RP: Why you never have Taco Bell prior to surgery

(From “The Beyond” number 2, 1951.)

RP: Worst. Coast Guard Commander. Ever.

(From “Keen Detective Funnies” number 21, 1940.)

META: Moving

I am moving yet again, so posting will be spotty till Saturday at the earliest. Sorry folks.

Hope you’re having a good holiday season though!

RP: I’ll take “Things That Sound Dirty” for $1000, Alex.

(From “Four Favorites” number 14.)

Character Contest 53: Bad guy

Granted, it’s called the “Hero” machine, but let’s be honest — the Flash programming environment is fairly value-neutral. Which means it’s time for you to unleash your inner bad-guy!

That’s right, your character design challenge for this week is to create the baddest of the bad-asses, the scummiest of the villainous scum, the evilest of the evil overlords! The person who submits the coolest looking, most awesome, absolutely dead-on killer criminal character will win his or her choice of a) any item or b) any portrait to be included in HeroMachine 3.

  • All entries must be in JPG or PNG form (BMPs are too big), posted to a publicly accessible website (like ImageShack, PhotoBucket, the UGO Forums, whatever);
  • Entries must be made as a comment or comments to this post, containing a link directly to the image and the character name;
  • The image cannot have been used in any previous HeroMachine character design contest — we had an “Angels and Demons” contest and a “D&D Character” contest a while back, for instance, and I don’t want repeats of stuff you already did for those;
  • Please name your files as [your name]-[character name].[file extension]. So DiCicatriz, for instance, would save his “Bayou Belle” character image as DiCicatriz-BayouBelle.png.
  • Please make the link go directly to the image (like this) and not to a hosting jump page (like this). If you see “preview” or “rotate” somewhere in the link you’re probably doing it wrong.
  • All entries must be in by next Monday, when I’ll choose a winner, who will receive his or her choice of any item or a portrait to be included in the final HeroMachine 3 program, or a “Sketch of the Week” style black and white illustration.

No limit on entries this week, so knock yourselves out. Just make them good!

RP: Inappropriate Ian strikes again

(From “Fantastic Comics” number 11, 1955.)

RP: The adventures of Lois Love, ace bondage reporter!

(From “Fantastic Comics” number 11, 1955.)

Merry Christmas from the Batman!

Courtesy of Brian Hughes at “Again With the Comics“, I present Patton Oswalt’s take on a very special Batman Christmas story to get you in the holiday spirit. Merry Christmas!





“BATMAN SMELLS”
Written by: Patton Oswalt
Drawn by: Bob Fingerman
Story scanned from Bizarro World collection, ©2005, DC Comics.

RP: No presents for you by order of the JSA!

Merry Christmas to all you Christians out there! Don’t let the primary colors fool you — not everyone dressed up in a costume today is there to GIVE you presents. Some, like Wonder Woman, Green Lantern, and the Flash are there to take them back.

(Image and characters © DC Comics.)

Best Present Ever.


Hey pal! What’s that big glowing butterknife for … ?

On Christmas Eve, I thought it would be a good time for us comic book nerds to all talk about our favorite nerdy Christmas presents ever. I’ll go first, but I really look forward to hearing some of your fondest Christmas gift memories.

Most of my super-hero memories involved laboriously tracking through the Sears Catalog (this was before the Internet, see, we actually used paper and the telephone for ordering things!), marking every Star Wars action figure I wanted. I considered myself Santa’s little helper, apparently, figuring surely he got some kind of volume discount. Plus I knew Santa didn’t really know squat about which figures were best, so he might need a hand picking the choicer ones.

I did the same thing with the MEGO 8″ tall fully articulated and clothed super-hero action figures. Those things were awesome. Unlike the Star Wars figures, which couldn’t move at the wrists or elbows or knees or ankles, these guys had joints where you needed them. And their outfits were actual sewn cloth, not molded plastic.

The highlight of Christmas morning for me was seeing which, if any, of the figures whose pages numbers and prices I’d written in a neat list for Santa showed up under the tree. Generally I’d lose at least one piece before the day was over, but that was all right; toys were to be played with, darn it, not kept in a box forever!

I still remember the Green Arrow figure, whose hat, boots, bow, quiver, and arrows all disappeared in fairly rapid fashion. Without his gear, he’s just a guy, so I decided I’d retcon him. I used Scotch tape for new, form-fitting boots over his stockings, which gave him a neat banded look. But the beard was so clearly Green Arrow, it had to go. So I heated up the electric stove, held a butter knife to it till it got really hot, and proceeded to do my best Barber of Seville imitation.

Unfortunately, eight-year-old Jeff was unaware of the finer points of shaving techniques, and used the serrated edge of the knife to remove the offending whiskers. As a result, The Green Scar Face too to the streets of my home town to fight crime. I thought the contrast between the horribly ravaged, black-edged melted face gouges and the shiny boots was particularly piquant.

What are some of your favorite geeky Christmas memories?

And I hope you spend the holiday either surrounded by beloved family and friends, or gloriously alone and untroubled by crappy family and friends! Either way, so long as YOU are happy, I am happy.

Thanks for following along on the blog this year and for sharing your thoughts and creativity with everyone. Happy Holidays and/or Merry Christmas!