Category Archives: Uncategorized

“A Poison Tree,” by William Blake

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Guilty as charged.

But, in my defense, let me point out that Batman is (arguably) the most capable hero in the DC pantheon because he has a contingency plan for ANYthing — even something like Superman going rogue and becoming a villain.

M’ jus’ sayin’.



Cover to “The Witching Hour” #13, Neal Adams, 1971

DC Comics.

Now weight just a minute …

From 159 lbs. on January 1 to 145.8 this morning.

Right — not amazing.  (And I am obviously no Chris Hemsworth.)  But it’s good for me.

I tried everything — including regularly walking five miles at a stretch.  I actually GAINED weight.  (There’s this weird, irresistible instinct that makes you EAT more, because you’re going on a long journey.  I call it “hobbit syndrome.”  Seriously!)

The ONLY way I could lose any weight was with calisthenics.  Old school.



Cover to “Mister Mystery #1,” Ross Andru & Mike Esposito, 1951

Aragon Publications.

Care for a ride-along with Charles Bukowski?

You can take a six-minute tour with Buk through his Hollywood neighborhood, courtesy of this short film uploaded by AceVideos on Daily Motion:

Touring Hollywood with Charles Bukowski



Cover to “Grendel: God and the Devil” #2, John K. Snyder III, 2003

Dark Horse Comics’ 2003 limited series was a reprint of issues #24 to #33 (1988 to 1990) from Comico’s original publication of “Grendel.”

Source: A Debt Paid in Ink: the Writing of Clyde Hurlston

Throwback Thursday: this unfortunate 1984 ad for the network premiere of “Alien” (1979)

If you are even remotely familiar with Ridley Scott’s “Alien,” then you know that ABC’s marketing staff was not.

John Hurt is looking pretty spry.  (At least they had the good sense to leave Ian Holm and Veronica Cartwright out of this mess.)

Anyway … did it really take “Alien” five years to reach network television?  I seem to remember (falsely, I suppose) that it hit TV when I was still a very young child.  Yes, HBO carried it only a year after its theatrical release — maybe that’s what I’m remembering.  (People just called it “Home Box” back in the day.  Being a little kid, I thought they meant the physical “box” –the converter — that sat atop the television.)

Yet I also seem to recall my family having Showtime, but not HBO … and people on my street still just called any premium channel “Home Box?”  Whatever … it was a verrrry long time ago, and I wasn’t the brightest kid out there, anyway.



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