Showing posts with label afro-american. Show all posts
Showing posts with label afro-american. Show all posts

Sunday, January 29, 2023

BIG APPLE COMIX "Over and Under"

Here's a fascinating side-by-side comparison...
...of life at the opposite ends of the social and financial spectrums in 1970s NYC!
The left side of the pages is illustrated by Neal Adams, the right side was penciled by Larry Hama and inked by Ralph Reese, both of whom had apprenticed under Wally Wood!
As for who wrote it, well, that's not entirely clear!
It could be the three artists co-wrote the tale (they all have solo writing credits), or any two of the three, or even any one of them..or someone else entirely, like Archie Goodwin, who also contributed to the 1975 one-shot Big Apple Comix!
I'm afraid we'll never know...
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Friday, February 26, 2021

STAR COMICS Ad-Ventures "Black Advertising Characters"

This was a weird ongoing strip showing characters used for advertising various products (food/soap/cigars/etc)...

...as performers and the audience in a circus!
In this never-reprinted short from Ultem-Centaur's Star Comics V1N03 (1937), we see Aunt Jemima...
Due to the rise of the Civil Rights movement and protests and boycotts involving such stereotypical characters, the product line was discontinued 
I'm not sure about the Black chef.
The only ones I'm familiar with are Uncle Ben (who promoted Converted Rice's rice-based products) and Rastus (who was used in Cream of Wheat ads and packaging)!
Interestingly, Aunt Jemima was sexy enough to warrant a Tijuana Bible strip about her...
...but I don't know if any other Black advertising characters had their own appearances in the infamous format!
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Friday, August 28, 2020

Trump Reading Room HELP! "Buster, Have You Ever Stomped a N---a?"

With Don da Con's administration using racist "dog whistles" to revive open racism in America...
...we're looking back at the last time such blatant stupidity went public, as Terry (Monty Python's Flying Circus) Gilliam and Dave Crossley present a never-reprinted satirical propaganda booklet which proves deeply-held con beliefs and comedy often read exactly the same, from Warren's HELP! #26 (1965), right after the Civil Rights Act was passed!
BTW, this was the final issue of the magazine, so the creatives felt they had nothing to lose and cut loose with everything they had!
The cover models are Elke Hellman and Gill Champion, with Terry Gilliam himself and Nicky Quest in the robes.
Gilliam is best-known as a writer-performer (and animator) in the Monty Python's Flying Circus ensemble, but also has numerous movie writing and directing credits including Brazil, Time Bandits, and Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas!
He was a writer/illustrator/designer/assistant editor for the last few issues of HELP!
It's frightening to see people currently-posting similar material on the internet...and believing it!
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Wednesday, February 26, 2020

SUPERBITCH the THIRD Black Superheroine! (Conclusion)

...recruited by the US government to rescue missing astronauts, SuperBitch encounters creepy cosmic perils as she retraces their route...
Sadly, this was SuperBitch's only appearance!
Written and illustrated by Ira Harmon in his only print comics work, this 1977 book was part of the output of little-known underground publisher California Comics, who specialized in scantly-clad (and unclad) action heroines!
Harmon cleaned-up the art and reissued the book as a free download HERE.
Note: We're using a scan of the original 1977 book, so it's worth your time to check out his personally-remastered version!
And, Harmon has apparently gotten back into the comics field with a new line of digital books at Reaction Comics!

Wednesday, February 28, 2018

UP YOUR NOSE AND OUT YOUR EAR "Ace of Spades II"

...actually, continuity isn't this strip's strongest point.
Just go with the flow...
You'll note the pages are, in fact, scans of the original art, not printed pages from Klevart Enterprises' Up Your Nose and Out Your Ear #2 (1972).
That's because it was easier to find them than a copy of the printed book!
(We detailed what happened when Ross Andru and Mike Esposito attempted a new Humbug/Trump/Help!-style satirical magazine HERE!)
Sadly, this was the last issue.
But, fear not!
We'll be re-presenting more kool stuff from this lost project from almost a half-century ago on this blog!
Watch for it!
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(which details the background story of Ross Andru and Mike Esposito along with info on of Ace of Spades, Up Your Nose and Out Your Ear and Klevart Enterprises!)

Friday, February 23, 2018

UP YOUR NOSE AND OUT YOUR EAR "Ace of Spades"

If there ever was a politically-incorrect superhero strip...
...it's this deliberately-inflammatory one by comics mainstays Ross Andru and Mike Esposito!
 
You'll note the pages are, in fact, scans of the original art, not printed pages from Klevart Enterprises' Up Your Nose and Out Your Ear #1 (1971).
That's because it was easier to find them than a copy of the printed book!
In the early 1970s, writer/Artist Ross Andru and artist Mike Esposito felt the time was right to try another Trump/Humbug/Help!-level b/w humor mag.
They produced two camera-ready issues of material and shopped them around to various publishers, but none were willing to take the financial risk!
So the duo self-published!
As Mike Esposito explained HERE:
"Well, we did that because we wanted to do a dissenter’s book. Dissension.
We were teed off at the world, and politics, and racial prejudice; everything that was bothering us as liberals.
We were irritated, and we wanted to make a book about it.
We put out a book called “Up Your Nose,” ... Johnny Carson used to have an expression on T.V.: “May the bird of paradise fly up your nose, and out your ear.”
So I said, “Hey. Why not? ‘Up Your Nose and Out Your Ear.’”
“It’s not bad,” Ross said, “Why not?”
So we had t-shirts with the finger going up your nose.
We sold a lot of t-shirts. The college kids loved it.
We were starting our third one with a take-off on Marlon Brando, and we were knocked out of the box because what happened was the distributor said, “We got a winner!”
He got so excited; Kable News, he called us up and said, “We’re going to bury Mad magazine!” Because he approached it as a magazine, not a comic book, like Mad magazine, and he said, “We got a winner!”
Then all of a sudden the books started coming in from Hawaii, from the west coast.
Carloads.
Because they thought it was a drug book.
And it wasn’t!
But when they heard “Up Your Nose;” cocaine.
And also, the main character was Joe Snow.
And that was his name!
My daughter knew him from school.
So he was perfect for the book, and we gave him a contract, and he appears in all the stories in photographs and we’d draw around him..."
We'll be presenting the only other adventure of Ace of Spades next week!

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(which details the background story of Ross Andru and Mike Esposito along with info on of Ace of Spades, Up Your Nose and Out Your Ear and Klevart Enterprises!)