Bin Liner: Difference between revisions
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'''Bin Liner''' was a [[Red Kang]] who lived in [[Paradise Towers]]. | '''Bin Liner''' was a [[Red Kang]] who lived in [[Paradise Towers]]. | ||
She and her wife [[Fire Escape]] birthed a clone, [[Viv-2]], after coming into contact with [[Kroagnon]]'s cloning tank. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Paradise Found (comic story)|Paradise Found]]'') They raise her as their daughter and fed stories about Kroagnon and the history of Paradise Towers. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Paradise Before (comic story)|Paradise Before]]'') | |||
== Biography == | == Biography == |
Revision as of 09:48, 15 February 2023
Bin Liner was a Red Kang who lived in Paradise Towers.
She and her wife Fire Escape birthed a clone, Viv-2, after coming into contact with Kroagnon's cloning tank. (COMIC: Paradise Found) They raise her as their daughter and fed stories about Kroagnon and the history of Paradise Towers. (COMIC: Paradise Before)
Biography
As a Red Kang
Like all Kangs, Bin Liner joined in competitive games against the other Kang factions. They based themselves in a brainquarters where they lived and from which they operated.
When the Seventh Doctor arrived in Paradise Towers, Bin Liner and Fire Escape greeted him with the typical Kang custom. However, they were hostile towards Melanie Bush as they were uncertain of her allegiance. They took them both captive and tried to take them back to the brainquarters but were forced to flee after the caretakers launched a raid on the Fountain of Happiness Square.
Bin Liner and the Red Kangs returned to their brainquarters and were later joined by the Doctor, who fell through a hole into the room and was knocked unconscious. Bin Liner greeted him when he woke and he told her that he had been chased by cleaners. Bin Liner went to check the area in case the cleaners were close. The Doctor found a vending machine and produced a can of Fizzade from it. Initially frightened by this development, Bin Liner took the can from him and was delighted by the taste. They sat down to watch an information video about Kroagnon.
The caretakers tracked the Doctor to the brainquarters and the Doctor let himself be captured to give the Red Kangs time to escape. Bin Liner and some other Red Kangs broke into the Chief Caretaker's office and tied up the Deputy Chief Caretaker and his fellow guards, allowing the Doctor to escape.
Back at the brainquarters, they were formulating a plan to defeat Kroagnon when the Blue Kangs broke in. The Doctor convinced them to work together and he headed to the basement with Bin Liner, Fire Escape and Drinking Fountain. There they witnessed Kroagnon's use of corpoelectroscopy to take over the body of the Chief Caretaker. The Doctor was attacked by a cleaner but the Kangs pulled him free and fled to Floor 304.
There they allied themselves with the Rezzies, Caretakers and Pex. Heading back down, Bin Liner and the other Kangs began setting traps for Kroagnon but he arrived too early and Pex sacrificed his life to kill him. In honour of Pex's bravery, all the Kangs held a ceremony for him. (TV: Paradise Towers)
In the rebuilt Paradise Towers
At some point after the Paradise Towers Massacre, Bin Liner got married to a wife. The two were active in stripping away all traces of Kroagnon's legacy from the Towers, leading a campaign to rename various areas of the House to honour the heroes of the Massacre, such as Fountain of Happiness Square becoming Pex Lives! Plaza. A decade later, she expanded to trying to undermine continued worship of the "Great Architect" in other areas of space, such as Miracle City, where she campaigned to have the sixty-feet-high golden statue of Kroagnon torn down. This was technically against the City's original charter, which required a majority vote of the City's inhabitants before any major alterations to the architecture could be made; this standard could not logically be met due to the City still being thoroughly uninhabitable due to Kroagnon's death traps, and consequently having no inhabitants in a capacity to vote. Bin Liner and her Kroagnon Must Fall Committee argued that this was an obvious "legal technicality" which should be ignored, while Kroagnon apologists like T. E. Hamster argued that to overlook it would undermine the very principle of democracy itself. (PROSE: Reclaiming Kroagnon)