“Yesterday’s” Comic> Detective Comics #38 (Facsimile Edition)

I’m sure this cover won’t be homaged to death.

Detective Comics #38

DC Comics (formerly National Comics), April, 1940)

I cannot say for certain this is the 2020 facsimile edition or some new one. I saw it on the regular shelves. Note that the price for the original comic back in April, 1940 was 10¢ while this edition was $6.99, which is probably STILL cheaper than an original copy in 2023. Still, according to the inflation calculator at the U.S. Bureau Of Labor Statistics website the current buying power of ten cents comes to $$1.83 in May 2020 money and $2.17 in April 2023 money. Even factoring in the upgraded paper from ye ol’ newsprint that’s a heck of a hike for a reprint. No wonder nobody can afford your comics anymore, DC!

Yes, this is back in the Golden Age anthology days, which is why I’m reviewing this in place of the Blue Beetle comics I’ve been doing. Dan Garret could use the day off. This does mean that we’ll see multiple stories, starting with the one we all came for.

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Looking Back On Crossoverlord And Crossoverkill

This cameo not approved. The comic he's from is.

This cameo not approved. The comic he’s from is.

I have a bunch of stuff in my Watch Later and Filler Video playlist (both private, so you won’t see them on my YouTube channel) that I need to go through and put up here at the Spotlight. Among them are panels from conventions both public and the pandemic-spawned “at home” variety, longform documentaries, and stuff like that. Let’s get this one out of the way.

In this very old Jake & Leon comic, #17 to be exact (the first of three), when I was still doing them longways on the back of my weekly comic checklist printout, I dropped Ringo here in to promote a comic series that intrigued me. Crossoverlord wasn’t just a nifty pun, it was a crossover of numerous superhero webcomics. It followed a villain who had appeared in Linkara’s The Lightbringer comic, which he gets a lot of flack on and really hates the comic and the way it turned out himself, but I found some merit in the concept at least. The villain was at the time known only as The Smiling Man, because he smiled all the time. This villain’s schemes through the multiverse would drag in heroes Mindmistress, Daisen, Mechagical Girl Lisa A.N.T.,  Superdan of Bad Guy High Adventures, The Green Avenger, and some character I don’t remember from the comic Indefensible Positions. It was a fun crossover and one of my inspirations to create something like Captain Yuletide once my art skills got past…well, look at the comic above and furthered the idea that the internet could be a way to get comics out into the universe. These weren’t big names but they were pretty cool.

Granted the only hero I would really follow from this and the sequel, Crossoverkill, in which someone was collecting the personification of death in various realities and would bring a few new character in with the returning ones, was Fusion, but that was a mix of personal tastes, what I have time to read (Fusion has been on a very long hiatus if it isn’t officially done like some of my other favorite webcomics), and what’s still online. Also new to that chapter was (easier to copy/paste from a list) Energize, Valkyrie Yuuki, Majestic Knight, Captain Perfect and Hoodoo, alongside returning hero Mindmistress. Both comics also had other cameos of online superhero characters. Sadly a third sequel was not produced after her creator and writer/artist, Al Schroder, passed away. It’s a great series of crossovers and if you haven’t read it, this site collected both series and some tie-in stories from a couple of the contributing sites. Oddly it doesn’t have the Smiling Man’s appearances in The Lightbringer according to the archive.

In the video below, some of the contributors to the original Crossoverlord got together in 2013 to remember the webcomic superhero crossover and plans for future crossovers that didn’t happen after this video was made. Since Ringo ended up in three of my comics, all of them rather old of course, and as fanart since I didn’t actually ask permission but wanted to promote both crossovers, I thought it would be interesting to see what brought these various creators together for this collaboration. It includes background information and concept art for the project.

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> Tron (2.0) #2

“Hey buddy, do you see a good parking space?”

Tron #2

SLG Publishing (April, 2006)

WRITERS: Landry Walker & Eric Jones

ARTIST: Louie De Martinis

LETTERER?: Eleanor Lawson

Yeah, I’m guessing on Lawson’s role. The back of the comic also gives a “speech & SFX” credit for David Hedgecock as missing from last issue and Lawson is given the credit this one. Apparently even the Grand Comics Database and the Tron Fandom wiki have little information on this comic.

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BW’s Daily Video> The M*A*S*H Doctors Shill For IBM

Catch more from BetaGems Lost Media on YouTube

 

BW Vs Philosophy Tube> Why Superman Needs Clark Kent

I was supposed to this a long time ago, back in 2015. That’s when the video came out, that’s when I put a comment saying I was inspired to do an article, and then for whatever reason since this was before 2016’s nonsense it got lost in the shuffle. In that time it’s sat in the Watch Later instead of the playlist where I put potential quickpost and article videos…and the host went from male to female. So if you haven’t watched her older videos you will be surprised to see him in the pre-op days. A lot happens in seven years. My apologies to the host for whatever needs to be apologized for.

The topic however still stands: another video suggesting getting rid of the Clark Kent identity, as Brian Michael Bendis (allowed by Dan DiDio) did to him in the comics. The host of Philosophy Tube makes the point that Superman could be out saving lives if he stopped being Clark Kent, that he doesn’t actually need the identity. I however believe keeping the identity is not only essential to Superman’s mission but essential to his very existence as Superman. Also check out a cameo by Scott from NerdSync, who is also seven years younger in this video as the discussion goes to what else Superman could do besides saving people. I’ll let the host make the case and then I’ll make my own.

(Yes, I’m avoiding the pronouns because this is when the host was still male before the transition but is now female. I’m old. I don’t really follow all the pronounsense. Language is getting less and less clear. Don’t get me started on they/them/it. Calling someone “it” feels like an insult. So this should be a fun writing exercise for me. Once I get these kids off my lawn.)

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> Overwatch #8

“That’s what I forgot: my swimsuit!”

Overwatch #8

Dark Horse digital comic (July, 2016)

“Ana: Old Soldiers”

WRITER: Michael Chua

ARTIST: Bengal

LETTERERS: John Roshell, Jimmy Betancourt, & Albert Deschesne

SENIOR EDITOR: Cate Gary

LEAD EDITOR: Robert Simpson

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BW’s Daily Video> What Happened To The Ultraverse?

Catch more from Strange Brain Parts on YouTube

So technically Disney now owns all these characters that they aren’t using. They could separate them from Marvel and have more income and potential superhero properties to ruin adapt, depending on whatever this deal was. Two out-of-comics media do exist from when the Ultraverse was still around. Saban Entertainment’s Amazing Adventures syndicated programming block included an Ultraforce TV show while a live-action Night Man TV show was also produced. Ultraforce lasted one season while The Night Man lasted two, changed a bunch of stuff from the comics and offered a coda to the 80s NBC series Manimal in one episode, which oddly also involves a time-travelling Jack The Ripper for some reason, since Glen Larson worked on both properties. Both Ultraverse shows are available on Tubi as of this writing while Manimal isn’t.