Catch more from Guru Larry on YouTube
Catch more from Guru Larry on YouTube

I had a bit of writer’s block this week as I couldn’t come up with a good Jake & Leon comic idea until late last night…while the power was out. That’s what inspired it but I didn’t get to work on it last night even though the outage was short. By the time I got today’s chores done it was too late to even start despite how easy this one is. If I have to speed up one this easy it’s best not to bother. The thing is I have a doctor’s appointment this week and Monday is going to be busy as well. So I’m going to focus on getting the content people actually come for. Jake & Leon is for fun an art practice but it’s one of the least read features on the site despite usually being a weekly one.
Over at The Clutter Reports this week I went into how collecting can get out of hand, using my oversized comic collection as an example.
This week I have more from the Batman: Knightfall novelization for Chapter By Chapter and the first official installment of Beast Machine Hunters, looking at the various production material from Beast Machines: Transformers and the original Beast Hunters concept. That’s on top of other topics, comic reviews, and all the stuff I have to do this week. I really hope I can do a Jake & Leon for next Sunday but until then have a great week, everybody!

Let’s do something a little different for tonight’s Saturday Night Showcase. Usually I look at sci-fi and superhero stuff but I wanted to get away from the recent flood of Ultraman shows and the Old West seems to fit the bill. Plus it’s an interesting piece of TV, and radio, history I thought at least some of you would find interesting.
I’m not much of a Western fan but my dad enjoys a few. One of them is Gunsmoke, the CBS Western series about Matt Dillon, Marshall of the Kansas region during the Old West. Developed by Charles Marquis Warren, it was the longest running prime-time live-action show until the crown was taken by, unfortunately, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit. I have…minor issues with that show we won’t go into here. Point is the show was very successful and still gets plenty of reruns and even a devoted channel on live-streaming sites like Pluto TV.
Except it wasn’t originally a TV show.
Airing on CBS radio when the chairman, William S. Paley wanted a “Philip Marlowe” type Western show, Gunsmoke was a rare cowboy show for adults. Most were made for kids, my research sources pointing to Hopalong Cassidy as their main example. The final show was created by John Meston and Norman Macdonnell after finding one of two pilots for the show (the actor they wanted was already tied to another Western called Broken Arrow) by Harry Ackerman and some of his script writers, on the request of programming head Hubell Robinson. The show would go on to air on radio even when the TV show was airing, until the radio show ended in 1961 and the TV show in 1975. I even had a coloring book based on the TV show. Australia even had their own version of the radio show, but that’s all I know about that.
None of the radio cast moved to the TV series. William Conrad was considered too overweight to play Dillon, which if you’ve seen a picture back then wouldn’t be a surprise. While not as heavy as when he played in TV shows like Cannon and Jake & The Fatman (he wasn’t Jake), he still had nothing on James Arness, who was encouraged by John Wayne to take the TV role. His deputy only went by Chester until actor Parley Baer improvised the last name “Proudfoot” during rehearsal, while the show would replace Baer’s aging sounding voice with a limp for Dennis Weaver’s Chester Goode…and that’s the guy from the TV series McCloud? Huh. Age and a mustache really does change your appearance.
Miss Kitty wouldn’t get her name until later, and Georgia Ellis would be replaced on TV by Amanda Blake, while Doc Adams would get a new first name from the radio show, played by Howard McNear (mostly known as Floyd The Barber from The Andy Griffith Show) as Charles, to the TV show, with Milburn Stone as Galen. Fun fact: Adams gets his name from Charles Addams, creator of the Addams Family comic strips, on the suggestion of Conrad.
Tonight’s episode is “Billy The Kid”, the first official episode as neither version of the pilot was ever aired. I think we can guess who’s stopping by the Longbranch…an actual Kansas saloon back then by the way. The name is a bit more accurate in this one. See if you can recognize his voice from cartoons. Enjoy.
The Blue Beetle #25
Holyoke Publishing (September, 1943)
Well, two Blue Beetle stories, one actually starting the book. That’s something I guess but it’s why Golden Age comics are remembered for the stories themselves and not the presentation. I wouldn’t want to spend a whole dime (that’s a whopping $1.77 in today’s money, for a bigger comic with ads than you can get today for $4) on a comic and only enjoy two or three of the stories where are like eight to ten of them. I know, comics were still new and these were being published like any other story magazine (which seems to have disappeared long before the print media decline) but it’s often all I have to discuss before starting these anthologies and it’s a system I’m glad isn’t the norm anymore. One or two would be okay in certain situations but these weren’t it.
First, there was…

Then I found…

Now thanks to TJOmega on YouTube I learned about not one but two entries from the world of the Transformers I get to do. Tonight I bring you the first of those. I’ve been wanting to do another story bible review article series since I finished Star Trek: The Next Generation season one, and now I’m happy to go over…
Star Power #6
(July, 2014)
“The Search For Black Hole Bill” part 1
WRITER: Michael Terracciano
ARTIST: Garth Graham
A continuation of last week’s video on the negative character arc from author Abbie Emmons
Catch more from Abbie Emmons on YouTube