The Many, MANY Intros Of Spider-Man: I Want My MTV

As Sam Rami was successfully dropping his take on Spider-Man and showing that a fairly adapted comic story could work in movies (frankly, he took more from Ultimate Spider-Man, and the organic “webshooters” still make no sense), MTV saw a way to cash in. By this point “Music Television” was no longer about music, so they could show anything. Reality shows and teen drama like the re-imagined Teen Wolf seems to be all they’re known for now, and their take on Spider-Man, known as Spider-Man: The New Animated Series to set it apart from the Fox Kids show, was their way of doing it.

The show itself comes from Mainframe Entertainment, the folks behind the 1990s Transformers cartoons and Reboot. However, MTV wanted to get as many celebrity voices as they could. So you had Neil Patrick Harris doing a fair job as Peter, singer Lisa Loeb doing a surprising turn as Mary Jane, and Ian Ziering showing his voice acting is better than his live-action (he did a better job as Nick Tatopoulos in Godzilla: The Animated Series if you ask me) as Harry Osborn. Guest voices would also feature a lot of celebs, but my favorite Peter, Rino Romano, did cameo now and then as a food cart vendor. Even Christopher Daniel Barnes got in there, and it would have been a nice nod to get other previous Peters in there at some point. Maybe if it had made season two?

Beats me, we’re here for the intro. From the start you see that this show had a slightly different art style from other Mainframe shows.

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> Knuckles The Echidna #11

“What do you know? The floor really is lava.”

Knuckles The Echidna #11

Archie Comic Publications (April, 1998)

“The Forgotten Tribe” part 2: “Covenant”

WRITER: Ken Penders

PENCILER: Manny Galan

INKER: Andrew Pepoy

COLORIST: Barry Grossman

LETTERER: Vickie Williams

EDITOR: J. Freddy Gabrie

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BW’s Daily Video> MatPat Leaves The Theorist Game

Catch more from MatPat (and his eventual replacement) and the Game Theorists on YouTube

I hope this new direction fares better than Extra Credits after Dan left.

Why I’m Done-ish With Doctor Who

the alternate 8th Doctor

I think it was some time in 1984 that a friend of mine told us about a science fiction show he saw on PBS called Doctor Who that he said was really good. At the time it aired when my family was eating dinner and the VCR wasn’t an option, so it took some time before I finally got to see an episode, and longer before I was able to watch it regularly, when TV schedules and eating schedules didn’t overlap. Once I got to see it regularly, I was in. It was a great show, the TARDIS was cool, and he had a robot dog for awhile. K9 is still my favorite Companion.

I also liked how malleable a show it was, even for sci-fi. That’s one of the reasons I’m such a huge fan of the genre: sci-fi can be or imitate any other fiction and when done well does so seamlessly. I’m one of the few people who likes the episode “Black Orchid” because even though the only sci-fi element were the time travelers, most of whom were from space, doing a simple and strange murder mystery didn’t feel out of place to me. Then they just went back to dealing with the usual cyborgs, monsters, and near godlike beings as usual. Each serial was a different adventure, with continuity coming from being the same people going to the next adventure or transitioning to new characters and new Doctors. Regeneration also kept the Doctor himself fresh.

I was disappointed when it ended, especially since my local PBS station ended on “Dragonfire”, Ace’s debut and Mel’s departure, when I knew more episodes were being made in the UK. Even that I only saw in a final marathon of Seventh Doctor episodes. I enjoyed the TV movie, but because Fox did their usual whammy on sci-fi (I’m surprised The Orville made it past season one), it didn’t go further than that.

Then the new series was announced. AND it would air on The Sci-Fi Channel, meaning I’d actually be able to watch it! I was looking forward to seeing what this new Doctor and new adventure would be like. “Disappointed” is too strong a word given how we use it, but on a technical level it’s not wrong, either. There was a certain charm lost in the hour long non-serials with a bigger budget and seasonal story arcs. Still, I enjoyed enough of it to keep watching until events kept me away from seeing past Peter Capaldi’s debut episode, catching the occasional moment but not getting to see the full thing. I finally got to start watching again with Jodie Whitaker’s debut, and that’s when the real disappointment again, and as I predicted what I’ve heard about the specials right up to the most recent one, “The Church On Ruby Road”, I’m kind of done. NO, NOT BECAUSE OF THE GAY DOCTOR, although the way it’s been done can join the list of reasons why I never got into New Who and why Neo Who, as Harbo Wholmes called it in this morning’s video, was the fork that got stuck in me. All I’ve seen is the club scene and the line about a “long, hot summer” with Harry Houdini. Not that this series cares he was married to a woman because the show created to teach history to kids now can’t even get Isaac Newton’s race right because politics. However, as I’ll be trying to make clear, it’s been a long time coming…and yet I’m still not all the way out of this franchise. Grab a seat and a decent monitor, folks. We’re going to be awhile and sorry if this posts late tonight. It’s been one of those days.

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Meet Archie

I think Raphael is putting the moves on Betty. Can’t say I blame him.

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Meets Archie (or Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Adventures according to the indicia and credits page)

Archie Comics Publications (Spring, 1991)

COVER ART: Dan DeCarlo, Ryan Brown, & Barry Grossman

COLORIST: Barry Grossman

EDITOR: Scott Fulop

“Green Legs And Gams”

PLOT: Ryan Brown & Dean Clarrain

WRITER: Dean Clarrain

PENCILERS: Ken Mitchroney (Turtles) and Stan Goldberg (Archie)

INKERS: Ryan Brown (Turtles) & Rudy Lapick (Archies, and I would love to know how that process worked)

LETTERER: Mary Kelleher

“Red Sails In The Sunset”

WRITER: Dean Larrain

ARTIST/LETTERER: Donald Simpson

“Storm Drain Savers”

WRITER: Stephen Murphy

PENCILER: Jim Lawson

INKERS: Peter Laird, Dan Berger, Michael Dooney, Steve Lavigne, & Eric Talbot (why so many?)

“Origin Of The Species”

PLOT: Ryan Brown

WRITER: Doug Brammer

PENCILER: Dave Garcia

INKER: S.R. Bissette

LETTERER: Mary Kelleher

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BW’s Daily Video> Introducing…Neo Doctor Who

Catch more from Harbo Wholmes on YouTube

I prefer his title over “Disney Doctor Who”, even if it is rather accurate. More on that in tonight’s feature article.

Chapter By Chapter> Star Trek: The Vulcan Academy Murders chapter 1

Chapter By Chapter (usually) features me reading one chapter of the selected book at a time and reviewing it as if I were reviewing an episode of a TV show or an issue of a comic. There will be spoilers if you haven’t read to the point I have, and if you’ve read further I ask that you don’t spoil anything further into the book. Think of it as a read-along book club.

So here we go. Last week I revealed the 23rd book in the Chapter By Chapter review series, and this week the review begins. Check out the reveal post for why I picked this up and the history of the author.

Vulcan is one of the few repeat visit planets in the Star Trek franchise and has appeared in almost every series. Voyager and Prodigy take place in another quadrant so that would be difficult, and I don’t know about the other shows. It has shown up in The Original Series, The Animated Series, and Star Trek: The Next Generation, and I think Star Trek: Discovery. Even the movies have been there thanks to Star Trek III and the first reboot movie…that decided to blow it up just to let you know this wasn’t daddy’s Star Trek. I think that’s the point I stopped caring about the “Kelvin Timeline”. I still have yet to get a proper “Kirk’s first mission” story that I like, and that includes the Enterprise: The First Adventure novel.

I don’t think we’re getting there this chapter because first we need to set up the medical emergency that gets them to Vulcan, as mentioned in the back cover blurb. So let’s go see how Kirk and company got beat up this time and which redshirt bought it. Or almost buys it, because otherwise we wouldn’t have a story.

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