Here are two from “the Fantastic Four” comic book:
Ben J. (the Thing) Grimm’s “Sweet Aunt Petunia” - referenced for about 20 years before John Byrne (the arch-villain extraordinaire in the comics medium) had to blow it and make her appear in an issue.
the Yancy Street Gang - Perpetual thorns in the side of the same Mr. Grimmm. Yancy, presumably, is based on Clancy Street - a street in Manhattan’s lower west side that was, once upon a time, over-run by Juvenile Delinquent street gangs.) The Yancy Street Gang never appeared in a panel, but were always harassing the Thing from “offstage” (throwing bricks & bottles at him, mercilessly insulting him) .
First season X-Files episodes often had Scully calling somebody named Danny back at headquarters for information on background checks, etc. I don’t recall ever actually seeing him … and that’s a show you pay attention to.
I remembered one as I lay in bed last night that had been nagging at me since I first read this thread three days ago. Does anyone else remember the cartoon DangerMouse from the 80s? The bad guy was never shown AFAIK, only shots of the back of his chair, or his metallic hand resting on the arm of the chair as he spoke.
Okay, I just went poking into some fan sites and now I’m wondering if I’ve misremembered because they don’t mention this. But I can very specifically recall being squeeked out by that mean-looking hand as a kid. What cartoon am I remembering?
Yes, at www.wrestlecrap.com you get to see the worst angles, the worst characters, and the stupidest darn ideas ever.
But wait, there’s more! The Death of WCW is a book R.D. wrote, about the… er, death of WCW. Great stuff, too.
I was gonna say Don Pardo, but a) he’s an announcer, not a character, and b) during one of Jon Lovitz’s “Get Ta Know Me!” sketches, he actually made it on screen. “I’m on TV!!!” The audience loved it.
Oh, I know Wrestlecrap very well. I think I even have a link to it somewhere on my own website. I’m more interested in an overall insider’s look at late-'90s WCW, the locker-room zeitgeist, how stories originated and how they ended up on TV, with all the volatile personalities involved. That book might be my best bet, if there isn’t some smart-mark website that recaps the era.
I’m pretty sure it was implied that that was the same guy as Agent Pendrell, the cute red-haired guy who had a crush on her. I could be misremembering, though.