“Yesterday’s” Comic> Worlds Of Aspen FCBD 2015

Worlds Of Aspen 2015

Aspen Comics (May, 2015–digital copy)

LETTERER: Josh Reed

EDITORS: Vince Hernandez & Frank Mastromauro

All credits come from the Grand Comics Database. They’re not in the two comic stories of the flipbook themselves, so they might be using the ones from the promos. If they’re wrong, at least it’s not my fault. -_*

Eternal Soulfire

WRITER: JT Krull

PENCILER: Alex Konat

INKERS: Mark Roslan & Gabe Carrasco

COLORIST: Federico Blee

Fathom Blue

WRITER: Vince Hernandez

ARTIST: Claudio Avella

COLORIST:  Erick Arciniega

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BW’s Daily Video> The Americanization Of Harry Potter

Catch more from Disparu on YouTube

 

Watchmen #2: A First Time Read

As I write this it’s very cold and rainy outside. Seems like a good time to read another issue of Watchmen. Plus it’s the first time I’ve been able to do a longer-to-write article just for the buffer.

The story so far…

The Comedian is dead. Falling from a very high window onto a spiked fence will do that to you. The only one that seems to care is Rorschach, the only hero who is still technically a vigilante. Ozymandias is writing his memoirs and living off his brand. Dr. Manhattan, who was working with the Comedian as a government superhero, is busy with his science studies. Silk Spectre II is happy to be out of the superhero game since her mom forced her into it. The only one that seems to miss the old days without still living them is Nite Owl II. None of the particularly liked the Comedian and they don’t consider Rorschach their friend either. I’m assuming we’ll find out why as the story continues.

We also started reading excerpts from a biography written by the first Nite Owl, telling how he was inspired to be a superhero due to the old pulp heroes. We’ll see more from that book, but first we’re going to check in to the murder investigation.

If you’re new to me reading this series, here’s the introductory article and my review of the first issue.

“Every time I forget my umbrella….”

Watchmen #2

DC Comics (October, 1986)

“At Midnight, All The Agents…”

WRITER: Alan Moore

ARTIST/LETTERER: Dave Gibbons

COLORIST: John Higgins

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> Sonic Universe #12

Beginning with Sonic The Hedgehog #208 I started reviewing the various Sonic comics as their own article instead of reviewing my entire pull list once a week. You can find further reviews in the Today’s Comic feature, but I didn’t want to end this story arc for new readers to the site. This will give all my Sonic reviews their own spot, and that also makes the last of my physical comics until the next Free Comic Book Day or I get some funds and storage space to buy more comics. I still have plans and you’ll know next week which one I ultimately go with, as next week will also be the last of the Drive Thru Comics collection unless I get some new comics from that digital service. With that, the last Sonic comic review.

“Just get a generator like everyone else!”

Sonic Universe #12

Archie Comics Publications (March, 2010)

“Echoes Of The Past” finale

WRITER: Ian Flynn

PENCILER: Tracy Yardley

INKER: Jim Amash

COLORIST: Jason Jensen

LETTERER: Teresa Davidson

ASSISTANT EDITOR: Paul Kaminski

EDITOR: Mike Pellerito

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BW’s Daily Video> Every Superman Logo Explained

Catch more from Recap Zone on YouTube

Not mentioned in the video: what a pain it is to draw! Thanks a lot, Curt! I use a template on the pencil layer when drawing digitally so the final digital ink still looks hand drawn, though there have been times I’ve tried doing it by hand even when not on paper where the template option isn’t available. I never get it right to my satisfaction.

Answering The Sunshine Blogger Challenge (Mostly)

Years ago, when I had a stronger readership and most of the blogs I followed were active, I was nominated for a “Liebster Award“. It’s not an official award from any particular organization. It was just a way for bloggers to promote fellow bloggers. Nowadays, as equipment has become cheaper and more people make videos for YouTube than write for solo websites, or so it feels (and I wouldn’t mind getting back to the occasional video myself), I don’t have a strong a readership as I used to. A couple of boosts by Instapundit only helped for a short time, as I expected it too. I still have people who show up, but I’m half of what I was before the forced hiatus in 2016, where I probably lost most of my readership, and the recent attempts to stay out of the culture war as it keeps forcing itself into storytelling, despite being only one of the many problems with storytelling today and the types of stories I tend to follow (sci-fi superhero stuff). This will become more important later on.

What’s important for the intro is that the independent blogger isn’t dead, just most of the sites I used to follow. Some of us still are out there posting stuff and reading others’ work. For example, novelist Caroline Furlong of A Song Of Joy enjoys myself enough to like most to all of my articles and I have also used a few of hers for the Saturday article link. She also nominated me for a Sunshine Blogger Award. That was nice of her. Like the Liebster, the Sunshine Blogger Award rules are answer a series of questions provided by the nominator and then charging 11 other sites to answer your questions, but it can’t include the blogger who nominated you. Which seriously reduces my nominations since most of the sites I follow these days are multi-contributor news and commentary sites. Who do I nominate on Bleeding Fool or Geeks & Gamers?

While I figure out a workaround, I have below the 11 questions Caroline has asked of me and her other nominations. You can read her responses to her own nominee’s questions at the link in the previous paragraph. Here are my responses to her questions of me. To make up for the limited nominations, I’m going to ramble a bit, and it seems I’ve broken my 2000 limit more than I’d like. She’s been here long enough to be used to that, so blame her. After all, I started this site to talk about the stuff I’m really into that nobody else I know in friends or family think about in the same way I do, and hoping to get into discussions with others who think the same way. It doesn’t seem to happen if you see how blank most of my comments are, which is also why I want to get back to videos and try livestreaming again. Also, go read the rest of her site after you see her own Q&A session. It opens in a new tab so you don’t have to scramble back here.

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> Police Comics #6

DC’s current Plastic Man wouldn’t have missed the woman changing in there.

Police Comics #6

Comic Magazines, Inc (January, 1942)

I don’t have to tell you what became of Plastic Man. In recent years he’s become one of their bigger characters, but that was a long time coming. His first post-comics appearance I’m aware of is a cameo in the first season of Superfriends, getting a mouse out of a computer. Like fellow cameo Green Arrow (from a later episode), he didn’t get to join the full team, but he did get his own cartoon as an agency superhero working with a woman named Penny, who was really into him, and Hula-Hula, a Hawaiian with bad luck who also happened to have informants all over the world. This was never explained.

In the next season Penny somehow won over Plastic Man, who in the first season was into his Chief (though she seemed to hate his stretchy guts). They married and had a son, Baby Plas. We’re not up far enough in the comics to know if Plas had a child in the comics, but I like to think this is the same son from the alternate universe “Injustice” stories, in which Plastic Man has really shined besides appearances in Batman: The Brave & The Bold and Justice League Action. The others that DC have picked up from the future Quality Comics haven’t fared as well, but we’ll touch on them in later comics.

[Read along with me here]

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