Author: Martha Thomases

NYCC Photo Gallery: ‘Create Your Own Superhero’ Kids Day Event

NYCC Photo Gallery: ‘Create Your Own Superhero’ Kids Day Event

Sunday afternoon, John Gallagher led a standing-room-only workshop for kids to create their own comic book heroes.  Gallagher, creator of Buzzboy and NASCAR Heroes, cited his own work as a model.  For example, his villain, Doc Cyber, a mad scientist, saw the error of his ways and decided to use his abilities for good, thus becoming a baker.  John then suggested his students create a character who is "just like you."

The results?  See for yourself!

(more…)

Is Ma Kent Old?, by Martha Thomases

Is Ma Kent Old?, by Martha Thomases

As I sit here, it’s Monday. TCM is kindly running The Maltese Falcon and Casablanca so I have snappy dialogue in the background. The sun is bright, my blueberry bushes are full of flowers, and it looks like it’s going to be a beautiful week.

However, as you read this, a momentous event is occurring. It’s my birthday. I’m 55 years old. When I was a child (until I was 31, at least), I thought 55 was old. People I knew who were that age had grown children, and were either biding their time towards retirement or starting out on new careers. How could they do it, I wondered, when so much of their life was over?

It’s a good question. How can I do it? I don’t feel like I’m 55 (see Column #47). More to the point, I’m not sure what 55 feels like. I don’t know what it looks like. Do you see women of a certain age in the media? Yes, you do. However, most of them have had so much cosmetic surgery, or Botox, or hair-dye, or liposuction, that there’s no way to see what they really look like.

In fact, I don’t have the personal medical records of famous women my age. It may be that Katie Couric or Diane Sawyer, for example, just naturally looks the same as they did 15 years ago, with no gray hair and full cheeks, while Tom Brokaw gets white hair and laugh lines. For women, wrinkles prevent one from delivering the news. Goldie Hawn is older than I am, but you can’t tell by looking at her recent photos.

(more…)

EZ Street: Big Breakthrough

EZ Street: Big Breakthrough

Sometimes, the story just flows.  In today’s brand-new episode of EZ Street, by Robert Tinnell and Mark Wheatley, Danny gets some new ideas about how to draw Scot’s story.  Will the parts be greater than the whole?  Can brothers collaborate on art and life?

Credits: Mark Wheatley (Artist), Mark Wheatley (Colorist), Mark Wheatley (Letterer), Mark Wheatley (Writer), Mike Gold (Editor), Robert Tinnell (Writer)

More: EZ Street

 

 

Jon Sable, Freelance: Holiday Blow Up

Jon Sable, Freelance: Holiday Blow Up

In today’s brand new episode of Mike Grell’s Jon Sable, Freelance: Ashes of Eden, Sable and Maggie the Cat have to find Bashira and the bomb before Rockefeller Center explodes.  

The GPS shows them where she is — but will they stop her in time?

Credits: Glenn Hauman (Colorist), Glenn Hauman (Assistant Editor), John Workman (Letterer), Mike Gold (Editor), Mike Grell (Artist), Mike Grell (Writer), Shannon Weaver (Colorist)

More: Jon Sable Freelance: Ashes of Eden

 

Demons of Sherwood: Daring Escapes?

Demons of Sherwood: Daring Escapes?

In today’s brand-new episode of Demons of Sherwood, by Robert Tinnell and Bo Hampton, our heroes have to escape from fire and water.

The monastery burns around them, and not everyone gets out alive. But those that do escape may not be the lucky ones.

Credits: Bo Hampton (Artist), Bo Hampton (Colorist), Bo Hampton (Letterer), Bo Hampton (Writer), Mike Gold (Editor), Robert Tinnell (Writer)

More: Demons of Sherwood

 

Harlan Ellison, Norman Mailer, and the Underdog, by Martha Thomases

Harlan Ellison, Norman Mailer, and the Underdog, by Martha Thomases

This was my week to consider the lives of little old Jewish men. On Tuesday, I went to a screening of Dreams with Sharp Teeth, a film about Harlan Ellison, where I was lucky enough to talk to the man himself.

On Wednesday, there was a memorial service for Norman Mailer at Carnegie Hall. If Mailer was there, it was, alas, in spirit only, and in the lives of those who read his work.

What struck me about these two events is that both men were bullied. Harlan talked about a group of boys who would beat him up every day after school. Mailer, a Jew at Harvard in the late 1930s and early 1940s, certainly was shunned more than his share. It was the era of John Wayne and Gary Cooper, Cary Grant and Jimmy Stewart. A man like Dustin Hoffman could no more be a leading man – a hero – than Larry Fine.

As one would expect, boys who experience cruelty grow up to be fighters. Both men have reputations for being opinionated, biting, passionate in their defense of their positions. Both have been known to throw a punch, physically as well as verbally.

And yet – they also both grew up to be charming men. Maybe my perceptions are flawed because I met them in the 1970s, when they were no longer young, but I don’t think so. I think they learned to be charming for the same reasons they learned to fight. Charm, with the sense of humor that so often tags along, is a great way to ingratiate oneself to people. Including bullies.

Girls can also be bullies, but of a different kind. I’m sure there are girls who beat up smaller kids, but it’s more likely that girls will bond together to exclude those they would ridicule. The bully is as likely to be the most beautiful, or the most popular, not the most physically strong. And, again, their victims learn to be charming.

Charm is the weapon of the outsider. There are many studies that demonstrate, for example, that women’s intuition is, in fact, a learned trait, that women learn to observe more men more closely than men observe women, because women have been more dependent on men’s approval, and need to keep tabs. African-Americans similarly know more about how white people will react than vice versa.

Bullies think they are hurting their victims. A punch in the face (or the kidney, or the knee) certainly hurts. At the same time, the bully’s victim learns to develop his own weapons. Perhaps she learns to hide meekly, and find a roundabout way home from school. Or he learns to find an adult or a bigger bully who can act as protector. Luckily for us, many develop a sense of humor or a winning smile or another talent that keeps away the pain.

For the artist, bullying can result in an empathy for underdogs of every kind, and the ability to understand different kinds of characters and situations. The best writers feel like outsiders and underdogs. Their work takes us to new worlds and lets us live new lives. Their success is the best revenge.

Martha Thomases, Media Goddess of ComicMix, is a real fan of the movie, My Bodyguard.

GrimJack: Hoodoo Vs. Chaos

What happens when you throw the Miller Medallion at a giant demon cat?  FInd out in today’s brand new episode of GrimJack: The Manx Cat, by John Ostrander and Timothy Truman.

John Gaunt thinks the big kitty is afraid of the amulet’s hoodoo.  Is she?

Credits: John Ostrander (Writer), John Workman (Letterer), Lovern Kindzierski (Colorist), Mike Gold (Editor), Timothy Truman (Artist)

More: GrimJack: The Manx Cat

 

 

 

Webbed Comics


Simone & Ajax: Brooklyn Ducks!

Simone & Ajax: Brooklyn Ducks!

In today’s brand-new, full-color episode of The Adventures of Simone & Ajax: The Maltese Duck, by Andrew Pepoy, our heroes are hot on the tracks of the legendary fowl.  His history includes a stint in The Black Legion. Where else will they be forced to go?

Credits: Andrew Pepoy (Artist), Andrew Pepoy (Letterer), Andrew Pepoy (Writer), Jason Millet (Colorist), Mike Gold (Editor-In-Chief)

More: The Adventures of Simone & Ajax: The Case of the Maltese Duck

 

EZ Street: Blood Flows

EZ Street: Blood Flows

In today’s brand-new episode of EZ Street, by Mark Wheatley and Robert Tinnell, Scott and Danny hash out the rest of their comic book story. Not just any story, but one with monsters, blood, swords and dreams — everything  you ever wanted.

Credits:Mark Wheatley (Artist), Mark Wheatley (Colorist), Mark Wheatley (Letterer), Mark Wheatley (Writer), Mike Gold (Editor), Robert Tinnell (Writer)

More: EZ Street

 

 

Jon Sable, Freelance: Nuke New York?

Jon Sable, Freelance: Nuke New York?

Ah, Christmas in New York!  The decorations, the good will, the beautiful tree in Rockefeller Center!  In today’s brand-new episode of Jon Sable, Freelance: Ashes of Eden, by Mike Grell, the city is all that and more — because the terrorist Bashira has a nuclear weapon, and Jon and Maggie have to find her in time!

Credits:Glenn Hauman (Colorist), Glenn Hauman (Assistant Editor), John Workman (Letterer), Mike Gold (Editor), Mike Grell (Artist), Mike Grell (Writer), Shannon Weaver (Colorist)

More: Jon Sable Freelance: Ashes of Eden