23 February 2020

Shoe Genius

When i was growing up, i usually felt like the smartest person in the room, adults often included. (That's true these days, too, but the room is usually empty, so that feeling is easier to achieve, though i may not always succeed.) So, it was rather natural that i had an affinity for boy genius/inventor type comics, even when the label was sarcastic, as it often was.

It certainly didn't hurt that genius inventor types of all ages were generally portrayed as odd-ball eccentrics. That's a crowd with whom i feel at home. We've seen a few of those sorts of characters here, and many more have lurked off-stage in the wings. Today's featured character is one of those lurkers. 

Li'l Genius lives in his own odd little world, as so many do. But sometimes the Odd goes deeper than it might appear. We don't know who wrote these stories, and Frank Johnson is only an unconfirmed guess for the artist. Take a gander at a couple stories, and i'll meet up with you down below.



For extra fun, Li'l Genius also featured strips like Atomic Bunny, with art by George Wildman -


However, what was really Odd about Li'l Genius wasn't in the comics themselves. It was the publishing deal. Not unique, but decidedly odd. Though the comic was produced by Charlton, the "Publisher" varied. You can find the comic with one of three Shoe Stores listed as the publisher - R&S Shoes, Schiff's Shoes, or Blue Bird Shoes, as seen here -


And, yes - shoe ads were included...




15 issues were published between 1959 - 1963, with numbering running from 1 to 20 to help keep things confusingly odd.

I'm not sorting that mess out.

page art from Li'l Genius #8 (1960)

22 February 2020

Flippity Floppity Twiddle Twaddle

Once upon a time, comics - and even superheroes - were fun...


Let's go there for some Saturday Morning Toons, eh? To kick it off, Flippity (née Flippy) and Flop, from Hubie Karp and Jim Davis. That Garfield guy was 6 years old when this came out, so let's assume it was a different Jim Davis, okay? I believe this is the same Jim Davis who illustrated Tom Lerher's classic The Hunting Song for The Dude.


From the same team (and co-starring in the same book)... 


Yes, i'm lazy. We're not sure who wrote this, but it's Jim Davis on the art again, and we're still in the same title...


These guys all played in Flippty and Flop all through the 1950s. The title ran 47 issues, from 1951...

(As you can see, Twiddle and Twaddle frequently received guest star billing on the cover)

...to 1960...

(No DC! No Superman! They've gone INDependent)

...and, yes - that cage showed up on a Lot of covers.

I don't think we've looked at Hubie Karp much yet, neither here nor in the 1940s Funny Animalphabet.

We should correct that.

page art by Jim Davis from Flippty and Flop #4 (I said i was lazy today) (1951)

21 February 2020

More Rudy Ray

I finally caught the first Eddie Murphy movie i've been excited about in a quite a while - Dolemite Is My Name


I've been a fan of Rudy Ray Moore for a long time. Some may recall that when i did this blog's first Xmas Covers collection a few years back, i slipped Rudy's This Ain't No White Christmas album cover in with the comics and magazines of the Blue set

Now, you may know that i see no television nor advertising in my hermit cave. I actively avoid trailers. So i hadn't seen Murphy in a fair bit of time. This turned out to be a good thing. Not necessarily the me-not-seeing-him part, the fair-bit-of-time part. The years have served him well, finally outgrowing the over-eager kid from SNL that was always present in the past. 

A character like Rudy Ray Moore could easily have gotten lost in younger Eddie Murphy's animate personality and potentially similar energies. The older Murphy, with more miles on both face and bearing can go deeper and bring us more Moore. Which is not to say that his trademark boyishness is gone, he can still bring it up to the surface when called for.


As you might guess, i was rather pleased with the portrayal of RRM in Dolemite Is My Name. But, more than that, i was quite pleased with how they told his tale. Many might have measured him by what he wasn't - here we focus on what he was and what he accomplished with the people he gathered.

Besides being a fond look at a unique pioneer, the movie is also packed with familiar faces and names - right from the very first scene with Murphy's Rudy hawking his sides to a DJ played by Snoop Dogg (or has he evolved?) We get Keegan-Michael Key, Mike Epps, Craig Robinson, Tituss Burgess, Wesley Snipes, T.I., Chris Rock, Ron Cephas Jones, Luenell, Barry Shabaka Henley, and many more. And a sweet kiss to Da'Vine Joy Randolph, for much the same reason Lady Reed thanked Rudy.

Eddie Murphy gives a good look at Rudy Ray Moore, and Dolemite Is My Name gives a good look at why a hermit Voice Of ODD would be such a fan of the Man (not The Man).

And i enjoyed that they showed the real Rudy Ray/Dolemite footage in the end credits for comparison. And that they noted Rudy and his team went on to make over a half dozen more movies...


Now who's going to give me my Melvin Van Peebles flic?

20 February 2020

Channel Surfing In The '80s

Maybe a nice dive into the Odd will help either shake things loose or tighten things up in the ol' noggin. 
Whichever it needs.

We may not have inter-dimensional cable, but we can maybe some inter-dementional video...


Yeah. I think that helped me.
How 'bout you?

page art by Michael T. Gilbert, Fred Hembeck, Dave Hunt, Walt Simonson, Trina Robbins, Jim Starlin, Jose Marzan, Kevin Maguire, Bill Wray, and Keith Giffen. With that many big name artists, you already know the book, right? (1988)