Hannah-Barbera’s Age of Super-Heroes: Biiiirrrrrrrdman!
Birdman
In 1966 Hannah-Barbera ushered in a Golden Age of television cartoon super hero television.
DetailsBirdman
In 1966 Hannah-Barbera ushered in a Golden Age of television cartoon super hero television.
DetailsDecember 2019, The New Yorker revises its all-comics issue for a new era, as the Cartoon Takeover!
DetailsThe Valiant event of the year begins this spring
DetailsGhostbusters: Year One #1
Ghostbusters: Year One #1 (Burnham, Schoening, Delgado) is a great companion series to the original film, and will get you totally hyped for the new Ghostbusters movie!!!
DetailsUnderdog
When that theme song first begins, you can taste the Cheerios and feel the shag carpet beneath your legs. This show was built for Saturday mornings and because of that, it holds its place in cartoon history.
DetailsFIREFLY # 12
Firefly #12: (Pak, McDaid, Federici, Costa, Garbett) gives us a fitting end to year one and ensuring the New Year rings in the changes!
DetailsSpider-Man The Black Cat Strikes #1
Spider-Man The Black Cat Strikes #1 (Hallum, Maresca, Rosenberg) is a fantastic gateway into the world of Spider-Man, even though nobody needs one. A smart, fresh story delivers exactly what it should.
DetailsRegular Show
The Regular Show is a wacky, extremely creative animated series that ran for 8 seasons about a couple of guys that work at a city park. It’s a simple premise, yet the show is anything but simple or “regular”.
DetailsDoctor Tomorrow #1
Doctor Tomorrow #1 (Arbona, Towe, Rodriguez, Cowles) is the kind of opening salvo you want for any book, with just enough intrigue and mystery to keep you on the hook mixed with the kind of fun sci-fi and relatability that we read comics for in the first place.
DetailsTeen Titans Go!
When another Teen Titans show was announced, Teen Titans Go! may not be what people expected, but given the chance of an open mind, they could see it as the comedy gold that it is. It’s not the typical take on superheroes, sure. Rather, it’s a fresh, creative version that wonderfully turns all the expected superhero clichés on their ear and gives viewers something entirely new.
DetailsAmazing Spider-Man #38
Amazing Spider-Man #38 (Spencer, Coello, Caramagna) is a pretty good “catch your breath” kind of issue, but if you’re looking for something more, unfortunately, you won’t find it here.
DetailsNightwing #68
Nightwing #68 (Jurgens, Cliquet, Moore): Sometimes in an issue like this it’s quality over quantity and a concrete move towards Nightwing being Nightwing again is exactly what the doctor ordered.
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