Respond Vibrate Feedback Resonate
art, business and economy, comics and animation, computers, dining and cuisine, event, everyday glory, family and friends, food for thought, geekery, history, human of the day, movies and TV, office antics, science and technology, toys February 13th, 2013Wednesday – 13 February 2013
New comics day? Yep
Movie Date Night with Sara!? Yep.
And, it’s my sister, Rana’s, birthday:
Last night, Sara! fixed jambalaya for dinner, in honor of Fat Tuesday. As always, it was very good.
This morning, I arrived in the office to find out that I had three meetings scheduled back-to-overlapping-back to slightly-more-breathing-room back. Yay. Fortunately, the first meeting was rescheduled for tomorrow.
As I mentioned above, tonight is Movie Date Night. It’s also my pick for a movie… and I have no idea what tonight’s selection will be.
Chew on This – Food for Thought: Black History Month
Today’s item is: Negro Romance Comics
Negro Romance was a romance comic book published in the 1950s by Fawcett Comics (which through a series of sales and acquisitions, is now part of Warner Communications, which owns DC Comics). It is remarkable in eschewing African-American stereotypes, telling stories interchangeable with those told about white characters. The comic even mentions college, which was relatively uncommon in the 1950s, even moreso among African-Americans. Negro Romance ran for only three issues.
It was developed as an experiment in expanding into the romance market, conceived by editor Roy Ald, who was European-American, and written by him without credit. It was illustrated by Alvin Hollingsworth, the first African-American artist hired by Fawcett.
Because of their obscurity and rarity, the Negro Romance issues sell for hundreds of dollars each.
The PBS series History Detectives also did a feature on African-American Comic Books:
References:
Stray Toasters
- I am really enjoying Strip the City on Discovery’s The Science Channel
- DC Comics Responds to Orson Scott Card Backlash
I hadn’t followed the story behind Card’s hiring, so hearing that there was backlash was odd… but now that I know, it makes this strip from The Gutters make much more sense. - Why US Internet Access Is Slow and Expensive
- Mattel Unveils 1966 ‘Batman’ TV Series Ken and Barbie Catwoman
- HulaBunny.com – the art of Anand Duncan
Yeah, that’s it.
Namaste.
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.