udjibbom--disqus
udjibbom
udjibbom--disqus

Do you mean Don Winslow's book or something else? Winslow's book is great but even more brutal and heart breaking than The Power of the Dog - I think there were at least two scenes in The Cartel where i had to put the book down and go do something else for a day or two, and (not to spoil things) there would have been

VE VANTZ DAH MUUUNEY, LEBAHWSKI!!!1!

dude, you should call Bob Loblaw and sue his ass.

yeah - i'd say the back half of Season 1 and then all of S2 and S3 are pretty much some of the best genre television out there.

Stargate:Universe had that distinction for me! well, aside from getting together with friends for Game Of Thrones on the weekends when it doesn't conflict with my Roll20 D&D campaign, i guess… (takes a hit off his inhaler, pushes glasses up nose, etc. etc.)

it was playing on the TV in a laundromat once and, since the laundromat was air conditioned and it was in the 90's outside, i wound up watching about three episodes in a row once.

a crazy generous offer to hunt down kids in WV? naw, its cool… c'mon down!

thumbs up on Astro City, for sure.

if you like Deadpool, i suggest the Helfer.Baker SHADOW series from the late 80s - they're awesome! fantastic art and pitch-black, satirical humor. Dynamite put out reprint collections a couple years ago and i used this exact same B&N promo to pick them up last year at this time!

i just gave away about two year's worth of his IMPULSE and FLASH comics to trick or treaters last Halloween, along with about three years of McFarlane Spideys and a bunch of other stuff or otherwise i would straight up send them to you - sorry.

plus the …OF COCK jokes, of course.

this, for sure.

Nth MAN, which is like 16 issues long and basically a love letter to classic Marvel.

These are books that are exploring the opportunities for superhero
comics to evolve and expand to reach a wider audience, which makes it
all the more disheartening that these series don’t sell more copies.

i think it's pronounced "WHAREN" but thats a pretty minor quibble.

others have talked about this in more detail elsewhere in the thread but, real briefly, Gaiman's work on Spawn created a character (Angela) that McFarlane later used without Gaiman's permission and lead to a decades long lawsuit that, eventually, won Gaiman back the rights to Angela and Miracleman. among other

i always imagined superman would view human foibles pretty much the same way most people ignore dogs sniffing each others ass or licking themselves in front of the tv. "that's gross but they're usually lovable so…" i mean, if the dude can see in the ultraviolet spectrum, i imagine he's seeing all kinds of stains on

do you want to give some kind of rebuttal of the assertions or do you just want to snark? because while i haven't read all 100 of those issues, i bought the book on a monthly basis for about five years, read the early phonebooks and continued to sample random issues here and there after i stopped collecting comics…

reading Morrison's Animal Man as it was being published during my senior year of high school was probably one of two or three most transformative moments of my adolescence, along with hearing Ministry's Land of Rape and Honey for the first time while packed into a hatchback with about seven other guys during my first

Manitowoc and our ice machines (and corrupt cops) loved the shit out of SCUD.