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Crónicas Superheroicas #2.14 TEEN TITANS: LOS FABULOSOS CUATRO Con Patricio López Tobares 1964. Año de cambios culturales y revoluciones sociales. Un fabuloso cuarteto llega para darlo todo... si, The Beatles también, pero estamos hablando de Teen Titans. El primer grupo adolescente de DC llega con aires de renovación de la mano de Bob Haney, Bruno Premiani y Nick Cardy. Recorreremos la historia de la primera etapa de los héroes juveniles y también profundizaremos en la historia de sus creadores. ¡A pura música Beat! Pueden leer todas las Crónicas Superheroicas en Instagram o Facebook.
David Armstrong interviewed Nick Cardy for a second round on set in 2005 about his time at the Eisner shop, Fiction House, illustrator influences, Lou Fine, anatomy, reference, army sketch book, his Paris exhibit, Science Fiction stories, design, page rates, Brushwork, advertising, his sense of religion, and a sex comic experience at comic con. Interview conducted, recorded and copyrighted to David Armstrong. Remastered, edited, timestamped and postproduction by Alex Grand.Support the show
David Armstrong interviewed Golden and Silver Age great, Nick Cardy in 1998 on set at San Diego Comic Con about his entry into comic books in 1940, working with the Eisner & Iger shop, his influences like Gary Cooper, Noel Sickles, working at Fiction House, drafted into the Army, Tarzan and Casey Ruggles daily comic strips, entering DC Comics, interacting with Alex Toth, Jack Kirby, Neal Adams and Mike Sekowsky, working with Julius Schwartz and Carmine Infantino, working on animation, illustration and movie posters for New Line Cinema. Interview conducted, recorded and copyrighted to David Armstrong. Remastered, edited, timestamped and postproduction by Alex Grand.Support the show
Hey there all you black cats! My good pal Nis (Zen of Comics) is back, and its been far too long since he and I talked comics! So, we have a fun DC horror anthology book to talk about today! There are four stories in this book, and we definitely have our thoughts on each, and some are definitely better than others. We do both agree about the awesome cover on this one (Nick Cardy)! So, join us for this episode during this Halloween season! As usual, if you'd like to leave any feedback for the show, you can do so through email at Magazinesandmonsters@gmail.com or to me on Twitter @Billyd_licious or on the show's FB page (I'm also on BlueSky @docstrange.bsky.social). You can find Nis on Twitter @Zen_of_Comics and at his blog TheWorldofArak.com (definitely check it out!). Thanks for listening! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/magsnmonsters/message
EOC All-Timers: PLOP! #4 by Sergio Aragones, Frank Robbins, Steve Skeates, Nick Cardy, and company, Thor #337 by Walt Simonson and George Roussos/Steve Oliff, and Detective Comics #526 by Gerry Conway, Don Newton, Alfredo Alcala, and Adrienne Roy, plus a whole mess more!
A year after the death of her husband Larry Lance, Black Canary finds new love with.... LARRY LANCE!?!?! Join David, Peter and special guest Christine as they cover this exciting Bob Haney and Nick Cardy tale from Brave and Bold 91. Don't miss it! email us at theearth2podcast@gmail.com Facebook www.facebook.com/theearth2podcast Instagram www.instagram.com/theearth2podcast Twitter www.twitter.com/podcast_earth2 #dccomics #dccomicspodcast #dcmultiverse #Multiverse #JLA #JSA #JusticeLeague #JusticeSociety #bronzeagecomics #comic #Batman #BlackCanary #GreenArrow #BobHaney #NickCardy #comics
God rest ye merry Comics fans Let nothing you dismay Remember Holiday Specials to read near Christmas Day To save us from depression when serotonin's gone astray Oh tidings of comfort and joy Comfort and joy Oh tidings of comfort and joy... In this episode, Greg, Leon and Rahul are bringing the cheer once again for the Ace Comicals 2021 Christmas Special! Four seasonal titles... only one can be top of the stack and earn a full 5 "Tree Toppers" out of five... In the running we have: Christmas with the Super-Heroes #1 1988 (https://dc.fandom.com/wiki/Christmas_with_the_Super-Heroes_Vol_1_1) Christmas with the Super-Heroes #2 1989 (https://dc.fandom.com/wiki/Christmas_with_the_Super-Heroes_Vol_1_2) Superman's Christmas Adventure 1940 (https://dc.fandom.com/wiki/Superman%27s_Christmas_Adventure_Vol_1_1) The Last Christmas (https://imagecomics.com/comics/releases/the-last-christmas-hc) Send any questions or feedback to (mailto:acecomicals@gmail.com) acecomicals@gmail.com. And also please subscribe (http://www.acecomicals.com/subscribe) and leave us a review! If you like what we do please consider donating to us (https://ko-fi.com/acecomicals) at https://ko-fi.com/acecomicals. All contributions will be used to defray the cost of hosting the website. Ace Comicals, over and out!#
Vaccines are here, people are getting inoculated, and there's hope for the future. But with Covid numbers still surging around the globe, most of us are sticking close to home and avoiding crowds. And that means conventions, too. Attending comic conventions has been an integral part of fandom since the 1970s. However, with local health boards advising against large gatherings, every major convention in America has gone virtual, as in, online. So your three hosts decided it would be fun (and a little emotional, if we’re to be honest) to sit down and reminisce over some of our fondest con memories. Step into the Wayback Machine with us as Dwight describes his first Atlanta Fantasy Fair, Swain shares a HeroesCon story involving Kurt Cobain and a comic artist named Kubert, Adrian gets all nervous meeting Silver Age great Nick Cardy, and all three of us recall our favorite moments from Spectrum Fantastic Art Live.
It's time for some Sixties spy action as Aquaman and Mera go undercover to take down O.G.R.E. - the Organization for General Revenge and Enslavement! David and Peter have a ball bringing you this James Bond homage from the pen of writer 'zany' Bob Haney and the incredibly talented artist, Nick Cardy! Who is the Huntress? Why does she want to kill our heroes? Find out this episode! #aquaman #dccomics #dcmultiverse #mera #ogre #jamesbond #huntress #manfromuncle #bobhaney #nickcardy #badseanconneryimpersonation
The DC Superheroes celebrate the holidays! Featuring the talents of Denny O'Neil, Frank Miller, Len Wein, Dick Dillin, Bob Haney, Nick Cardy, Paul Levitz, José Luis García-López, Dick Giordano, E. Nelson Bridwell, Curt Swan, Murphy Anderson, Mike Friedrich + Neal Adams! Mikes EL & DELL get into the holiday spirit. Well, Mike-EL does, at least. www.ComicBookSyndicate.com
'His name is Timmy Dickens'. Regular Co-Host Dave Robertson returns to chat about 'Christmas with the Super-Heroes' from DC Comics (1988). This features a bunch of great Christmas stories featuring John Byrne, Neal Adams, Denny O'Neil, Curt Swan, Nick Cardy and Jose Luis Garcia-Lopez. It's a Christmas Miracle! You can find out more about Dave's comics here and follow him on Twitter here. Many thanks for listening.
(L to R) Superman 233, January 1971 & Superman 240, July 1971!Download Episode 393!Denny O'Neil passed away on June 11, 2020. He was born on May 3, 1939. He was a comic book writer and editor who wrote for Charlton, DC and Marvel and was an editor at both Marvel and DC. When Julius Schwartz became editor of the SUPERMAN title after Mort Weisinger's retirement, he asked Denny O'Neil to become the new writer for the series. He only lasted for a year before asking editor Schwartz to take him off the title because he found it hard to relate to an omnipotent character. This episode will feature O'Neil's Superman stories.During the 2011 MegaCon, I attended a panel that Denny O'Neil was on: EPISODE 117 PART IV: COMICS WRITERS ON THE ART OF WRITING! posted on March 29, 2011.NOTE: if you're interested in other podcasts that discussed Denny O'Neil's comic book career, check out the following episodes:- Collected Comics Library: EPISODE 530: REMEMBERING DENNY O'NEIL- Comic Geek Speak: COMIC GEEK SPEAK PRESENTS CLASSIC GEEK SPEAK: AN INTERVIEW WITH DENNY O'NEIL from 2013. - Word Balloon Podcast: EPISODE 27: DENNY O'NEIL MUST ANSWER THE QIESTION, from March 2006. DENNIS O'NEIL - OUT FROM BATMAN'S SHADOW WITH HIS AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL NOVEL, from January 23, 2018 COMICS; BATMAN IN THE O'NEIL STYLE, WITH GREG RUCKA, posted on July 2, 2020.- (9:20) Denny O'Neil's first Superman story was SUPERMAN 233, January 1971, published on November 5, 1970. It contained 32 pages for the cover price of 15¢. The cover was drawn by Neal Adams. SUPERMAN BREAKS LOOSE was written by O'Neil, pencilled by Curt Swan, inked by Murphy Anderson and lettered by Ben Oda. This story was reprinted in SUPERMAN FROM THE 30'S TO THE 70'S, SUPERMAN IN THE SEVENTIES, MILLENNIUM EDITION SUPERMAN 233 (ME 58) (which is the edition of the story I have), SUPERMAN: THE GREATEST STORIES EVER TOLD vol. II and SUPERMAN: KRYPTONITE NEVERMORE (which reprints SUPERMAN 233-238 and 240-242). The creative team remained the same for most of these issues, except where noted otherwise.- (32:27) SUPERMAN 234, February 1971, was released on December 15, 1970. HOW TO TAME A WILD VOLCANO (15 pgs.), was lettered by John Costanza. - SUPERMAN 235, March 1971, was published on January 12, 1971. The cover was pencilled by Carmine Infantino and inked by Neal Adams. THE SINISTER SCREAM OF THE DEVIL'S HARP was 22 pages long. - SUPERMAN 236, April 1971, was released on February 9, 1971. PLANET OF THE ANGELS (15 pgs.), also lettered by John Costanza, was also reprinted in BEST OF DC 12 in 1981. - SUPERMAN 237, May 1971, was published on March 16, 1971. ENEMY OF THE EARTH (22 pgs.), was also lettered by John Costanza. - SUPERMAN 238, June 1971, was released on April 15, 1971. The cover was pencilled by Carmine Infantino and inked by Murphy Anderson. MENACE AT 1000 DEGREES (15 pgs.), was also lettered by John Costanza.SUPERMAN 239, June/July 1971, was published on April 6, 1971. It was a 64 Page Giant for the cover price of 25¢. The .cover was pencilled by Curt Swan and inked by Murphy Anderson. This issue contained four stories of Superman's Greatest Battles.- (48:29) SUPERMAN 240, July 1971, was released on May 13, 1971. The cover was pencilled by Carmine Infantino and inked by Neal Adams. TO SAVE A SUPERMAN (15 pgs.), was inked by Dick Giordano and inked by John Costanza.- (1:04:47) SUPERMAN 241, August 1971, was published on June 15, 1971. It contained 48 pgs. for the cover price of a quarter. THE SHAPE OF FEAR was 22 pages long. - SUPERMAN 242, September 1971, was released on July 13, 1971. It contained 48 pages for the cover price of 25¢. THE ULTIMATE BATTLE was 22 pages long. This story was the final part of the KRYPTONITE NEVERMORE storyline. - SUPERMAN 244, November 1971, was published on September 16, 1971 (11 days before my 11th birthday). It contained 48 pages for the cover price of a quarter. The cover was pencilled by Curt Swan and inked by Murphy Anderson. THE ELECTRONIC GHOST OF METROPOLIS (24 pgs.), was lettered by John Costanza. - SUPERMAN 247, January 1972, was released on November 11, 1971. It contained 48 pages for the cover price of 25¢. The cover was pencilled by Curt Swan and inked by Murphy Anderson. Denny O'Neil wrote the second of the issue's three stories. WHEN ON EARTH, the first installment of the series THE PRIVATE LIFE OF CLARK KENT. This story was pencilled by Curt Swan and inked by Murphy Anderson. - SUPERMAN 253, June 1972, was published on April 13, 1972. This issue contained 48 pages for the cover price of a quarter. The cover was drawn by Nick Cardy. Denny O'Neil wrote the issue's first of three stories, THE KID WHO SAVED SUPERMAN, which was 22 pages long. - SUPERMAN 254, July 1972, was released on May 11, 1972. This issue contained 32 pages for the cover price of 20¢. Denny O'Neil's final Superman story was titled, THE KID WHO STOLE SUPERMAN'S POWERS. This story was 15 pages long.Next Episodes: SUPERMAN FAMILY COMIC BOOKS COVER DATED MARCH 1966: PART I: SUPERMAN'S PAL JIMMY OLSEN 91, PART II: ACTION COMICS 334 (80 Pg. Giant starring Supergirl), PART III: WORLD'S FINEST COMICS 156 & PART IV: ACTION COMICS 335!The home for THE SUPERMAN FAN PODCAST is http://thesupermanfanpodcast.blogspot.com. Send e-mail to supermanfanpodcast@gmail.com.You can join the SUPERMAN FAN PODCAST Group or Page on facebook, and follow the podcast on twitter @supermanpodcast. You can also keep track of the podcast on Tumblr, Medium, Flipboard, the Internet Archive, tunein, Stitcher and Instagram.SUPERMAN FAN PODCAST is a proud member of:- The LEAGUE OF COMIC BOOK PODCASTERS and- The COMICS PODCAST NETWORK.The theme of this podcast is PLANS IN MOTION, composed by Kevin MacLeod, and part of the royalty free music library at http://incompetech.com. "Plans in Motion" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/Superman and all related characters are trademark and copyright DC Comics. Any art shown on this podcast is for entertainment purposes only, and not for profit. I make no claims of ownership of these images, nor do I earn any money from this podcast.If you are interested in my artwork, go to wayfarerercomics.wordpress.com. I am available for commissions, so click on the Art Commissions tab for more information. If interested, send an e-mail to wayfarercomics@gmail.com.Thanks for listening to the SUPERMAN FAN PODCAST and, as always, thanks to Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, creators of Superman!And don't forget to take care of each other out there.
Love is in the air, and the Bronze Age Book Club got is giving you YOUNG LOVE #112 (1974) for Valentine's Day! This 100-page spectacular features the art of Nick Cardy, Win Mortimer, Ric Estrada, and Vince Colletta. Plus, there's "Marc--On the Man's Side," one of the most bizarre letter columns ever!
TREASURYCAST #28 - GHOSTS It's that spooky time of year again, so Fire and Water Network All-Star Ryan Daly is back to take a look at LIMITED COLLECTORS' EDITION #C32 - GHOSTS, featuring work by Nick Cardy, Jim Aparo, Tony De Zuniga, Jerry Grandinetti, George Tuska, and more! Check out images from this comic by clicking here! E-MAIL: firewaterpodcast@comcast.net Follow TREASURYCAST on Twitter: @TreasuryComics Subscribe to TREASURYCAST on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/treasurycast/id1166726594 Opening theme by Luke Daab: http://daabcreative.com This podcast is a proud member of the FIRE AND WATER PODCAST NETWORK: Visit the Fire & Water WEBSITE: http://fireandwaterpodcast.com Follow Fire & Water on TWITTER – https://twitter.com/FWPodcasts Like our Fire & Water FACEBOOK page – https://www.facebook.com/FWPodcastNetwork Use our HASHTAG online: #FWPodcasts Thanks for listening! Go big or go home!
Marv Wolfman, George Perez, Geoff Johns, Tom Grummett, Devin Grayson, Nick Cardy, Neal Adams, Phil Jimenez, Dan Jurgens, Scott Lobdell, Dan Abnett, Jose Luis García-López, Paul Pelletier, Eduardo Barreto... Mencionar a todos ellos es hablar de los Titanes. Hablar de los Jóvenes Titanes (Teen Titans en inglés). Y de eso hemos querido hablar. Como no nos faltan oportunidades para ponernos nostálgicos, hemos querido aprovechar el estreno de la nueva serie de televisión de Los Titanes del servicio de streaming de DC/Warner y nos hemos lanzado a la piscina para charlar, reflexionar y recordar la trayectoria editorial de este grupo de DC Comics. Nightwing, Donna Troy, Starfire, Beast Boy, Raven, Arsenal, Kid Flash, Lilith, Terra, Cyborg...Protagonistas de una de las mejores etapas longevas jamás publicadas en los cómics de la editorial (para más de uno es, sin duda, la mejor, y será dificil rebatíselo) nos hemos puesto manos a la obra. Además, heoms acompañado el podcast con una pequeña crítica con nuestras primeras impresiones sobre la propia serie de televisión, con dos capítulos ya emitidos a la hora de publicar este podcast.
Marv Wolfman, George Perez, Geoff Johns, Tom Grummett, Devin Grayson, Nick Cardy, Neal Adams, Phil Jimenez, Dan Jurgens, Scott Lobdell, Dan Abnett, Jose Luis García-López, Paul Pelletier, Eduardo Barreto... Mencionar a todos ellos es hablar de los Titanes. Hablar de los Jóvenes Titanes (Teen Titans en inglés). Y de eso hemos querido hablar. Como no nos faltan oportunidades para ponernos nostálgicos, hemos querido aprovechar el estreno de la nueva serie de televisión de Los Titanes del servicio de streaming de DC/Warner y nos hemos lanzado a la piscina para charlar, reflexionar y recordar la trayectoria editorial de este grupo de DC Comics. Nightwing, Donna Troy, Starfire, Beast Boy, Raven, Arsenal, Kid Flash, Lilith, Terra, Cyborg...Protagonistas de una de las mejores etapas longevas jamás publicadas en los cómics de la editorial (para más de uno es, sin duda, la mejor, y será dificil rebatíselo) nos hemos puesto manos a la obra. Además, heoms acompañado el podcast con una pequeña crítica con nuestras primeras impresiones sobre la propia serie de televisión, con dos capítulos ya emitidos a la hora de publicar este podcast.
Join us Live at San Diego Comic Con 2018 with your favorite CBHer's Alex Grand, Jim Thompson and Bill Field for a sit down podcast interview with Arlen Schumer, published Comic Book Historian and Silver Age expert as we discuss Marvel Comics 1965 to 1968 ranging from Jim Steranko to Jack Kirby, to Nick Cardy to Wally Wood to Neal Adams and many others. Robot Coupe - Lost European - Standard License, The Silver Age of Comic Book Art ©Schumer. Support us at https://www.patreon.com/comicbookhistoriansPodcast and Audio ©℗ 2019 Comic Book HistoriansSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/comicbookhistorians)
Batman team-ups from the 1970s including Batman tries to exorcize himself of the ghost of a Portuguese sailor, trying to foster mutual understanding between adults and some well-intentioned teenagers who are holding Gotham City hostage with a nuclear bomb!And will the Metal Men refuse to help Batman because of robot lib?Affiliate link added. Transcript below:Batman joins forces with the fastest man alive! Killers[?] from another dimension and three random British people. We'll tell you all about it as we look at Showcase Presents Brave and the Bold: Batman Team Ups Volume Two.Welcome to the Classy Comics Podcast where we search for the best comics in the universe. From Boise, Idaho here's your host, Adam Graham.I love a good team up book and DC was kind of the leader in getting those started. They had the original monthly team up between Batman and Superman in World's Finest. In the Silver Age they took Brave and the Bold, what had been a series with a colored past and various formats – more recently a tryout book like Showcase Presents, and the featured team ups between various superheroes. Batman team ups begin to dominate, and then with Issue Seventy-Four it became an exclusive Batman team up book. I am reviewing this using Showcase Presents the Brave and the Bold: Batman Team Ups Volume Two, but there have been some more modern collections from DC called Brave and the Bold: The Bronze Age Omnibus and then just plain Brave and the Bold. Bronze Age, the one that's the Omnibus takes Issue Seventy-Four and goes all the way up to Issue 121, while the Brave and the Bold goes from Seventy-Four to Ninety-One.Now while these stories are set in where many define the Bronze Age to be – they were written in the 1970s and the art reflects a lot of that '70s artistic style, particularly in this collection. You have art by Ross Andru and then Nick Cardy, they fully invested into the 1970s style. However, a lot of the stories have a Silver Age feel to them. At this point the comics were changing – there was more of a focus on being a little more grown up, not talking down to kids; and Marvel had captured the imagination of a lot of older kids by – while still being fairly family friendly by modern standards – also being a bit more grown up. DC is trying to do this, and there's a sense of trying to be a bit more mature, but there's still this underlying layer of goofiness that comes off so often. And it's not like the intentional goofiness of the '60s stories, so there can be some of these that are just a bit awkward. That said, we're going to take a look at the first few issues. I won't cover every single team up. Someone not particularly impressive either as good or bad.Most of these – with one exception…all of these actually are written by Bob Haney – the art is by various people: Nick Cardy is on most of the ones that we cover here. Issue Eighty-Eight was a notable, ‘Count Ten and Die' because it had Wildcat, i.e. Ted Grant, a former boxer meeting up with Batman, and Batman bringing him out of retirement both as a boxer/boxing coach and eventually as Wildcat. And it's a fun adventure that involves Batman and Wildcat having to contend with the Soviet propaganda machine. I enjoyed that one pretty well. IIssue Ninety is another one of those stories which really is not so much a Bronze Age story as it is a Silver Age story with a bronze coat of paint. Adam Strange is the guest character and I love Adam Strange. He is this character who was on earth and hit by a Zeta beam that took him across the galaxy, and he goes to this planet Rann where he is a hero who manages to save the day. And he's continually being shot back and forth between Rann and Earth by the Zeta beam. Anyway, the Zeta beam sends Adam Strange into the future,
On this interview episode, Andy and Derek are pleased to have as their guest Arlen Schumer. His book, The Silver Age of Comic Book Art, has recently been released in a beautiful, new revised edition from Archway Publishing. It originally came out in 2003 as a softcover, with a hardbound companion that included an extra section, but in this revised edition Schumer includes all the material from the longer hardbound release, but with brighter images and cleaner type. The result is a unique visual experience, a text on comics art history in the form of a coffee table book. As the guys point out in their discussion, this is the kind of book that every comics aficionado will want to get, and the perfect gift for anyone unfamiliar with the medium but interested in the many forms of American art. The Two Guys kick off the conversation by asking Arlen how he defines the Silver Age, and he argues that while everyone can agree that it began in 1956 with the publication of Showcase #4, the era ended in 1970, a watershed year that inaugurated the way we read comics today. Then they get into the particulars of the book, Arlen's chapter-by-chapter visual study of legends Carmine Infantino, Steve Ditko, Jack Kirby, Gil Kane, Joe Kubert, Gene Colan, Jim Steranko, and Neal Adams. They spend quite a bit of time discussing the work of Infantino, Colan, and Adams (one of Arlen's favorites), but the artist they spend the most time exploring is Gil Kane. In fact, on the topic of Kane's art -- specifically, the way he rendered punches -- Andy is able to flex his superhero acumen in ways he normally doesn't on the podcast. The guys also talk with Arlen about the creators he didn't have the room to explore in the book, many of whom receive some attention in the final "More Masters" chapter of the book: Murphy Anderson, Wally Wood, John Buscema, Nick Cardy, and Curt Swan. In many ways, this is a departure for The Comics Alternative, a podcast devoted to non-mainstream, non-superhero comics, but given the significance of this book as both a work of art and a necessary critical/historical text, the guys just had to have Schumer on their show.
It's our annual Thanksgiving Week gobble-gobble gabfest, and we welcome a special guest to the table, our old friend Scott Powers, to partake in a bounteous banquet of babble! Topics on the menu include the passing of Nick Cardy; the return of MST3K Turkey Day; the Bat-Kid of San Francisco; recently announced comic book cancellations and revivals; a marathon of 'Muddle the Murd' misfires; and a heaping helping of TV talk (with spoiler sauce!) covering 'Arrow,' 'The Walking Dead,' 'Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.,' and 'American Horror Story.' This one's got everything but the cranberry sauce! (1:39:47)
This episode Rob and Shag dive into the first AQUAMAN ANNUAL in 15 years! Next we remember the legendary Nick Cardy. The show wraps up with a discussion about DC moving their offices to the west coast.
Collected editions are up first in the episode as Billy Z, Justin and Bryan are joined by former DC Comics collected editions editor Bob Joy! Bob offers up his insights into collected editions and discusses his experiences editing various books during his tenure at DC. Then we shift over to news of DC's move to Burbank and the passing of Nick Cardy. From there we go into current comic talk, discussing Battle of the Atom, Infinity and Amazing X-Men from Marvel, Sex Criminals and Velvet from Image and DC's Forever Evil. At various points in the cast you will also hear us discuss tranny Jimmy Olsen, Spooky Bear in Provincetown, the Skip Ender's Game events, Greg Rucka, DC Showcase Presents releases, Supergirl as a teen model, the late 70's New Gods revival by Gerry Conway and Don Newton, The Adventures of Superman radio show, Ed McGuinness, Afterlife with Archie and a helluva lot more. In the mood to play a drinking game as you listen? Then take a shot every time Billy Z says "esoteric".
The Subs battle through technical difficulties to say goodbye to two old friends, the first, a character in the Legion, as Invisible Kid meets his demise, and the second, as Superboy and the Legion cover artist, and comic book legend Nick Cardy, passed away while this episode was being recorded. RIP Nick.
Get ready for a very special episode of THE FIRE AND WATER PODCAST! In this show Rob chats with legendary Aquaman artist Nick Cardy! Recorded in September 2011, Nick talks about Aquaman, comics, his career as an artist, and his experiences in WWII.
In The Brave and the Bold #60, Tom looks at the second Teen Titans tryout issue, which introduces the character-that-should-not-be: Wonder Girl. It also begins the association of the title with artist supreme Nick Cardy, and depicts an epic battle between surfboarding teens and a giant who can separate his body into different body parts. Plus Hondas. Lots of Hondas.
In The Brave and the Bold #60, Tom looks at the second Teen Titans tryout issue, which introduces the character-that-should-not-be: Wonder Girl. It also begins the association of the title with artist supreme Nick Cardy, and depicts an epic battle between surfboarding teens and a giant who can separate his body into different body parts. Plus Hondas. Lots of Hondas.
In The Brave and the Bold #60, Tom looks at the second Teen Titans tryout issue, which introduces the character-that-should-not-be: Wonder Girl. It also begins the association of the title with artist supreme Nick Cardy, and depicts an epic battle between surfboarding teens and a giant who can separate his body into different body parts. Plus Hondas. Lots of Hondas.
In The Brave and the Bold #60, Tom looks at the second Teen Titans tryout issue, which introduces the character-that-should-not-be: Wonder Girl. It also begins the association of the title with artist supreme Nick Cardy, and depicts an epic battle between surfboarding teens and a giant who can separate his body into different body parts. Plus Hondas. Lots of Hondas.