House ad for Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer #9 (December 1958);
printed in Flippity & Flop #43 (December 1958)
Comic cover art: pencils and inks by Rube Grossman (?)
Ad designed and lettered by Ira Schnapp
Panels from Hawkguy Hawkeye (2012 series) #6 (February 2013), script by Matt Fraction, pencils and inks by David Aja, colors by Matt Hollingsworth, letters by Chris Eliopoulos
Panels from Hawkguy Hawkeye (2012 series) #6 (February 2013), script by Matt Fraction, pencils and inks by David Aja, colors by Matt Hollingsworth, letters by Chris Eliopoulos
Panels from Hawkguy Hawkeye (2012 series) #6 (February 2013), script by Matt Fraction, pencils and inks by David Aja, colors by Matt Hollingsworth, letters by Chris Eliopoulos
from Hawkguy Hawkeye (2012 series) #6 (Marvel, February 2013), script by Matt Fraction, pencils and inks by David Aja, colors by Matt Hollingsworth, letters by Chris Eliopoulos
Panels from Uncanny X-Men #239 (December 1988), script by Chris Claremont, pencils by Marc Silvestri, inks by Dan Green, colors by Glynis Oliver, letters by Tom Orzechowski
Fight and pose: check and check. Two skills Psylocke has perfected that will make her an essential part of comic books in the 1990s.
House ad for The Superman Family #182 (March-April 1977);
printed in The Superman Family #181 (January 1977)
Ad art: pencils and inks by Neal Adams (Superman), pencils and inks by Kurt Schaffenburger (Lois, Jimmy, Supergirl); designed and lettered by Gaspar Saladino
...otherwise known as the month Superman Family became a Dollar Comic: 80 pages of brand-new, no-reprint stories!
Left: Cover of The Superman Family #181, pencils by Ernie Chan, inks by Vince Colletta
Right: Cover of The Superman Family #182, pencils by Curt Swan, inks by Neal Adams
...also known as the month Superman and Supergirl accidentally killed Lois Lane and Jimmy Olsen by flying them into outer space.
Hey, remember that TV show Early Edition, about the guy who got newspapers from the future?
opening titles from Early Edition (CBS, 1996), theme composed by W. G. Snuffy Walden
Well, as we all know...Batman did it first.
from "The Man Who Could Not Die!" in World's Finest Comics #32 (January 1948), script by Bill Finger, pencils by Paul Cooper, inks by Ray Burnley, letters by Ira Schnapp
When he finds out he is unkillable for 365 days (366 days if it's a leap year), crook Lucky Star does what all of us would do in the same situation: he cosplays as Ted "Starman" Knight.
Uh oh! It's into the pokey for Lucky Starr. But could that prediction of the day he dies actually come true, Alanis? Why...yessssssssssssss.
Most tragically of all: Lucky never lived to see his theme song finally hit the top of the pop charts.
"Lucky Star" by Madonna (1983), written by Madonna
from 100 Bullets #22 (DC/Vertigo, May 2001), script by Brian Azzarello, pencils and inks by Eduardo Risso, colors by Patricia Mulvihill, color separations by Digital Chameleon, letters by Clem Robins
Happy birthday, Ma! Sorry we already ate the cake on December second.
A Bully Christmas Classic, originally posted December 12, 2007! (You can tell it's a classic because it's in black and white.) Enjoy or enjoy again!
Hey, Luke Cage! What's your favorite holiday?
Um, I'm sorry, you'll have to speak up...what did you say?
Really? I woulda thought you'd say Martin Luther King Jr. Day, or Kwanzaa. But you really prefer...
Well, that's great. I bet you're gonna get some fantastic gifts. What do you want for Christmas?
So how's the Hero for Hire business? Are you working on any special cases this holiday season?
How do you plan on celebrating Christmas?
Really? When do the festivities begin?
And I'm sure you'll be decorating the place and making it look so festive! Say, where do you think you'll put your Christmas tree this year?
Whoops, speaking of Santa, here he comes!
I think you're right! But you'd better get to bed, Luke. If you don't Santa will never come. You can't stay up all night!
Oh, you know, Mister Cage, I'm been trying to remember...that song "Last Christmas"...who was that sung by?
Well gosh, thanks for talking to us, Mister Cage. One last question: if you were to read any kind of little stuffed animal blogger, which one would be your favorite?
House ad for Funny Stuff Stocking Stuffer one-shot (March 1985);
printed in World's Finest Comics #313 (March 1985)
Ad art: pencils and inks by Jim Engel, from the cover of Funny Stuff Stocking Stuffer one-shot