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Harry S. Robins
Harry S. Robins
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Harry Scifres Robins (born November 28, 1950) is an American voice actor, screenwriter and cartoonist.[2] He is best known for his role as Isaac Kleiner in the Half-Life series and Tinker in Dota 2.[3] Robins is also a member of the Church of the SubGenius, holding the official title of "Master of Church Secrets", and has written and drawn several comic books for them. He also voiced the narrator in Arise! The SubGenius Video and made an appearance in the 1999 documentary film Grass.

Key Information

Radio

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He can be heard on KPFA on a show called 'Puzzling Evidence' that started back in 1982. His description of the radio show:

"Deranged “edits” segue into a cascade of echoing glossolaliac madness, the voicing of lyric ruminations from the free-falling brains of disintegrating personalities. And some people, demented individuals, obsessively record every word and squealing sound effect. Of course, you may just hate it."[4]

Film and television

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Robins co-wrote the film Kamillions with director Mike B. Anderson, in addition to playing Nathan, the Wingate family patriarch and benevolent mad scientist.[5]

He appeared on a television show, The Conspiracy Zone, for two seasons in 2002, on now-defunct TNN, in which he was the announcer and made several on-camera appearances. He also appeared as one of several underground comic experts in the documentary film, God's Cartoonist: The Comic Crusade of Jack Chick.

He voiced the trailer for the 2015 video game Plague Inc: Evolved.[6]

Literature and comic books

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Robins illustrated Marc Laidlaw's 1996 novel The 37th Mandala. Robins would again collaborate with Marc Laidlaw on the Half-Life series, for which Laidlaw was the lead writer.

Robins has been a comic book artist and cartoonist, appearing in R. Crumb's Weirdo magazine and various comic books, including Legal Action Comics II and Alien Apocalypse 2006. Many of his horror comics were anthologized in Grave Yarns. He also wrote and illustrated The Meaning of Lost and Mismatched Socks published by Frog, Ltd. (a division of North Atlantic Books), which also published his book Dinosaur Alphabet. His work also appears in popular trading card sets, including Dinosaurs Attack by Topps, and Tune In For Terror from Monsterwax Trading Cards.

The Church of the SubGenius

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As Dr. Howland Owll, Robins contributed to The Book of the SubGenius and Revelation X: the "Bob" Apocryphon. His short story "The Smoker from the Shadows" appears in the anthology Three-Fisted Tales of "Bob". He also contributed to the SubGenius comic book, "Bob's" Favorite Comics (a rarity, of which most copies were burned in a warehouse fire). In addition, Robins' work appears in the 2006 SubGenius book, Psychlopaedia of Slack: The Bobliographon.

References

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from Grokipedia
Harry Scifres Robins (born November 28, 1950), known professionally as Harry S. Robins, is an American voice actor, screenwriter, cartoonist, and comic book artist. Best known for his contributions to the Half-Life video game series, Robins provided voices for characters including Dr. Isaac Kleiner, Black Mesa scientists, HECU soldiers, and Black Ops operatives across multiple titles such as Half-Life (1998), Half-Life 2 (2004), and related expansions. His work in these games, developed by Valve Corporation, has been praised for adding depth to the series' narrative through distinctive character portrayals, with Robins being one of the few actors to contribute to the franchise's core installments. Beyond gaming, Robins has engaged in underground and alternative media, including associations with the Church of the SubGenius as a former "Master of Church Secrets" and contributions to comic illustrations and screenwriting. Born in Lebanon, Indiana, he resides in San Francisco, California, and continues to perform voice reenactments and participate in fan events related to his Half-Life legacy.

Early Life

Upbringing and Initial Interests

Harry S. Robins was born on November 28, 1950, in . Public information on his family background and formative years is limited, with few documented details about parental influences or local schooling in the rural Midwestern setting. Robins has recounted a childhood affinity for monster movies and horror cinema, viewing them from a young age and maintaining that enthusiasm as a foundational creative influence. This early fascination aligned with the "Monster Kid" subculture of the and , encompassing B-movies, sci-fi tropes, and related memorabilia, which later intersected with his artistic endeavors in and satirical performance.

Broadcasting Career

Radio Work and Ask Dr. Hal

Harry S. Robins has been a co-host of the radio program Puzzling Evidence on KPFA-FM in , since its inception in 1982. The show, originating from listener-sponsored Pacifica Radio, features surreal, eclectic content including audio collages, parody, and discussions tied to the , with Robins performing under the alias Dr. Howland Owll. Initially launched by Doug Wellman (as Puzzling Evidence), it incorporated Robins early on, later adding co-founder Philo Drummond, and aired in late-night slots such as Fridays from 3:00 a.m. to 5:00 a.m., allowing for experimental, boundary-pushing broadcasts. Robins has described the program as involving "deranged 'edits'" of music and , contributing to its reputation for psychedelic and irreverent programming over four decades. The Ask Dr. Hal show, hosted by Robins as Dr. Hal, originated as a live performance in nightclubs and bars, evolving into an interactive format where audiences pose questions on diverse topics, met with Robins' improvisational responses, poetry recitations, predictions, and songs. Recognized as an award-winning intellectual salon, it emphasizes Dr. Hal's purported across mundane to obscure subjects, often incorporating mad science demonstrations, eclectic music, and guest appearances. While not initially a traditional radio broadcast, the show has adapted to and streaming formats, including episodes on Radio Valencia and Slack Radio, maintaining its core Q&A structure with live audience interaction via calls or chat. In recent years, Ask Dr. Hal shifted to a "Home Edition" streamed live on Twitch every third Sunday at 9:00 p.m. Eastern (6:00 p.m. Pacific), hosted alongside collaborators like Professors and Gofflin, with virtual by St. Joyce, allowing global participation unbound by physical venues. This evolution reflects Robins' broader radio persona, blending with broadcast elements, though Puzzling Evidence remains his longest continuous radio commitment. Earlier, Robins experimented with transmissions featuring conspiracy theories, aligning with his SubGenius affiliations and unorthodox broadcasting style.

Voice Acting in Video Games

Half-Life Series Contributions

Harry S. Robins provided voice work for multiple Black Mesa scientists in the original , released by on November 19, 1998, including iconic lines such as exclamations of alarm during the game's resonance cascade event. His performances contributed to the scientists' portrayal as frantic researchers amid the at the . Robins also voiced HECU soldiers in the same title, delivering military dialogue that emphasized the government's hostile response to the incident. In , released on November 16, 2004, Robins portrayed Dr. Isaac Kleiner, a key resistance scientist and former Black Mesa colleague of protagonist . Kleiner's character operates from a hidden City 17 safehouse, providing exposition on the Combine occupation and facilitating Freeman's teleportation mishaps with his pet headcrab, Lamarr. Robins reprised the role in the episodic expansions, including (June 1, 2006) and (October 10, 2007), where Kleiner coordinates resistance efforts against the Combine's portal storms and threats. These contributions spanned the core narrative arc of the series, marking Robins as a recurring voice talent in Valve's franchise.

Other Gaming Roles

Robins provided the voice for , a mechanical engineer hero in the game , which released in 2013. His performance included the character's response lines, contributing to Tinker's quirky, inventive persona through dialogue such as gadget references and quips. In 2014, Robins served as the narrator for , a strategy simulation game developed by Ndemic Creations where players evolve pathogens to infect humanity. His voice work guided players through symptom progression, transmission mechanics, and cure resistance updates, enhancing the game's educational undertones on . This role extended to voicing the launch trailer, emphasizing the game's premise of disease simulation.

Visual Media and Screenwriting

Film and Television Appearances

Robins co-wrote the screenplay for the 1990 independent Kamillions, directed by Mike B. Anderson, and portrayed the character of Nathan Wingate, the Wingate family patriarch depicted as a benevolent . In , he served as the narrator for Arise! The SubGenius Video, a satirical recruitment video produced by the , which he co-wrote with Paul Mavrides. Robins appeared on the television series The Conspiracy Zone, which aired for two seasons in 2002 on The National Network (TNN), functioning as the announcer and making several on-camera appearances as himself.

Writing and Production Credits

Harry S. Robins co-wrote the for the 1990 independent Kamillions, collaborating with director Mikel B. Anderson on an adaptation of Robert Hsi's original story. Robins also received writing credit for the 1992 satirical video Arise! The SubGenius Video, a recruitment film produced by the , where he worked alongside Paul Mavrides and Douglass Smith. No formal production credits, such as producer or roles, appear in Robins' for visual media projects.

Comics and Literary Works

Underground Comix

Harry S. Robins, professionally known as Hal Robins, emerged as an underground comix artist in the 1970s, contributing satirical illustrations to countercultural anthologies that emphasized detailed, eccentric visuals and thematic absurdity. His early collaboration appeared in Cover Up Lowdown (1977), a one-shot featuring contributions from Paul Mavrides, Jay Kinney, and Fred Todd, focusing on conspiratorial and humorous narratives typical of the era's self-published works. Robins gained prominence through stories in Weirdo magazine, edited by and published by Last Gasp, where his work exemplified the publication's blend of horror, sci-fi, and parody. In Weirdo #2 (1981), he serialized "The Entropy Crisis," starring the bombastic Professor Dr. Brainard, who delivers a comically overwrought lecture on the second law of to a barmaid amid apocalyptic imagery; the original art pages date to 1979, reflecting pre-publication development in the underground scene. Further credits include contributions to Young Lust, Anarchy Comics, Strip AIDS U.S.A., Legal Action Comics, and Rip Off Comix #20 (1988), often collaborating with peers like and Robert Armstrong on themes of social critique and . These publications, distributed through independent channels like Last Gasp, underscored Robins' role in the tradition of bypassing mainstream censorship for raw, unfiltered expression.

Published Writings and Poetry

Robins authored and illustrated Dinosaur Alphabet, a children's published in 2006 by North Atlantic Books, featuring 26 poetic quatrains structured around the alphabet, each accompanied by detailed illustrations of dinosaurs and informed by contemporary paleontological data. The verses employ and meter to describe dinosaur traits, with a supplementary notes section providing factual context on species and scientific updates. He edited and provided illustrations for The Meaning of Lost and Mismatched Socks (2004, Frog Books), a satirical attributed to Dr. Perditus Pedale examining the cultural and existential implications of disappearing laundry items through whimsical prose and diagrams. Sources attribute the core writing to Robins under , aligning with his style of absurd, illustrated humor. Robins contributed textual entries and satirical content to The SubGenius Psychlopaedia of Slack: The Bobliographon (2006), a compendium tied to the featuring his involvement in encyclopedic-style definitions and parody writings. These pieces reflect his engagement with subversive, mock-scholarly themes consistent with SubGenius publications.

Involvement in the Church of the SubGenius

Official Roles and Contributions

Harry S. Robins, adopting the persona of Dr. Howland Owll (also known as Dr. Howl), holds the official title of Master of Church Secrets within the , a position recognizing his deep involvement in the organization's esoteric and promotional activities. In this capacity, he has contributed to the church's media outreach by narrating its primary recruitment video, Arise! The SubGenius Video, released in 1992, where he provided voiceover as Dr. Howland Owll to expound on core doctrines. This role extended to voicing elements in other SubGenius productions, such as brief appearances in Grass (1999), aligning with the church's tradition of using for satirical evangelism. Robins has been a co-host of the church's flagship radio program, The Puzzling Evidence, broadcast on 94.1 FM in , since its inception in the early 1980s, collaborating with figures like Dr. Philo Drummond to deliver improvisational discussions blending SubGenius lore, science, and absurdity. His contributions to SubGenius radio are noted for their erudite style and expansive vocabulary, often described as pivotal to the format's dynamic appeal. Additionally, he has narrated multiple recruitment videos produced by the church, reinforcing its messaging through his distinctive delivery. In literary efforts tied to the church, Robins authored short stories such as "The Smoker from the Shadows," published in the 1990 anthology Three-Fisted Tales of "Bob", edited by Reverend Ivan Stang, which explores themes resonant with SubGenius mythology. He has also collaborated on church-affiliated comics, including work with artist St. Paul Mavrides on projects like the Dinoboy saga, integrating paleontological themes with satirical narratives. These roles underscore his function as a key propagandist and performer, leveraging his background in voice acting and writing to propagate the church's parody of religious structures.

Satirical and Cultural Impact

Robins' persona as Dr. Howland Owll, serving as Master of Church Secrets, satirizes the arcane hierarchies and secretive doctrines of established religions by positing a mock-esoteric authority within the Church's framework, where "secrets" often lampoon conspiracy theories and pseudo-mysticism. This role, held since the Church's formative years in the late , has featured in live performances and devivals, amplifying the organization's absurdist critique of dogma through Owll's erudite yet nonsensical pronouncements on "slack" and anti-consumerist rebellion. His written contributions, including segments in Revelation X: The "Bob" Apocryphon (1994), employ hyperbolic apocalyptic tropes to deride end-times prophecies and cultish fervor, reinforcing the Church's core tenet that true enlightenment lies in ironic detachment from societal norms. In visual media, Robins narrated and co-wrote Arise! The SubGenius Video (1992), a recruitment that parodies infomercials and evangelical broadcasts with rapid-fire montages of found footage, sacred "Bob" imagery, and calls to "slack off" against the "pinks" (normals), reaching underground audiences via and later to perpetuate the Church's humor. Appearances as Owll in documentaries like J.R. "Bob" Dobbs and the (2019) have documented and extended this to broader cultural commentary, portraying the Church as a deliberate that exposes the absurdities of belief systems, influencing niche communities in , zines, and early forums dedicated to dadaist and postmodern critique. These efforts, alongside rare comic contributions to Bob's Favorite , have cemented Owll's archetype in SubGenius lore, fostering a that values the Church's resistance to literalism and its embrace of performative irony as tools for cultural subversion.

References

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