Re: Flex and Wolter's Den of Nerdly Awesomeness
Posted: 16 May 2020, 10:39am
In that first panel he looks like he's being forced to apologize.
In that first panel he looks like he's being forced to apologize.
This is some black market human trafficking shit. Kevin is gonna be chained up in the basement.Dr. Medulla wrote: ↑18 May 2020, 8:48am
Pretty sure adopting or fostering kids, even Kevins, involves paperwork and the like. It's not like picking out a lobster from a tank at a restaurant.
That would explain all the sly grins.revbob wrote: ↑18 May 2020, 10:08amThis is some black market human trafficking shit. Kevin is gonna be chained up in the basement.Dr. Medulla wrote: ↑18 May 2020, 8:48am
Pretty sure adopting or fostering kids, even Kevins, involves paperwork and the like. It's not like picking out a lobster from a tank at a restaurant.
Ross Andru will always be my Spider-man artist. He was on Amazing when I started reading—the Doc Ock-Ghost of Hammerhead story, to be precises—so he'll always be my standard (in the same way that Gerry Conway and Len Wein are my Spidey writers).Wolter wrote: ↑17 Jul 2020, 2:58pmProbably only of real interest to Dr. Hookenstein, but today I learned these two longtime stalwarts of the Silver and Bronze Age of comics were friends since high school, and graduated together from the school of visual arts in 1948 (along with Wally Wood). Explains why they worked together for like 40 years.
. I remembered you saying that. And I’m pretty sure Esposito was his inker first most If not all of it. They were almost always paired together.Dr. Medulla wrote: ↑17 Jul 2020, 5:42pmRoss Andru will always be my Spider-man artist. He was on Amazing when I started reading—the Doc Ock-Ghost of Hammerhead story, to be precises—so he'll always be my standard (in the same way that Gerry Conway and Len Wein are my Spidey writers).Wolter wrote: ↑17 Jul 2020, 2:58pmProbably only of real interest to Dr. Hookenstein, but today I learned these two longtime stalwarts of the Silver and Bronze Age of comics were friends since high school, and graduated together from the school of visual arts in 1948 (along with Wally Wood). Explains why they worked together for like 40 years.
Yeah, on the Conway issues, I'm pretty sure. He was inking Romita and Jim Mooney as Mickey Demeo back in the 60s, too. In a way, Mike Esposito is the key figure in post-Ditko Spider-man art all the way to almost the 80s.Wolter wrote: ↑17 Jul 2020, 6:06pm. I remembered you saying that. And I’m pretty sure Esposito was his inker first most If not all of it. They were almost always paired together.Dr. Medulla wrote: ↑17 Jul 2020, 5:42pmRoss Andru will always be my Spider-man artist. He was on Amazing when I started reading—the Doc Ock-Ghost of Hammerhead story, to be precises—so he'll always be my standard (in the same way that Gerry Conway and Len Wein are my Spidey writers).Wolter wrote: ↑17 Jul 2020, 2:58pmProbably only of real interest to Dr. Hookenstein, but today I learned these two longtime stalwarts of the Silver and Bronze Age of comics were friends since high school, and graduated together from the school of visual arts in 1948 (along with Wally Wood). Explains why they worked together for like 40 years.
Fans of wild 60s DC comics probably enjoyed their run on Metal Men as well. Though the normies probably knew them for Eonder Woman.Dr. Medulla wrote: ↑17 Jul 2020, 7:02pmYeah, on the Conway issues, I'm pretty sure. He was inking Romita and Jim Mooney as Mickey Demeo back in the 60s, too. In a way, Mike Esposito is the key figure in post-Ditko Spider-man art all the way to almost the 80s.Wolter wrote: ↑17 Jul 2020, 6:06pm. I remembered you saying that. And I’m pretty sure Esposito was his inker first most If not all of it. They were almost always paired together.Dr. Medulla wrote: ↑17 Jul 2020, 5:42pmRoss Andru will always be my Spider-man artist. He was on Amazing when I started reading—the Doc Ock-Ghost of Hammerhead story, to be precises—so he'll always be my standard (in the same way that Gerry Conway and Len Wein are my Spidey writers).Wolter wrote: ↑17 Jul 2020, 2:58pmProbably only of real interest to Dr. Hookenstein, but today I learned these two longtime stalwarts of the Silver and Bronze Age of comics were friends since high school, and graduated together from the school of visual arts in 1948 (along with Wally Wood). Explains why they worked together for like 40 years.