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4[[quoteright:350:[[ComicBook/FantasticFour https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/eraser.png]]]]
5->''"Me? I'm the evil mastermind behind the scenes. I'm the wicked puppeteer who pulls the strings and makes you dance. I'm your writer."''
6-->-- '''Creator/GrantMorrison''', ''ComicBook/AnimalMan''
7
8When a character [[MostWritersAreWriters is an author]], or the author [[AuthorAvatar is a character]], and they are shown [[NoFourthWall interacting with the characters in their works]], they are often shown to have [[GodModeSue god-like control]] [[RealityWarper over the world of their characters]]. Note that often, the characters themselves will appear to have independent wills from the author, [[RageAgainstTheAuthor and may even try to stop them]], even though the author should be able to control them like puppets, too.
9
10A common variant involves an artist for a comic or animation changing the character's appearance in [[BodyHorror cruel and unusual ways]], [[ArtInitiatesLife drawing monsters]] to chase them, or even threatening to erase characters out of existence.
11
12Compare RewritingReality, in which a character literally rewrites the world. See also InteractiveNarrator. Often implicitly relies on ThePowerOfLanguage. This is not to be confused with MetaPower, as that deals with powers that influence other powers, as this trope deals more in the meta-''narrative''.
13
14Not to be confused with ''Film/AustinPowers''.
15----
16!!Examples:
17
18[[foldercontrol]]
19
20[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
21%% * Creator/AkiraToriyama often did this in ''Manga/DoctorSlump''.
22* In ''Anime/PuniPuniPoemi'', Nabeshin is Poemi's father and he and his wife survive their certain death with no explanation other than he's the director.
23* One of the main plot points of ''Anime/PrincessTutu''. [[spoiler: Drosselmeyer was a tragedy-obsessed writer with this power who has his hands cut off when the townsfolk got sick of his "stories", so he wrote one last story in his own blood. Drosselmeyer's descendants also inherit this power, most notably Fakir.]]
24* The plot of Yamatogawa's {{doujinshi}} ''Power Play!'' is about the author of a self-published VisualNovel struggling with women from his past life who have been recast as characters in his latest game. Since all of them have enough mystical power to extinguish his life several times over and three of them vowed to destroy him, he is forced to use his knowledge of their characters to try to reach an accord. Since the whole story is softcore {{Main/hentai}}, there is [[Main/SexGod a certain predictability to his methods]].
25* ''Anime/ReCreators'' establishes that authors do have the powers to assist their characters' existing powers by augmenting them with whatever they can write. But it's not just limited to their original author; anyone who's written for a character's series has this power as well, meaning the author of a light novel has just as much will over a character as the scenario writer for the novel's anime adaptation. There is a catch, however-- the authors may be able to excise these powers on the world their characters live in, but [[ClapYourHandsIfYouBelieve the audience has to accept it first]] for the changes to become permanent. [[spoiler: Keeping all of this in mind, the Creators try writing an animated special featuring the creations in order to give them enough power to combat the immensely powerful Altair.]]
26[[/folder]]
27
28[[folder:Asian Animation]]
29* ''Animation/HappyHeroes'': In Season 8 episode 36, series creator Huang Weiming demonstrates his authority over the show's characters to Big M. by having the scriptwriter punish Little M. for killing an unhatched bird by making a bunch of rocks fall on him, and then reward Happy S. for helping a senior citizen by making some coins fall on him.
30[[/folder]]
31
32[[folder:Comic Books]]
33* Creator/GrantMorrison inserted themself into ''Comicbook/AnimalMan'' as a character called 'the Writer' with the ability to alter reality. Later, John Ostrander and Yale figured, hell, if Morrison appeared in an issue of ''Animal Man'', then they're part of mainstream DC continuity, right? Fair game, right? They featured 'the Writer' in ''Comicbook/SuicideSquad'' #58 (a tie-in to ''ComicBook/WarOfTheGods''), where they altered reality by typing a comic book style script into a computer. They are [[DroppedABridgeOnHim abruptly killed]] when they're hit by writer's block in the middle of a firefight and are unable to write a way to save themself.
34* In ''ComicBook/CerebusTheAardvark'', Dave Sim does this. He even has conversations with Cerebus in which he's speaking in Cerebus' thought balloons with nothing to differentiate his words from Cerebus', and yet somehow always manages to make it clear which of them is speaking at any time. He also alters reality around Cerebus in ways that only a completely omnipotent being could, although he makes it clear to Cerebus that, while he ''is'' Cerebus' creator, he isn't the god Tarim that Cerebus normally worships.
35* Partway through ''ComicBook/TheUnbelievableGwenpool'', Gwen Poole, who supposedly was born in the real world but somehow traveled into the Marvel universe, realizes she can interact with the medium and control it, in addition to having knowledge of everyone's secret identities from reading comics. Her powers include entering the gutter space, breaking panel walls, muffling noises by grabbing the sound effects, and traveling through time and space by moving between pages. However, her powers are also constricted by editorial mandate, so she cannot do anything the higher-ups would never let a minor character like her do, like killing Doctor Doom or becoming an Avenger.
36** The issue with her supposedly being from the real world is addressed in ''Gwenpool Strikes Back'', which has Gwen's powers coming to a climax. Gwen, afraid of disappearing into ComicBookLimbo, somehow self-{{retcon}}s herself as being a [[spoiler:mutant with reality-warping powers who always lived in the Marvel universe, but suppressed her "true" memories out of trauma when her powers first emerged. This means she is officially an X-Men character and can live on Krakoa, allowing her to live on in future X-titles]].
37* In ''ComicBook/{{Concrete}}'', creator [[AuthorAvatar Paul Chadwick]] steps into one story to basically give the character of Concrete some time off: He turns him back into a human, gives him some time alone with Maureen, then [[KissingDiscretionShot tells us the reader to give them some privacy]] while he conjures up some crazy artwork out of thin air and spends some quiet time creating little worlds. He has also spent time away from proper plots to imagine crazy little things like what would happen if Concrete left a trail of himself everywhere he went...
38* A one-shot ''Comicbook/{{Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles|Mirage}}'' comic that was an extended tribute to Creator/JackKirby featured Donatello meeting [[{{Tuckerization}} cartoonist named Kirby]] who'd found a magic crystal that, when tied to his pen, [[PaintedTunnelRealTrain allowed anything he drew with it to come to life]]. Donatello and Kirby end up being pulled into Kirby's comic book world, and they get caught up in a battle between Kirby's heroic characters and his evil characters. Kirby helps Donatello and the heroic characters defeat the villains by drawing special weapons for Donatello to use and eventually binding all the villains with specially designed shackles. The story ends with Donatello returning to New York, although Kirby [[IChooseToStay chooses to stay]] so that Don can return and gives him a sketch as a parting gift.
39* In one ComicBook/ArchieComics story, Reggie sends the writer on vacation and writes a story in which Jughead suffers the worst day of his life. On the last page, Jughead sends the story's artist on vacation and draws his ''own'' ending where he gets revenge on Reggie.
40* ''ComicBook/{{Fables}}'' has a variation on this; the various fairy tale characters living in the mundane world are aware of the stories about them right from the start, but are unsure as to the exact relationship between the stories and their own existence. The spin-off "Jack of Fables" introduces the Literals, who are {{Anthropomorphic Personification}}s of literary concepts (such as genres, the DeusExMachina, the idea of [[{{Bowdlerise}} bowdlerisation]] etc.) and this includes Kevin Thorn, the actual writer. [[CrisisCrossover The Great Fables Crossover]] has them having to deal with his omnipotent RewritingReality powers and his view that the world (both the fairy tale homelands and the supposedly "real" mundane world) is ''his'' story that has gotten out of hand and needs to be [[RetGone erased]] so he can write a better story in its place.
41* Completely inverted in ''ComicStrip/DykesToWatchOutFor'' -- an out-of-continuity strip reprinted in ''The Indelible Alison Bechdel'' depicts [[Creator/AlisonBechdel Bechdel]] as a prisoner ''chained up in a dungeon'' by her characters and ''forced'' to draw the strip!
42* The page illustration comes from a ''ComicBook/FantasticFour'' story where the team literally meets God. They're surprised to find that He looks like Creator/JackKirby, co-creator of their comic book. He assures them that it is the most appropriate way for Him to look to them. He then uses a pencil to erase the recent scarring on Reed's face and restore Ben to his Thing form.
43* ''ComicBook/WonderWoman1942'': When Creator/RobertKanigher retooled the book he wrote himself in as a character that called up a bunch of characters from the story to tell them they were being let go and wrote them and their histories out of that universe, while the characters themselves were quite confused about what was happening.
44[[/folder]]
45
46[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
47* Christof in ''Film/TheTrumanShow'' is an interesting example. Truman is not a fictional character, but every aspect of his life, including the people around him, is controlled by Christof. In the film's climax [[spoiler: Christof ''[[CueTheSun makes the sun rise]]'' in order to stop Truman's escape.]]
48* The Black Beast in ''Film/MontyPythonAndTheHolyGrail'' vanishes when the animator has a fatal heart attack, implying some combination of this trope with NoOntologicalInertia and a good dose of BeyondTheFourthWall.
49* In ''{{Film/Delirious}}'', a soap opera writer gets hit on the head and [[TrappedInTVLand wakes up as a character inside his own show]]. His typewriter comes with him, and he can use it to alter and plan out events in the show, even affecting other characters' behavior. However, a rival author has been hired to write show scripts as well, leading to a rare case of someone with AuthorPowers being in a RageAgainstTheAuthor situation.
50* Near the end of ''Film/InTheMouthOfMadness'', Cane's powers have become so vast that the entire world is his story, and he doesn't even need to write about it anymore. If he thinks it, so shall it be, demonstrating it to Trent by turning the entire world blue just because it's his favorite color.
51* The premise of ''Film/StrangerThanFiction''. Slightly played with as the author, Eiffel, has no idea of the power she has. Even when writing a scene where her protagonist is searching/calling ''her'', she doesn't realize it's her actual self until she answers the phone and almost has a breakdown when her "fictional character" Harold Crick is on the other line. She then has to contemplate several things; it's implied all her books end with the main character's death, which is what started the search in the first place, and Crick is next. She's written at least six other books, and wonders if she killed those main characters in real life as well. Her book, as written now, has to have his death for the ending to be good and have any meaning. Her "power" is limited to the actual manuscript written on her old typewriter, as she already has the ending planned out on legal pads, allowing Crick to read her novel and willingly accept his death.
52[[/folder]]
53
54[[folder:Literature]]
55* Recurs in Creator/RobertAHeinlein's works, particularly in his later period.
56** In ''Literature/TheNumberOfTheBeast'', near the end the characters think they may be up against an Author: a truly worrisome thought, because the characters know that the universe is created from the imagination of authors.
57** In ''Literature/TheCatWhoWalksThroughWalls'', the lead character considers the possibility that their story is being written for them, and [[SelfDeprecation curses the person writing it]].
58* PlayedForLaughs in Creator/SpikeMilligan's novel ''Literature/{{Puckoon}}'', where Dan, the lead character, has frequent arguments with the narrator ("Did you write these legs? Who wrote ''your'' legs?"). At the end of the book the narrator has the last laugh by leaving Dan [[OffscreenInertia stuck up a tree forever]].
59* Creator/KurtVonnegut makes a cameo appearance in ''Literature/BreakfastOfChampions'', and demonstrates his AuthorPowers a bit. However, he also finds out that his creations have a habit of slipping out of his control.
60* In the setting of ''Literature/TheReaderAndProtagonistDefinitelyHaveToBeInTrueLove'', the author of the [[ShowWithinAShow Novel Within a Novel]] has complete control over the world of his novel but later realizes that he himself might also be a character in a novel. [[NoticingTheFourthWall He is correct.]]
61* Creator/RobertRankin sometimes appears in his own "far-fetched fiction" with AuthorPowers, usually leading to the characters complaining about the outrageous DeusExMachina endings they cause.
62* In [=Geraldine McCaughrean=]'s metafictional children's book ''Literature/APackOfLies'', the protagonist and her mother start realizing that various things about recent events don't add up, leading to them NoticingTheFourthWall. It is then revealed that another character who the protagonist met at the beginning of the book is the (in-universe) author's Canon Sue, and the inconsistencies that surround him are the result of the author patching over his improbable awesomeness.
63* When Creator/StephenKing appears as a character in ''Franchise/TheDarkTower'' series, it's as himself, the author of the book he's appearing in. However, IJustWriteTheThing is in full effect; he's not a god, just some guy God picked to write Roland's story into existence, so any Author Powers he has are either extremely limited or can't be used consciously. Even though being "the writer" makes him a CosmicKeystone - Roland's quest won't finish if Stephen King dies before the ending can be written - the most he can do to help Roland with his quest is to write some lucky breaks or a DeusExMachina into the plot. (It's strongly hinted that some of the subsequent events actually are a result of King trying to help from behind the scenes.)
64* Depending on how you look at it, Yi Ye Zhi Qiu, the author of "Mixed Blood," a ShowWithinAShow, is the one who is actually controlling everything in the world of "Mixed Blood." In the end, Yi Ye Zhi Qiu speculates that he is in a novel (Literature/TheReaderAndProtagonistDefinitelyHaveToBeInTrueLove) so he isn't really the one in control.
65[[/folder]]
66
67[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
68* ''Series/DoctorWho'', "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS6E2TheMindRobber The Mind Robber]]": The Doctor discovers that they are in the Land of Fiction, a realm of a different dimension presided over by The Master of the Land, an English writer from the 1920s who has been yanked out of his own time and is being controlled by the Master Brain computer. The Master wants the Doctor to take the writer's place and the two enter a battle of wills using fictional characters.
69** Taken a stage further by the Literature/DoctorWhoNewAdventures novel ''Conundrum'', where the new Master of the Land of Fiction is the book's narrator, thereby adding MediumAwareness.
70* ''Series/YoungBlades'', which is very loosely based on Creator/AlexandreDumas' ''Literature/TheThreeMusketeers'', features Dumas as a character in the series finale who explains to the main characters that he is writing their story.
71* ''Series/HikoninSentaiAkibaranger''. [[spoiler: Toei Productions becomes the Bigger Bad, using Author Powers to change everyone's goals, end certain arcs, and ultimately end the show.]]
72* In one episode of ''Series/{{The Twilight Zone|1959}}'', "A World of His Own", an author speaks into a tape recorder and makes real people, including his perfect wife and his mistress. He could also destroy the creations by destroying the tape. Cut to Rod Serling's closing monologue about how the story was complete fiction. The main character interrupts Rod to warn him about saying such things, revealing a line of tape labelled "Rod Serling" and tossing it onto the fire. This was the first appearance of Rod onscreen to do the monologue and was so well received that he came on for almost every episode afterwards. However, it was the only time he interacted with the story's characters. The original story by Richard Charles Matheson was far darker, and involved the author becoming bored with RealityWarping and making people, even creating monsters and other horrors.
73* Season 4 of ''Series/OnceUponATime'' introduces The Author, a person tasked with recording all history in the storybook using a magic quill that makes him a RealityWarper. Anything the Author writes with the quill will come true, though there are limitations - an Author cannot change the true past, including bringing back the dead (though these limitations do not apply to anything that happens in an alternate reality created by the Author, as Isaac Heller did by writing ''Heroes and Villains'' - reverting everything to normal caused everyone who died in that timeline to be restored to life), they cannot change the outcome of a Savior's Final Battle, and if they use the pen to write their own happy ending, they lose their powers as an Author.
74* [[GainaxEnding The final episode]] of Brazilian sitcom ''Toma Lá Dá Cá'' imbues the character whose actor is the show's lead writer with this so the cast can escape a helpless situation - i.e. a literal case of OnlyTheAuthorCanSaveThemNow.
75* The first-season final episode of ''Series/SheHulkAttorneyAtLaw'' reveals that [[spoiler:the AI overseer K.E.V.I.N.]] is responsible for writing all of the stories in the Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse. [[spoiler:When Jen complains that the finale is [[StrictlyFormula too formulaic]] -- with villains stealing powers via a blood transfusion, a [[FinalBattle big CGI-overdosed fight,]] and the [[BackForTheFinale gratuitous return of forgotten characters]] -- K.E.V.I.N.]] agrees and rewrites the ending to address her complaints.
76[[/folder]]
77
78[[folder:Music]]
79* Taken to hilarious extremes in the song [[http://sniff.numachi.com/pages/tiRRBILLKT;ttRRBILLKT.html "Railroad Bill and the Kitten"]]
80[[/folder]]
81
82[[folder:Radio]]
83* Parodied to confusing and hilarious effect in ''Radio/TheGoonShow'' episode "Six Charlies in Search of an Author". ("Ten pounds, Neddie, to be paid in money before Chapter Ten! And don't try to slip past us, Neddie, because we have an armed man in the index!")
84[[/folder]]
85
86[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
87* ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons''
88** Adventure [=WG7=] ''Castle Greyhawk''. One of the dungeon levels has the author of that level being [[TheOmnipotent omnipotent]] and interacting with the {{PC}}s as they explore the level.
89** The April Fools section of Dragon magazine #36 has the Dungeon Master (the person who creates an adventure) as a monster who has the power of a deity.
90** It should be noted that multiple ''[=DnD=]'' media, as well as other TabletopGame media is general, ''greatly'' discourages a DM of pulling this trope, both because the players aren't there to watch the DM go on a power trip with a [[SelfInsertFic self insert]], but also because it enforces bad habits when it comes to story crafting.
91[[/folder]]
92
93[[folder:Theatre]]
94* The play ''Theatre/SixCharactersInSearchOfAnAuthor'' explores what happens when the author of an unfinished play dies before its completion. Two of the characters are doomed to die, over and over again because the play into which they were written never made it to the stage.
95* A 2008 Viennese production of ''Theatre/MadameButterfly'' featured the composer, Giacomo Puccini, as a character. He observed the events onstage, occasionally sung lines meant for the male lead, and was haunted by the spirits of the tragic heroines from his other operas as he made the decision to kill Butterfly. It was presumably intended to be a commentary on the cruelty of the audience for wanting to see characters tortured and killed for the sake of drama, and how the composer's hands were tied from making a better, kinder story because of the demands of the audience.
96* ''Theatre/{{Fairview|2018}}'': The play is about an upper-class black family having a dinner party. In the last act, four white people from the audience enter the play and start changing the story. Jimbo enters as Tyrone, and plays Tyrone, previously described as an attorney, as a rapping gangsta draped in gold chains. Dayton the responsible husband and father is suddenly said to have gambled away all the family's savings. Then the white people, continuing to improvise, change the story to say that actually Beverly spent all the family's money on drugs and Dayton has syphillis. Keisha, who was earlier said to be a lesbian, is now pregnant.
97[[/folder]]
98
99[[folder:VideoGames]]
100* [[http://www.cracked.com/blog/the-7-most-elaborate-dick-moves-in-online-gaming-history_p5/ This]] ''WebSite/{{Cracked}}'' article details the case of a game (''VideoGame/AsheronsCall'') where a group of players prevented all others from reaching a boss and made it grow stronger by allowing it to kill them. The admins descended, recruited great heroes from the players, gave themselves the best equipment, and... managed to beat the blockade on the third try.
101* In a rom hack of VideoGame/PaperMario64, ''Videogame/PaperMarioDarkStarEdition'', [[spoiler:the final BossFight of the added Dark Temple is a [[MyNameIsQuestionMarks mysterious]] dark sword. A [[AuthorAvatar ShadeBlade,]] even. It has the power of disabling your ability to use items, or press the B button, and the reward you get for beating it is access to the mod's source code.]]
102* Maxwell from ''VideoGame/{{Scribblenauts}}'' and its sequels has limited author powers, being able to write down anything (as a free action, mind you) to will objects into existence (including versions of everyone who made the game), modify objects (himself included) with nearly any adjective, and erase objects from existence. He can't, however, manipulate the terrain or buildings with proper interiors.
103* In ''VideoGame/TheSimpsonsGame'', The Simpsons [[RageAgainstTheAuthor fight]] Creator/MattGroening who creates an army of [[WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}} Bender and Zoidbergs]] from [[ArtInitiatesLife sketches on paper.]]
104* In ''VideoGame/TheStanleyParable'', the narrator acts as a sort of fickle GameMaster, capable of making considerable changes to Stanley's world to humor or spite the player for taking ''his'' story OffTheRails.
105[[/folder]]
106
107[[folder:Visual Novels]]
108* Due to the meta-narrative in ''VisualNovel/UminekoWhenTheyCry'', the game has a few InUniverse examples with the {{Game Master}}s, but also notably [[spoiler:Featherine]], who at one point outside the games stops the plot to kill someone without actually describing how, promising to do that later on.
109* In ''VisualNovel/DanganronpaV3KillingHarmony'', [[spoiler: after [[BigBad Tsumugi]] the [[CosplayOtakuGirl Ultimate Cosplayer]] [[BreakingTheFourthWall shatters the fourth wall]] and reveals that the entire setting is a fiction that she helped create, she begins showing off by shapeshifting into characters from previous games.]]
110[[/folder]]
111
112[[folder:Web Animation]]
113* ''WebAnimation/AnimatorVsAnimation'' features a battle between a stick figure and his off-screen animator in UsefulNotes/AdobeFlash.
114* JustSomeRandomGuy does this in a homage to the below mentioned ''Duck Amuck'' with Deadpool standing in for Daffy though the author is never shown in this version so its a more direct example.
115[[/folder]]
116
117[[folder:Webcomics]]
118* In ''Webcomic/ZeroZeroZeroThisComicAppearsFirstAlphabetically'', the author has a sketchbook that contains the entire comic. He can use it to control all of space and time, and everyone within it. [[spoiler: Until he loses it, that is.]]
119* ''Webcomic/AkumasComics'': Early on Akuma served as the AuthorAvatar and had a lot of power because of it. However as [[BloodKnight he wants a genuine challenge in his fights]] he rarely used them to solve the plot and eventually gave them up. The character of Overseer Akuma is a [[TheWatcher Watcher-like]] character who represents the original AuthorPowers Akuma had.
120* In ''Webcomic/BobAndGeorge''. the Author is [[AuthorGuestSpot an occasional cast member]] of the comic. The cast of the comic frequently gets into arguments with him, makes fun of the fact that sprite comics are all he can manage and generally treat him like a normal member of the cast. Never mind that he has been known to raise the dead in order to fix their mistakes and bend reality to suit the needs of the plot.
121* In ''Webcomic/BooksDontWorkHere''. the Author is the narrator and takes an active hand in directing the characters. Not that it does him a lot of good most of the time.
122* Some of the ''Webcomic/ElGoonishShive'' filler strips feature Dan Shive interacting with the characters and warping reality, usually dishing out {{Gender Bender}}s and other transformations to anyone who annoys him.
123* Played with in ''Webcomic/{{Homestuck}}''; while Andrew Hussie does exist in universe (and is even shown physically drawing the strip), he has stated that the extent of his interference in the story proper will be limited to "[[http://www.mspaintadventures.com/?s=6&p=005558 exactly one yard]]." [[spoiler: Turns out to be the length between [[BreakingTheFourthWall two fourth walls.]]]]
124** He has also been shown not to be immune to the PsychicPowers of his characters, and has to cover up the [[NoFourthWall Fourth Wall]] when he's not using it to stop them from seeing him. [[SuperPowerLottery It's safe to say he's got the short end of the stick here.]]
125*** That being said [[spoiler: [[HeartIsAnAwesomePower he apparently turns Doc Scratch into a puppet whenever he's nearby]], like a reverse ComicStrip/CalvinAndHobbes. [[UnwittingPawn But it's just]] [[ThanatosGambit as Scratch planned.]]]]
126*** And Hussie's Author Powers don't [[spoiler:save him from ''[[AnyoneCanDie being killed]] by Lord English'']].
127* Subverted in ''Webcomic/OneOverZero'' where characters successfully rebel against the author and get him to swear off direct intervention.
128* As the [[AuthorAvatar Author Avatars]], Kingwerewolf and Brogalio have control over ''Webcomic/NintendoAcres'' but purposely restrict their direct involvement so the characters don't get lazy.
129* The two authors in ''WebComic/LsEmpire'' have all the powers that gods have and can also freeze time, create portals to anywhere, see the future, and manipulate the fabric of reality as they see fit. They have also written one character out of the comic multiple times. [[spoiler: This becomes problematic when [[GodOfEvil Dark Star]] turns himself into an author.]]
130* Christine Weston Chandler, creator of the infamous ''Webcomic/{{Sonichu}}'' webcomics, [[AuthorAvatar writes herself as the Mayor of the city the series is set in]], gives herself all sorts of super-powers and [[SpotlightStealingSquad eventually displaces the title character as the real star of the comic.]]
131* ''WebComic/SluggyFreelance'': {{Subverted}} (also kind of played straight) in "The Sluggite Koan", in which Bun-bun ends up in the real world and decides to do a bit of RageAgainstTheAuthor. Pete Abrams tries to threaten to turn him into a banner ad (there ''was'' a banner ad with Bun-bun on the site around the time), but Bun-bun's MediumAwareness lets him see it's a GuestStrip, so Pete has no power there. Then again, Pete gets Bun-bun to let him live by promising to write him a new exciting story (clearly referring to "Oceans Unmoving", which had started in real life by the time this guest comic was published), demonstrating his having Author Powers outside the guest story. Oh, and the Author Powers of the guest writer are also demonstrated after Bun-bun uses an AsideComment to threaten him into changing Bun-bun's motives in the story.
132* Webcomic/KarateBears can absolutely [[http://www.karatebears.com/2012/12/characterization.html write their own scripts.]]
133* ''WebComic/KillSixBillionDemons'': Played with. TheMultiverse is made up of 777,777 different creations/universes/settings, each of whom is a story told by a now-dead god. The gods are dead precisely because of this trope: They realised their creations needed to grow and evolve without them, just as they themselves had come into being because of [[TheCreator YISUN]] [[HeroicSuicide deciding that something Not YISUN should exist]]. Therefore, the gods poured all of themselves into their own stories and then died, leaving the Multiverse to their creations. What the gods did not predict was that those very same creations would eventually leave their homes, enter heaven, and pluck the dead gods' voices and names from their corpses. This is the origins of the Magus Keys, the artifacts that power [[DemiurgeArchetype the Demiurges]], and it is implied that holding a Magus Key [[DomainHolder is akin to holding author power over the creation it was used to speak into being]].
134[[/folder]]
135
136[[folder: Web Original]]
137* On Blog/DasSporking, the sporkers tend to wield this sort of power to force fictional characters to spork with them, summon food for therapy, set loose tortures on hated characters, or revitalize co-sporkers who died in some way as a result of the sporking.
138* Ask Vector Prime, a ''Franchise/{{Transformers}}'' Facebook post series, reveals that all writers of Transformers fiction are known in-universe as wielders of the [[http://tfwiki.net/wiki/Quill Quill]], a reality-altering device.
139* [[Website/SCPFoundation The SCP Foundation]] deals in "pataphysics" (borrowed from the French term), referring to a branch of anomalies that involve, among other things, the link between authors and story:
140** The earliest form of the concept originated in the form of articles that use the premise of "anomalous incidents" to indirectly & even explicitly relate these anomalies to authors who can torture characters at will or rewrite their story to change reality in the blink of an eye. One article suggests that the Foundation has prepared a potential counter-measure to the [[spoiler: "bunch of horror writers"]] in charge, even if that might cause their own [[spoiler: fictional]] reality to vanish.
141** SCP-2747 is an entity existing in narrative space that devours anti-climactic narratives, purging the associated work from history but allowing discussions on the narrative to remain; this effectively makes the idea of the work a form of fiction. Its advance is temporarily halted in SCP-5317 when the Pataphysics Department gets the authors to write a story (the ending of the SCP in question) about how some of the other truths about its nature are never to be discovered. [[spoiler:Temporarily, because SCP-2747 breaks through and admits [[TheChessmaster it controls six of the Groups of Interest and the Scarlet King]] by writing its own ideal stories through them anyways]].
142** The ''Archetypicals'' series features Dr. Placeholder [=McDoctorate=] trying to exploit this trope to juice up a machine he's been working on, which is able to travel through stories (but more practically the far reaches of outer space at FTL speeds.) Apparently, audience reactions can be transformed directly into a form of energy, so Place spends the series trying to elicit certain reactions to get the right amounts to power up the machine.
143** Literature/DonQuixote as a fictional character works for the Foundation, having [[DumbassNoMore grown past his foolishness]] and changed his name to Dr. Pierre Menard, head of the Pataphysics Department. A throwaway note from SCP-423 describing him as literally writing the book on metafiction implies he carries some author powers of his own, which is how he's kept his job (and is also how he can keep damaging a wind farm back in Spain every now and then to humor his past and Sancho.)
144* The main character of "Literature/NothingLikeTheSun" eventually [[spoiler:finds out that she is a fictional character, and brings her authors in to her world in an attempt to force them to use their author powers to get rid of her glowing eyes. However, this doesn't work because the authors only have author powers in their own world, not hers]].
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146
147[[folder:Western Animation]]
148* The ''WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes'' cartoon "WesternAnimation/DuckAmuck" is a famous version of this; WesternAnimation/DaffyDuck is tormented by the animator [[spoiler:who turns out to be Bugs Bunny]]. It also has a less famous sequel, "WesternAnimation/RabbitRampage", with a similar premise, with Bugs being tormented this time around, [[spoiler:with the animator turning out to be Elmer Fudd]].
149* ''WesternAnimation/TheMagicKey'': In “The Giant And The Knee Nibblers”, Wilf was transported into a story he’d just been telling, and ends up with a limited version of these- he can add new elements to the story by narrating, but cannot delete anything he’d already created (including elements he’d introduced before being transported there) or radically change the scenario. The only way for him to leave was to give the story (which he’d stopped telling in the middle) a satisfying ending.
150* In the ''WesternAnimation/AdventureTime'' episode "[[Recap/AdventureTimeS5E15AGlitchIsAGlitch A Glitch Is a Glitch]]", Finn says that professional animators [[CreatorCareerSelfDeprecation must "have no life whatsoever"]]. He then immediately punches himself in the face.
151* 1991 short ''WesternAnimation/{{Manipulation}}'' has a similar premise to ''Duck Amuck'', only in this one it's a live-action animator screwing with the cartoon man the animator drew on the page, doing things like blurring the cartoon man's face or stretching out his arms to an absurd length.
152* Animators from ''WesternAnimation/TheClevelandShow'' fit this trope. They live in Cleveland's basement and can draw or erase anything. First they used it to mess with Cleveland, erasing the box he carries, and then another drew a sexy [[Film/{{Avatar}} Na'Vi]] woman for himself.
153* In the ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'' "Vaccination Special", ConspiracyTheorist Mr. White takes Mr. Garrison on a journey to take down the "Hollywood elites" behind everything... including the show's creators, who deform and shift him in various ways [[RageAgainstTheAuthor while he angrily shouts at them]] before settling on turning him into a giant penis with eyes.
154* [[FourthWallPsych Subverted]] in an episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons''. Homer spots a panel from ''ComicStrip/LifeInHell'' in an Art Museum and insults Matt Groening's work. A giant pencil descends eraser first onto his forehead. [[spoiler:It is actually two movers bringing in a modern art exhibit.]]
155* The episode of ''WesternAnimation/{{Beetlejuice}}'' "The Chromazone", where the title refers to a ''Series/{{The Twilight Zone|1959}}''-like ShowWithinAShow created through such powers by [[NoCelebritiesWereHarmed Tod Sperling]], including when he's ReadingTheStageDirectionsOutLoud. Beetlejuice is recruited to save Tod from [[PunnyName Ima Loony]], [[RageAgainstTheAuthor a rebellious character of his who started doing her own scripts and wants to do a]] HostileShowTakeOver. It's all solved when Beetlejuice's friend Lydia uses the typewriter to make Tod and Ima fall in love.
156* ''WesternAnimation/{{The End|1995}}'': The characters in a cartoon find out that they're in a cartoon, and the animator tells them that he controls them completely. Then the animator realizes that he is a character in his own cartoon and can control his reality. The end of the cartoon has the animator morphing through several different body shapes and flipping between genders as he realizes he has complete control over everything.
157[[/folder]]

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