Power Rangers: Origins’ New Info Part 1: The Characters

July has been interesting. I expect my reader count to oddly rise when I take my hiatus. I’ve also lost time to help my dad and try to turn BW into something more than monopolizing my time, like a way to generate income. As of this writing all the ad revenue goes to my site host. I’ve also tried to reinvigorate the site (and hit a wall) and finally get my technology and software up to snuff for all that video stuff I want to do (hit another wall), and somehow still make comics and other projects happen (more like a pile of those soft wall things you see at kids’ gyms). I have made some steps to the schedule I want to keep, but not enough.

On the other hand, my count rose higher than I expected partly thanks to Instapundit picking up one of my articles, and now somebody actually sent me an update on an article from September of 2024 that I didn’t even know knew of my site. So everybody say “gracias” to Ranger_esp because his site’s in Spanish and I needed Google Translate to read it.

Apparently he (she? it’s the internet and these days even those two aren’t the only option for some people) collected some updated news on Reddit, a site I don’t go to because it’s kind of a mess. If you have a translation program you like or speak the language you can check the site I’m working from, the article title translating to “All the secrets of Power Rangers Origins revealed!”. It’s new information about the ZAG Entertainment co-produced take on the original team (and we do have confirmation of that in this article) that was dropped in favor of the live-action movie. I have no interest in the recent live action movie and based on what I saw I wasn’t sure I would have been interested in this one, either.

Thus the question is whether or not this new information changes that? Thanks to translation I can go over it and see the rest of what was intended. Ranger Esp has brought us character bios, more production art, and summaries for the various acts of Power Rangers: Origins. The movie was developed with ZAG and Saban Brands (before selling the franchise to Hasbro) as well as Onyx Films. In the first article you’ll find a trailer and a few images from eBay listings. This is new information and we can see if it changes my mind or if I still wouldn’t have liked this.

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> Sonic The Hedgehog #101

Even the cover isn’t worth talking about.

Sonic The Hedgehog #101

Archie Comics Publications (November, 2001)

COLORIST: Frank Gagliardo

EDITOR: J.F. Gabrie

“Altered States”

WRITER: Karl Bollers

PENCILER: Ron Lim

INKERS: Pam Eklund & Andrew Pepoy

LETTERER: Jeff Powell

“Reboot”

WRITER: Ken Penders

PENCILER: Dawn Best

INKER: Andrew Pepoy

LETTERER: Vickie Williams

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BW’s Daily Video> A Balanced Take On Hulk Hogan

NOTE: Some swearing in the video

Catch more from Comics By Perch on YouTube

I don’t know if Hogan was worried about how interracial couples are still considered taboo and not wanting his daughter to be caught in the figurative or literal crossfire, or if he really was the racist he was depicted as. The only complaint I’ve heard from a black wrestler was how he screwed over Booker T when it came to the title that one time. I was more disappointed when he turned evil and ruined his character, because that I actually saw in action and can confirm. Although in hindsight it may have been more honest than the American Made “say your prayers, take your vitamins, believe in yourself, and believe in the Man Upstairs” (God) persona that fueled Hulkamania. Naturally that doesn’t protect him from what he said, and I only know of one clip that sounds like he’s saying it, but I’m not aware of what his response was to the controversy. It’s like that line from Transformers: Beast Wars: “Tell my tale, tell it truly, the ill deeds along with the good, and let me be judged accordingly. The rest is silence.”

Star Trek: Starfleet Academy> Read The Comic Instead

Yes, I have seen the trailer. No, I’m not impressed.

While I do question some of the critiques, many born from just past experience with Kurtzman “Trek” (for example the main cast is actually not as female dominant as I’ve seen claimed, but having seen Memory Alpha’s preview report as of this writing, and the trailer, I do agree with “pretty boy Klingon” and why the hell is there a female Jem’ Hadar when they’re a clone race that serves as the army for the Founders that never had a female because they don’t reproduce?), it’s those same experiences that make me apprehensive. No, I’m not fixing that run-on sentence. I’m not sure where to divide it to make sense. My apologies.

Anyway, not having Paramount Plus means I haven’t suffered through most of Kurtzman “Trek”. I did watch the pilot episode of Discovery on CBS, but I wasn’t impressed. Everything I’ve heard since has made me even less impressed not only about that show but the entire Kurtzman era. I wonder if that’s why I never went back for more Prodigy, either? So I have about as much interest in Kurtzman’s Starfleet Academy as I do the rest of his alternate universe. In other words, none.

Before this nonsense clogs up the wi-fi, however, I would push you towards a most likely better, but sadly all too short, better take. I haven’t read IDW’s version, but it’s set in the movie timeline so I don’t care. Instead we’re going back to 1996. For a time, Marvel had been coordinating with Paramount to form the imprint Paramount Comics. While not exclusively Star Trek based, the majority of its comics were Star Trek, the second time Marvel technically had the Star Trek licence before losing it to DC Comics for decades. The titles included:

  • Star Trek UnlimitedFor some reason the original series and The Next Generation shared a double-sized comic, with only one actual crossover between the two.
  • Star Trek: Early VoyagesA better take on the Christopher Pike years aboard the Enterprise than anything I’ve seen or heard about Strange New Worlds.
  • Plus miniseries like Untold Voyages, set between movies, a couple of one-shots, and separate ongoings for Deep Space Nine and Voyager. I wouldn’t expect them to share a title, but combining both TV Enterprises makes for questions in my comic box lineup.

And of course for this article, Starfleet Academy. Set during the 24th century, it was a way for Nog to remain part of the franchise when his character left Deep Space Nine to join Starfleet. I reviewed these comics during a “Yesterday’s” Comic re-read, but this is a full series overview, and why these are better to track down than anything Kurtzman is going to toss out, given his history with “Trek” branded shows that don’t feel like Star Trek.

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> Captain Atom #88

This remake of Yars’ Revenge seems off.

Captain Atom #88

Charlton Comics Group (October, 1967)

WRITER: Dave Kaler

“Ravage Of Ronthor!”

PENCILER: Steve Ditko

INKER: Frank McLaughin

COLORIST: uncredited though the whole comic is in color

LETTERING: A. Machine

Nightshade: “Poetry Of Peril”

ARTIST: JIm Aparo

[Read along with me here]

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BW’s Daily Video> The He-Man/Ghost Busters Connection

No, not those guys. The original Filmation version, or at least their kids.

Catch more from Cereal:geek TV on YouTube

As a bonus, here’s John Guardian’s episode so you can see him in action. A bonus Tuesday Morning Showcase, if you will.

 

Chapter By Chapter> Tom Clancy’s Op-Center: Mirror Image chapter 55

Chapter by Chapter features me reading one chapter (or possibly multiple chapter for this one) of the selected book at the 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 read-along book club.

Only one chapter this time. In the previous chapter we saw Striker trying to stop a train while their escape was being put together.

I have to wonder if I’d be complaining about the length so much if I were enjoying the book more. I had no trouble with Death & Return Of Superman or Batman: Knightfall, while one of my first books as a kid was about as long as the Op-Center novels. On the other hand, while an improvement over the first book, Mirror Image still suffers many of the same flaws, and it comes down to the useless trivia. The characters are less annoying compared to the first book (except for Paul Hood and Squires, who were both some of the good characters and possibly the only ones from the series cast). There’s just information that I don’t care about and serve no actual purpose to the story outside of blending history with the Op-Center universe. From what little I know of books like The DaVinci Code, this is a good way to screw people up in the real world, being clueless about history and accepting the altered events for drama as not only book canon but historical facts. Seeing movies that have caused trouble by doing that, I’m not convinced it’s a good idea.

Still, we have a little over 20 chapters left to go over, which even if we get more short chapter combinations will take awhile, so let’s get it over with.

Chapter 55: Tuesday, 3:25 PM, St. Petersburg, Russia

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