Discworld/The Truth/Awesome

"de Worde: "Asked for his opinion of this flagrant abuse of the city laws, Mr. Slant said..."?
 * William de Worde uses the power of the press to prevent the Guild of Engravers and the zombie lawyer Mr. Slant from shutting down his paper, merely by having his printer Mr. Goodmountain set their exact words in type as they say them:

Slant: STOP TAKING DOWN EVERYTHING WE SAY!

de Worde:...Full caps for the whole sentence please, Mr. Goodmountain."


 * He scores another over Mr. Slant at the end, blackmailing him into being The Times's lawyer, gratis. And probably forever.
 * Let's just say every instance of William pulling the "I'm just being an honest reporter noting your every word" act on people trying to pull something shady.
 * When appears in Lord De Worde's estate and
 * He never liked cocoa, anyway.
 * To make this even more awesome, he does the last part with a longsword through his chest. His response to this is to comment on how he can't seem to keep his shirts from being ruined.
 * Heck, William standing up to Lord De Worde in the first place is pretty badass. "The truth has got its boots on," he said, "It's going to start kicking." (A followup to the Arc Words of "A lie can run halfway around the world before the truth has its boots on.")
 * Taking into account his credentials (see Making Money), when the New Firm (Mr. Pin and Mr. Tulip) intimidate Mr. Slant, an undead zombie lawyer who actually prosecuted his own murderers, and subsequently all others who tried it was pretty badass. How do they do this? He's undead. He'll come back again and again. They realize one thing that no-one else did -- zombies are very, very flammable.
 * I've always liked William De Worde's final interaction with Lord Ventinari. With a single question he forces Lord Vetinari to attend a social function that he clearly would prefer to miss, made that wedding into possible the social event of the year, made his job much easier by filling inches and paid back one Harry King for his previous help with interest.