Showing posts with label 1954. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1954. 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)

14 February 2020

They Don't Make 'Em Like That Any More - Valentine's Day Edition

Me and Brain still not getting along, so just a quick cover collection today. I did manage to figure out it was Valentine's Day, even if i didn't realize it was Friday again already. 

So our covers today are from one of the more odd Romance comics (unless there was an actual Odd Romance comic. I should look...)

Hang on, wokesters, here we go...








Don't you love how they decided this was the right place to find girls to write to soldiers? As noted in the title of this post, they don't make 'em like that any more.

But then, how could they?
We don't have Matt Baker any more.

Hmm...
Does that tie this into Black History Month?
Not the best way to do that. Might have to use that as a cheap excuse to come back to Matt once again, eh?

covers by Matt Baker for Teen-Age Temptations #s 1-3, 5, & 7-9 (1953, 1954)

09 February 2020

Spin The Wheel Of Animals...

I've mentioned previously how it seems like some of the old Funny Animal comics were created by spinning a wheel or drawing animal names out of a hat to pair them up. How else can one explain titles like The Dodo And The Frog?

For some Sunday Morning Funnies, let's pair that up with an old fave around these parts - Howie Post

Howie spins the wheel and we get...


We got 3 issues of The Monkey And The Bear back in 1953-4 -
 


Let's take a look inside the covers, shall we...?
 




Of course, there were also a few supporting characters in back-up strips, like Funny Bunny...
 

...more monkeys in Jungle Fun...
 

...and a Coo-Coo Cat...
 

Yeah, i can dig on ol' Coo-Coo. I used to paint and draw in parks and public places every now and again. He just showed you why i stopped doing that years ago.

So, before we wrap for today, let's have another peek at Coo-Coo Cat...
 

Ah...   the Classics.

page art by Howie Post from The Monkey And The Bear #s 1-3 (1953, 1954)