Sunday, July 19, 2015

Design of the Week "DIARY SECRETS: OH, JIM, IF ONLY WE COULD!"

Each week, we post a limited-edition design, to be sold for exactly 7 days, then replaced with another.
This week, put a "beach read" retro romance comic book cover on your beach blanket, t-shirt, canvas bag, e-reader, and other stuff!
Enjoy...and make sure you have plenty of drinks.
Gotta keep hydrated in this heat!

Saturday, July 18, 2015

Reading Room: SPACE PATROL "Gambling Den of Space"

Here's a tale featuring an evil Plutonian who runs a mobile gambling den...
...from a short-lived series about a pair of interstellar cops in Centaur's Amazing Mystery Funnies!
(Does Kodi look like a prototype for Star Trek: the Next Generation's Ferengi?)
The multi-talented Basil Wolverton wrote, illustrated, lettered, and probably colored, this tale from Amazing Mystery Funnies #22 (1940).
It's one of the first of the "law enforcement in space" sub-genre that prospered in pulp and comic sci-fi in the 1930s and 40s, and carried over to TV in the 1950s.
Note: the 1950s TV/radio series Space Patrol was not based on Wolverton's strip.
(Could you imagine them trying to do the aliens in the gambling ship using 1950s-level makeup techniques?)

Friday, July 17, 2015

Reading Room NORGE BENSON "Frozen Famine"

Let's visit Pluto, world of talking penguins...
...as stranded spaceman Norge Benson's existence may come to an end since the food supply on the frozen world seems to be running out!
As you can see, life on Pluto had its' charms back in 1942, as this never-reprinted tale from Fiction House's Planet Comics #16 proves!
Artist Al Walker and whoever was scripting under the name "Olaf Bjorn" did a heck of a job with this whimsical tale, providing comedy relief amidst all the deadly-series tales of space emperors and alien invasions.

Thursday, July 16, 2015

Norge Benson and the Penguins of Pluto

Yep, you read that right...
Pluto's inhabited by intelligent, talking penguins.
Lots of them!
Some are "hoodlums" who wear sweatshirts and newsboy caps and talk with thick Brooklyn accents!
Didn't know that, did you?
The Cosmo Corrigan strip proved to be less than a smash hit, so the editors retooled the concept, adding even more juvenile humor (plus a talking polar bear and penguins) and dropping the sexual innuendo and frat-boy antics, while renaming the lead "Norge Benson" and having him crash-land on Pluto, rather than simply being assigned there to get him out of his superiors' hair!
The new character was still what we politely call a "doofus", but Norge proved to be far more popular than Cosmo, lasting for almost two dozen appearances!
We've run four of his never-reprinted tales HERE, and we'll be presenting another on Friday!

Wednesday, July 15, 2015

The Saga of Cosmo Corrigan on Pluto!

The Life on Other Worlds feature about Pluto wasn't Planet Comics' first look at that frozen world...
The editors of Planet Comics gave two different characters their own strips set on the most recently-discovered planet in our Solar System.
However, unlike most of the deadly-serious features of the period, these strips played both series as sci-fi sitcoms, starring "heroes" who could best be described as spacegoing slackers, or "party animals of the galaxy"!

You can read the complete run of the first guy, Cosmo Corrigan, HERE, HERE, and HERE.
Yeah, he only lasted three issues.
Then be back tomorrow as we introduce you to his even lazier and loonier successor, Norge Benson!