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unusual facts about Fictional location


Fictional location

Fictional locations are places that exist only in fiction and not in reality, such as the Negaverse, Planet X, or Skyrim.


Waste container

On the famous, internationally distributed children's television series Sesame Street, the character Oscar the Grouch, lives in a trash can, which contains much more than one would expect and his most famous song is called “I Love Trash”.


see also

Albert Square

Albert Square is the fictional location of the BBC soap opera EastEnders.

Chuck Billy 'n' Folks

The stories are centered on Chuck Billy (originally named Chico Bento) and his friends and parents, who are all caipiras and live in the small Vila Abobrinha (Zucchini’s Village), a fictional location on the countryside of Brazil.

Eddy County, New Mexico

Within the Myst and Uru series of computer games, Eddy County is the fictional location of The Cleft, a fissure near a dormant volcano leading down to the large D'ni Cavern.

Montacute House

The fictional location for the earlier Wallace and Gromit film The Curse of the Were-Rabbit, Tottington Hall, was also based on Montacute House.

Rawdon, West Yorkshire

Benton Park School in Rawdon is used as a fictional location in the soap opera Emmerdale.

San Manuel Bueno, Mártir

The fictional location in San Manuel bueno, mártir was perhaps inspired by a real place, as suggested by the real life lake San Martín de Castañeda, in Sanabria, at the foot of the ruins of a convent to St. Bernard where to this day lives a legend of a submerged city (Valverde de Lucerna) sleeping at the bottom of the lake.

Sanctum

Sanctum Sanctorum, a fictional location in Doctor Strange comic books

Seattle Core

The Seattle Core is a fictional location found in Marvel Comics Age of Apocalypse storyline.

Stansted, Kent

In January 2007 the village was used as a semi-fictional location in the filming of an episode of EastEnders broadcast in the United Kingdom over the Easter 2007 holiday season.

Tar: A Midwest Childhood

The fictional location of Tar: A Midwest Childhood bears a resemblance to Camden, Ohio where Sherwood Anderson was born, despite him having spent only his first year there.