Ok, how about this for an idea. We take it in turns to post a favourite (British spelling) comic cover every day. This went really well on the comic fan website that I used to frequent. What we tried to do was find a theme or subject and follow that, until we all got bored with that theme. I'd like to propose a theme of letters of the alphabet. So, for the remainder of October (only 5 days) and all of November, we post comic cover pictures associated with the letter "A". Then in December, we post covers pertaining to the letter "B". The association to the letter can be as tenuous as you want it to be. For example I could post a cover from "Adventure Comics" or "Amazing Spider Man". However Spider Man covers can also be posted when we're on the letter "S". Adventure Comic covers could also be posted when we're on the letter "L" if they depict the Legion of Super Heroes. So, no real hard, fast rules - in fact the cleverer the interpretation of the letter, the better, as far as I'm concerned.
And it's not written in stone that we have to post a cover every day. There may be some days when no cover gets posted. There's nothing wrong with this, it just demonstrates that we all have lives to lead.
If everyone's in agreement I'd like to kick this off with one of my favourite Action Comic covers, from January 1967. Curt Swan really excelled himself here.
Date | Page/Reply | Theme (and clickable link) | Pages | Replies |
Oct 2016 | 1/1 | Letter A | 19 | 228 |
Dec 2016 | 20/1 | Letter B | 17 | 207 |
Jan 2017 | 37/4 | Letter C | 18 | 214 |
Feb 2017 | 55/2 | Letter D | 17 | 208 |
Mar 2017 | 72/6 | Letter E | 15 | 178 |
Apr 2017 | 87/4 | Letter F | 15 | 184 |
May 2017 | 102/8 | Letter G | 13 | 157 |
Jun 2017 | 115/9 | Letter H | 16 | 195 |
Jul 2017 | 131/12 | Letter I | 12 | 133 |
Aug 2017 | 143/1 | Letter J | 16 | 194 |
Sep 2017 | 159/3 | Letter K | 19 | 237 |
Oct 2017 | 178/12 | Letter L | 24 | 285 |
Nov 2017 | 202/9 | Letter M | 24 | 280 |
Dec 2017 | 226/1 | Letter N | 19 | 236 |
Jan 2018 | 245/9 | Letter O | 21 | 245 |
Feb 2018 | 266/7 | Letter P | 25 | 295 |
Mar 2018 | 291/2 | Letters Q & R | 20 | 243 |
Apr 2018 | 311/5 | Letter S | 22 | 270 |
May 2018 | 333/11 | Superman’s 80th anniversary | 21 | 250 |
Jun 2018 | 354/9 | Letter T | 21 | 250 |
Jul 2018 | 375/7 | Letter U | 17 | 207 |
Aug 2018 | 392/10 | Letter V | 19 | 228 |
Sep 2018 | 411/10 | Letter W | 20 | 233 |
Oct 2018 | 431/3 | Letter X | 15 | 180 |
Nov 2018 | 446/3 | Letter Y | 13 | 156 |
Dec 2018 | 459/3 | Letter Z | 13 | 156 |
Jan 2019 | 472/3 | Person being carried | 16 | 190 |
Feb 2019 | 488/1 | Real people | 17 | 214 |
Mar 2019 | 505/11 | Homages/parodies | 19 | 224 |
Apr 2019 | 524/7 | Green-skinned people | 17 | 207 |
May 2019 | 541/10 | Wanted posters | 17 | 201 |
Jun 2019 | 558/7 | Boxing rings | 15 | 180 |
Jul 2019 | 573/7 | Empty uniforms | 15 | 177 |
Aug 2019 | 588/4 | Beaches | 25 | 297 |
Sep 2019 | 613/1 | Apes | 28 | 340 |
Oct 2019 | 641/5 | Haunted houses/graves | 21 | 250 |
Nov 2019 | 662/3 | Motor bikes | 21 | 254 |
Dec 2019 | 683/5 | Foreign language covers | 17 | 209 |
Jan 2020 | 700/10 | Playing cards/tabletop games | 23 | 275 |
Feb 2020 | 723/9 | Valentines and Cupids | 22 | 259 |
Mar 2020 | 745/4 | Statues | 21 | 256 |
Apr 2020 | 766/8 | Elephants | 22 | 263 |
May 2020 | 788/7 | Heroes & villains cooperating | 17 | 198 |
Jun 2020 | 805/1 | The Moon | 26 | 322 |
Jul 2020 | 831/11 | Flags & patriotic symbols | 18 | 215 |
Aug 2020 | 849/10 | Foreign locations (non-US) | 20 | 233 |
Sep 2020 | 869/3 | MST3K (with commentary) | 24 | 292 |
Oct 2020 | 893/7 | Vampires and Werewolves | 20 | 245 |
Nov 2020 | 913/12 | Giants | 24 | 286 |
Dec 2020 | 937/10 | Snow & winter scenes | 24 | 289 |
Jan 2021 | 961/11 | Doppelgängers | 32 | 377 |
Feb 2021 | 993/4 | Movies | 23 | 275 |
Mar 2021 | 1016/3 | Cats/cat-themed adventurers | 22 | 263 |
Apr 2021 | 1038/2 | Dogs/dog-themed adventurers | 25 | 305 |
May 2021 | 1063/7 | Big guns/Heavy weaponry | 25 | 302 |
Jun 2021 | 1088/9 | Dinosaurs/Time Travel | 28 | 338 |
Jul 2021 | 1116/11 | Big Questions/Question Marks | 28 | 330 |
Aug 2021 | 1144/5 | Highways, Travel etc | 19 | 232 |
Sep 2021 | 1163/9 | Favourite Covers/Comics | 28 | 330 |
Oct 2021 | 1191/3 | Lineups | 21 | 260 |
Nov 2021 | 1212/11 | JSA 80th Anniversary | 23 | 269 |
Dec 2021 | 1235/4 | Logos in the action | 26 | 317 |
Jan 2022 | 1261/9 | Dynamic Duos | 29 | 348 |
Feb 2022 | 1290/9 | Romantic Scenes | 26 | 313 |
Mar 2022 | 1316/10 | Bridges | 29 | 339 |
Apr 2022 | 1345/1 | Unexpected Green | 23 | 286 |
May 2022 | 1368/11 | Neal Adams | 26 | 310 |
Jun 2022 | 1394/9 | George Perez | 19 | 227 |
Jul 2022 | 1413/8 | Parents | 30 | 356 |
Aug 2022 | 1443/4 | Fairgrounds and Carnivals | 24 | 285 |
Sep 2022 | 1467/1 | Joe Kubert | 19 | 238 |
Oct 2022 | 1486/11 | First and last issues | 27 | 324 |
Nov 2022 | 1513/11 | Classrooms and Education | 22 | 264 |
Dec 2022 | 1535/11 | Robots and Cyborgs | 33 | 392 |
Jan 2023 | 1568/7 | Trials and Courtrooms | 28 | 330 |
Feb 2023 | 1596/1 | Doctors, Nurses and Hospitals | 24 | 292 |
Mar 2023 | 1620/5 | Detectives & Murder Mysteries | ||
Apr 2023 | Birds and Winged Creatures | |||
May 2023 | Strength in Numbers |
Tags:
JD DeLuzio said:
Apparently, Luthor really got into the prison grey.
My theory back then was that Luthor didn't own any regular clothes because he was never out of prison long enough to get any.
I've entered my sixth decade of life this year, so I can empathize with everyone else on this road.
On the other hand, it sure beats the alternative.
Meanwhile, a family not always cover featured on/in an Archie comic, Chuck Clayton and his Coaching father, in the background.
(Image courtesy of the Grand Comics Database.)
I myself am nearing the end of my sixth decade, that is, my 50s. Here's how it works...
1st decade = birth through 10
2nd decade = 11 through 20
3rd decade = 21 through 30
...and so on.
If you are in your 50s, your are in your 6th decade of life; if you are in your 60s, you are in your seventh decade of life; if you can't remember that, don't try to get fancy and count the decades; just say "my '50s" (or "my '60s" or whatever) as appropriate. I seriously thought I left all this nonsense behind with the people who thought the year 2000 was the beginning of the new millennium (i.e, the 21st century).
When I give blood and the Red Cross person tells me my blood pressure is very good, I tell them I am a miracle of modern science. I'm halfway through my eighth decade (ouch!).
My entire career was in elections. California and many/most other states allow people to register to vote when they are 17 1/2. They are entered into the system but are excluded from actual voting until they become 18.
You are 18 the day before your birthday. If your birthday is the day after election day, you can vote. When a new database required new programs, the programmer erroneously told the computer that voters weren't 18 until their actual birthday. Fortunately, a report showing who was excluded was produced in time for me to bring the mistake to everyone's attention before it caused actual problems.
Years earlier, birthdates were entered with two-digit years. When the 17 1/2-year-olds were first allowed to register to vote the programs started screening for birthdates. This was in the late 1970s (IIRC) and there were many people born before 1900. The program kicked them out because it thought they hadn't been born yet and were therefore too young. Since we were stuck with the two-digit year at the time, the only way to override this was by pretending that a person born before 1900 was actually born in 1900. This was an early warning of the Y2K issues.
I just turned 60 back in March, so I guess it's more accurate to say I'm a few months into my seventh decade?
Right you are.
Lee Houston, Junior said:
I just turned 60 back in March, so I guess it's more accurate to say I'm a few months into my seventh decade?
My introduction to the popular but problematic Mr. Chan was probably the early-70s cartoon, which had he and his brood (and their little dog, too) travelling the world in a shape-shifting van and solving Scooby Doo-type mysteries. Gold Key, predictably, made a comic:
For those interested, I recommend Yunte Huang's Charlie Chan: The Untold Story Of The Honorable Detective And His Rendezvous With American History.
Jeff of Earth-J said:
I seriously thought I left all this nonsense behind with the people who thought the year 2000 was the beginning of the new millennium (i.e, the 21st century).
To quote from The Authority comic.
Jenny Sparks, dying at midnight on 31st December 1999: "I'm the spirit of the twentieth century. A hundred-year-long defense mechanism. Twentieth century's over."
Swift: "No, it's not. The twentieth century doesn't click over til 2001, anyone with half an education knows that --"
Jenny: "Don't blame me. Blame the planet that counts it. Consensus reality. Entire bloody century's been run by the fish-head majority."
Good to think how much more sensible the twenty-first has been, isn't it?