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Business as usual. Click here to view the embedded video. Full Trailer For Anchorman 2
Business as usual. Click here to view the embedded video. Full Trailer For Anchorman 2
16 minutes ago
The Shrine has been getting flooded (no pun intended...maybe) with pics of merchandise showing up at Target that features Aquaman in one way or the other. Despite my complaints about him being left out of the big Justice League line, the...
The Shrine has been getting flooded (no pun intended...maybe) with pics of merchandise showing up at Target that features Aquaman in one way or the other. Despite my complaints about him being left out of the big Justice League line, the Sea King has been appearing on some of the more arts-and-crafts-type stuff, like these "Velv-Its", which are pretty much what they look like!A bunch of people sent this in, but F.O.A.M.er Jake Johnston was first out of the gate. Thanks Jake!
about 1 hour ago
Joshua Hale Fialkov survived the judicial system in order to return to the podcast. Find out how he ultimately feels about ULTIMATE COMICS ULTIMATES, last week's crazy ending in ALPHA: BIG TIME plus closing thoughts on I, VAMPIRE and may...
Joshua Hale Fialkov survived the judicial system in order to return to the podcast. Find out how he ultimately feels about ULTIMATE COMICS ULTIMATES, last week's crazy ending in ALPHA: BIG TIME plus closing thoughts on I, VAMPIRE and maybe even some Green Lantern Corps stuff.
about 1 hour ago
- - - - - - - - - - Wild Bill Hickok and Jingles v1 1958-59 Charlton (continued from Cowboy Western) 68 - Al Williamson / Angelo Torres art (more to come) - - - - - - - - - - See today's posts, more series checklists or...
- - - - - - - - - - Wild Bill Hickok and Jingles v1 1958-59 Charlton (continued from Cowboy Western) 68 - Al Williamson / Angelo Torres art (more to come) - - - - - - - - - - See today's posts, more series checklists or the master list of series. See also this blog's artist checklists, top 10 lists or readers polls.
about 2 hours ago
This one is a bit more about who finishes SECOND, but WHO comes in second is still fascinating to me. Check out the poll after the break…
This one is a bit more about who finishes SECOND, but WHO comes in second is still fascinating to me. Check out the poll after the break…
about 3 hours ago
NNNNNNOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!
NNNNNNOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!
about 3 hours ago
Panels from "Barbara Gordon...Murderess!" in Detective Comics #497 (December 1980), script by Cary Burkett, pencils by Jose Delbo, inks by Joe Giella, colors by Gene D'Angelo, letters by Milt Snapinn
Panels from "Barbara Gordon...Murderess!" in Detective Comics #497 (December 1980), script by Cary Burkett, pencils by Jose Delbo, inks by Joe Giella, colors by Gene D'Angelo, letters by Milt Snapinn
about 3 hours ago
Ever since I first discovered his work, PLASTIC MAN creator jack Cole has been one of my all-time favorite cartoonists. When Craig Yo told me he was doing up a collection of Cole's horror comics I told him I didn't think he'd done enough...
Ever since I first discovered his work, PLASTIC MAN creator jack Cole has been one of my all-time favorite cartoonists. When Craig Yo told me he was doing up a collection of Cole's horror comics I told him I didn't think he'd done enough to collect! He had mainly done superhero, humor and crime comics before jumping into panel cartoon success and finally newspaper strips. But leave it to Yoe! He found about twice as many as I thought were out there and along with his ad hoc gang of proofreaders and fact-checkers, we just put the finishing touches on JACK COLE'S DEADLY HORROR, the latest volume in THE CHILLING ARCHIVES OF HORROR COMICS. Looks like it's on track for early August. Now's the time to order your copy either online or through your local comic shop. It's a real scream!
about 3 hours ago
Last week, Bleeding Cool ran this article, reporting rumours rampaging around the highest echelons of the BBC that a lot of missing episodes of Doctor Who had been found, and were planning to be released later this year. We then ran a co...
Last week, Bleeding Cool ran this article, reporting rumours rampaging around the highest echelons of the BBC that a lot of missing episodes of Doctor Who had been found, and were planning to be released later this year. We then ran a couple of follow ups, detailing and clarifying which episodes these were meant to be, that it was part of a much wider cache of BBC films that had been recovered, citing names of BBC and Who-related individuals who had been discussing the rumours, as well as those who poured doubt on the story. Some saw that as us backtracking on the original story, which I don’t accept. We were always reporting these rumours as exactly that – rumours. Just ones being discussed at the highest level, behind closed doors. Tonight one of the naysayers, archivist Ian Levine, who had previously tweeted; Look,I DO believe no episodes have been found,based on what certain people told me at the BFI. But I suppose they could have lied to my face — Ian Levine (@IanLevine) June 17, 2013 Is now tweeting; I am so fucking speechless, I have no idea how I am going to sleep tonight. I was utterly wrong, but I was lied to, yes barefaced lied to. — Ian Levine (@IanLevine) June 18, 2013 I have just seen “three tons” of evidence that tells me it’s all true. Saying no more. Apart from I now believe it again. — Ian Levine (@IanLevine) June 18, 2013 @keefybabe I’ve just been given proof that backs up the entire story,from 2011. So yes I now really believe he has found 90 missing episodes — Ian Levine (@IanLevine) June 18, 2013 And why? Well, he’s probably talking about this; There are details online of a shipment to archivist Philip Morris, who has traveled Africa and beyond looking for all sorts of missing footage. Someone who, after appearing on a 2009 BBC Radio 4 show about the recovery of Doctor Who missing episodes, an angry Ian Levine commented “he has never found ONE SINGLE EPISODE in his entire life.” Well, maybe he has. From late 2011, a shipment listing 3 tons of film material arriving from Lagos to Liverpool… click on “Carrying” to read it. And Liverpool? That also rang a bell, considering this post from early 2011. I work at a regional branch of a large international logistics company. On Tuesday morning a customer called in to collect a box sent from Zambia via Nigeria containing BBC tapes and 16″ films, supposedly for returning to the archives. The guy apparently said (I didn’t serve him myself) that the box contained recovered 60s material including episodes of Doctor Who (the only programme he mentioned by name, it seems) and that we’d be hearing all about it before the end of the year. Naturally I was keenly excited, particularly given that this seemed to suggest a major find, but, having encountered neither box nor customer myself, I couldn’t pursue the matter directly. I’ve checked the paperwork but I can’t fathom why BBC archive stuff would be addressed to a Merseyside address, especially one where the company name given doesn’t match the stated premises or postcode (hence why we couldn’t deliver the box and the customer had to fetch it himself). Then again, the shipper may have just cocked up the address slightly, it’s all perfectly kosher and I’m just fretting inappropriately. After all, the customer did say all would be revealed in time. All conjecture and circumstantial evidence of course. And it may signify nothing. I am not a Doctor Who or a BBC insider, by any stretch of the word. It’s just that, as a result of this job, I’ve ended up knowing a very few people who are. In my twenty-odd years of doing this job, albeit it mostly concentrated on the comics industry, my aim has been to try and lift the curtain and give other fans a peek behind the scenes. To let them be party to conversations, rumours, gossip being passed around by those who are on the inside. Which
about 4 hours ago
Tonight: The Superman Radio Theatre...is on the air! With a whole Luthor-sized treasure-chest of house ads for The Adventures of Superman radio show! Superman radio show ad from Superman #7 (November-December 1940). I'm 'specially...
Tonight: The Superman Radio Theatre...is on the air! With a whole Luthor-sized treasure-chest of house ads for The Adventures of Superman radio show! Superman radio show ad from Superman #7 (November-December 1940). I'm 'specially fond on this one as it mentions WFBL, the radio station I grew up listening to! And they had the CBS Radio Mystery Theatre, too! from Superman #7 (November-December 1940) Click here to read more! >> from Superman #10 (May-June 1941) from Superman #11 (July-August 1941) from Superman #12 (September-October 1941) Superman was first sponsored by merchants local to the station which it was broadcast... from Superman #15 (March-April 1942) from Superman #16 (May-June 1942) from Superman #19 (November-December 1942) from Superman #21 (March-April 1943) Later the show ran across the country on the Mutual Broadcasting System and was sponsored by Kellogg's defunct cereal, Pep (not to be confused with Archie's defunct comic Pep). from Superman #22 (May-June 1943) from Superman #24 (September-October 1943) That was not only the Golden Age of comic books but the Golden Age of cereal box prizes. Look, authentic model WWII fighter planes! from Superman #26 (January-February 1944) from Superman #27 (March-April 1944) from Superman #28 (May-June 1944) from Superman #29 (July-August 1944) Even when Pep ads changed post-war to the comic page format so popular with Golden Age advertisers (and remind me to tell you about Captain Tootsie one of these days), Superman still got a plug: from Boy Commandos #22 (July-August 1947 ) But by far the most prized giveaway packed inside those boxes of Pep were their famous, ultra-collectible comic buttons, including all the big names from the comic strips, including Superman! from Detective Comics #112 (June 1946) Yep, you can still collect Pep comic pins today, but make sure you have plenty of moolah... ...and make sure they're the gen-u-ine article (they say "Kellogg's Pep" on the back!): Yep, we all gotta agree...Pep cereal put out the best advertisements! OH FOR PETE'S SAKE PEP Here's an extensive history of the Superman radio show, and here's a 1954 Pep cereal commercial starring You-Know-Who-El! And finally, here's some episodes of the radio show! If you want more, you can find 'em by hunting around on YouTube and the internet, and CD collections are available of some of the radio serials. Up in the sky! Look!
about 4 hours ago