Doctor Who Vs Jack The Ripper

I try not to use a video from the same poster in the same week, nevermind the same day. However, while looking up the short from this morning’s Quickpost I noticed there were still two videos from Dalek 63•88 I hadn’t watched in my continuing quest to finally get caught up with my YouTube backlog. So I watched them, and one was so interesting I wanted to share it with you guys.

I hate when science fiction or horror tries to use Jack The Ripper as a character. It’s why, good as it might be, I haven’t read Gotham By Gaslight. The idea of a 19th Century Batman going up against a serial killer sounds interesting but not if that villain is supposed to be Jack The Ripper. I understand the mystique surrounding him. He was never caught, the tabloids gave him an almost mythic presence in how he escaped justice…but he murdered people. His identity was never found and now most likely never will for what little good would come out of finding out. He escaped punishment and a bunch of innocent women were never avenged. No, I don’t care what you think about what they did for a living. I have my issues with it but they didn’t deserve to be horribly mutilated just for choosing a morally questionable “career”. God Himself would be against this punishment and if you think otherwise you need to read His word a lot better.

On the other hand I have no issue with using him as a template for a completely unrelated villain. It’s not “ripped from the headlines” so much as using real world evil as inspiration for a fictional villain and it feels like less of a slight against murder victims. The police can catch Murderin’ Mick and we can all celebrate without the stigma of using an actual evil for a fictional story where they do find out who he is, and it isn’t some alien or demon responsible. Jack The Ripper can still be a very evil but clever man and Murderin’ Mike can be the space demon or whatever without any trouble.

The classic era Doctor Who episode “The Talons Of Weng-Chiang” usually only gets mentioned for being a good mystery story with casual racism because of course we have to highlight the casual racism as if pointing out makes us better people or some crap. However, Dalek 63•88 instead did a video about how the 51st century villain Magnus Greel may have borrowed from fictional villains the Phantom Of The Opera and Fu Manchu as well the Doctor acting like the fictional hero Sherlock Holmes, but the space villain’s plot took influence from Jack The Ripper and another serial killer operating in London around that time. It’s quite interesting…but be warned! We’re talking about the mutilation murders of sex workers. While not overtly graphic this is a video made for grown-ups and may thus be disturbing to somebody out there. Use your own judgement before hitting play.

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> Super Angry Birds #1

“Dang it, Red, put on some pants!”

Super Angry Birds #1

IDW Publishing (September, 2015)

I should note that using ComiXology means I don’t always have access to the cover date. Usually I can go to the Grand Comics Database and find it easily. Not with this one. They don’t even have a cover image. I went to a few different sites before Comic Book Realm finally gave me the cover date. Even the Angry Birds fandom wiki has so little on this that I’m kind of worried, and I usually like this writer’s work.

“The Eagle’s Eye”

WRITER: Jeff Parker

ARTIST: Ron Randall

COLORIST: Jeremy Colwell

LETTERER: Pisara Oy

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BW’s Daily Short> The Dalek That Saved Lives

Catch more from Dalek 63•88 on YouTube

 

First Episodes Review> Tiny Toons Looniversity

In the 1990s Steven Spielberg decided to produce a show for Fox Kids, something he’s not usually known for. Tiny Toon Adventures didn’t make kid versions of the Looney Tunes. You’d have to wait for Baby Looney Tunes for that. Instead the usual suspects took a backseat as mentors to a whole new cast of kids at the high school Acme Looniversity. While being kid variants of the Looney Tunes they were original characters learning to follow in the footsteps of their mentor.

Then the show ended and they disappeared. Remembering the fate of Bosco and Honey, where laughter is what kept a toon young this is not the best news for our young heroes. Maybe that’s why they’re in college now for Tiny Toons Looniversity, the new spinoff featuring the same characters in a new location.

And a new continuity. The original show seems to have no connection to this one outside of the same characters. That’s how you do nostalgia wrong. Nostalgia is all about the comfort zone, which so many not-stalgia shows get wrong, and the only reason this show exists is because of the nostalgia. However, a new continuity alone does not equal not-stalgia. So is this show any good or is it another lame remake that Hollywood keeps churning out?

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> Sonic The Hedgehog #51

The crew rejoices after getting them to fix the terrible character model for the first movie.

Sonic The Hedgehog #51

Archie Comics (October, 1997)

“Reality Bites”

Okay, comic, where are your credits? Sometimes the next issue fixes the mistake of the previous if they get a credit wrong or COMPLETELY FORGET TO POST THEM! If that’s the case I’ll fix this as soon as Archie did. Well, sooner because my reviews are weekly and the comic was monthly.

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BW’s Daily Video> How To Copyright Your Book

Catch more from Abbie Emmons on YouTube

 

Free Comic Inside> Honor Of The Starriors

Next in my list is another one of the Spider-Man minicomics that were slapped on the Peter Pan peanut butter lids but I only own one and the rest I couldn’t find. So let’s go to the next minicomic series on our list and check in with the Starriors.

For those of you late to the party, Starriors was a toyline by Tomy that tried to do the Transformers thing with two factions of robots at war without the actual transforming. On this planet Man was forced to go underground, leaving the post disaster world to two groups of robots. The Protectors were supposed to rebuild while the Destructors were supposed to clean out the potential giant mutations. Slaughter Steelgrave, a name that makes me question what their creators were thinking, decided the Starriors alone should inherit the planet and tricks his fellow Destructors into stopping the Protectors from uncovering proof of Man’s continued existence and waking them up.

This is our third trip to this alternate future, thanks again to the website Virtualnaut scanning all six comics and making it available for everybody. So let’s see what our robot pals are up to this time.

“Think they’ll mistake us for Wheeled Warriors?”

Starriors #3

Marvel Comics/Tomy (1984)

No credits given yet again. You can check out the reviews of issue #1 and issue #2, though it’s not completely necessary.

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