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We're delighted to have been asked to participate in JSApril. We have a whole month of episodes lined up featuring some familiar named characters who sound like they should be in the Justice Society! We kick off with "The Atom Detective" from House of Mystery 86. Next up is a Fox and Crow story from Comic Cavalcade 45 featuring... The Sandman? Finally, we tackle "The Spectre in Steel" from Doll Man 42. Don't miss it! Check out the other participants of JSApril at https://fireandwaterpodcast.com/podcast/jsapril/ Email us at theearth2podcast@gmail.com Facebook www.facebook.com/theearth2podcast Instagram www.instagram.com/theearth2podcast Twitter www.twitter.com/podcast_earth2 Leave us a Voicemail at www.speakpipe.com/theearth2podcast Find our Linktree at https://linktr.ee/theearth2podcast #JSAPRIL #DCComics #DCMultiverse #Atom #The Atom #Sandman #TheSandman #Spectre #TheSpectre #DollMan
Hey there, FF'ers! Well, the time has arrived for us to finish off our coverage of the Freedom Fighters! The book was cancelled after issue 15, but there was another story completed that wound up in another book. Ross, Terry and I will attempt to relay all the kooky aspects of these books, and our thoughts overall on the team/book. We get aliens, a carnival, plus two guest stars as well! So join us for this final chapter of our coverage. As usual you can leave any feedback for the show through email at Aworldonfirepodcast@gmail.com or to the show's Twitter account @Allsquadron or on the FB page (just search A World on Fire podcast). You can find Ross on Twitter @JSA4e and his podcast Stop! Let's Team Up! Terry is on Twitter 2wardhillterry and check out his band, Stop Calling me Frank! Thanks for listening! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/stephen-strange02/message
Hey there, All Stars! It's time for another episode of the show! My pal Mart Gray is back with me, and we're here to finish off our coverage of Steel! Not only do we cover issue five, but all the story that was intended for issue six, but the title (along with a plethora of others!) was cancelled, and that's how we got Cancelled Comic Cavalcade! This little series seemed to not be able to get going in the right direction, but Mart and I have fun with it all the same. If you want to leave any feedback for the show, you can do so through email at Aworldonfirepodcast@gmail.com or to the show on Twitter @Allsqquadron or on the show's FB page. You can find Mart on Twitter @martgray and on his (awesome) blog Dangermart.blog! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/stephen-strange02/message
Pity poor Ultra the Multi-Alien - no sooner has he found a way to change back to Ace Arn at will (all the better to woo sweet Bonnie Blake!) than he single-handedly gets Mystery in Space cancelled! Johnny Cloud doesn't fare much better on his road to Loser-dom, as the bell also tolls for All-American Men of War. Join us for this somber celebration!
This week Nic shares the 37th and final episode of the All the Books Show spinoff, Comic Book Coffee Break. He's sentimental. It's a whole thing. Anyway, tune in as Nic and Eric discuss recent comic book reads and review the pilot of the CW's new show Superman & Lois. https://www.cwtv.com/shows/superman-and-lois
Time stamps: Comic Cavalcade vol. 1 issue 7: The Vulture's Nest — 6:22 Wonder Woman vol. 2 issue 45: Legacy — 18:02 Wonder Woman vol. 4 issue 42: Struggle and Strife — 35:43 Wonder Woman season 3 episode 11: Pot of Gold — 47:55 Fan review of Wonder Woman 1984 — 1:06:40 Wonder Woman 1984 Crossover Discussion Part 1 — 1:10:43 News — 2:03:56
Time stamps: Comic Cavalcade vol. 1 issue 6: The Mystery of Countess Mazuma — 2:45 Wonder Woman vol. 2 issue 40: Divided We Fall — 12:55 Wonder Woman vol. 4 issue 38: War-Torn, Chapter 3 — 28:08 Wonder Woman season 3 episode 6: Formicida — 38:18 DC FanDome recap, including a live reaction to the new Wonder Woman 1984 trailer — 57:05 News — 1:09:19
Year of the Cheetah: Priscilla Rich in The Golden Age Frank returns after another year & a half's sabbatical to find... the Wonder Woman: Warrior for Peace podcast had returned from its own year of absence. To celebrate our both running again, Angela has an opening cameo to foreshadow her continuing appearances in a series of Cheetah-centric episodes to tide you over while Wonder Woman 1984 keeps being delayed. I bet Warner Brothers wish they'd just released the sequel back in November of 2019 as originally planned. But we're more interested in prequels today, as we travel back to the earliest stories of the original incarnation of the Cheetah. We cover every one of Priscilla Rich's published Golden Age stories set on Earth-Two, including Sensation Comics #22 & 36, Wonder Woman #6, 28, 196, & 230, Comic Cavalcade #11, Crisis on Infinite Earths #5 & 9, and DC Special #3. Most especially, we survey the Wonder Woman newspaper strip from November 20, 1944-March 30,1945, the most exhaustive and involved version of the initial Cheetah saga. We don't have a Magic Sphere, so if you want to communicate with us about the podcast... Tweet host Diabolu Frank directly, or commune with @rolledspine as a group. You can also #WonderWomanPodcast. Email Diabolu If the main Diana Prince as the New Wonder Woman blog isn't your thing, try the umbrella Rolled Spine Podcasts. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/diabolu-frank/message
Frank returns after another year & a half’s sabbatical to find… the Wonder Woman: Warrior for Peace podcast had returned from its own year of absence. To celebrate our both running again, Angela has an opening cameo to foreshadow her continuing appearances in a series of Cheetah-centric episodes to tide you over while Wonder Woman 1984 keeps being delayed. I bet Warner Brothers wish they’d just released the sequel back in November of 2019 as originally planned. But we’re more interested in prequels today, as we travel back to the earliest stories of the original incarnation of the Cheetah. We cover every one of Priscilla Rich’s published Golden Age stories set on Earth-Two, including Sensation Comics #22 & 36, Wonder Woman #6, 28, 196, & 230, Comic Cavalcade #11, Crisis on Infinite Earths #5 & 9, and DC Special #3. Most especially, we survey the Wonder Woman newspaper strip from November 20, 1944-March 30,1945, the most exhaustive and involved version of the initial Cheetah saga.We don’t have a Magic Sphere, so if you want to communicate with us about the podcast…Tweet host Diabolu Frank directly, or commune with @rolledspine as a group. You can also #WonderWomanPodcast.Email DiaboluIf the main Diana Prince as the New Wonder Woman blog isn’t your thing, try the umbrella Rolled Spine Podcasts.
Time stamps: Lyle Waggoner memorial — 1:55 Comic Cavalcade vol. 1 issue 5 — 3:10 Wonder Woman Annual vol. 2 issue 2: The Game of the Name — 14:38 Wonder Woman vol. 4 issue 34: Madness Rains — 44:02 Wonder Woman season 3 episode 1: My Teenage Idol is Missing — 54:55 News — 1:11:09
Time stamps: Comic Cavalcade vol. 1 issue 4 — 3:20 Wonder Woman vol. 2 issue 35: Journey's End — 18:39 Wonder Woman vol. 4 issue 33: Paradise Lost! — 30:36 Wonder Woman season 2 episode 22: The Murderous Missile — 39:25 News — 59:25
Time stamps: Feedback email — 2:34 Comic Cavalcade vol. 1 issue 3 — 5:22 Wonder Woman vol. 2 issue 34: The Tournament of the Crown — 15:12 Wonder Woman vol. 4 issue 32: The Beast of Times — 26:00 Wonder Woman season 2 episode 21: The Girl from Ilandia — 33:43 News — 50:19
Time stamps: Meeting George Pérez at C2E2 — 2:30 A long-overdue update — 6:24 Comic Cavalcade vol. 1 issue 2 — 11:09 Wonder Woman vol. 2 issue 33: Secrets in the Sand — 23:33 Wonder Woman vol. 4 issue 31: This Monster's Gone Eleven — 38:29 Wonder Woman season 2 episode 20: The Man Who Wouldn't Tell — 47:16 Brief coverage of The Lego Movie 2 and Professor Marston and the Wonder Women — 1:01:37 News — 1:03:37 Wonder Woman 1984 first trailer live reaction — 1:03:56 WfP Special Correspondent Wonder Bira on the Wonder Woman 1984 panel at CCXP — 1:10:27
On this episode of “Don’t Feed The Geeks,” the LI Comic Guys delve into Cancelled Comics Cavalcade, a super special unreleased comic book and also discuss some of our favorite books that have been cancelled over the years! We also discuss some current news and go over our recent pickups in the geek world!! Connect with us: Be sure to listen and subscribe to us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or Google Play Music and leave a review, lets us know what you think. You can reach us at our Official Website, Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram. Have a follow up thought on anything we discussed then drop us an email at dontfeedthegeeks@licomicguys.com ... Thanks for listening!! Website: www.licomicguys.com Facebook: www.facebook.com/licomicguys/ Twitter: twitter.com/LIComicGuys Instagram: www.instagram.com/licomicguys/ To Contact Us for reviews and promotional appearances please email requests@licomicguys.com
Time stamps: Comic Cavalcade vol. 1 issue 1: The Mystery of the House of Seven Gables — 4:12 Wonder Woman vol. 2 issue 32: Meanwhile… — 19:57 Wonder Woman vol. 4 issue 30: Throne to the Wolves — 30:05 Wonder Woman season 2 episode 19: Séance of Terror — 39:24 Just Imagine Stan Lee with Jim Lee Creating Wonder Woman — 1:00:33 News — 1:22:39
The House of the Seven Gables is a gothic novel written by Nathaniel Hawthorne featuring a real home in Salem, Massachusetts that he knew well. The story has ghosts as some of the characters and that seems true to life as well since there are many people who claim that the home is haunted. Join me as we explore the beliefs of Nathaniel Hawthorne and the history and hauntings of The House of the Seven Gables! The Moment in Oddity was suggested by Kim Gasiorowski and features three cages on St. Lamberti Church spire and This Month in History features Unabomber killing first victim. Our location was suggested by Nicole Cardarelli. Check out the website: http://historygoesbump.com Show notes can be found here: https://historygoesbump.blogspot.com/2018/12/ep-287-house-of-seven-gables.html Become an Executive Producer: http://patreon.com/historygoesbump Music: Vanishing by Kevin MacLeod http://incompetech.com (Moment in Oddity) In Your Arms by Kevin MacLeod http://incompetech.com (This Month in History) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ All other music licensing: PODCASTMUSIC.COM License Synchronization, Mechanical, Master Use and Performance Direct License for a Single Podcast Series under current monthly subscription. Eulogies by Mort music is Long Time Gone by 5 Alarm Music on Drones & Beyond album. Lost in the Witch's Woods by Valeriy Antonyuk on the Comic Cavalcade album.
This week! Strange Adventures 185 Cover date February 1966 Cover Price 12 cents Cover Artist: Jack Sparling Edited by Jack Schiff Featuring Star Hawkins in “Gangsters, Inc.” Writer Dave Wood, artist Gil Kane And The Immortal Man in “The Man Who Died 100 Times” Writer Dave Wood, Artist Jack Sparling Fox and the Crow 96 Cover date February/March 1966 Cover Price 12 cents Cover Artist: Jack Sparling Edited by Murray Boltinoff Featuring Stanley and his Monster in “Please Don’t Pet the Monster” writer Arnold Drake, Artist Bob Oksner Brat Finks – Don’t Knock the Rock penciled by J. Winslow Mortimer Fox and Crow – Money Mad writer Cecil Beard and Alpine Harper, art Jim Davis. Star Hawkins appeared in 21 issues of Strange Adventures, first in #114 (March 1960) in rotation with two other series, The Atomic Knights and Space Museum, and appeared in every third issue of Strange Adventures from #119 – 158. He was brought back in issue #173 (February 1965), featuring him again in every third issue until #185 (February 1966), this time all written by Dave Wood and drawn by Gil Kane. Star Hawkins never featured on the cover of Strange Adventures. Star Hawkins is a down-at-heel private investigator living in New City, Earth in the 21st Century. He is first shown in 2079, with a robot receptionist, Ilda (Robot F2324), bought from the 'Super-Secretary Robot Factory'. Because Star is always short of money, Ilda is regularly pawned (although Star always promises that was the last time). Although a sharp detective with athletic skills, it is normally Ilda who exhibits the intelligence and power to solve the crime or is critical to defeating the 'zips' (criminals), using low-powered telepathic ability— 'standard equipment in all models the year of Ilda's manufacture'—or other robot powers. Immortal Man first appeared in "I lived a Hundred Lives" in Strange Adventures #177 (June 1965), an eight-page story drawn by Jack Sparling. It is not clear who created him. Although not a regular character in the title, Immortal Man then featured in Strange Adventures #185 in a 16-page tale and Strange Adventures #190 and #198 in 12-page tales. Jack Sparling drew all four adventures, and Dave Wood wrote at least two of them (#185 and #190). Immortal Man also featured on the covers to all four issues. When he first appears in modern times, Immortal Man is an orphan named Mark with a mysterious past he has little memory of and many skills in areas such as bullfighting, Japanese Samurai culture and culinary arts without knowing why. Eventually he returns to the orphanage where he was brought up and is given a jewel amulet that shows him his past lives and powers. Shortly afterwards he instinctively uses similar powers to save a town when a reservoir bursts, but dies when a school boiler explodes during the rescue. The Fox and the Crow are a pair of anthropomorphic cartoon characters created by Frank Tashlin for the Screen Gems studio. The characters, the refined but gullible Fauntleroy Fox and the streetwise Crawford Crow, appeared in a series of animated short subjects released by Screen Gems through its parent company, Columbia Pictures, and were Screen Gems' most popular characters. Tashlin directed the first film in the series, the 1941 Color Rhapsody short The Fox and the Grapes, based on the Aesop fable of that name. Warner Bros. animation director Chuck Jones later acknowledged this short, which features a series of blackout gags as the Fox repeatedly tries and fails to obtain a bunch of grapes in the possession of the Crow, as one of the inspirations for his popular Road Runner cartoons. The Fox and the Crow were going to have a cameo in Who Framed Roger Rabbit but were dropped for reasons unknown. The Fox and the Grapes: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wWbWKNmaXp0 The Fox and the Crow starred in several funny animal comic books published by DC Comics, from the 1940s well into the 1960s. They starred with other characters in DC's Columbia-licensed funny animal anthology Real Screen Comics (first issue titled Real Screen Funnies) beginning in 1945, then did likewise when DC converted the superhero title Comic Cavalcade to a funny-animal series in 1948. The duo received its own title, The Fox and the Crow, which ran 108 issues (Jan. 1952 - March 1968). Until the 1954 demise of Comic Cavalcade, Fox and Crow were cover-featured on three DC titles. They continued on the cover of Real Screen Comics through its title change to TV Screen Cartoons from #129-138 (Aug. 1959 - Feb. 1961), the final issue. The Fox and the Crow itself was renamed Stanley and His Monster beginning with #109 (May 1968), after the back-up feature, begun in #95 (Jan. 1966), that had taken over in popularity. For the last ten years of its existence, The Fox and the Crow was written by Cecil Beard, assisted by his wife, Alpine Harper. The illustrator was Jim Davis (b. 1915), although it was generally unsigned.
This week! Strange Adventures 185 Cover date February 1966 Cover Price 12 cents Cover Artist: Jack Sparling Edited by Jack Schiff Featuring Star Hawkins in “Gangsters, Inc.” Writer Dave Wood, artist Gil Kane And The Immortal Man in “The Man Who Died 100 Times” Writer Dave Wood, Artist Jack Sparling Fox and the Crow 96 Cover date February/March 1966 Cover Price 12 cents Cover Artist: Jack Sparling Edited by Murray Boltinoff Featuring Stanley and his Monster in “Please Don’t Pet the Monster” writer Arnold Drake, Artist Bob Oksner Brat Finks – Don’t Knock the Rock penciled by J. Winslow Mortimer Fox and Crow – Money Mad writer Cecil Beard and Alpine Harper, art Jim Davis. Star Hawkins appeared in 21 issues of Strange Adventures, first in #114 (March 1960) in rotation with two other series, The Atomic Knights and Space Museum, and appeared in every third issue of Strange Adventures from #119 – 158. He was brought back in issue #173 (February 1965), featuring him again in every third issue until #185 (February 1966), this time all written by Dave Wood and drawn by Gil Kane. Star Hawkins never featured on the cover of Strange Adventures. Star Hawkins is a down-at-heel private investigator living in New City, Earth in the 21st Century. He is first shown in 2079, with a robot receptionist, Ilda (Robot F2324), bought from the 'Super-Secretary Robot Factory'. Because Star is always short of money, Ilda is regularly pawned (although Star always promises that was the last time). Although a sharp detective with athletic skills, it is normally Ilda who exhibits the intelligence and power to solve the crime or is critical to defeating the 'zips' (criminals), using low-powered telepathic ability— 'standard equipment in all models the year of Ilda's manufacture'—or other robot powers. Immortal Man first appeared in "I lived a Hundred Lives" in Strange Adventures #177 (June 1965), an eight-page story drawn by Jack Sparling. It is not clear who created him. Although not a regular character in the title, Immortal Man then featured in Strange Adventures #185 in a 16-page tale and Strange Adventures #190 and #198 in 12-page tales. Jack Sparling drew all four adventures, and Dave Wood wrote at least two of them (#185 and #190). Immortal Man also featured on the covers to all four issues. When he first appears in modern times, Immortal Man is an orphan named Mark with a mysterious past he has little memory of and many skills in areas such as bullfighting, Japanese Samurai culture and culinary arts without knowing why. Eventually he returns to the orphanage where he was brought up and is given a jewel amulet that shows him his past lives and powers. Shortly afterwards he instinctively uses similar powers to save a town when a reservoir bursts, but dies when a school boiler explodes during the rescue. The Fox and the Crow are a pair of anthropomorphic cartoon characters created by Frank Tashlin for the Screen Gems studio. The characters, the refined but gullible Fauntleroy Fox and the streetwise Crawford Crow, appeared in a series of animated short subjects released by Screen Gems through its parent company, Columbia Pictures, and were Screen Gems' most popular characters. Tashlin directed the first film in the series, the 1941 Color Rhapsody short The Fox and the Grapes, based on the Aesop fable of that name. Warner Bros. animation director Chuck Jones later acknowledged this short, which features a series of blackout gags as the Fox repeatedly tries and fails to obtain a bunch of grapes in the possession of the Crow, as one of the inspirations for his popular Road Runner cartoons. The Fox and the Crow were going to have a cameo in Who Framed Roger Rabbit but were dropped for reasons unknown. The Fox and the Grapes: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wWbWKNmaXp0 The Fox and the Crow starred in several funny animal comic books published by DC Comics, from the 1940s well into the 1960s. They starred with other characters in DC's Columbia-licensed funny animal anthology Real Screen Comics (first issue titled Real Screen Funnies) beginning in 1945, then did likewise when DC converted the superhero title Comic Cavalcade to a funny-animal series in 1948. The duo received its own title, The Fox and the Crow, which ran 108 issues (Jan. 1952 - March 1968). Until the 1954 demise of Comic Cavalcade, Fox and Crow were cover-featured on three DC titles. They continued on the cover of Real Screen Comics through its title change to TV Screen Cartoons from #129-138 (Aug. 1959 - Feb. 1961), the final issue. The Fox and the Crow itself was renamed Stanley and His Monster beginning with #109 (May 1968), after the back-up feature, begun in #95 (Jan. 1966), that had taken over in popularity. For the last ten years of its existence, The Fox and the Crow was written by Cecil Beard, assisted by his wife, Alpine Harper. The illustrator was Jim Davis (b. 1915), although it was generally unsigned.
Andy, Lex, and Carl talk about DC Trifold Covers, a weekly Avengers book, and a lot of new comics.
Andy, Lex, and Carl talk about DC Trifold Covers, a weekly Avengers book, and a lot of new comics.
Mike discusses the Flash from the first issue of Comic Cavalcade!
Remember that guy that I let read his copy of Comic Cavalcade #19 when he was drunk? He recorded part two the next morning. He had kind of a hangover, and some remorse about having bought the comic. He finishes the Flash story, and then reads a more interesting one that happens to have no superheroes in it at all.