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Wednesday, April 7, 2010

The True Story of Batman and Robin: How A Big Time Comic Is Born! (1946)



From Real Fact Comics #5, comes a contractually obligated DC party line story on the creation of Batman. It’s fun to note that Bob Kane had nothing to do with this feature.


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Plus - Some nonsense filler from the same issue:

Real Fact Comics #5, 1946. (C) DC Comics.
Script by Jack Schiff; Mort Weisinger, & Bernie Breslauer; Art by Win Mortimer


Sunday, April 4, 2010

Behold! The Forbidden Dimension!


Tom Bagley (aka Jackson Phibes) has been producing great art AND great music as the de facto leader of Calgary’s own horror-themed rock ‘n roll band, Forbidden Dimension. His art graces some the best indie LP covers and his gig posters (like these) are things of beauty.






Check out more art by Tom at Tom-Bagley.com and check the band out at their MySpace site. Don’t forget to follow Tom and 6(+) of his fellow sinners at the 7 Deadly Sinners blog

If the film Carnival of Souls was a rock band it would be Forbidden Dimension!


Did someone mention Vaughn Bode?

Friday, April 2, 2010

I Was Big-Game On Neptune (1958) by Jack Kirby




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My Greatest Adventure # 20 (1958), © DC Comics
Art by Jack Kirby


Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Inaugurated This Day (1889): The Eiffel Tower

In 1889, the Eiffel Tower, Paris, France, was inaugurated, becoming the world's tallest tower of its era. With a height of 300-m (986-ft), it remained the world's tallest structure until surpassed by the Empire State Building, 40 years later. The designer Alexandre Gustave Eiffel, 56, celebrated by unfurling a French flag at the top of the tower.

The immense iron latticework design was chosen unanimously from 700 proposals submitted in a competition. Construction took from 26 Jan 1887 to 31 Mar 1889, using 300 steel workers. It was erected for the Paris Exposition of 1889, which had 1,968,287 visitors. link

A very young version of The Pixies tip their collective hats to Alex Eiffel:

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Friday, March 19, 2010

We Found The Super-Tribes of Tomorrow (1963) by Alex Toth




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My Greatest Adventure #77 (March 1963) © DC Comics
Art by Alex Toth



LIKE THIS?: Read The Spookman!

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Blackhawk “Madame Butterfly” (1948) by Reed Crandall (plus Jack Cole)



Even though evolutionary biologists have long recognized the size discrepancy (sexual dimorphism) between male and female animals, they have struggled for decades to solve a major paradox: How can males and females of one species be of different sizes, given that they share the same genetic blueprints dictating their development and growth?


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To solve the problem researchers followed more than 1,200 caterpillars of the giant hawk moth (Manduca sexta) from the time they hatched, all the way through four molts and until they pupated.

Stillwell and Davidowitz discovered that female caterpillars initiate final larval stage a bit later than the males. By the time the female caterpillars pupate, they are larger, making for larger moths when they emerge.





So where is the advantage in being larger if you're a female insect?

"Biologists think selection favors large females because they can produce more offspring," Stillwell said. link




Modern Comics #78 (Oct. 1948); © DC Comics (probably).
Pencils by Reed Crandall; Inks by Chuck Cuidera


(Is it just me or do those henchmen look too much like they should be working for The Monarch from the Venture Bros. series?)
Ref.: A developmental perspective on the evolution of sexual size dimorphism of a moth. 2010. R. C.Stillwell and G, Davidowitz. Proc. Roy. Soc. B, published online before print on March 10.


Plus, from the same issue, a one-page gag strip by Jack Cole: