Runnin the radio off an electric eel is a good gag
Posts by Tom Peyer
Bill O’Reilly in 2026
David McCallum in the Outer Limits
Interview With Mark Russell
comicbuzz.com/interview-wi...
@manruss.bsky.social
@ahoycomicmags.bsky.social
@kickstarter.com
#interview #graphicnovel
If you haven't yet, check out the Kickstarter page for The Forgotten Divine. Contains free pages and some really cool extras.
Trump dropping his sassy little ad-libs in while reading from the bible on television. Drawling "and that's really so true" and "it's really amazing" as he plods through a verse chosen because Pete Hegseth's pastor thinks it justifies pre-emptive war. What a cool age we're in.
The George Reeves Superman, his portrait, and its artist.
One more for Superman Day.
Oh, thank you. That’s one of my very favorite things.
Froggy from the Little Rascals
No, it’s Froggy
Happy Superman Day
Happy Superman Day! I am sharing one of my favorite covers, which other artists might appreciate, as it is a technique cover and it flowed smoothly from my hand, which happens infrequently:)
A black and white photo of Hamilton.
Superman #156 (1962), which contains his story, “The Last Days of Superman!” Superman is in a glass booth. Supergirl, Krypto, and members of the Superman Emergency Squad are flying towards him but he explains he has locked himself in the isolation booth because he has contracted a fatal plague and doesn't want to infect others.
Writer Edmond Hamilton. #SupermanDay
Still and expressionless, Superman is bathed i green light. Lois and Jimmy, silhouetted, look on. CAPTION: Suddenly... LOIS: That strange, green light shining on SUPERMAN! What is it? Where does it come from? JIMMY: It--it seems to have put him in some kind of trance! He's just staring at that poster of a clown! SUPERMAN #116, 1957, "The Ray That Changed Superman!" Al Plastino artist. Jerry Coleman, writer.
Happy Superman Day
Ugh.
A tiny Superman from the bottle city of Kandor stands fist on hips, cape flapping in the breeze, on Superman's open palm in a panel dominated by Superman's comparatively gigantic head. SUPERMAN #148, 1961. Art by Curt Swan and Sheldon Moldoff, story by Jerry Siegel.
The super-powers you and your Kandorian companions who resemble me, gained on earth, enabled you to fly to this spot inside that friction-proof dummy at super-speed!
Panel from ACTION COMICS #286, 1962. Aboard a spaceship, extraterrestrial members of the Superman Revenge Squad laugh as they watch a monitor showing Lois Lane, Clark Kent, and Jimmy Olsen eating hamburgers at a diner counter. One of the bad guys says, "Ha, ha! If Clark Kent only knew what he was eating!" Curt Swan and George Klein art; Robert Bernstein, story.
Ha, ha! Dogshit!
And don't forget to sign up to be notified when the Kickstarter launches: www.kickstarter.com/projects/com...
"I've been having these dreams. At least... I think they're dreams. I don't know what they are."
Don't miss these stunning brand new pages from THE FORGOTTEN DIVINE, our upcoming debut Kickstarter for @manruss.bsky.social and Russ Braun's dreamy (or nightmarish?) new sci-fi tale.
One of the biggest myths of the Robber Baron class is that they are what make cities like NYC great and prosperous because they create works that employ people. Only they EXPLOIT those workers with unlivable wages, no healthcare,not paying taxes, while jacking up living costs.
From Superman II: The Man of Steel smashes out of a Marlboro cigarettes truck
A favorite of mine
I continue to find this specific photograph to be one of the funniest things ever created by the minds and hands of humankind
You’ll know.
13 years ago, I bought the best Superman comic (cover detail)
Witness this spread
Well, yesterday by now. Tomorrow is yesterday.
My next Essentiall Read is The Toxic Crusaders #5 from @ahoycomicmags.bsky.social by @mattbors.bsky.social @tristanwright.bsky.social Lee Loughridge & @robsteen.bsky.social - A heartfelt continuation that embraces its Troma roots while carving out its own comedic identity ^KB wp.me/p8WCuG-3Wl
I used to think that people got more conservative as they got older because they had accumulated wealth and sought to keep it.
Now I think it’s that people who’ve had to experience the difficulties of life and learn empathy were those who had less and died earlier from things wealth protects from.
Well, sure, I've *rented* them...
Super-American panel from FIGHT COMICS #17, 1942, art by Dan Zolnerowich. Our hero tells a young man and woman, "I'll have to get to Iceland immediately! I'll borrow a plane..." and the young man says, "We'll follow as soon as we lock up these spies!"
I have never succeeded in borrowing a plane.
A fun setup: "In 1941, scientist Allan Bruce developed the Chronopticon [reaching] the year 2350, a time when everyone has superpowers[, so] Super-American, an average American soldier, was sent back in time to help fight off the Axis powers during World War II." pdsh.fandom.com/wiki/Super-A...