mike sterling's progressive ruin

Saturday, October 16, 2004

I hear tell from a little bird that it's
AiT/Planetlar head honcho Larry Young's birthday today...so to help him celebrate the big 8-7*, let's dip back into that long-neglected box of review copies Big Larry sent me way back when and take a look at a book Larry himself wrote: True Facts: Comics' Righteous Anger.

Well, it would be kind of a crummy birthday present if I didn't like this book, so I'm glad to say that I enjoyed it a great deal. It's a collection of columns Larry wrote for the now defunct Savant website describing, in great detail, just what it takes to get a comic book published and put into the hands of potential readers. The volume is a slim 120 pages, but don't let that fool you -- it's stuffed with lots of good information for the aspiring comics creator/publisher. It's written in a casual and friendly tone...this isn't Mr. Young shoving numbers and addresses and instructions at you. This is Larry writing you a letter, telling you about his day, his friends, and, oh, yeah, how to decide on a printer for your comic, how to promote your material and yourself, how to run your business like a business, and so on. Also, it's not just hard numbers being discussed, but mindsets as well, particularly the kind of singleminded dedication you need to work in comics.

The information comes in a variety of forms, from straightforward instructions on how to put together and distribute a press release, from a San Diego panel interview, from an observation of a person in a bunny costume at a wedding (yes, that does have something to do with comics), and from his own days working at a comic store. All these methods of delivery keep your interest, and though some may not have an explicit connection to the main theme of getting your comic book published, some of Larry's stories (particularly the one about the person trying to sell his "valuable" comic book collection) go a long way to giving hopeful self-publishers a sense of perspective regarding their work and the industry they're in.

The columns originally date from 2000, so for this 2002 edition Larry thoughtfully adds updates when necessary, sometimes correcting some outdated information, or occasionally just adding a tad more discussion borne of an extra couple years of hindsight.

This is a nicely done book, and a valuable resource to anyone thinking about entering the industry. I would even recommend it to comic fans who have no intention of publishing their own books, because 1) who knows, maybe it'll spark some interest, and 2) maybe it'll give them a little more empathy towards the people who actually have to work to provide them with a little entertainment. Anyway, file this with Scott McCloud's Understanding Comics and Reinventing Comics, as well as Will Eisner's Comics and Sequential Art...it's a nice supplement to the material presented in those highly-regarded volumes.

My only real quibble...please, no more use of the term "cha-cha" -- Dennis Miller has ruined it for everybody!

In other news:

Smallville's latest episode says "so long" to Lois, at least for the time being, and puts an end to the Lex/Clark rift, also for the time being. About the latter...that's too bad, because as the story was working out, it seemed very much to me that Lex's eventual enmity with Superman would have its roots in Clark treating Lex like absolute crap. I suppose that would be going a little too far off model, even for the producers of Smallville. The less said about this week's adversaries (cheerleaders with mind-control Kryptonite punch? Wha--?) the better, though I did like Lois' confused reaction to Clark's reference to "meteor rock." Really, it's the appealing cast that make this show fun to watch...goodness knows it's not plots like this episode's.

Pal Ian discusses Howard Chaykin's Scorpion. I really liked most Atlas Comics...yes, even Morlock 2001.

The Shatner totally name-checks the city of Ventura in "That's Me Trying," a track off his new album Has Been (listen for free here). Therefore, for no more reason than that, I hereby dub the Shatner an honorary member of the Associated Comics And Pop Culture Webloggers of Ventura County, CA And Outlying Environs**, with all rights and privileges thereof.

* Please don't kill me, Larry.

** As always, IDIC for short.

Friday, October 15, 2004

Thursday, October 14, 2004

From
Movie Poop Shoot (found via Johanna):
I was lucky in that my mother bought me a steady diet of Claremont/Byrne X-MEN and MARVEL TEAM-UP. I wasn't stuck reading SHAZAM reprints from the ‘40s.

What stinks about being sick is that I suddenly have more time to read, but I'm not able to easily concentrate on what it is I'm reading, which makes things a little difficult. So, of course, both the new issues of The Comics Journal and Alter Ego come out. I'm feeling a little better now, but there was no way I was going to be able to read these last night. Oy. TCJ contains a series of articles about Cerebus and its creator, Dave Sim, plus an interview with Ed Brubaker and reprints from George Carlson's Jingle Jangle Tales. I own a handful of Jingle Jangle Tales, and they're all demented and brilliant...if you've not seen this comic before, you have to take a peek at the new TCJ. Anyway, this new issue looks interesting, but I haven't been able to do more than just skim it, unfortunately.

The new Alter Ego has more stuff about Frankenstein's Monster in comic books than you'd ever want to see, ever...it does has a short Frankie-focused interview with Bernie Wrightson, plus a look at a comic I haven't read enough of, Dick Briefer's version of Frankenstein. This issue includes 25 daily strips by Briefer for a proposed Frankenstein daily, and they're really something else.

Other new arrivals (possible SPOILERS):

Mad Magazine #447 - Sergio Aragones brings us "A Mad Look at Politicians," which is great, as Aragones always is. The mag also includes a pull-out Alfred E. Neuman for President poster. Look for the Mort Drucker George W. Bush as the Cat in The Hat cover.

Punisher #12 - okay, okay, the story's finally over, for all you people who got tired of it. I enjoyed it, myself. Sometimes I need a little morally-abhorrent mayhem in my comics reading, and I'm not ashamed to admit it.

Astro City - A Visitor's Guide - eek, $5.95? But there's a lot of material packed into this comic...lots of text pages that I'll have to read later when I'm not so sick, a short comic by Kurt Busiek, Brent Anderson, and Ben Oliver) and an extensive gallery of Astro City's inhabitants by a variety of artists (including Howard Chaykin, Kelley Jones, Dave Gibbons, and Bruce Timm). I think you'll get your money's worth out of this funnybook.

Fallen Angel #16 - good as usual, and equally good is the news that
Fallen Angel sales have bumped up a bit, with the possibility of a second collection. The promo comic helped, but I'd like to think a little online word-of-mouth (via comics weblogs and elsewhere) helped a bit, too.

Action Comics #820 - I read Superman comics, so you don't have to...the art on this issue by Carlos D'Anda is nicely done, reminding me a bit of Art Adams (appropriate, given Adams' work on the covers lately). But, really, the story didn't really do anything for me...the villain's M.O. seemed different from what I remembered, and the sudden focus on the guest-hero near the end of the book was admittedly interesting, but out of nowhere and out of place, I think.

Also: JSA #66 (a happy ending all around, I guess, as one of the "mistakes" of Zero Hour is corrected), Fables #30 (Snow White finally gives birth, and the winner of the Fabletown election discovers the cloud in his silver lining...very amusing issue), Ex Machina #5 (really, you need to be reading this comic), Challengers of The Unknown #5 (there's nothing quite like a Howard Chaykin comic), and Tom Strong #29 (it's an "everything you know is wrong" story, but at least for once there's no pretense at trying to fool the reader that really everything we know is wrong).

Other arrivals: the SPX 2004 Anthology (the War issue, which has an alarming cover by Steve Lieber, featuring a tank rolling over the remains of comic characters, Charlie Brown's shirt fluttering on the barrel), Secret War #3 (just took a brief glace through it...is it really half "S.H.I.E.L.D." files?), and X-Force #3 (...I'm just still amazed this is actually happening).

We also received our incentive packs for our orders on the Dreadstar reprint volumes. Fortunately, we were going to order quite a few of the Dreadstar books anyway, so it's not like we had to bump up our orders a lot to reach the incentive plateaus (like we had to on that most recent issue of Wolverine in order to get the variant...which arrived this week, finally). And it's a good thing we didn't, because we would have been pissed...included in the packs were four copies of the Battle of the Planets paperbacks that reprinted the Gold Key comic book series. You remember, the books that featured such terrible black and white reproductions of the comics that the publisher had to take returns on them? This is apparently how the publisher is getting rid of them again. Well, crud.

Wednesday, October 13, 2004

Due to illness, I'm not going to be doing my usual new-comics-Wednesday round-up...I'm shooting for tomorrow. However, so you don't leave empty-handed, here are some unusual internet search referrals that I've received over the last week or so:

kryp+tuck - You have no idea how many searches I got for this.

funny+spiderman+dancing+on+street+corner - Uh, what?

Reasons+to+visit+Saturn - Why, to get away from the funny Spider-Man dancing on a street corner, of course.

explain+superman+209 - No one can explain.

progressive+ruin+chalk+swamp - It just amuses me that someone who wasn't me was looking for this. God bless that person.

print+runs+for+marvel+masterworks - Actually, I'm kind of interested in that, myself.

ruin+marvel - I can only take partial credit for ruining Marvel, thank you.

I've+got+a+handful+of+vertebrae+and+a+headful+of+mad - Someone's looking for the
Doom comic, I betcha.

femforce+slash - Sigh.

necronomicon+warning+in+front+cover - "WARNING: Not a real historical volume. Created only to part gullible people from their money."

Green+Lantern+181+Spoilers - SPOILER WARNING: It stinks.

green+lantern+racial+sensitivity - "I been readin' about you...how you work for the blue skins...and how on a planet someplace you helped out the orange skins...and you done considerable for the purple skins! Only there's skins you never bothered with --! ...The black skins! I want to know...how come? Answer me that, Mr. Green Lantern!" - from Green Lantern #76 (April 1970) by Denny O'Neil and Neal Adams

werewolves+nazis - ...Make for great comics.

hitler+logo - I really should stop mentioning Hitler in my weblog. I don't even like the guy.

monsieur+mallah+loves+the+brain - Yes...yes he does.

Comics+Slave - Aren't we all?

vixen+comic+fabio - I'm sure there's an explanation...but keep it to yourself.

killed+sue+dibny - No I didn't!

And because some of you are dirty, dirty people:

bubble+gum+fetish - I wish I could say this surprises me, but alas, it doesn't.

animated+toplessness - Because static toplessness is so boring.

erotic+elfquest - Isn't that redundant?

naked+adrienne+barbeau - At last, a nekkid web search I can get behind.

betty+and+veronica+nude - Ah, the eternal quest continues....

kerry+washington+goes+topless & erica+durance+topless & Erica+Durance+nude+pictures - Pretty much any time you mention any actress or female athlete on your webpage, you're gonna get hits from people looking for nekkid pictures of them. So, let's run a test: Carole Lombard Carole Lombard Carole Lombard

jessica+alba+latest+pictures+with+blond+hair - Oh, God, not this again.

Charlton Comics and the art of subtlety. 




Ghost Manor #33 (Sept. 1977)

Tuesday, October 12, 2004

1. Congratulations to
The Comic Treadmill for reaching the one year mark. H and Mag are a couple of swell cats, in my own unbiased opinion.

2. Oh, for God's sake, does nothing go right for Walt Wallet?

3. Just added View from The Cheap Seats and Irresponsible Pictures to the weblogroll. I've also made other adjustments to the 'roll over the last week or so, but was too lazy to note them at the time.

4. Pal Andy has been posting a lot of comic-related links lately...instead of stealing them for my own, like I usually do, I suggest you check them out for your own self.

From the NEWSFLASHES column in Amazing Heroes #68 (April 1, 1985):
Marvel Comics will be combating the problem [of the increase of costs in printing a 32-page comic] by converting all of its existing titles into a 100-page format. Retailing for $2.95, these new comics will bear the headline 'SPECIAL GREAT BIG COMIC - MORE FOR YOUR MONEY!' across the top of each cover. The story content in each issue will total 85 pages, with 12 pages of ads and a 6-page letters column.*

...CHRIS CLAREMONT will be in charge of The X-Men Super Giant Big Book, which will include a regular 30-page X-Men series drawn by JOHN ROMITA, Jr. and DAN GREEN, a 25-page New Mutants series drawn by FRANK ROBBINS, and rotating series of features starring other mutants.

DC Comics' reaction?
What DC will be doing instead is cutting down its comic books to 16 pages - 'like Cerebus, just a step further.' Ads will be cut down to 4 pages, leaving 14 pages of story per issue.** Letters pages will be confined to the inside front cover, a la First Comics.

...'Let's face it,' DICK GIORDANO said, 'it's already tough enough fitting, say, the Legion of Super-Heroes into one 25-page story.' As a result, all teams will be cut down to three members.

...Justice League of America will reduce its membership to Vibe and Vixen, according to readership polls the favorite members of the audience. GERRY CONWAY will continue to write, and MIKE SEKOWSKY will draw.


It was meant as a joke at the time, but nearly 20 years on, do either of these options sound terribly farfetched? I think the estimate on the number of ad pages is a bit low...I think we'd be looking at about a 50/50 ratio of ads to story, just to keep the costs down on a 100-page monthly comic. And
pal Dorian mentioned to me that Warren Ellis had suggested some kind of 16 page weekly comic in place of the 32-page monthlies. (I hadn't read Ellis' comments on that, so forgive me if I have the details wrong.)

Well, at our store, people are still buying the regular monthlies like they're going out of st...er, like they're hotcakes, but with the increase in popularity of the trade paperback sales model (particularly in manga), monthly books may have to evolve in order to continue competing in venues aside from the comic book store niche market.

Just a thought...I don't think the 32-page format is going away anytime soon, but there will come a point when its price point will become too high for even the most ardent comics fan. What will happen then, I wonder?
* Yes, I know that adds up to 103 pages.

** See? Still funny!

Monday, October 11, 2004

So as I was digging through some boxes in the store's back room, I was surprised to find this little underground comix motherlode hidden away:



That's four copies each of Big Ass Comics #1 and #2 by Robert Crumb, and twelve copies of The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers #2. I seem to vaguely remember receiving these in a collection a while back, but I think we were in the process of dealing with yet another much larger collection of undergrounds at the same time (as in several hundred of them), and this lot just sorta got lost in the shuffle. Anyway, they're rescued now, and thus I must begin preparing them for sale...which means figuring out which printing each comic is.

Now, several underground comix went back to press several times to meet demand, and with the exception of Kitchen Sink Press (which was fairly consistent in indicating what printing number each comic was up to) most publishers didn't make it easy to determine printings. Of course, it wasn't the publishers' concern, really...all they were trying to do is reprint enough copies of, say, Mother's Oats #1, to fill orders. They certainly didn't expect that 25 years later, some poor schlub like me was going to be carefully placing these in plastic baggies for back issue sales...they probably thought the comix would end up being tossed out, used as coasters, used as ashtrays for (ahem) "cigarettes," or whatever.

The only near-complete reference guide to undergrounds is The Official Underground And New Wave Comix Price Guide by Jay Kennedy...which was published 22 years ago, so obviously the pricing information is out of date. However, the publishing information is very detailed, and thoroughly explains the differences between printings.

In a lot of cases, the only way to tell the difference between printings is certain visual clues. A first edition may have a coloring error on the cover that the second printing does not, maybe a mailing address has changed between printings, maybe there's an art correction inside the comic, and in some cases it even comes down to the thickness of the paper stock used for the covers! However, since the Underground Price Guide only had the one edition, any errors that appeared in that first edition have remained uncorrected. In particular, we've come across several variations of Freak Brothers that are unmentioned in the Guide.

A great site that's been doing a lot of work toward straightening out underground comix' publishing history, and correcting errors in the Guide, is
Ugcomix.info, which is attempting to assemble a visual record of every variation of every printing of every UG...you might even see a scan or two I contributed, if you look around long enough.

There have been other price guides over the last few years that made half-hearted attempts at listing undergrounds...but in most cases not enough information was given in telling the various printings apart, and therefore unusable except in conjunction with the Underground Price Guide. Years ago, word on the street was that Kennedy was preparing a revised edition of his Guide, but unfortunately it has yet to appear.

In other news:

Mark Evanier's post about Christopher Reeve affected me the most. Very, very sad. Most of my fellow comics webloggers have some nice words about Mr. Reeve as well.

For some reason, I keep getting credit on various sites (this one's the latest I've found) for finding that Justice League of America panel with Batman thinking "Robin, what have I done to you?" Wasn't me...I'm not sure who first posted it, but it's never appeared on site (beyond my linking to it elsewhere).

Sunday, October 10, 2004

I'm a little under the weather today, so I'll just post a couple quickies here:

Laura's been linking to me on a fairly regular basis, and I haven't said "thank you." So, thanks, Laura! One of Laura's ongoing features is to post an Aquaman sketch (or, at least, an aquatically-themed sketch) every Saturday that she's acquired from pro cartoonists. Here's the latest, and I suggest going back through the archives to see more...lots of good stuff!

***

The contents for the next issue of The Comics Journal are up on the official site. (Read Dirk Deppey's essay on Marvel.)

***

My ballot-box-stuffing sense is tingling, what with the sudden increase in votes for Yoko Ono in the Comic Treadmill's latest poll. Surely the people know that a vote for the Associated Comics And Pop Culture Webloggers of Ventura County, CA And Outlying Environs* is a vote for freedom and prosperity?

***

Real content tomorrow, I promise!


* As always, S.H.I.E.L.D. for short.

logo banner by
John Lancaster

(submit your own!)


e-mail me at
mikester @
this domain name
LAST.FM / MYSPACE

SITE FEED / LJ FEED

Mike Sterling's
BEHIND THE COUNTER

at

[column archive]


What other people
are saying about

MIKE STERLING'S
PROGRESSIVE RUIN



SUPPORT THIS SITE: Please use these ads and services.


Banner





ASSOCIATED COMICS AND POP CULTURE WEBLOGGERS OF VENTURA COUNTY, CA AND OUTLYING ENVIRONS

Batfatty
Brill Building
Captain Corey
Feminine Miss Geek
Flesh-head's Treehouse
Kid Chris
Postmodernbarney
Progressive Ruin
Tales from Treasure Island
You Know What I Like?


COMIC WEBLOGS

Update-A-Tron 5000

Comics Weblog
Update-A-Tron 4000

(newest additions in red)


The Absorbascon
Again with the Comics
Alan David Doane
Another Damn Comic Blog
Any Eventuality
Bahlactus
BeaucoupKevin
Bispectacult
Blockade Boy
Blog@Newsarama
Blog de Jotace (in Spanish)
Bloggity-Blog-Blog-Blog
Blurred Productions
Booksteve's Library
Brainfreeze
Broken Glass...
Bugpowder
Cable & Tweed
Chaosmonkey
Chipped Ham
Chris Karath
Chris "Lefty" Brown
Christopher Butcher
Collected Editions
Comic Gays
Comic Treadmill
Comics and More
Comics Ate My Brain
Comics Curmudgeon
Comiks Debris
Comics Make No Sense
Comics Reporter
Comics Oughta be Fun
Comics Should Be Good
Comics Waiting Room
Comics Want List
Comics Weekly
Comics Worth Reading
Completely Futile
Continuity Error
Crocodile Caucus
Dave's Long Box (ret.)
DC Conspiracy
Double Articulation
Dr. K's 100-Page Super Spec.
Ear in the Fireplace
El Jacone's Comic Book Bunker
Every Day Is Like Wed.
Exercise in Futility
Face Down in The Gutters
Ferret Press
Fish-Flavored Baseball Bat
FLOG!
Fortress of Fortitude
Fortress of Soliloquy
Four Realities
Gad, Sir! Comics!
Great Caesar's Post
Highway 62
House of L
House of The Ded
Howling Curmudgeons
The Hurting
Hypnoray
I Am NOT The Beastmaster
In Sequence
Invincible Super-Blog
I Read Comics
I Was Ben
Jog
Johnny Bacardi Show
Journalista
Kirby Comics
Kochalkaholic
Lady, That's My Skull
Legion Abstract
Legion Omnicom
Mah Two Cents
Matching Dragoons
Milo George
Motime Like The Present
My Three Dollars Worth
Near Mint Heroes
Neilalien
Noetic Concordance
Not Blog X
Of Course, Yeah
Pickering's Corner
Polite Dissent
Precocious Curmudgeon
Pretty, Fizzy Paradise
Random Happenstance
Random Panels
Redhead Fangirl
Repent Sinners!
Retroactive Continuity
Ringwood
Roar of Comics
Senses Shattering
Seven Hells
Shelly's Comic Book Shelf
Simply Comics
Size Matters
Snap Judgments
Spandex Justice
Spatula Forum
Sporadic Sequential
Successless Comics Blog
Super Underwear Perverts
Tales from the Longbox
Thought Balloon
Tom the Culture Titan
Trickle of Consciousness
Twenty Seven Letters
View from The Cheap Seats
Vintage Spandex
Warren Peace Sings the Blues
Weekly Crisis
Welt am Draht (in German)
When Fangirls Attack
Word on The Street
Written World
Ye Olde Comick Blogge
Yet Another Comics Blog

COMIC CREATORS

Alvitre, Weshoyot
Alanguilan, Gerry
Aragones, Sergio
Birdie, Benjamin
Bissette, Steve
Cardy, Nick
Cockrum, Dave
Dame Darcy
David, Peter
Ellis, Warren
Evanier, Mark
Fabio and Gabriel
Gaiman, Neil
Gerber, Steve
Hembeck, Fred
Isabella, Tony
Lynch, Mike
Marder, Larry
May, Michael
McCloud, Scott
Noland, Fred
Peyer, Tom, et al
Pfeifer, Will
Quagmire, Joshua
Veitch, Rick
Wein, Len
Wieringo, Mike

MISC. COMIC SITES

Achewood
AAUGH!
About Comics
ADD Reviews
AiT/Planetlar
Barnacle Press
BOOM! Studios
Comic Blog Legion
Comic Book Galaxy
Deep Fried
Diesel Sweeties
Digest Comics
Fourth Wall Editing
Grand Comic Database
Hellboy
Licensable Bear™
Marvel Family
The Rack
Roots of the Swamp Thing
This Modern World
Treasury Comics
Zippy the Pinhead

OTHER WEBLOGS

ADD Too Flat
Armagideon Time
Alert Nerd
Astonishing Tales
Bad Astronomy
Bedazzled
The Best I Can
Blog This Pal
Brad's Bully Pulpit
Center of Gravitas
Chazzbot
Clandestine Critic
Daniel85
Dave Ex Machina
Defective Yeti
Delenda Est Carthago
Distorting the Medium
Eddie-torial Comments
Electric Mayhem
Empty Handed
Eschaton
Eventually Clever
Get Off The Internet
Glyph Jockey
Grow A Brain
Gulf of YouTube
The Horror Blog
Incoming Signals
Indierocket
It Is Not What It Is
Jay Pinkerton
John Gorenfeld
Joopy
Keep Creepin'
Ken Lowery Movie Reviews
Linkbunnies
Look at His Butt
Matter-Eater Weblog
Matt O'Rama
Metrokitty
Miraclo Miles
Moose in the Closet
Mountain of Judgment
Mr. Dan Kelly
Nat's TV
No Sword
Philip's Book & Movie Lists
Plastic Pumpkins
Pop Culture Gadabout
Positive Ape Index
Pretty Fakes
Ramblin' with Roger
Rick Gebhardt
Rob's Blog o'Stuff
Sam-a-Rama
Siskoid's Blog of Geekery
Sock Drawer
Stephen Frug
Tales from the Liberry
TangognaT
TBogg
This Is Pop Culture
Tiki TomB
Toner Mishap
Trusty Plinko Stick
Unqualified Offerings
Utopia Moment
Various and Sundry
Waxy
Weezer and Geezer
Wheaton, Wil
Wis[s]e Words

ALSO OF NOTE

All Too Flat
Autumn Things
Baresark
Bartcop
Bill Hicks
Cinematic Titanic
James Randi Ed. Foundation
Jehan Parker
MikeSterling.com (me)
MikeSterling.net (not me)
Not Just A Theory
Ookla the Mok
Poor Mojo Newswire
Pop-Culture Spectrum
RadioTiki
Ralph's Comic Corner
Randy Martinez
Rifftrax
Scott Phillips Author
Scuba Jason
Seatbelt Googolplex
Trek Rumors
TV Tattle

DISSENTING OPINIONS

Mike Sterling Is A Big Cheater-Pants


BATMAN DEFEATED BY JOKER - SEVEN DECADES OF SUPERHEROING COME TO END

BAT-WEEK: 1 2 3 4 5 6

DR. DOOM'S TOP 10 EUPHEMISMS FOR SEX

THE END OF CIVILIZATION:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33
34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42

100 THINGS I LOVE ABOUT COMICS

100 MORE THINGS I LOVE ABOUT COMICS

ANOTHER 100 THINGS I LOVE ABOUT COMICS

OXNARD MAN READS COMICS, BRINGS SHAME UPON FAMILY

POST #1000

THE SEVEN DEADLY HARVEYS

SUDDENLY, ONE YEAR LATER

SUDDENLY, TWO YEARS LATER

SUDDENLY, THREE YEARS LATER

SUDDENLY, FOUR YEARS LATER

10 SCARY SWAMP THING MOMENTS

THINGS NOT TO SAY TO A COMIC SHOP EMPLOYEE:
Parts 1 2 3

COMIC POSTS OF NOTE

Batman #118
Bionic Woman #1
Blip #1 & #2
Buck Rogers #15
DC Sampler #1-#3
Doom Patrol #34
Eerie #11
Jughead #327
Many Ghosts/Dr. Graves #60
Peter Cannon Tbolt #59
Popeye #138
Public Enemies #2
Sir Charles Barkley & The Referee Murders
Strange Adventures #156
Super DC Bumper Book (1970)
Superman #330
Superman #355
Superman & The Computer Masters of Metropolis
Superman's GF Lois Lane #94
Superman's Pal Jimmy O. #86
Swamp Thing #23
Swamp Thing #24
Tales of Suspense #28
Terrifying Tales #13
Thor #303
Witches Tales #13
Wonder Woman #127

ARCHIVES

11/30/2003 - 12/07/2003  

12/07/2003 - 12/14/2003  

12/14/2003 - 12/21/2003  

12/21/2003 - 12/28/2003  

12/28/2003 - 01/04/2004  

01/04/2004 - 01/11/2004  

01/11/2004 - 01/18/2004  

01/18/2004 - 01/25/2004  

01/25/2004 - 02/01/2004  

02/01/2004 - 02/08/2004  

02/08/2004 - 02/15/2004  

02/15/2004 - 02/22/2004  

02/22/2004 - 02/29/2004  

02/29/2004 - 03/07/2004  

03/07/2004 - 03/14/2004  

03/14/2004 - 03/21/2004  

03/21/2004 - 03/28/2004  

03/28/2004 - 04/04/2004  

04/04/2004 - 04/11/2004  

04/11/2004 - 04/18/2004  

04/18/2004 - 04/25/2004  

04/25/2004 - 05/02/2004  

05/02/2004 - 05/09/2004  

05/09/2004 - 05/16/2004  

05/16/2004 - 05/23/2004  

05/23/2004 - 05/30/2004  

05/30/2004 - 06/06/2004  

06/06/2004 - 06/13/2004  

06/13/2004 - 06/20/2004  

06/20/2004 - 06/27/2004  

06/27/2004 - 07/04/2004  

07/04/2004 - 07/11/2004  

07/11/2004 - 07/18/2004  

07/18/2004 - 07/25/2004  

07/25/2004 - 08/01/2004  

08/01/2004 - 08/08/2004  

08/08/2004 - 08/15/2004  

08/15/2004 - 08/22/2004  

08/22/2004 - 08/29/2004  

08/29/2004 - 09/05/2004  

09/05/2004 - 09/12/2004  

09/12/2004 - 09/19/2004  

09/19/2004 - 09/26/2004  

09/26/2004 - 10/03/2004  

10/03/2004 - 10/10/2004  

10/10/2004 - 10/17/2004  

10/17/2004 - 10/24/2004  

10/24/2004 - 10/31/2004  

10/31/2004 - 11/07/2004  

11/07/2004 - 11/14/2004  

11/14/2004 - 11/21/2004  

11/21/2004 - 11/28/2004  

11/28/2004 - 12/05/2004  

12/05/2004 - 12/12/2004  

12/12/2004 - 12/19/2004  

12/19/2004 - 12/26/2004  

12/26/2004 - 01/02/2005  

01/02/2005 - 01/09/2005  

01/09/2005 - 01/16/2005  

01/16/2005 - 01/23/2005  

01/23/2005 - 01/30/2005  

01/30/2005 - 02/06/2005  

02/06/2005 - 02/13/2005  

02/13/2005 - 02/20/2005  

02/20/2005 - 02/27/2005  

02/27/2005 - 03/06/2005  

03/06/2005 - 03/13/2005  

03/13/2005 - 03/20/2005  

03/20/2005 - 03/27/2005  

03/27/2005 - 04/03/2005  

04/03/2005 - 04/10/2005  

04/10/2005 - 04/17/2005  

04/17/2005 - 04/24/2005  

04/24/2005 - 05/01/2005  

05/01/2005 - 05/08/2005  

05/08/2005 - 05/15/2005  

05/15/2005 - 05/22/2005  

05/22/2005 - 05/29/2005  

05/29/2005 - 06/05/2005  

06/05/2005 - 06/12/2005  

06/12/2005 - 06/19/2005  

06/19/2005 - 06/26/2005  

06/26/2005 - 07/03/2005  

07/03/2005 - 07/10/2005  

07/10/2005 - 07/17/2005  

07/17/2005 - 07/24/2005  

07/24/2005 - 07/31/2005  

07/31/2005 - 08/07/2005  

08/07/2005 - 08/14/2005  

08/14/2005 - 08/21/2005  

08/21/2005 - 08/28/2005  

08/28/2005 - 09/04/2005  

09/04/2005 - 09/11/2005  

09/11/2005 - 09/18/2005  

09/18/2005 - 09/25/2005  

09/25/2005 - 10/02/2005  

10/02/2005 - 10/09/2005  

10/09/2005 - 10/16/2005  

10/16/2005 - 10/23/2005  

10/23/2005 - 10/30/2005  

10/30/2005 - 11/06/2005  

11/06/2005 - 11/13/2005  

11/13/2005 - 11/20/2005  

11/20/2005 - 11/27/2005  

11/27/2005 - 12/04/2005  

12/04/2005 - 12/11/2005  

12/11/2005 - 12/18/2005  

12/18/2005 - 12/25/2005  

12/25/2005 - 01/01/2006  

01/01/2006 - 01/08/2006  

01/08/2006 - 01/15/2006  

01/15/2006 - 01/22/2006  

01/22/2006 - 01/29/2006  

01/29/2006 - 02/05/2006  

02/05/2006 - 02/12/2006  

02/12/2006 - 02/19/2006  

02/19/2006 - 02/26/2006  

02/26/2006 - 03/05/2006  

03/05/2006 - 03/12/2006  

03/12/2006 - 03/19/2006  

03/19/2006 - 03/26/2006  

03/26/2006 - 04/02/2006  

04/02/2006 - 04/09/2006  

04/09/2006 - 04/16/2006  

04/16/2006 - 04/23/2006  

04/23/2006 - 04/30/2006  

04/30/2006 - 05/07/2006  

05/07/2006 - 05/14/2006  

05/14/2006 - 05/21/2006  

05/21/2006 - 05/28/2006  

05/28/2006 - 06/04/2006  

06/04/2006 - 06/11/2006  

06/11/2006 - 06/18/2006  

06/18/2006 - 06/25/2006  

06/25/2006 - 07/02/2006  

07/02/2006 - 07/09/2006  

07/09/2006 - 07/16/2006  

07/16/2006 - 07/23/2006  

07/23/2006 - 07/30/2006  

07/30/2006 - 08/06/2006  

08/06/2006 - 08/13/2006  

08/13/2006 - 08/20/2006  

08/20/2006 - 08/27/2006  

08/27/2006 - 09/03/2006  

09/03/2006 - 09/10/2006  

09/10/2006 - 09/17/2006  

09/17/2006 - 09/24/2006  

09/24/2006 - 10/01/2006  

10/01/2006 - 10/08/2006  

10/08/2006 - 10/15/2006  

10/15/2006 - 10/22/2006  

10/22/2006 - 10/29/2006  

10/29/2006 - 11/05/2006  

11/05/2006 - 11/12/2006  

11/12/2006 - 11/19/2006  

11/19/2006 - 11/26/2006  

11/26/2006 - 12/03/2006  

12/03/2006 - 12/10/2006  

12/10/2006 - 12/17/2006  

12/17/2006 - 12/24/2006  

12/24/2006 - 12/31/2006  

12/31/2006 - 01/07/2007  

01/07/2007 - 01/14/2007  

01/14/2007 - 01/21/2007  

01/21/2007 - 01/28/2007  

01/28/2007 - 02/04/2007  

02/04/2007 - 02/11/2007  

02/11/2007 - 02/18/2007  

02/18/2007 - 02/25/2007  

02/25/2007 - 03/04/2007  

03/04/2007 - 03/11/2007  

03/11/2007 - 03/18/2007  

03/18/2007 - 03/25/2007  

03/25/2007 - 04/01/2007  

04/01/2007 - 04/08/2007  

04/08/2007 - 04/15/2007  

04/15/2007 - 04/22/2007  

04/22/2007 - 04/29/2007  

04/29/2007 - 05/06/2007  

05/06/2007 - 05/13/2007  

05/13/2007 - 05/20/2007  

05/20/2007 - 05/27/2007  

05/27/2007 - 06/03/2007  

06/03/2007 - 06/10/2007  

06/10/2007 - 06/17/2007  

06/17/2007 - 06/24/2007  

06/24/2007 - 07/01/2007  

07/01/2007 - 07/08/2007  

07/08/2007 - 07/15/2007  

07/15/2007 - 07/22/2007  

07/22/2007 - 07/29/2007  

07/29/2007 - 08/05/2007  

08/05/2007 - 08/12/2007  

08/12/2007 - 08/19/2007  

08/19/2007 - 08/26/2007  

08/26/2007 - 09/02/2007  

09/02/2007 - 09/09/2007  

09/09/2007 - 09/16/2007  

09/16/2007 - 09/23/2007  

09/23/2007 - 09/30/2007  

09/30/2007 - 10/07/2007  

10/07/2007 - 10/14/2007  

10/14/2007 - 10/21/2007  

10/21/2007 - 10/28/2007  

10/28/2007 - 11/04/2007  

11/04/2007 - 11/11/2007  

11/11/2007 - 11/18/2007  

11/18/2007 - 11/25/2007  

11/25/2007 - 12/02/2007  

12/02/2007 - 12/09/2007  

12/09/2007 - 12/16/2007  

12/16/2007 - 12/23/2007  

12/23/2007 - 12/30/2007  

12/30/2007 - 01/06/2008  

01/06/2008 - 01/13/2008  

01/13/2008 - 01/20/2008  

01/20/2008 - 01/27/2008  

01/27/2008 - 02/03/2008  

02/03/2008 - 02/10/2008  

02/10/2008 - 02/17/2008  

02/17/2008 - 02/24/2008  

02/24/2008 - 03/02/2008  

03/02/2008 - 03/09/2008  

03/09/2008 - 03/16/2008  

03/16/2008 - 03/23/2008  

03/23/2008 - 03/30/2008  

03/30/2008 - 04/06/2008  

04/06/2008 - 04/13/2008  

04/13/2008 - 04/20/2008  

04/20/2008 - 04/27/2008  

04/27/2008 - 05/04/2008  

05/04/2008 - 05/11/2008  

05/11/2008 - 05/18/2008  

05/18/2008 - 05/25/2008  

05/25/2008 - 06/01/2008  

06/01/2008 - 06/08/2008  

06/08/2008 - 06/15/2008  

06/15/2008 - 06/22/2008  

06/22/2008 - 06/29/2008  

06/29/2008 - 07/06/2008  

07/06/2008 - 07/13/2008  

07/13/2008 - 07/20/2008  

07/20/2008 - 07/27/2008  

07/27/2008 - 08/03/2008  

08/03/2008 - 08/10/2008  

08/10/2008 - 08/17/2008  

08/17/2008 - 08/24/2008  

08/24/2008 - 08/31/2008  

08/31/2008 - 09/07/2008  

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?

Weblog Commenting by HaloScan.com

Copyright © 2003-8 Mike Sterling. Some images used are copyright © their respective copyright owners.