Bob Lusital (Comprehensive Gerosha)

Bob Lusital is the former regional manager of Sleet Mountain Lower Northern, in what would've been a novel remake of the miniseries Blood Over Water.

Character bio
Similar to that of his Earth-G7 counterpart.

Personality
Similar to that of his Earth-G7 counterpart.

Trivia

 * Bob's last name of "Lusital" is a play on words; as he gets to "loose it all" when Clyde takes over.
 * Likewise, when Clyde takes over, and then the plant loses money after getting sued, Clyde spends all that Bob was once worth. Hence, his surname of "Spendelworth" (spend-all-worth.)
 * Bob was created specifically for this version, to demonstrate that Sleet Mountain as a company wasn't always evil. This is to likewise demonstrate that Sleet Mountain is purely a stand-in for Ice Mountain, and that it was created for storytelling purposes.  In no way should Sleet Mountain be construed as an attack on Nestle or Ice Mountain as companies, nor the specific character of anyone that works there.
 * This Bob directly inspired his later version.
 * Bob's existence, while implied in supplemental materials, is never specified in the original miniseries.
 * Likewise, Bob's creation and the formation of "Sleet Mountain" as a fictional company were to address the fact that the original miniseries crew was careless with trademarks - which prevented the original piece from being safe for airing on the Ferris Access Channel.
 * Whole scenes had to be edited to remove the Starbucks logo, which was originally included without permission, in spite the company's stringent usage policy for filmmakers.
 * Similarly, whole scenes in the edits released to YouTube had to be heavily altered to remove any explicit mention or defamation of Ice Mountain, which cast members Chris Wilson and Zach Foster badmouthed shamelessly in the original.
 * The whole issue with the cast and its issue with Ice Mountain stemmed from research ordered for them by instructor Nathan Meadows, who insisted there be an environmental theme included in the miniseries' plot. Given that the Stanwood plant had been involved in some controversy in the 1990s, Chris and Zach felt it was fair game.  They didn't distinguish, however, between fair documentary discussion of a real building's history; and a fictional work insinuating an outright homicidal crime ring running said real life facility.
 * For this same reason, the comic makes explicit that most low-level Sleet Mountain workers had no knowledge of Clyde's pollution scam, nor of his involvement with Gleeful-N'-Young.