“Yesterday’s” Comic> Exciting Comics #1

“That’s not a manbun, you fraud!”

Exciting Comics #1

Better Publications, Inc (April, 1940)

Another new title enters the game, not to be confused by a similar titled comic by Antarctic Press I just learned about. Yep, it’s an anthology. What do we expect. I write this before reading it, but going over the story list I don’t recognize any of the character names. Outside of Klaus Nordling I don’t recognize any name here, and I only know that one from other Golden Age comics I’ve reviewed. So we’ll just have to see how “exciting” these comics are if they didn’t release any famous heroes but lasted 69 issues.

By the way, those of you who actually read this feature here at the Spotlight will want to check out Sunday’s update, usually mixed into the Jake & Leon posting. “Yesterday’s” Comic isn’t going away but there’s going to have to be a change in how I do this. Archival readers won’t care so check that out, or the Programming Note on Sunday if I don’t get the comic done. For now, let’s meet the new kids on the block and see why they didn’t have the right stuff. (Look, someone was going to make that reference.)

[Read along with me here]

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BW’s Daily Video> Doctor Who Was Weird About Black People

Catch more from Zero Woolfe on YouTube

Finally, someone else bringing this up. Also don’t forget that one of 13’s Companions was married to a black woman and she died the same episode. You have to be gay to survive being the black person in an interracial relationship on modern Doctor Who. Interspecies relationships, however, are totally allowed.

Helen Slater Talking Supergirl

If you’ve followed this website long enough, my saying “I really like the 1980s Supergirl movie shouldn’t surprise you. Helen Slater was great in the role, Faye Dunaway made a good villainess who’s in over her head in her pursuit for power, and the effects are as good as…most of the Superman movies from the Salkinds. Plus they did more with Jimmy Olsen in this movie than in all four Superman movies…not that he did much here, either. Poor Mark McClure never got to be as big as Christopher Reeve and Margo Kidder. It might not be a popular opinion on the internet…but when has that stopped me?

Slater would probably be more known for her role in The Legend Of Billie Jean, where she played a girl who grew two spines and told ACTUAL toxic men what to do with themselves, at least from what little I’ve watched of it. Today that movie would come off as intersectional feminist garbage but back then you were on her side. She wasn’t done being tied to Kara, though. She played Kara’s adoptive Earth mom in the Supergirl TV series, apparently played Kal-El’s space mom after I stopped watching Smallville, and she was at least acknowledged in The Flash for what little that crap was worth. Sadly we’ll be coming back to that.

First, our context: this interview with The Hollywood Reporter in which they ask her about the 2026 totally-not-James-Gunn version, her CG cameo, and her time making the 1984 movie. It’s another example of how actors do not approach stories the same way fans do, or she’s just trying to be professional. Possibly both.

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> Sesame Street: Grover Lends A Hand

“Oh, you already have hands.” Wait, is that Little Bird? I thought he died or something!

Sesame Street: Grover Lends A Hand

Oni Press (June, 2025)

WRITER: Joey Esposito

ARTIST: Austin Baechle

COLORIST: Alessandro Santoro

COVER ART: Erin Hunting

LETTERER: Shawn Lee

EDITOR: Megan Brown

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BW’s Daily Video> More Sony Diskless Fallout

Note: angry swearing British man

Catch more from HeelvsBabyface on YouTube

I don’t know if this info will be proven false by the time this post goes live, but if it’s true then it’s kind of suspicious.

Free Comic Inside> Sweetbee Visits Catra’s Treehouse

Free Comic Inside logo

It’s been a while since we visited the minicomic version of Etheria and the girly psycho that is the Princess Of Power version of She-Ra. We’ve seen her turn many beings into butterflies, cat men to stone, and make friends with someone who will make their enemies go into emotional shock over dress-up clothes buried in the backyard. Minicomics Etheria is weird.

In our latest outing our focus is on Sweetbee, the bee girl. We also get to meet the minicomics version of Entrapta, and if you only know her from the Netflix show, as I don’t remember her being part of the original cartoon that much, you’re in for a surprise. This is the girls division of Mattel trying to regain their #1 status when He-Man took the title from Barbie, which isn’t what Filmation was thinking when they saw all the girls who liked the strong women of planet Deathtrap Eternia and cheered them on. In the show it’s a battle to reclaim their planet. Here, Bow just got too close to Catra’s treehouse. It’s going to get very girly up in here.

I wonder if Sweetbee ever met Buzz-Off?

Princess Of Power series 2 #4

Mattel (1986)

“A Born Champion”

WRITER: Tina Harris

PENCILER: Jim Mitchell

INKER: Todd Kurosawa

COLORIST: Charles Simpson

EDITORS: Joan Dumbauld & Lee Nordling

no letterer credited

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> Police Comics #12

Don’t be too impressed. On his first try he broke the header logo.

Police Comics #12

Comic Magazines, Inc (October, 1942)

Plastic Man’s dominating the next few covers so we’ll just discuss one of the other characters. What happened with Chic Carter? Granted the Sword wasn’t much of a hero identity, though the idea of a fencing superhero could have worked. I have to wonder if the creator(s) wanted another superhero, couldn’t figure out what to do with him, and just gave up the costume thing and simply let Chic be another action reporter? They must have been doing okay with him since as Chic alone he’s part of this series and another future Quality Comics title, Smash Comics.

And yet, if DC bought him as well I don’t know of them doing anything with him or The Sword. The DC Database doesn’t even bother doing anything other than acknowledge he was part of Quality Comics when DC bought the rights to many of the characters. His story may be a mystery even he couldn’t solve. Anyway, let’s see what he and the other not-police characters do in Police Comics.

[Read along with me here]

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