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Spider-Man, Jon Jones

Jon Jones, MMA Champion, Passes The Test Spider-Man Failed

Spider-Man, Jon Jones

We all know the story of Spider-Man’s original sin– how, at the height of fame and glory and as a matter of pique, he let a burglar go free rather than make any effort to catch him, with tragic consequences.

Now consider the story of Jon Jones, who was preparing for the MMA Light Heavyweight Championship fight in Newark, NJ, last night, when he found himself in the same situation.

Jones and his coaches were getting dropped off at a park in nearby Paterson, NJ when his co-manager Glenn Robinson warned them that the area was known for its crime. The trio shrugged it off and was no sooner out of the car when they heard screaming. Before Jones quite realized what was happening, his coaches Jackson and Winkeljohn took off after a man who had allegedly smashed a windshield and stolen a GPS unit. Jones ran after them.

“I got these gazelle legs, and I’m running, and next thing you know, I catch up to my coaches,” he said. “I said, ‘What do we do? We going to catch this guy?'”

Jones said it was then he “put the jets on” and sprinted past his coaches.

“The guy looks back, he sees me,” Jones said. “You know I’m 6-foot-4, and I said, ‘You know I’m going to catch you, right?'”

The thief tripped over his own feet and as he tried to regain his footing, Jones kicked his ankle out, figure-foured his legs and helped hold him until the police came for the easy collar.

Jones said it was then that one of the cops realized who he was.

“The policeman said, ‘What? What are you doing here? Aren’t you fighting tonight?'” Jones said.

Jones then returned back to the woman who had screamed for help, and she thanked him and told him God would be with him as he fought.

Jones went on to win UFC 128 Light Heavyweight Championship that night over Mauricio “Shogun” Rua. No word if Jones has an uncle.

MMAFighting.com also has video of him recounting the story at a press conference after his victory, where he said he and his team felt like superheroes.

No, sir– you did the superheroes one better.

ALL PULP NEWSSTAND BULLDOG EDITION 3/20/11

ALL PULP NEWSSTAND
BULLDOG EDITION
3/20/11

FLYING GLORY KICKS OFF NEW ISSUE WITH NEW COVER!

Beginning with a fully painted cover art, a special story begins as we take a new look at our heroine and her family. Enjoy and Share with your friends.

www.flying-glory.com

She wants to conquer the charts using the same superhero identity as her grandmother who dutifully served her country in WWII. Backed by her band, the Hounds of Glory, Flying Glory struggles with life’s battles while fighting supervillians.

ALL PULP NEWSSTAND 3/20/11

ALL PULP NEWSSTAND
BULLDOG EDITION
3/20/11
FLYING GLORY KICKS OFF NEW ISSUE!
From Kevin Paul Shaw Broden-
Beginning with a fully painted cover art, a special story begins as we take a new look at our heroine and her family. Enjoy and Share with your friends.

www.flying-glory.com

She wants to conquer the charts using the same superhero identity as her grandmother who dutifully served her country in WWII. Backed by her band, the Hounds of Glory, Flying Glory struggles with life’s battles while fighting supervillians.

Twitter Updates for 2011-03-20

A BOOK A DAY FROM ALL PULP GETS BLONDE!

As usual, except with one notable exception, ALL PULP’s Book a Day comes from http://www.bearmanormedia.com/, one of the best outlets for books on pulp and popular culture today!  If you have other books, though, that you feel should be featured here, drop ALL PULP  a line at allpulp@yahoo.com!

’50s Blondes

'50s Blondes
An illustrated look at the lives and careers of the sexiest women of the 1950s. From major star to starlet, author Richard Koper shows – with hundreds of rare photos from his personal collection – that gentlemen still prefer blondes!

Among the 100 actresses who are featured in the book are famous Hollywood names like Marilyn Monroe, Jayne Mansfield, Kim Novak and Anita Ekberg, as well as starlets like Jeanne Carmen, Gloria Pall, Sandra Giles and Kathy Marlowe. Also featured within the pages of this book are England’s reigning blondes Diana Dors, Belinda Lee and Carole Lesley, and fifties cult fan’s favourites: Mamie Van Doren, Cleo Moore, Beverly Michaels, Barbara Nichols and Joi Lansing.







Twitter Updates for 2011-03-19

A BOOK A DAY AND PULP REVIEW ALL ROLLED INTO ONE!!

PULP REVIEWS BY RON FORTIER
AND ALL PULP’S BOOK A DAY!
THE BONUS
By Georgia Lowe
Lucky Dime Press
398 pages
Release Date – Oct.10, 2010
ISBN 10 – 0615371450
ISBN 13 – 978-0615371450
(historical fiction/drama)
bonus-9944103
The trouble with most history books is that they are generally impersonal.  They offer up the facts and then focus solely on the public figures who actually shaped events.  What is omitted, save for the grainy black and white photos of yesterday, are the tales of the average people who experienced those moments; days now slowly morphing into ghostly images of a past all too soon forgotten.  In choosing to read and review Georgia Lowe’s powerful retelling of the Bonus March, I purposely stepped away from this column’s focus on pulp fiction.  Why?  Because too many of us who love this unique brand of fiction some times need to be reminded of the times in which it was born.  To better appreciate those exciting and colorful tales of escapist fancy, we should be aware that they were created during a time of national pain and suffering; the Great Depression.
Sadly there have been too few novels set in this time of social upheaval, economic tragedy and hopelessness.  Not that there haven’t been many competent historical text, several of which the author mentions in her own lists of references, still it takes a fiction writer to make history personal.  John Steinbeck did it with his “Grapes of Wrath” and now, first time novelist, Georgia Lowe achieves the same emotional impact with “The Bonus.”  This is not an easy book to read for any American who loves his or her country.  Its honest depiction of the Hoover administration and the cavalier, egotistical attitude of its chief participants from the President on down to his Chief of Staff, General Douglas MacArthur is deplorable, to say the least.
In 1924, several years after the end of the War to End All Wars, America’s veterans were promised a bonus payment for their service.  The country’s representatives spend the next five years debating on what form and amount this “bonus” will be in.  Then comes the Wall Street crash of 1929 sending the economy into an unparalleled nosedive.  Unemployment rises to 25%, banks collapse like dominoes, home foreclosures are rampant.  On top of all this, Mother Nature delivers the second knock out punch in the form of a far reaching drought that devastates America’s central farmlands, turning abundant fields of wheat and corn into arid wastelands soon to be known as the Dust Bowl.  The end result, Congress votes to defer the Bonus until 1945.
Three years later, in the Spring of 1932, thousands of veterans, feeling betrayed by their own government, began to organize throughout the country.  As the news of their discontent and public gatherings spread, the idea of a united march on the Capitol is born and eagerly approved.  Charismatic leaders among the various groups like the VFW arise and by the start of summer, they are leading thousands of desperate veterans to Washington in every mode of travel possible from automobile caravans to train boxcars filled with weary travelers.  Their one unifying goal, to force Congress into giving them their money now.
We experience this historical pilgrimage through the yes of several characters including Will Hardy, a reporter for a Los Angeles tabloid, himself a veteran still enduring the effects of “shellshock,” and his lovely girlfriend, Bonnie.  Bonnie, enjoying her life as a Hollywood extra is naively unaware of the country’s ailing condition until she embarks on this odyssey with her girlfriend Myrna to rendezvous with their men.  By the time she arrives in Washington, she and Will become eye-witnesses to the monumental injustice perpetrated by President Hoover and his cronies.  Not only does Hoover publicly ignore the peaceful petitions and demonstrations of the Bonus marchers, in the end, he has them attacked and driven out by Army troops under the command of General McArthur.   
“The Bonus” is one of the finest historical novels I’ve ever read and it left me emotional drained.  It is clearly a cautionary tale of what happens to a people when its elected officials allow themselves to become disassociated with their constituents.  It is a story of governmental betrayal at its worst and a timely warning considering our nation’s current situation.  It is also a fine work of fiction with moving, believable characters that any reader will quickly recognize as each is driven to find their own piece of the American promise.  We tip our pulp fedora to Georgia Lowe and we thank her deeply for reminding us all what happened that summer in 1932.  It is up to each and every one of us to make sure it never happens again.

First Look At Adrianne Palacki As ‘Wonder Woman’

wonder_woman_tv_02-7117823Entertainment Weekly* has the first photo of Adrianne Palacki as Wonder Woman in the new NBC TV series being planned for the fall, produced by David E. Kelley.

The observant will note the great similarities to the new costume designed by Jim Lee and launched by J. Michael Straczynski when he took over the series last year. As I suspected at the time, the new costume was at least partially influenced by the desire of getting an actress into something other than a one-piece bikini.

Elizabeth Hurley and Cary Elwes are also in the pilot cast. NBC’s upfront presentation is scheduled for May 16, so we’ll know by then if Wonder Woman will be picked up as a series.

  • No real surprise here, as EW is owned by DC’s corporate parent. I think they had the inside track on this one.