Showing posts with label 1952. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1952. Show all posts

04 March 2020

The Lasting Power Of Stupidity

So...  
Last week i stumbled across Moronica, Miss Nit-Wit Of 1948 (& 1949). I thought she was just an odd little blip on the cultural radar - a flash and gone.

Nope.

As noted, she debuted in 1948


...not to be confused with the other Moronica who first appeared in 1948 in Meet Corliss Archer...


Our Miss Nit-Wit lasted into 1949, as we knew...


...but she continued on into 1950...
 

...1951...
 

...1952...
 

...1953...
 

...1954...
 

I was so wrong about that "little blip". In fact, she even got together with her friends to form their own book -







Maybe this is what the evil clown sees when it looks back and spews make things Great again? (It was spawned right around this time)

page art mostly by Owen Fitzgerald from Starlet O'Hara In Hollywood #s 1, 3, & 4, The Kilroys #s 23-28, 30-32, & 37, Cookie #s 45 & 48, Dizzy Dames #s 1-6 and Al Feldstein for Meet Corliss Archer #1 (1948-1954)

21 January 2020

His Name Is Buck, He's Here To Duck

Saturday i made reference to Stanley & Edwin, but i was really talking about Buck -


That may not make a lot of sense right up front, but don't worry - it doesn't get any better with a close view.

But maybe the credits on this story will help just a tad...
 

Stan Lee and Ed Win - Did ol' Smilin' Stan convince somebody else to split their name the way he did? Or did he follow Edwin's example?
 

Nope, that ain't it.
Ed Win took a different route to get to his name. He's not Edwin, he's Ed Winiarski. So it's all just a bit of damnfoolery filling my head once again. 


Somehow Buck seems good for damnfoolery, doesn't he?

We don't know who originally wrote or drew the comic, But Winiarski came onboard with the third issue (#6) and rapidly became the primary artist. Stanley hopped on and started writing most of the title with issue #10. The next issue was the final, as Buck drove off a cliff and was never seen again.

Though Stan did manage to work Iron Man into it before they were through -


Yeah, okay. Maybe not quite Iron Man.
And we didn't even get to Meathead Wiggins. I guess we may have to come back here later. But for now, here are the rest of the covers for It's A Duck's Life -









page art by Ed Winiarski from It's A Duck's Life #s 10 & 11 (1951, 1952)