Superhero patrols Phoenix
Via BoingBoing, we learn of a certain guy named Jim. He lives in Tempe, AZ. He drives a Nissan.
And he is a crime-fighting hero.
Several nights a week, he patrols the streets of his town as Citizen Prime. He wears a leather mask, a silk cape, and a steel-plated body shield on his upper body. He drives through bad neighborhoods, armed with a cell phone to take photos and call the police. If things get really tough (they haven’t yet), he has a stun gun and a bean bag stun gun.
When he isn’t driving, he walks the streets, distributing pamphlets to his fellow citizens urging them to get more involved in their community.
If you want to learn more, check out his MySpace page. Sorry, girls, he’s married!
Now if he can only do something about Tempe’s vampire outbreak…

The comics industry stands at an exciting crossroads. International acceptance of graphic literature is starting to have a positive effect on how Americans see non-superhero genres, as manga saturates teen audiences and award-winning autiobiographical novels like Fun Home and Persepolis enthrall adults. When you factor the geek contingent into that, as even the superhero genre (the one most non-comics readers associate and conflate with the medium itself) gains mainstream acceptance in blockbuster movies and hit TV shows, it would seem to be another Golden Age for the artform. The future of print and online comics looks healthier than ever.


Three of the good folks behind Mystery Science Theater 3000 – Kevin Murphy, Bill Corbett and Mike Nelson – have done some work in various media as
First up from The Film Crew: Hollywood After Dark, the 1968 blockbuster starring Rue McClannahan, later of Golden Girls fame. Warning for the prudes and the peculiar: Rue’s got a strip scene. Three more "episodes" are in the can and will be released in upcoming months: Giant of Marathon (1959, starring Steve Reeves), Killers from Space (1954, starring Peter Graves) and The Wild Women of Wongo (1958).
Sixty-six years ago today, Citizen Kane premiered in New York.
Stringer Lisa Sullivan notes: "Doctor Who is scheduled to be among the programs to be made available on demand via the BBC’s iPlayer service.
