(If you haven't done so already, you can see the whole mag here.)
Showing posts with label wham-o. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wham-o. Show all posts
Saturday, August 10, 2019
Ernie Colon R.I.P.
Ernie Colon, the man who could draw any and every genre amazingly well... the man who did masterful work for nearly every publisher from the 1960s until just a handful of years ago has passed away at the age of 88. We have over a dozen posts here on the Diversions featuring his incredible work, mostly focusing on my favorite examples of his art--namely his work for Harvey Comics' Richie Rich and Atlas/Seaboard's Tigerman and Grim Ghost. Not nearly enough to explore the depth of the man's prodigious talent. Colan did some extremely cool issues of Marvel's Warlord of Mars that we'll have to rap about one of these days. For today, though, let's just admire his first credited work from 1967's Wham-O Giant Comics #1, "Kaleidoscope of Fear!"
(If you haven't done so already, you can see the whole mag here.)
(If you haven't done so already, you can see the whole mag here.)
Monday, April 18, 2011
Wham-O! It's Our 1000th Giant Comics Post!
Greetings, Groove-ophiles! Here it is, our One Thousandth post here on DotGK! Sound the trumps! Fire the cannons! Let the doves fly! Bring me some ibuprofen--my carpal tunnel's coming back!
Seriously, Ol' Groove is humbled have so many of you fine folks out there in the intranet making DotGK your stopping-off point on a daily basis. The fact that DotGk has well over 1,500 subscribers and hundreds of "drop-in" readers blows Ol' Groove's mind--and I appreciate you one and all. I especially want to thank the dozens of you who've been true-blue Groove-ophiles from virtually the very start of of this humble blog waaaaaaay back in July, 2008! Fellow bloggers who took me in and made me part of the "family", like Joe Bloke at Grantbridge Street, BookSteve, Pat Curley from Silver Age Comics, Andrew Wahl of Comics Bronze Age fame, Mykal Banta of the many blogs, and so many more have helped me in a myriad of ways, from tips, to corrections, to flat out friendship. I also have to thank all of the pros who've contributed to make this blog so special. Not just the ones whose work I share with y'all day in and day out, but the ones who actually stop by to read and/or comment on goings on in Groove City. I could name-drop all day (Denis Kitchen, Roy Thomas, Mark Evanier, Paul Kupperberg, Steve Skeates, P. Craig Russell, Nick Cuti, Joe Staton, Walter Simonson, Scott Edelman, Kevin Nowlan--oh, I'd better quit before I leave someone out) and go all gushy over how fanboyish me's heart goes all a-flutter when one of my heroes drops a comment or e-mail. I certainly need to name and thank the Groovy Age pros like Michael Netzer and Rich Buckler who believe in DotGK so much that they actually took time to write posts for us. And how dull would it get around here, speaking of Guest Bloggers, if folks like Barry Pearl, Sharon K., Mike Mikulovsky, and Jazzy Jonathan "A" Gilbert hadn't stopped by to share their powerful points of view?
Thanks to all of you, named or not. Your kindness, generosity, and support are appreciated more than you'll ever know. Keep on truckin', Groove-ophiles! Keep on truckin'!
Okay, okay, this ain't an awards show, so where's the comix? Well, to celebrate this milestone occasion, it has to be something special. Something rare. Something HUGE. What could be more rare and huge than the legendary, almost mythical Wham-O Giant Comics?
I remember getting this one-of-a-kind comicbook rarity from a big display in the toy section of a Rink's department store in the Cincinnati area. I don't know for sure what year it was and I sure don't see how I talked my folks into shelling out 98 cents for a comicbook--unless the very sight of that awe-inspiring 14" x 21" tabloid monolith grabbed their imaginations the way it grabbed mine. Of course, it could have been a few years after the mag's 1967 debut and we got it at a discount. Either way, Li'l Groove knew how he was gonna spend the rest of that fateful Saturday (or was it a Sunday?)!
Wham-O Giant Comics was produced by--duh!--Wham-O, the legendary toy company that gave us such magical childhood memories with their Frisbees, Hula-Hoops, Slip-and-Slides, and Super Balls. Evidently, during the 1966/67 Batmania craze (fueled by--you guessed it!--ABC's Batman TV show), everyone wanted to produce comics and super-heroes--including Wham-O. I've never been able to find the name of the publisher and/or editor behind this unique assemblage o' comics, but man, did whoever it was believe in packing 52 pages with piles of panels! Over 1500, according to the cover. Count 'em if you want--Ol' Groove'll take their word for it!
Super-heroes, sci-fi, humor, adventure, mystery, fantasy, games, puzzles, and (natch) ads for more Wham-O toys (and even a subscription to Wham-O Giant Comics, which was intended to be a quarterly mag) filled every inch of every humongous page. In their zeal to get those 1500 panels into print, and despite the size of the actual pages, you could still get eyestrain trying to read the furshluginner thing! Still, knowing there were strips by the likes of Wally Wood (don't overlook Goody Bumpkin!), Lou Fine, Ernie Colon, John Stanley, and Warren Tufts made it worth the risk, baby! Have at it and have fun!
And a special shout-out and "Thanks, man!" to jodyanimator for the sweet, sweet scans! Man, did you save Ol' Groove some sweat and eyestrain!
Seriously, Ol' Groove is humbled have so many of you fine folks out there in the intranet making DotGK your stopping-off point on a daily basis. The fact that DotGk has well over 1,500 subscribers and hundreds of "drop-in" readers blows Ol' Groove's mind--and I appreciate you one and all. I especially want to thank the dozens of you who've been true-blue Groove-ophiles from virtually the very start of of this humble blog waaaaaaay back in July, 2008! Fellow bloggers who took me in and made me part of the "family", like Joe Bloke at Grantbridge Street, BookSteve, Pat Curley from Silver Age Comics, Andrew Wahl of Comics Bronze Age fame, Mykal Banta of the many blogs, and so many more have helped me in a myriad of ways, from tips, to corrections, to flat out friendship. I also have to thank all of the pros who've contributed to make this blog so special. Not just the ones whose work I share with y'all day in and day out, but the ones who actually stop by to read and/or comment on goings on in Groove City. I could name-drop all day (Denis Kitchen, Roy Thomas, Mark Evanier, Paul Kupperberg, Steve Skeates, P. Craig Russell, Nick Cuti, Joe Staton, Walter Simonson, Scott Edelman, Kevin Nowlan--oh, I'd better quit before I leave someone out) and go all gushy over how fanboyish me's heart goes all a-flutter when one of my heroes drops a comment or e-mail. I certainly need to name and thank the Groovy Age pros like Michael Netzer and Rich Buckler who believe in DotGK so much that they actually took time to write posts for us. And how dull would it get around here, speaking of Guest Bloggers, if folks like Barry Pearl, Sharon K., Mike Mikulovsky, and Jazzy Jonathan "A" Gilbert hadn't stopped by to share their powerful points of view?
Thanks to all of you, named or not. Your kindness, generosity, and support are appreciated more than you'll ever know. Keep on truckin', Groove-ophiles! Keep on truckin'!
Okay, okay, this ain't an awards show, so where's the comix? Well, to celebrate this milestone occasion, it has to be something special. Something rare. Something HUGE. What could be more rare and huge than the legendary, almost mythical Wham-O Giant Comics?
I remember getting this one-of-a-kind comicbook rarity from a big display in the toy section of a Rink's department store in the Cincinnati area. I don't know for sure what year it was and I sure don't see how I talked my folks into shelling out 98 cents for a comicbook--unless the very sight of that awe-inspiring 14" x 21" tabloid monolith grabbed their imaginations the way it grabbed mine. Of course, it could have been a few years after the mag's 1967 debut and we got it at a discount. Either way, Li'l Groove knew how he was gonna spend the rest of that fateful Saturday (or was it a Sunday?)!
Wham-O Giant Comics was produced by--duh!--Wham-O, the legendary toy company that gave us such magical childhood memories with their Frisbees, Hula-Hoops, Slip-and-Slides, and Super Balls. Evidently, during the 1966/67 Batmania craze (fueled by--you guessed it!--ABC's Batman TV show), everyone wanted to produce comics and super-heroes--including Wham-O. I've never been able to find the name of the publisher and/or editor behind this unique assemblage o' comics, but man, did whoever it was believe in packing 52 pages with piles of panels! Over 1500, according to the cover. Count 'em if you want--Ol' Groove'll take their word for it!
Super-heroes, sci-fi, humor, adventure, mystery, fantasy, games, puzzles, and (natch) ads for more Wham-O toys (and even a subscription to Wham-O Giant Comics, which was intended to be a quarterly mag) filled every inch of every humongous page. In their zeal to get those 1500 panels into print, and despite the size of the actual pages, you could still get eyestrain trying to read the furshluginner thing! Still, knowing there were strips by the likes of Wally Wood (don't overlook Goody Bumpkin!), Lou Fine, Ernie Colon, John Stanley, and Warren Tufts made it worth the risk, baby! Have at it and have fun!
And a special shout-out and "Thanks, man!" to jodyanimator for the sweet, sweet scans! Man, did you save Ol' Groove some sweat and eyestrain!
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Special thanks to Mike's Amazing World of Comics and Grand Comics Database for being such fantastic resources for covers, dates, creator info, etc. Thou art treasures true!
Note to "The Man": All images are presumed copyright by the respective copyright holders and are presented here as fair use under applicable laws, man! If you hold the copyright to a work I've posted and would like me to remove it, just drop me an e-mail and it's gone, baby, gone.
All other commentary and insanity copyright GroovyAge, Ltd.
As for the rest of ya, the purpose of this blog is to (re)introduce you to the great comics of the 1970s. If you like what you see, do what I do--go to a comics shop, bookstore, e-Bay or whatever and BUY YOUR OWN!
Note to "The Man": All images are presumed copyright by the respective copyright holders and are presented here as fair use under applicable laws, man! If you hold the copyright to a work I've posted and would like me to remove it, just drop me an e-mail and it's gone, baby, gone.
All other commentary and insanity copyright GroovyAge, Ltd.
As for the rest of ya, the purpose of this blog is to (re)introduce you to the great comics of the 1970s. If you like what you see, do what I do--go to a comics shop, bookstore, e-Bay or whatever and BUY YOUR OWN!