Follow the adventures of the Headmaster Transformers and the equally incredible Targetmaster Transformers in Marvel Comics.
Follow the adventures of the Headmaster Transformers and the equally incredible Targetmaster Transformers in Marvel Comics.
Story: Rob Liefeld
Script: Robert Napton
Penciler: Mark Pajarillo & Rob Liefeld, Pajarillo & Paul Scott (issue #2)
Inker: Norm Rapmund & Jonathan Sibal
Letterer: Kurt Hathaway
Colorist: Laura Penton & Andrew Troy
Enhancement: Drew
Separations: Extrem Color
Editors: Jeph Loeb & Eric Stephenson
Special Thanks: Bob Harras and Mark Powers
Well, a combination of day job travel, the punishing (for critics) three-a-week release schedule of the second season of Andor, and my laptop completely and utterly dying a couple weeks ago threw me off my regular schedule.
But, things are starting to settle a bit, and I'm hoping to get back into my regular posting groove again, including this column. My plan is to abandon some of the strict formatting I'd been using, to make something more like a typical newsletter in favor of getting it out more regularly.
My other big news of late is that I was selected to present at the Uncanny Experience, the annual X-Men fan convention here in Minneapolis. My panel is called "Fight The Power: The X-Men as Outlaws", and will focus on the way Claremont repositioned the X-Men from traditional superheroes fighting to preserve the status quo to anti-establishment figures trying to upend it. The full description is as follows:
June 1997
Writer: James Robinson
Penciler: Randy Green & Allen Im
Inkers: Scott Hanna and Scott Koblish
Letterer: Richard Starkings & Comicraft
Colorist: Mike Thomas
Editor: Mark Powers
Editor-in-Chief: Bob Harras
Hey, the Oscars were Sunday!
May 1997
Writers: Todd Dezago with Brian Vaughn
Pencilers: Randy Green and Chap Yaep
Inker: Scott Hana
Letterer: Richard Starkings & Comicraft
Colorist: Mike Thomas
Editor: Mark Powers
Editor-in-Chief: Bob Harras
Gene Kendall returns again -- I guess I threatened to do this, so here we are. Having exhausted the known archives of animated G. I. Joe commercials for the Marvel series, it does make a certain amount of sense to cover the other Marvel/Hasbro collaboration of the day, those wily robots in disguise.
Girl, each time I try
I just break down and cry
Pain in my head
Oh, I'd rather be dead
Spinning around and around
Although we've come
To the end of the road
Still I can't let go
Nobody beats G. I. Joe
Over the land and deep down below
Cobra BUGGs got an eye out for Joe
Nobody beats G. I. Joe
A Real American Hero!
April 1997
Writer: Todd Dezago
Penciler: Randy Green
Inker: Scott Hana
Letterer: Richard Starkings & Comicraft
Colorist: Mike Thomas
Editor: Bob Harras
Destro's back
On the attack
Out to conquer the world on his own
But nobody beats G. I. Joe
A Real American Hero
Quick-witted and clean-cut Mason Mackay has something dark within. Struggling to accept his sinister urges, Mason must choose between those he loves and those who deserve brutal justice.
Gene Kendall here, once again acting like a hog and using a blog post to plug his projects. I've been at work for a few years now on Efficient and Divine, a small-town crime thriller series. (They're available on Kindle Unlimited, which is currently running a free trial promotion.) The first novel Almost Heaven is an origin story of sorts for Mason Mackay, a handsome documentarian who discovers a staggering capacity for violence.