More research has identified their prehistoric ancestors and cast light on the processes that influenced their evolution. Though gaps in the fossil record leave some room for speculation a coherent story has emerged.

Some twenty million years ago a species of small cave-dwelling bat that used radar for hunting and navigation developed bioluminescence – a trait often seen in deep-sea fish but rare in terrestrial vertebrates. As most insects are attracted to light this allowed new feeding strategies. Instead of expending energy actively pursuing prey, these more sedentary prototubbies let their meals come to them. While angler fish grew glowing lures that hung just above their mouths the prototubbies’ light sources were concentrated on their stomachs, perhaps so they could shield them and trap small creatures with their wings. Natural selection favoured individuals with larger, brighter organelles though these brought disadvantages; the fur needed for insulation dulled their luminescence and the light that attracted prey could also bring predators.

The prototubbies overcame these problems through steadily growing bigger and stronger. The fur on their bellies gave way to fine down and larger luminescent patches entirely devoid of hair. A thick layer of subcutaneous fat provided insulation and large eye spots on their foreheads intimidated enemies. Although they lost the power of flight their forelimbs grew better adapted to climbing, seizing and dismembering prey, which came to include baby birds, reptiles and smaller mammals when the prototubbies left their caves and started living in the trees.

Later prototubby species were larger, more formidable, and much more intelligent. Their well-developed nervous systems let them control the colour, tone and brightness of their light sources with more finesse than cuttlefish, and the radar once used for echolocation now allowed communication other species could not hear. Large and bulbous craniums which served as resonating chambers and natural “antenna” increased their signals’ range and strength, and together with their eye spots, changed feeding strategies once more. As dominant tree-dwelling predators, adults no longer feared eagles and owls, and ignored small animals in favour of larger game. Their high round foreheads and false faces made them seem less threatening to young primates who were drawn to the prototubbies’ sophisticated light displays, or watched in a state of hypnosis until they were seized and devoured. This approach to hunting – in which large carnivores benefit from benign physiognomy – may be unique in nature, though many harmless species use distinctive markings and behaviour to appear more dangerous and scare predators away.

The Terrortubbies of today are among the few wild animals that can survive in major cities – an impressive achievement given their size. They evidently benefit from their near-human intelligence, powers of communication, proficiency at hiding by day and moving silently at night. They mostly eat organic refuse – and the occasional lost pet – but when possible exploit the fact the average human child becomes almost immobile when staring at a glowing screen.

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Comments: 121

BobbyGray138 [2014-12-17 20:41:18 +0000 UTC]

This is my nightmare

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QueenCordite [2014-12-17 19:41:00 +0000 UTC]

I knew kids' TV in the mid-90s unnerved me for a reason. Now I know why.

Awesome work. Finally, an origin story for these unsettling beasts.

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JTHMFrAeK [2014-12-17 17:18:04 +0000 UTC]

Wow, just wow. Great job on this, J. The story really accentuated the artwork to a t. This one's a winner.

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Orionh [2014-12-17 15:02:47 +0000 UTC]

Amazing

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Bark [2014-12-17 10:37:02 +0000 UTC]

:devMadhattersSociety:: Childhood Fears Contest!The new contest is as much of a challenge as it is a contest. The theme is "Childhood Fears." Was it the sound of a train in the night, before you knew what trains were? A shadow on the wall at a certain time of day? Something from a movie that you were too young to see? Maybe even a children's story that spooked you; the Brothers Grimm were pretty grim.
The idea is to represent that fear in your chosen field of art/literature. The more edgy, off-balance, and surreal it is, the better the chance of winning. The contest will run through January first, 2015, so you'll have plenty of time. Don't procrastinate, though, get to creating!
So far the prizes are 400 points for first pace, 300 for second, and 175 for third in each category. There will be two categories, one for visual art and one for literature.  (more points will be added as donations come in)
:iconprettyflour: will donate a feature for the winners in her personal journal and in th

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pexyn In reply to ??? [2014-12-17 02:55:42 +0000 UTC]

Oh man, this is twisted.

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Soyom In reply to ??? [2014-12-17 01:39:16 +0000 UTC]

At first, I believed it was sort of a psychic vampire. The creature have a strong vampire look, so I thought it was feeding on the sanity and psyche of the child (it would have been on topic  ).

However, it doesn't undermine the fact that you've pulled off the horror/satire mix successfully. You've managed to make horror and satire enhance each other. Since you're good at both genres, it leads to a nice result.

I note that the teletubbie's head doesn't have the horrible ears of its real life counterpart. Why is it so?

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jflaxman In reply to Soyom [2014-12-18 23:00:26 +0000 UTC]

Thanks for the feedback! A creature that feeds on sanity/the psyche could feature in a later piece.

I forgot about the ears and they'd tie in with the backstory (think natural satellite dishes). I could add some though I'm more inclined to move on to other things.

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Crowstitch In reply to ??? [2014-12-17 00:45:56 +0000 UTC]

At first glance, it looked cute and cuddly in the description. But click to see in full view for a spectacularly unsettling image! The description is intelligent, well written and quite frighteningly convincing and realistic!

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FollowinTheBlackBird In reply to ??? [2014-12-16 23:38:47 +0000 UTC]

I think I might steal my Son and Daughter's tv sets and tell them the gypsies got 'em. I don't want one of those things getting anywhere near my Granddaughter.

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jflaxman In reply to FollowinTheBlackBird [2014-12-17 06:22:32 +0000 UTC]

That might be going a bit far, unless the TV sets came with teeth and claws as non-optional extras!

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FollowinTheBlackBird In reply to jflaxman [2014-12-21 06:39:17 +0000 UTC]

What, you mean they don't?

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curtsibling In reply to ??? [2014-12-16 23:00:40 +0000 UTC]

Amazing job, sir!

Takes me back to the 1990s! Not that actual BBC monstrosities were any nicer than this!

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jflaxman In reply to curtsibling [2014-12-16 23:08:44 +0000 UTC]

I'll give this to the Brits - they're world leaders in putting acid trips on screen. I've passively absorbed some of this stuff since an old acquaintance had three accidental children. It seems to keep them quiet at least.

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curtsibling In reply to jflaxman [2014-12-17 01:20:33 +0000 UTC]

All part of our government's plan to make sure the population grows up insane!

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ChaosBladewing In reply to ??? [2014-12-16 22:51:43 +0000 UTC]

With no hyperbole I can say this is more comforting to me than the thing it is parodying.
Very nice artwork though. I love the smug little face hiding under the decoy/lure head.

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jflaxman In reply to ChaosBladewing [2014-12-16 23:03:12 +0000 UTC]

It's hard to top the horror of the actual Teletubbies! Don't even get me started on Boobahs. I thought everything I heard about them had to be hysteria until I saw them for myself.

Good thing that show was axed - it's a rare victory for sanity!

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killerweinerdog [2014-12-16 22:45:23 +0000 UTC]

Terrifying...but funny. They'd be formidable enemies if they developed soceity. 

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WeenySparrow [2014-12-16 22:41:00 +0000 UTC]

This cracked me up more than I want to admit.

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Toasty-Marshmallow In reply to ??? [2014-12-16 22:40:03 +0000 UTC]

This is terrifyingly awesome~ Truly. 

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