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There are some fans of some show who know who she is and why you should care.
Images in Wiki Pages are great, aren't they? They make the page more visually appealing and let us display a really cool example, often in a funnier and more imaginative way than by words alone. Why, we love images so much that we have the Image Links Wiki so each page can have more than one. However, you don't need that, for you've found the perfect example for the trope and thought of just the wittiest caption to go with it.
Well, stop and think. You might be putting up Just a Face and a Caption.
A common sin of contributors is to let their Fan Myopia get the best of them and put in a pic that just shows off one of their favorite characters with a caption that makes a joke off of how they so totally fit the trope in their show. This will rarely, if ever, do a good job of showing off the trope. Nobody who isn't a fan of the show will get who this character is or how they fit the trope and the caption just won't be funny to them. The point of the page image is to provide a quick, sharp visual illustration of the trope for everyone.
Of course, a trope about purely visual tropes, like faces, facial expressions, hairstyles, and such are a different matter. It can be acceptable for certain character archetypes as well, depending on the picture itself.
Remember, There Is No Such Thing as Notability, and so there is no show that you can assume that all of the readers will know about. You certainly shouldn't assume such a thing from the examples you read around the site. No matter how good their Entry Pimping is, the editors can't get past the fact that they are only 1% of the total readership. This ratio has been stable for some number of years, and is generally true of all wikis.
Our readers come from all sorts of fandom and will connect with examples from different media. That's why we have the different media — to get people from all fandoms, not just to read but also to contribute. We want it all, from Webcomics to Wagner. So, images shouldn't be added under the assumption that people are already in the fandom, they must be added to get people to get involved in it. If we give the impression we're not interested in a person's subject area (or are much more interested in another area), we are limiting our subject coverage. Along that pathway is utter niche-dom.
See also How to Pick a Good Image.
If you're unsure about whether a page pic falls under Just a Face and a Caption (JAFAAC) or not, check it against these exemplars. open/close all folders
True JAFAAC This character is an example of Super Speed. However, there's nothing at all in this image to tell you that.
The True JAFAAC:
Pretty Much JAFAAC If this image were on Kung-Fu Jesus, it would demonstrate the "Jesus" part of the trope just fine, but without any indication of the Kung-Fu, it's useless for showing the trope.
The Pretty Much JAFAAC:
Not Actually JAFAAC This is the page image for What Is Evil?. At first glance, it may look like all the information is in the text, making it JAFAAC. However, take a look at the characters' body language.
The Not Actually JAFAAC:
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