
Rachel Bennet - our hero, see morefriction's work for backstory. A TV news caster
         with integrity who thinks HERS women ought to be responsible.
         11'4". 43.
         Legs are ~6' tall.
         Breasts - diameter is ~twice as big as her head. More?
                    Let's say 23 inches in diameter 'cause her
                    boobs are just about as tall as her co-worker's
                    torso in the render where she comes back to
                    work and that's about how long my torso is
                    (I hope I didn't just dox myself with my
                    torso length), this means each of her
                    breasts has a volume of ~104 liters or
                    ~27 gallons.

                    Human fat has a density of about .9 g/ml,
                    so this means that each breast is ~94
                    kilos or 207 pounds.

        Weight - The first interview said that HERS women
                 weighed about 10x as much as ordinary
                 women. The average woman in America
                 weighs 170 pounds (That seems like a
                 lot... but ok). That would mean she weighs
                 ~1700 pounds. Let's say she's a bit bigger
                 than a typical HERS woman, so let's give
                 her 1800 pounds.

        Initial: 10'4", 23 inch diameter breasts.
        In scene 2: she's now 11'1" and her breasts are 24.5 inches in
                    diameter.

Rick Quinn - Rachel's husband. They have different last names since they met after
             Rachel was already broadcasting, and that's what Rachel would have
             preferred anyway.

Ben Snell - Rachel's co-host.

Charlie Umber - News Director at News 13. Rachel's boss. 54,
                gray haired.

Jen Lee - Opinion Director at News 13. Charlie's counterpart in the opinion section.
          48.

Roger Earl - CEO of News 13.

Austin - one of Rachel's production assistants. He used to help with fact checking,
         but since Rachel caught HERS, his duties have since collapsed to being
         Rachel's personal servant while she's at work.

Alison - One of Rachel's assistants who brings her food in scene 3.

Grace Michaels - A HERS supremacist who got killed at a riot.
Officer Shawn - The driver who tried unsuccessfully to stop Grace. White.
Officer Williams - The partner who killed Grace with a shotgun. Black.

Gretta Pim - A HERS bodybuilder and powerlifter.

Steve - One of Rachel's analysts who writes a report showing that she had
        and impact on traffic to porn sites.

Fran Washington - Founder of 'Her Responsibility', black.

Josh Manning - One of Rachel's field reporters.

Glen Plumb - Mattress Mogul and major former Republican donor
Diane Rockefeller - Heiress, environmentalist and former Democratic donor.

Marlin Chambers - Current president. Democrat.
Bob Licht - Republican nominee.

Miriam - Democratic education activist/donor
Elizabeth - Republican education activist/donor

Victor - One of Rachel's supporters. We watch the debate with him.

Sara Cooper - One of the debate moderators. Ben Snell is the other one.

Scenes:

Rachel's boss (executive producer? Director?) calls her and her co-host in to his
office to talk about a new direction for the news cast. Ratings are way up and
he congratulates them for that, but says that focus groups want to hear more
from Rachel, and in particular, they want to hear her personal opinions about
the news more. Rachel, a thoroughly professional journalist, feels a bit strange
about the transition into punditry, but accepts. It means a reduced role for her
co-host, who is resentful, but feels cowed by both Rachel's presence and their
boss.

A PA brings Rachel food while she is preparing to go on air. Work has been providing
her with tons of food, even more than she really needs, but she always seems to have
the appetite for more. It has turned out that Rachel is one of the rare HERS women
who grow continually, and her boss wants to encourage this to make her even more
imposing and get the ratings even higher. Rachel realizes what he is doing, and though
she never would have initiated such a plan herself, allows herself to go along with
it.

Rachel calls her bosses into her office. A few days before her boss told her that
he wanted to change the show yet again, taking a sharper turn towards punditry
and getting rid of her co-host entirely. Rachel told him she would think about it
and now she has an answer. She'll accept, but she wants the name of the show to
change to just "Rachel", she wants a massive raise and a profit sharing plan where
she gets 80% of the profits the show makes, and she wants total editorial control.
Her boss doesn't like it, but Rachel's presence makes him submissive and she
drives home the point that she could go to any other network with the deal based
on her ratings.

Rachel does a segment on her show about the recent police killing of a HERS supremacist
at a protest that turned violent. The supremacist is a prominent member of the "Her Time"
group. The supremacist broke through some barricades and
started charging a cop car. One cop ordered her to stop, then started shooting her
with his 9mm rounds, which just made her mad. His partner stopped her at the last
minute with a shotgun slug. There's controversy since it wasn't a service issue
shotgun, because she hadn't done anything more than approach them, and because they
had  a car to hide in. Rachel shows some newly released body-cam video and then
talks about how HERS women are deadly weapons. To prove it, she crushes first a civilian
sedan, then the exact cop car that the cops were sitting in under her feet. Afterwards,
she's thinking more about the normal members of the protests "Her Dogs", noting the way
the HERS women at the protests seemed to be in control of them. She thinks about a
paper she's just read talking about how the HERS-beta strain, previously thought to be
asymptomatic, seems to make people who have been infected react to HERS women with
a mix of arousal and submissiveness, with overall size being mildly correlated and
breast volume being highly correlated with the intensity of the feelings.

Rachel is worried about HERS-beta, and is thinking about a paper she just found that
talks about altered mental states being correlated with HERS-beta victims being
exposed to a HERS woman. These effects are mildly stronger when the woman is larger
and much stronger when she is bustier. Rachel meets with an annalist about a competition
report he put together that lists porn sites as competitors. She was initially offended by the
premise, but he has hard numbers showing that porn sites get less traffic when she's
on the air, and shows reductions in overall usage for longer periods of time after some
specific events on her show. The phenomenon started a while ago, but not as soon as she
got HERS. He doesn't understand this, but Rachel notes that it seems to have started
shortly after HERS-beta became widespread. She finds this whole thing arousing, and winds
up telling the analyst to start consulting with the wardrobe department.

Scene 7: Rachel does a fund-raising dinner for her presidential campaign. She reflects back on
         how she let herself be talked into it by her staff and a couple of political
         consultants.

Rachel debates the incumbent Democrat and a Republican challenger, making them both look
tiny and dumb.



Rachel does a segment about a sharp rise in purchases of guns, tasers and mace among
ordinary Americans. She says she sympathizes with people buying these things because
they want to feel safe, but she warns people that HERS women have different biology
from ordinary humans. To demonstraight, she has an assistant attempt to taze her,
unsuccessfully. She says it is just annoying. Has a swat team on and lets them try
to take her down with special HERS tazers that some companies have been hawking.
They make no progress and she handcuffs them all in less than a minutes. Then
she asks them how they would deal with her in real life and they say that they
would likely use multiple 50 caliber sniper rifles if she didn't surrender
peacefully. She warns people that HERS women are always threats.

Rachel does a segment where she has on a doctor who's been reassuring people
that HERS women don't continue growing, but she proves that she has been
growing herself with some photos.


Rachel does a segment criticizing a push for a new "Right of Way" law that would
give HERS women immunity from liability for injuring ordinary people if the
ordinary people step in front of them. She says that we don't give ordinary
adults a pass if they hurt children, and says that anyway the idea that HERS women
can't avoid people because of their breasts isn't true. She shows this by having
a bunch of her employees mill about on stage while she gracefully walks through
them, then has them actively try to trip her up. She explains that HERS women have
better senses of all kinds, but it takes some practice to make use of them. She
says that she always goes bare legged so she can feel the subtle shifts in air
current to help her avoid ordinary people. She admonishes other HERS women for not
living up to their responsibility by mastering their senses.

Rachel and her husband enjoy her newly constructed house. It cost enormous amounts, but she is
on track to be a billionaire soon, so she can afford it. Everything is sized for Rachel,
but there are parts of it that accommodate ordinary people.

Rachel has a HERS activist (Allison Carter again?) on the show to talk about the
"Right of Way" law. Rachel is visibly taller and of course much bustier than the
other HERS woman. The activist lays out her case and Rachel picks her argument apart
just like you would expect a seasoned journalist to handle a spoiled girl with
little to no press training.

IDK if we'll still be going at this point, but I think Rachel transitioning to running
for president on an anti-HERS supremacist platform and winning make sense. She would
drive forward policies of trying to accommodate HERS women, but holding them to an
exacting standard due to the power they have.

