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themagicrobot

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Posts posted by themagicrobot

  1. Quote

    all of you people collecting this title need to have your head examined, since it is clearly destined to remain a lower end of  the second-tier scale

    ???????????? Not everyone follows the herd and thinks that the world starts and stops with Spider-Man or Batman. The Doom Patrol have endured through the decades and are now up to volume 7 or is it volume 8. I would place them at the higher end of the second tier, whatever that is.

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  2. D C Thompson may well have invented the concept of "free gifts" in comics. In the 1930s they were usually little booklets. That Whoopee Mask in the first Beano might have been the first time  something more interesting was included. My favourite was the green cardboard frog free inside Smash number 2. These were fun too.

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    PS: When they produced the most recent facsimile of Beano number 1 in 2018 (to celebrate 80 years of continuous publication) they removed Peanut, the guy standing to the left of the logo. Modern life is rubbish innit. Earlier facsimiles were more faithful to the original.

     

     

     

  3. I have a Wham! number one from 1964 which is absolutely priceless to me as it was the first comic I ever “collected”.

    By that I mean it was the first ever comic I kept/saved/preserved for the next 59 years. 
    Prior to Wham! number one I, like everyone else I knew, swapped/traded comics with friends neighbours and relatives simply because you wanted to be able to read far more different copies each week than you could afford to buy.

    And you had to hide it under the bed because if you left it lying around downstairs your parents would add it to the pile of newspapers that would later be screwed up and used to light the fire.

  4. Quote

    Does the UK published comics have any value?

    ?????????? Can you be more specific. All comics have some value, be it small or great depending on dozens of factors, whichever country they were published in. Note that the comics displayed above such as the Tales of Suspense and Brave and the Bold were NOT published in the UK. They are US comics  that were sent to the UK. In the case of the TOS if it isn't yet then one in a reasonable grade really ought to be worth more than a similar grade cents version due to its rarity/smaller print run. This comic below WAS published in the UK and is currently for sale at £2000.

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    Some UK comics have a value of 5p and some such as Beano No 1 change hands for ££thousands as perhaps as few as 30 still exist 

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  5. Dell comics continued with “Golden Age” size well into the 1960s long after everybody else had moved to the slightly smaller format. Of course comics reduced in width again in the 1970s or was it the 1980s. Seems like yesterday.

    Through the 1950s most companies  managed to retain the 10cent price by reducing the page count from 52 to 36.

    lt’s only recently that I realised that 1940s World’s Finest comics were thicker than all other DCs and cost a whopping 15cents. I wonder why that was the only comic in their range produced in that format?

  6. In the UK there were perhaps less than two dozen black and white reprints of Prize and EC Pre-code horror books that brought about this 1955 act. Any colour ECs in the UK probably arrived via US servicemen stationed here. Although colour ECs were waved by people promoting more regulation of comics sold here.

     

     

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     Wasn't the USA act amended in the early 1970s which allowed words like "Horror" to be used in comic titles once more and allowed DC to sell "Black Magic" again? As the UK act is still on the statute books unchanged how does that impact on comics sold now? It is so vague, talking of crime, violence and cruelty which could be interpreted so many different ways. Surely every single issue of 2000AD shows "incidents of a repulsive or horrible nature". Or is 2000AD and every Marvel/DC comic now classed as Magazines rather than comics? The main problem in the 1950s was that everything published was classed as a "comic" if it was a funny animal one or an EC horror one. I suspect most of the horror (and romance) comics in the 1950s in the USA were purchased by people in their late teens/early twenties. Dell comics were far more popular with kids.

    https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Eliz2/3-4/28/1991-02-01/data.pdf

     

     

  7.  Who knows what evil lurks in the heart of man, apart from the Shadow? I just happened to be perusing Google maps to see what my house looked like in 2008. Interesting that 100 miles away Lower James Street in 2022 contains a large She-Hulk. Note the two vagrants/comic collectors vainly searching for the home of Arnold Comics, issues of which are now very very old and worth £$£s when encapsulated. They will soon have to resort to visiting the betting shop and the bar instead.

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  8. Now for something completely different. I have been binge-watching old Monty Python episodes and was ready for something more serious. So on to the TV adaption of Defoe's Moll Flanders featuring Alexandra Kingston. There was also a Movie in 1965 that starred Kim Novak. I own a Pan paperback from 1965. For reasons unknown that paperback was re-issued in 1966 with a different number. Out of idle curiosity in the last 5 minutes of looking I have found 32 different covers for this classic. I am sure there will be more but here are a few of them. Amazingly this book has remained in print for 301 years and is still readable today.

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    mollalex.jpg.8c7b74bdc265408d2913eab15d308084.jpg

    001.jpg.ed0e499b0cfee3d4ae2abad157857250.jpg002.jpg.8313facba91f336ce2936146de793ff1.jpg

    moll1.thumb.jpg.e7b6607da2176f41a71c61ebc9e6ecf1.jpg

    moll5.jpg.81e30e25807a2ecb0b8fd4e9485d2b8e.jpgmoll6.jpg.0d37b2342599273a8c3455ae1e040b66.jpgmoll7.png.abd7c56aad35cc0b20f2398c030fcaec.pngmoll8.thumb.png.64e83549869525ff71c7b049572f5d4e.png

    moll2.jpg.bf4541c803be3929e20a470096f963fe.jpgmoll3.jpg.4459d24eb1be3c854896d6eb10e0421c.jpg

    moll 4.jpg

  9. Will AI destroy music or enhance it?

    We now have Frank Sinatra singing Walk on the Wild Side which is something he never did when alive. Will there eventually have to be new ways of trademarking peoples voices or likenesses of to prevent another Wild West. Will it be legitimate to ask AI to produce a graphic novel in the style of Alan Moore and Brian Bolland or will that in the future become a new copyright infringement? We might end up with the potential to be free to do everything we can conceive but in reality unable to do hardly anything

  10. Quote

    Because some collectors don't like lower grade books?

    Why? It seems a very odd title to choose to collect only the very highest graded issues in existence. I could understand it if the OP was collecting a title from the last 30 years where loads of issues were bagged and boarded from the day of purchase. Every Showcase would have been purchased off a Newstand or Spinner Rack (or arrived in the post folded for the few that subscribed). Even collectors in the  960s didn't poly bag their stuff so mint Showcases that are 60 years old are as rare as rocking horse sh*t.

  11. Yes lets all live in the present whilst we can. 5 minutes ago I found this old pdf  https://themagicrobot.files.wordpress.com/2009/08/brian-augustyn.pdf  written by Brian Augustyne. It might be blurry just copying it as a screenshot but I hope it is readable if you don't want to click on the link. I know nothing else about him. The text page appeared in an old Trollords comic. I have just Googled and found he went on to edit/write at DC. He had a wife and two daughters. And he died 18 months ago at the age of 68.

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