Weekend Window-Closing Wrapup
"Once more into the breech," in the immortal words of the Human Cannonball. And no, you aren’t going to get puns of a better caliber.
- Wolverine comics from the 1950s. (Via Avram Grumer.)
- The works of Richard Mullins— it may be fine art, but somehow I don’t see this guy getting the job pencilling Action Comics anytime soon.
- Via Johanna, we learn that Newsarama is rebuilding, and may be wrecking a lot of their existing infrastructure to do so. Good luck with that, fellas.
- Brad Guigar shows how to Unshark Mask in Photoshop. A handy skill when you least expect it.
- Want to do nothing but lie around for 90 days reading comics? NASA might pay you to do it.
- The other career of Alex Ross. And then he photographs himself to paint himself to…
- Lt. Worf endorses Barack Obama:
I am moved by the story of his humble origins, his absent Kenyan father, his mother working to make ends meet, and growing up without his father in an environment where his racial identity was unclear. After all, I, Lieutenant Worf, am a Klingon by birth, but raised by Caucasian humans, the Rozhenkos, on the farm world of Gault. So I know a little bit about absent fathers, and being a dark-skinned man, looked upon as an alien in a white world.
- A former voice actor for Peanuts specials is a candidate for a school board. His platform? "Waa waa WAA waa waa…"
- In a switch, Jessica Alba wants to stare at you.
- And finally, Rating The Super Hunks. I’ll take Rachel’s word for it, but bear in mind she thinks the guy in the Iron Man costume is worth marrying.

When it comes to comic book movies this summer, most of the attention has been focused on Iron Man and The Dark Knight. What about the man with the big red fist?
Charles McNider was a brilliant doctor and surgeon who believed in doing the right thing. He was removing a bullet from a mob witness one night when mobsters threw a grenade into the room, killing the witness and blinding McNider.
During 1992–1993, my newspaper-of-record became a sponsor of a traveling exhibition of art tracing the centuried history of editorial-opinion cartooning in Texas. Curators Maury Forman and Bob Calvert, seeking to preserve the display as a book, enlisted me to edit their program notes into manuscript form. The finished result, Cartooning Texas
Over a year ago, we broke the news of a new Batman project drawn by Neal Adams. Now the day when you will actually get to see this is coming closer, and there have been a few changes along the way. Neal brings us up to date, plus:

Remember when we told you that comic publisher UDON was working on a
It seems as if DC/Warner Bros. have relented a smidge in their decision to
