Showing posts with label 1950. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1950. Show all posts

19 November 2019

Choose Your Own Introduction #01

Introduction 01:

When i was a child, my parents decided to put the family on a diet. We were in the first batch of adopters of the zero-carb diet - the horrors of no bread or pizza! (They tried a meatloaf crusted 'meatza', but it wasn't the same)

At any rate, during that time they switched over to Shasta diet sodas - a nasty little chemical concoction in a can. By the time we lived through that phase, something had changed. I thought that those nasty little sodas had destroyed my taste buds, but actually the soda manufacturers had dropped sugar for high fructose corn syrup during the interim. It wasn't until decades later drinking 'Real' Pepsi in Mexico that i figured out what had happened.

That formula change made Coca Cola undrinkable for me, giving it a cigarette ash aftertaste mixed with the chemical bite. We were living in the state of Georgia at the time - Coke Was It. Pepsi existed, but one had to forage independently for it. Eateries served Coke.

Not too many years later, we moved cross country to California. Not only was Pepsi aplenty, but there was a Royal Crown bottling plant in our new home town! To my taste buds, Pepsi and RC were fairly equivalent and both superior to all competitors i had sampled.

Now i had two favorite sodas with my preference leaning back and forth between them. RC was the outsider, so closer to my heart - but Pepsi had that nice tooled leather holster for my can.

How is one supposed to decide between the two?

Well, i know what the stars say...




...but with whom are they agreeing?

***

Introduction 02:

There is an odd category tucked into Un-Comics.

As regular readers know, Un-Comics is what we call comics that appear outside of comics, usually in magazines or books. Sometimes in boxes of breakfast pastries or cereal or packaged with a toy. Et cetera.

Today we're looking at Un-Comics that appeared in comic books. A contradiction? Well, yeah, but... there is a reasonable rationale here.
They're comics, but they were advertisements and so, in a sense, not part of the 'comic' itself. Some of them featured regular characters with ongoing adventures that lasted for years. There was a trend toward using comics to advertise in comics, and many followed the fad.

Let's look at the Adventures of "R.C." and Quickie for an example. I've spent the last couple days digging through comics during the time period these adverts ran - from 1944 to 1951 - and i've found most, if not all, of them. Two dozen one page ADventures -
























 They must have really liked that one...


Now i suppose i'm going to have to start collecting "Pepsi" the Pepsi-Cola Cop, Volto, Tootsie, "U.S." Royal, Thom McAn, and some of those other ADventures...

ads from various issues of Sensation Comics, Flash Comics, Action, Adventure, Captain Midnight, Boy Commandos, Mary Marvel, Funny Stuff, Real Fact Comics, Hopalong Cassidy, Ozzie and Babs, Strange Adventures and Fawcett's Funny Animals (but they were lots of other places, too) (1944-1951)

01 October 2019

And Now That Title Makes More Sense...

Yesterday we featured two short tales that didn't seem to read quite right. Character names changed, details didn't line up... something was a bit Off.  Or just Odd.

And that oddness is what both had in common. To answer yesterday conundrum - what made the stories nearly identical is that both were re-published twice, each time with the names, even story details, changed.

Both of these stories originally ran in Red Seal Comics, just a few issues apart in 1946. Both were republished two years later in 1948, and then again in 1950 & '52, diverging a bit at the end.

George Tuska's Gay Desperado, not to be confused with Fred Guardineer's Gay Desperado, ran from mid-1945 to mid-'47 and has had stories reprinted as recently as 2016. The Gay Desperado name seems to have lost its cachet over the years, and he was renamed The Bold Buckaroo and The Lone Vigilante in the republished versions. But that wasn't enough, it seems. Jim Collins became Tim Rollins became Tom Cullen. Here are all three versions of this story, in publication order -




In a demonstration of customer contempt that would fit right in with today's corporations, that last version of the tale above was published only 8 issues after the previous version - in the same damn title.

Meanwhile, the second version below is from Authentic Police Cases, running a retread of a Lady Satan story. Authentic enough for the History Channel.

Another link between these two stories - although this Lady Satan tale is drawn by Ralph Mayo, the original artist on the series was none other than George Tuska. Mayo drew three Lady Satan stories that i know of, putting him even with Tuska.

You'll note more dramatic changes to the story on this next one, especially since she's not a superhero in the later versions -




Lady Satan was also reprinted in 2016, along with The Gay Desperado. Both were in Gwandanaland Comics, if you want to go hunting. Lady Satan saw more action with them.

page art by George Tuska and Ralph Mayo for Red Seal Comics #s 15 & 18, The Texan #s 1 & 9, Authentic Police Cases # 5, and Strange Terrors #1 (1946, 1948, 1950, 1952)