I'm thinking of stuff like Ro-Jaws and Hammerstein (Rogers & Hammerstein), the Slavers of Drule and all those other puns and references that drifted gracefully over my head as a kid... (Some of 'em still do.)
Anyway, I just spotted a 1949 Schlitz advert in a Grauniad New York photo gallery (http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/gallery/2012/jan/06/new-york-photography-in-pictures#/?picture=384053709&index=4) sporting the slogan: "The beer that made Milwaukee famous"...
I guess that's where the Dredd classic "The Fear that made Milwaukee famous" came from. I live and learn!
Had one happen to me just yesterday. I was at work, working. And I got thinking about the Prog 2012 Sinister Dexter story. I started wondering what kind of pun 'Ms. Deeds' was suppose to be because I know Abnett loves his Sin-Dex puns.
There wasn't a face slap hard enough when it finally clicked.
Speaking of Sinister Dexter, my son has been learning about Rome at school recently and has been marching around the house pretending to be a Centurion, chanting "Sinister, dexter, sinister, dexter..."
Apparently it means 'Left, right' in Latin.
"He ain't heavy, he's my brother!" in Return of Rico seemed to me a really odd thing for Dredd to say. It was many years later when the song was used in a beer advert that I realised it came from a Hollies song.
We had a thread about this a few years ago, but it's always nice to see if any new ones pop up. I'm duty bound to mention "Mach Zero" ("Macho") again, and to wonder if this time we'll get a conclusion to the "say Tharg's name five times rapidly" question...
SBT
The big one for me was not realising that almost all the Nu-Earth locations were puns on regular-Earth places. Examples: the Ox-Arks, Dix-I and the Gasbah. I think the penny finally dropped during a re-read of 'The Phrisco Phog'*. Sigh.
*I didn't get out much**.
**Still don't.
Quote from: ming on 09 January, 2012, 11:00:01 AM
I'm thinking of stuff like Ro-Jaws and Hammerstein (Rogers & Hammerstein), the Slavers of Drule and all those other puns and references that drifted gracefully over my head as a kid... (Some of 'em still do.)
Anyway, I just spotted a 1949 Schlitz advert in a Grauniad New York photo gallery (http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/gallery/2012/jan/06/new-york-photography-in-pictures#/?picture=384053709&index=4) sporting the slogan: "The beer that made Milwaukee famous"...
I guess that's where the Dredd classic "The Fear that made Milwaukee famous" came from. I live and learn!
I think I have only just realised the slavers of Drule one ::)
i give up - what's the pun in Slavers of Drule?
Drule = Drool, slaver.
I would never have guessed that!
I recently got some goldfish and named one of them Finnigan as I wanted a fish with a 2000AD name and Mrs Albion wasn't keen on naming one Judge Fish.
Anyway...... this got me thinking it was also appropriate as fish have fins. Then I realised sharks have fins too and FINNY is a gunSHARK! Clever name I never noticed before or just coincidence?
Quote from: Lee Bates on 09 January, 2012, 11:26:16 AM
Speaking of Sinister Dexter, my son has been learning about Rome at school recently and has been marching around the house pretending to be a Centurion, chanting "Sinister, dexter, sinister, dexter..."
Apparently it means 'Left, right' in Latin.
Yes, hence 'ambiDEXTERous' means "like having two right hands". And I seem to remember that 'sinister' got it's 'evil' connotations this way - left-handers being considered unnatural.
Quote from: Dash Decent on 10 January, 2012, 10:30:25 AMAnd I seem to remember that 'sinister' got it's 'evil' connotations this way - left-handers being considered unnatural.
And rightly so. Twisted freaks!
Out of curiosity, I just browsed Barney's collection of SinDex covers, and Finny might be left-handed (which would be fitting). Depends who's on art duties, but at least three Simon Davis covers give that impression, which is good enough for me.
(http://2000ad.org/covers/2000ad/hires/1563.jpg)
(Sure there are probably more covers there where he's using his right, or both hands, but without resorting to further research I'm sticking to him being a lefty. Facts be damned!)
hats and bunnets
wasnt D.R. and Quinch a reference to the classic Quincy M.E.
Quote from: SpetsnaZ99 on 11 January, 2012, 09:03:32 AM
wasnt D.R. and Quinch a reference to the classic Quincy M.E.
I had thought it was just a copyright-dodging variation on O.C. and Stiggs,but you might well be on to something there... DR Quinch, E. E.?
Venus Bluegenes didn't go over my head but I can't help thinking of her when I listen to 'Dirty Blue Gene' by the late great Captain Beefheart:
"She's not bad
She's just genetically mean"
Wasnt D.R. & Quinch
More A Play On Hitchhikers What With Planet Makers Getting Bored and using Land Masses
For Spelling Out Something Rude That Got Them The Sack From There Job In The First Place
Plus Very Very Very Loud Interstellar FunkRock Bit Like Daff Punk
Hitchhikers Is A Play On Asimov Foundation Stuff As Far As I UnderStand Anyway?
Quote from: SmallBlueThing on 09 January, 2012, 11:47:57 AM
We had a thread about this a few years ago, but it's always nice to see if any new ones pop up.
Probably this one, in which Adrian Bamforth asks for an explanation of Slavers of Drule, proof that history is cyclical:
http://forums.2000adonline.com/index.php/topic,22044.0.html
Quote from: Emperor on 11 January, 2012, 04:07:04 PM
Quote from: SmallBlueThing on 09 January, 2012, 11:47:57 AM
We had a thread about this a few years ago, but it's always nice to see if any new ones pop up.
Probably this one, in which Adrian Bamforth asks for an explanation of Slavers of Drule, proof that history is cyclical:
http://forums.2000adonline.com/index.php/topic,22044.0.html
I was thinking of this one.
http://forums.2000adonline.com/index.php/topic,25403.msg437632#msg437632
SBT
The reason why Dry Run got printed went over my head.
Quote from: Emperor on 11 January, 2012, 04:07:04 PM
Quote from: SmallBlueThing on 09 January, 2012, 11:47:57 AM
We had a thread about this a few years ago, but it's always nice to see if any new ones pop up.
Probably this one, in which Adrian Bamforth asks for an explanation of Slavers of Drule, proof that history is cyclical:
http://forums.2000adonline.com/index.php/topic,22044.0.html
Where would I be if my goofs weren't studiously recorded for the ages.
I never really made the connection between Kiss my Axe!/Kiss my a** - I guess because it just sounds so good as a catchphrase on it's own.
I was always amused by the Dredd story Down on Sausage Tree Farm (Down on Jollity Farm) - proof that the best punnery is not the most accurate, but the most tenuous.
Quote from: Emperor on 11 January, 2012, 04:07:04 PM
Probably this one, in which Adrian Bamforth asks for an explanation of Slavers of Drule, proof that history is cyclical:
Brilliant! There's something I keep asking about on this forum, which I naturally can't remember at the moment (or ever), and every time I do someone reminds me that I've asked the same question n+1 times before, and had it answered each time... -sigh-
Irish Pies Are Smiling!
Bet Youll Find Some Gems In Cal Hab Also After Lessons In Rab C Nesbitt Speek!
Quote from: TordelBack on 11 January, 2012, 06:36:00 PM
Quote from: Emperor on 11 January, 2012, 04:07:04 PM
Probably this one, in which Adrian Bamforth asks for an explanation of Slavers of Drule, proof that history is cyclical:
Brilliant! There's something I keep asking about on this forum, which I naturally can't remember at the moment (or ever), and every time I do someone reminds me that I've asked the same question n+1 times before, and had it answered each time... -sigh-
Sadly, we all know what you are talking about but refuse to link to previous examples, as you'll forget, ask about it and we can then link back here where you've forgotten what it was the question always is.
I suppose the first stage of dealing with a problem is accepting that you have a problem.
"Dan Abnett on Puns and Triumff
People often come up to me and say, "Dan, do people really come up to you?" Also, they ask what it is with me and puns. Call me paranomasiac, but I love 'em, god help me. Homophonic puns, homonymic puns, homographic puns, Homer Simpson puns, I can't get enough. I love graphological puns and morphological puns, logical puns and illogical puns, polysemic puns and metonymic puns, old school puns and current puns and, at the risk of fracturing myself, I love compound puns. I can't have too many multiple puns and as for double entendres, woof! get a load of the double entendres on that, if you know what I mean. I enjoy a good feghoot and adore a fine eggcorn. Recursive puns have made me swear more than once. I like big loud puns like the Puns of Navarone, I like hard rocking puns like Puns and Roses, and I like quiet, relaxing puns like a late Punday afternoon in high summer."
http://www.sfsignal.com/archives/2010/08/guest_post_dan_abnett_on_puns_and_triumff/
He's a pun shark. Geddit? I'll get me coat.
Quote from: SuperSurfer on 11 January, 2012, 02:05:09 PM
Venus Bluegenes didn't go over my head but I can't help thinking of her when I listen to 'Dirty Blue Gene' by the late great Captain Beefheart:
"She's not bad
She's just genetically mean"
I allways thought Venus Bluegenes was an amalgam of Velvet Underground and David Bowie
Venus in Furs and Blue Jean/The Jean Genie
Quote from: SpetsnaZ99 on 12 January, 2012, 10:40:03 AM
I allways thought Venus Bluegenes was an amalgam of Velvet Underground and David Bowie
Venus in Furs and Blue Jean/The Jean Genie
'Venus in Blue Jeans', by Jimmy Clanton, shirely?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lsfzLZl17QE
pants, over the head, not a comment on Jimmy Clanton.
HA! Stop Calling Me shirely! boom! boom! :lol:
Smoke And A Pancake? :lol:
I'm ashamed to say that I only "got" the band name "The Beatles" about two or three months ago.
Beatles.
BEATLES. Ffs, how did I live so long and not notice that?
(http://www.deviantart.com/download/152359066/Idiot_Motivational_Poster_by_krawky398.jpg)
Quote from: The Legendary Shark on 14 January, 2012, 01:13:24 AM
I'm ashamed to say that I only "got" the band name "The Beatles" about two or three months ago. Beatles. BEATLES. Ffs, how did I live so long and not notice that?
(http://www.deviantart.com/download/152359066/Idiot_Motivational_Poster_by_krawky398.jpg)
Youve lost me, who's Les? was he their first manager?
Beat Les was their very first drummer.
Quote from: The Legendary Shark on 14 January, 2012, 02:04:35 PM
Beat Les was their very first drummer.
I love that John Lennon comment when he was asked if Ringo was the best drummer in the world.
"He's not even the best drummer in the Beatles."
:D
Back on topic, I suppose I would have realised that GI females were called 'dolls' because of "Guys [GI's] & Dolls" if I'd thought about it long enough at the time....
I can't believe I only sussed Kid Knee when reading Stronty Dog yesterday. What an idiot!
Dredd - Dread? ;)
Somehow I've only just noticed one of the characters in The Red Seas is called Billy Mackenzie, which I assume is a nod to the late great Associates frontman. Probably.
Nemesis. Thanks to 2000ad I grew up thinking it was a masculine name, I found out much later that Nemesis was actually originally personified as a female goddess in Greek mythology.
Quote from: Pete Wells on 15 January, 2012, 11:54:02 AM
I can't believe I only sussed Kid Knee when reading Stronty Dog yesterday. What an idiot!
Kid knee...? Oh yeah! Now I get it! ::)
Quote from: SpetsnaZ99 on 12 January, 2012, 10:40:03 AM
Quote from: SuperSurfer on 11 January, 2012, 02:05:09 PM
Venus Bluegenes didn't go over my head but I can't help thinking of her when I listen to 'Dirty Blue Gene' by the late great Captain Beefheart:
"She's not bad
She's just genetically mean"
I allways thought Venus Bluegenes was an amalgam of Velvet Underground and David Bowie
Venus in Furs and Blue Jean/The Jean Genie
could be both then... Big Eyed Beans From Venus/Bluejeans & Moonbeams by Don Van Vliet seem more likely though imho.
Oh.. Thats Why They Call Him Chopper..
Quote from: wonkychop on 16 January, 2012, 12:49:24 PM
Quote from: SpetsnaZ99 on 12 January, 2012, 10:40:03 AM
Quote from: SuperSurfer on 11 January, 2012, 02:05:09 PM
Venus Bluegenes didn't go over my head but I can't help thinking of her when I listen to 'Dirty Blue Gene' by the late great Captain Beefheart:
"She's not bad
She's just genetically mean"
I allways thought Venus Bluegenes was an amalgam of Velvet Underground and David Bowie
Venus in Furs and Blue Jean/The Jean Genie
could be both then... Big Eyed Beans From Venus/Bluejeans & Moonbeams by Don Van Vliet seem more likely though imho.
*Ahem*
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venus_in_Blue_Jeans (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venus_in_Blue_Jeans)
When your mom squirted it went over my head.
That's what you get for being such a shortarse, Roger.
Quote from: Noisybast on 16 January, 2012, 03:13:51 PM
Quote from: wonkychop on 16 January, 2012, 12:49:24 PM
Quote from: SpetsnaZ99 on 12 January, 2012, 10:40:03 AM
Quote from: SuperSurfer on 11 January, 2012, 02:05:09 PM
Venus Bluegenes didn't go over my head but I can't help thinking of her when I listen to 'Dirty Blue Gene' by the late great Captain Beefheart:
"She's not bad
She's just genetically mean"
Neil Diamond?
I allways thought Venus Bluegenes was an amalgam of Velvet Underground and David Bowie
Venus in Furs and Blue Jean/The Jean Genie
could be both then... Big Eyed Beans From Venus/Bluejeans & Moonbeams by Don Van Vliet seem more likely though imho.
*Ahem*
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venus_in_Blue_Jeans (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venus_in_Blue_Jeans)
I didn't know that Harke & Burr was a play on Burke & Hare – because I'd never heard of the latter.
Oh, and it didn't click until I read it, that Frank Quitely is a play on "quite frankly".
Quote from: Dash Decent on 14 January, 2012, 11:54:57 PMBack on topic, I suppose I would have realised that GI females were called 'dolls' because of "Guys [GI's] & Dolls" if I'd thought about it long enough at the time....
Yup, I missed that one. :-[ I always thought it was just because they were artificial.
Quote from: ming on 09 January, 2012, 11:00:01 AM
I'm thinking of stuff like Ro-Jaws and Hammerstein (Rogers & Hammerstein), the Slavers of Drule and all those other puns and references that drifted gracefully over my head as a kid... (Some of 'em still do.)
Anyway, I just spotted a 1949 Schlitz advert in a Grauniad New York photo gallery (http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/gallery/2012/jan/06/new-york-photography-in-pictures#/?picture=384053709&index=4) sporting the slogan: "The beer that made Milwaukee famous"...
I guess that's where the Dredd classic "The Fear that made Milwaukee famous" came from. I live and learn!
There is actually a Schlitz sign in a panel as well...
It always went over my head the mythological references in Nemesis. For example Brother Hades the Pandemonium player who was a Mandrake. At the time I had no idea that Pandemonium or Hades were both the same or indeed that mandrakes were a type of plant that was meant to grow under the trees used for hanging criminals.
Ace Garp - Ace Card. ::)
Quote from: wonkychop on 27 January, 2012, 08:52:54 AM
Ace Garp - Ace Card.
Is it... if it is I'm letting myself off that one. Though looking at that logo...
...and his head is pointy like the Spades symbol, hence "Ace" of Spades???
I thought it was inspired by The World According to Garp. Or is that just too obvious
But why the ace?
Acc Garp
Ro - Busters, when something is tough it's called ROBUST/...(ers)
and it was also the name of a comic (Ro)... BUSTER...http://www.wackycomics.com/2011/07/buster-comic-library-29.html (http://www.wackycomics.com/2011/07/buster-comic-library-29.html)
Also I've only just noticed Devlin Waugh -- Evelyn Waugh was the author of Brideshead Revisted.
And "The Simping Detective" ---The Singing Detective a drama for television by Dennis Potter.
I'm sure others will turn up.
Quote from: wonkychop on 04 February, 2012, 11:44:38 AM
And "The Simping Detective" ---The Singing Detective a drama for television by Dennis Potter.
D'oh! How did I miss
that? And why do these things always seem so obvious in retrospect?
I only very recently twigged the pun in 'Central Perk' - the coffee shop in Friends - always knew it was a play on Central Park, but the 'perk', as in 'perk you up' only just clicked.
I always assumed it was "perk" as in percolated.
You're probably right, that makes more sense. :-[
Don't rule out that it might have been used precisely because it worked on different levels.
Arthur Askey once had a gag: "My last cheque came back marked 'Insufficient Rubber'." I love the fact it works on the level of 'rubber' being slang for money, and also on the level that it was going to 'bounce' badly.
Girls Aloud is another nice example -- pun on "girls allowed"; identifying the mouthy ladette target audience they were aiming for; and also making reference to the fact they were a female singing act.
Quote from: Dark Jimbo on 04 February, 2012, 02:06:11 PM
Quote from: wonkychop on 04 February, 2012, 11:44:38 AM
And "The Simping Detective" ---The Singing Detective a drama for television by Dennis Potter.
D'oh! How did I miss that? And why do these things always seem so obvious in retrospect?
I only worked this out a couple of days ago when i noticed The Singing Detective was on TV. Although I must admit I'd never heard of it before so I have the excuse of ignorance. :lol:
can't beleive I missed Evelyn/Devlin Waugh!
You're BANNED.
In Red Dwarf, Dave Lister likes as sport called Zero G, i think it was an homage to the Harlem heroes in 2000ad which itself was also a pun on the Harlem Globetrotters
This thread is in danger of making me feel smart!
If you look at The Simping Detective, you'll see that even the way the title is written mimics that of The Singing Detective.
Quote from: Dash Decent on 07 February, 2012, 10:37:42 AM
This thread is in danger of making me feel smart!
Quote from: ming on 09 January, 2012, 11:00:01 AM
I'm thinking of stuff like Ro-Jaws and Hammerstein (Rogers & Hammerstein), the Slavers of Drule and all those other puns and references that drifted gracefully over my head as a kid... (Some of 'em still do.) I live and learn!
Try and top Ro-Jaws and Hammerstein for hidden puns then.
Well, I don't want to let the cat out of the bag or anything, but in 'Rogue Trooper' you could work out (if you were paying attention to the subtle clues*) which piece of equipment each character's biochip would end up in because it was hidden in their names.
* or if you read the first ever instalment.
And did you know that the names of the Aux's in Kingdom... etc.
Strontium Dog had its fair share of groaners, too. In addition to the aforementioned "Slavers of Drule" and "Kid Knee", I give you "Mm-mm-Mattezon's", "Dobie Zitch", "Planet Blas, way out in the Gallego System", "Carrington Crystal", "No Cure for Kansyr", "Rita Duckworth" "Stone Killers" and many, many more.
Plus the fact one whole story seems to be based solely on Dantes' Inferno. And let's not forget Stix.
Not until last year did I twig that Diagon Alley from Harry Potter is the direction Diagonally. ::)
Quote from: Ghastly McNasty on 08 February, 2012, 10:20:52 AM
Not until last year did I twig that Diagon Alley from Harry Potter is the direction Diagonally. ::)
But...they even point that out in the story.
It obviously went over his head crazyfox...
QuoteBut...they even point that out in the story.
Must have glazed over during that bit.
QuoteIt obviously went over his head crazyfox...
Indeed
Quote from: Noisybast on 08 February, 2012, 08:30:19 AM
Strontium Dog had its fair share of groaners, too. In addition to the aforementioned "Slavers of Drule" and "Kid Knee", I give you "Mm-mm-Mattezon's", "Dobie Zitch", "Planet Blas, way out in the Gallego System", "Carrington Crystal", "No Cure for Kansyr", "Rita Duckworth" "Stone Killers" and many, many more.
I've got to admit I love all that stuff - "Next prog: Dog-gone!", the Chums of Dennis singing "Chum-chum-cheree" etc, etc.
Quote from: Noisybast on 08 February, 2012, 08:30:19 AM
Strontium Dog had its fair share of groaners, too. In addition to the aforementioned .... I give you ...."Dobie Zitch" ..... "Planet Blas, way out in the Gallego System",
Nope - still don't get these two.
Quote from: Dandontdare on 08 February, 2012, 12:00:28 PM
Quote from: Noisybast on 08 February, 2012, 08:30:19 AM
Strontium Dog had its fair share of groaners, too. In addition to the aforementioned .... I give you ...."Dobie Zitch" ..... "Planet Blas, way out in the Gallego System",
Nope - still don't get these two.
Blas Gallego (here there be scantily clad ladies, by the way):
http://www.blasgallego.com/illustration/illustra.htm
The other one - er, crotch rot, to you.
Quote from: Noisybast on 08 February, 2012, 08:30:19 AM
Strontium Dog had its fair share of groaners,..."Planet Blas, way out in the Gallego System"
Nope. I still don't get this one. Explanation?
Quote from: The Cosh on 08 February, 2012, 12:28:34 PM
Quote from: Noisybast on 08 February, 2012, 08:30:19 AM
Strontium Dog had its fair share of groaners,..."Planet Blas, way out in the Gallego System"
Nope. I still don't get this one. Explanation?
Blas... Gallego...
A reference to the artist linked to above.
(not that I'd heard of him at the time I started reading Strontium Dog, mind)
aha, you learn something new every day! Hadn't heard of this artist before.
Didnt he do the movie poster for Heavy Metal
(http://{http://www.cityonfire.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/17917_front.jpg%7D)
Do you know? K9 went over my head for years.
Sorry if this already got a mention...
Ace Trucking (according to the Wiki):
The title was lifted from a 1970s improvisational comedy group whose membership had included Fred Willard, Patti Deutsch and Bill Saluga.
Who knew? Not me.
Five years ago, my Dredd t-shirt: 30 years of hurt, not being an Football fan nor an Englander, this had to be explian to me very recently
not being an Football fan nor an Englander can you explain ?
I was told it was the words to an English football team song recorded with that Baddel chap, could have been a wind up for all I know :-[
football mostly goes over my head so I'll just nod :)
Quote from: James Stacey on 21 February, 2012, 11:35:53 AM
football mostly goes over my head so I'll just nod :)
so your a goalie?
Quote from: Proudhuff on 21 February, 2012, 11:32:49 AM
I was told it was the words to an English football team song recorded with that Baddel chap, could have been a wind up for all I know :-[
David Baddiel and Frank Skinner's 3 lions
Back on topic, at the time I was too young to get the pun in "Gasbah" in Rogue Trooper. Later on I thought it was just a pun on the Clash song. Years later found out what a casbah was. I'm thick like that.
Might as well point this out again...
In Bad Company - bloke keeping a diary is Danny Franks.
Quote from: M.I.K. on 21 February, 2012, 06:08:51 PM
Might as well point this out again...
In Bad Company - bloke keeping a diary is Danny Franks.
oh for f,,, so it is. :-[
Talking of Bad Company, and as a massive Clash fan it never went over my head, but Joe Scummer - Joe Strummer.
Quote from: Judge Jack on 01 March, 2012, 07:18:57 PM
Talking of Bad Company, and as a massive Clash fan it never went over my head, but Joe Scummer - Joe Strummer.
Huh. That never once occurred to me, and I'm really fond of that character (despite the fact we basically know nothing about him - he's got such a cool look.)
Quote from: M.I.K. on 21 February, 2012, 06:08:51 PM
Might as well point this out again...
In Bad Company - bloke keeping a diary is Danny Franks.
Oh for fuck's sake, I can't believe I never copped that one.
In Prog 500 there were pages written and drawn by past masters with many in-jokes. One that for some reason always stuck with me was on the page drawn by Ian Gibson which I think was written by Alan Moore; one character says "Umberto what?". The only Umberto I know of is Eco, does anyone know the relevance of this?
The penny just dropped on Slabhead the Strontium Dog ([spoiler]slaphead[/spoiler]). Of course, it is possible it occurred to me before and didn't stick, but I'd be just using that as a figleaf to try and preserve my modesty, when we know I'd need a dirty great big figleaf (to cover up my oblivious ignorance, not my winkle, as I'm hung like a mouse*).
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 01 March, 2012, 09:30:36 PM
Quote from: M.I.K. on 21 February, 2012, 06:08:51 PM
Might as well point this out again...
In Bad Company - bloke keeping a diary is Danny Franks.
Oh for fuck's sake, I can't believe I never copped that one.
Me neither.
* But I can still make Roger's mom squeak**
** Although that might be the cheese***
*** Or she just needs a good oiling****
**** Oh never mind, I could go on all night*****
***** Nope must leave it there
Quote"Umberto what?".
Gibson used Q.Twerk 'cute work' and Umberto, (IIRC that was his mothers maiden name)as a pseudonym for his work.
David
Blakee Pentax.
I'm still not really sure what it's supposed to mean although I have a suspicion it's "break." I used to think it must be "black" because that's what colour cameras were.
QuoteGibson used Q.Twerk 'cute work' and Umberto
Mayby Emberton.
Quote from: maryanddavid on 09 March, 2012, 12:02:09 AM
QuoteGibson used Q.Twerk 'cute work' and Umberto
Mayby Emberton.
Thank you SO much for scratching that itch, I appreciate it.
Quote from: The Cosh on 08 March, 2012, 11:15:43 PM
Blakee Pentax.
I'm still not really sure what it's supposed to mean although I have a suspicion it's "break." I used to think it must be "black" because that's what colour cameras were.
Yeah, it's break.
Well I used to think it was just going on about someone called 'Blake Pentax'... :-[
:)
Blakee Pentax
is not to do with 'On The Buses'?
wasn't there an episode where the inspector tried to photograph the staff when they weren't working
No, its just a very funny, borderline racist, gag of the sort you probably wouldnt do today- blakee= 'break' spoken in japanese accent, 'pentax'= type of camera. Japanese tourists were often depicted photographing everything that moved, and most things that didnt, at the time.
Its a seminal panel- i cant hold my own camera or watch someone else hold it, without thinking or saying 'aieeee, no blakey pentax' to this day.
SBT
In Slaine, the quote 'He didn't think it too many'.
Was this linked to a hymn i used to sing in junior school. I cant remember the title but i think it was about Samson, a couple of lines went "with the jaw bone of an ass he slew a thousand men, and the next day he did it all again" (i think)...
Just been checking out the 2000ad art over on the CAF site, and i was reminded of the Cam Kennedy drawn story from Prog 440 - Magnificent Obsession, which i always thought was a play on Orson Welles The Magnificent Ambersons
and I thought it was a play on Douglas Sirk's Magnificent Obsession (1954)
Oh dunno then. If it is from the Douglas Sirk film, then by copying exactly its not the best play on words is it.
Always thought it was a nod and a wink to Orson's film because they both dealt, to a degree, with family.
I'm not sure this counts, but I often wondered why most of the Judges' armour seems to be in the shoulder area. Okay, I suppose it's possible the fibre of the main uniform itself might have protective qualities but all the thick stuff is on the shoulders rather than on the chest where.. you know... the majority of vital organs are stored. (Okay it partly covers the chest but not enough to constitute proper protection.)
Then one day it hit me. It's not so much to protect a judge from bullets, although it no doubt does help an off-centre shot. It's motorcycle gear to protect the judge if he/she goes flying over the handlebars! Obviously that's the best place for such armour in that eventuality.
Mind you, Johnny Alpha's gear seems to be primarily shoulder based too, and while he will often pilot a skimmer, it's not really his modus operandi, so maybe Mr Ezquerra just likes big shoulder pads. Then again Alpha's shoulder armour is a lot more extensive than the judges' covering more chest area, at least on one side.
"Judge Mandroid, the good news is your armour saved you from the crash's impact. The bad news is that you now have an Eagle embedded two inches into your shoulder blade.'
Quote from: BPP on 10 March, 2012, 03:04:43 PM
"Judge Mandroid, the good news is your armour saved you from the crash's impact. The bad news is that you now have an Eagle embedded two inches into your shoulder blade.'
Heh. I've often thought that eagle was a bit too pointy too, although it looks good. That's one thing I'm glad they changed in the new film.
Quote from: Mardroid on 10 March, 2012, 03:09:20 PM
Quote from: BPP on 10 March, 2012, 03:04:43 PM
"Judge Mandroid, the good news is your armour saved you from the crash's impact. The bad news is that you now have an Eagle embedded two inches into your shoulder blade.'
Heh. I've often thought that eagle was a bit too pointy too, although it looks good. That's one thing I'm glad they changed in the new film.
If it welds itself to your nervous system perhaps it could help you fly, Controling you, making your muscles twitch in all sorts of ways to enable you to soar through the air. They could call you Eagle Angel.
V
Quoteit's not really his modus operandi, so maybe Mr Ezquerra just likes big shoulder pads.
Artists don't like drawing shoulders and elbows and knees.
Quote from: SpetsnaZ99 on 10 March, 2012, 09:04:42 AM
In Slaine, the quote 'He didn't think it too many'.
Was this linked to a hymn i used to sing in junior school. I cant remember the title but i think it was about Samson, a couple of lines went "with the jaw bone of an ass he slew a thousand men, and the next day he did it all again" (i think)...
Nope. It's straight out of Celtic legends, where the hero engaged on a slaying spree will kill X people and
never think it too many.
My personal favourite Celtic death count belongs to a guy who called for his harp in a battle. It promptly flew to his hand,
killing seven men as it came.
Was that in the Mabinogion, Jedit (I leant my copy and didn't get it back, grr)?
I lent it too...
Oh Drokking hell! Futsie = Foostsie!!!
How on earth did I miss that!?!
Quote from: Pete Wells on 29 July, 2012, 02:07:05 PM
Oh Drokking hell! Futsie = Foostsie!!!
I have no idea what a Foostsie is, and Google is being absolutely no help. If, perchance, you meant Footsie, I still don't get it.
Futsie = Future Shock Sufferer, no?
I can only ask, what the hell did you think it was?
Futsie = Future Shock or FTSE (footsie): the UK share index futures.
Never made that connection. Indeed, I'm very dubious that there is (an intentional) one.
Christ, I even spelt that wrong!
Right, so futsie = footsie (like playing saucily with your feet.) However, from some reason I always read it as Fustie and have only read it correctly today. Whodathunk?
Isn't a 'Fustie' just a very old man?! :lol:
I always read it as footsie but I don't think there was ever a correct phonetic put forth and I see nothing wrong with fu-tsie since that's how it's spelt.
Quote from: Pete Wells on 29 July, 2012, 04:42:17 PM
Christ, I even spelt that wrong! Right, so futsie = footsie (like playing saucily with your feet.) However, from some reason I always read it as Fustie and have only read it correctly today. Whodathunk?
Stallone and Cannon thought MC1 was surrounded on three sides by The
Curs't Earth (rather than
Curs-ed), which made me question whether I'd been reading that wrongly all those years- for all I know I have. Pat Mills is the cause of much confusion: a childhood pal used to make reference to
Hammer-steen and
Mee-Quake, and I've never felt the need to call
Shlawn-ye by his 'proper' name.
It took me ages to realise that Pat Wagons were so-named in reference to the supposedly inveterate criminality of the Irish.
I thought Pat Wagons was a reference to Paddy Wagons, themselves reflecting that so many Irishmen joined police forces in the US.
Quote from: bikini kill on 29 July, 2012, 09:11:18 PMIt took me ages to realise that Pat Wagons were so-named in reference to the supposedly inveterate criminality of the Irish.
I'd always assumed that the Pat in 'Pat Wagon' was short for 'Patrol', but there y'go.
Quote from: bikini kill on 29 July, 2012, 09:11:18 PM
It took me ages to realise that Pat Wagons were so-named in reference to the supposedly inveterate criminality of the Irish.
Quote from: Trout on 29 July, 2012, 09:14:46 PM
I thought Pat Wagons was a reference to Paddy Wagons, themselves reflecting that so many Irishmen joined police forces in the US.
Both are true and correct.
Quote from: bikini kill on 29 July, 2012, 09:11:18 PM
Quote from: Pete Wells on 29 July, 2012, 04:42:17 PM
Christ, I even spelt that wrong! Right, so futsie = footsie (like playing saucily with your feet.) However, from some reason I always read it as Fustie and have only read it correctly today. Whodathunk?
Stallone and Cannon thought MC1 was surrounded on three sides by The Curs't Earth (rather than Curs-ed), which made me question whether I'd been reading that wrongly all those years- for all I know I have.
It is and you have.
I always went with Curs-ed.
I always read it as cursed, rather than curs-ed!
I started reading it at Curs't. But now pronounce it Curs-ed.
I've always pronounce Futsie as 'fff-you-tsie'. As in the first syllable of 'Future'
Quote from: The Adventurer on 29 July, 2012, 09:59:29 PM
I started reading it at Curs't. But now pronounce it Curs-ed.
Same here, though 30 odd years of doing it one way is a hard habit to break.
Progue.
Forgot to mention that in my recent reading of The Treasures of Britain I finally got to see the bit where Pat lays down the law on pronounciation of Sláine. In his musical interlude. Ukko rhymes 'Sláine' with 'pain', then Nest points out that it should be pronounced 'slauncher', rhyming it with 'torture'. Ukko then observes that this a matter for future generations to ponder. That's us told!
It was a few years before I understood the Helltrekkers 'next week' caption that inspired my username.
"Slow, Slow, Quick-Quag, Slow"
Never saw the little Dredd face hidden in the J of the old school Dredd logo until someone pointed it out on this board.
(http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_49Qd6oXQ1t0/TSKJUfvUmbI/AAAAAAAAAP4/vWIH8DQgcQU/s1600/DSC_3383.JPG)
For some reason, when I first saw that 'J' it actually reminded me of Hammerstein. I'm not sure why, as it doesn't look much like him at all.
Quote from: The Cosh on 29 July, 2012, 09:23:31 PM
QuoteStallone and Cannon thought MC1 was surrounded on three sides by The Curs't Earth (rather than Curs-ed), which made me question whether I'd been reading that wrongly all those years- for all I know I have.
QuoteIt is and you have.
You've got to think Alan Grant and John Wagner used the same pronunciation- unless
that's why they couldn't keep working together- so you'd also think the audio on the clip below would settle the matter ... but it doesn't. Grant opts for
Curst, but incorporates a glottal stop between the 's' and the 't' that gives it the same rhythm as
Curse-ed. Because
Cursd just sounds wrong (see the 1995 film).
Unless I'm mistaken, it was Mills who named the previously anonymous 'radiation desert' that had been mentioned (and shown in a limited form) in earlier issues. If anyone can be bothered trawling through that 3 hour
ECBT2000ad podcast to find mention of Mills's protean Dredd epic they can claim the glory as their own.
GLOTTAL STOP YER CARRY ON (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4UrWxWGFH8w) (2m 05s)
The Garth Ennis story Death Aid, is a pun on Live aid but also on the old name for a hearing aid as a 'deaf aid'.
Quote from: QuickQuag on 30 July, 2012, 11:02:52 AM
It was a few years before I understood the Helltrekkers 'next week' caption that inspired my username.
"Slow, Slow, Quick-Quag, Slow"
I don't get this?!
It's a dance move (the Tango, I think) "Slow, slow, quick - quick slow".
In my defence m'lud I was only a kid, and I still can't dance for toffee! ;)
Quote from: QuickQuag on 01 August, 2012, 11:34:57 AM
It's a dance move (the Tango, I think) "Slow, slow, quick - quick slow".
In my defence m'lud I was only a kid, and I still can't dance for toffee! ;)
Ahhhhh ! Now i get it!
D'oh!
Only just realised that Blackblood is named after the robot oil he drinks.
It has to be said; When Jessop Hammer is assembling hisc Iron Man drones at the Stark Expo and makes the comment that press have a real big problem that day, that they'd run out of ink, got me wondering what the fuck he was talking about. It gets me every time. But it's rewarding working it out just before the audience in the Expo theatre. But, it gets me every time hehe.
Good lord I have a new one.
Twenty years after the ABC Warriors enter a pub called The Piston Broke (Khronicles of Khaos) the penny finally drops as to why Pat insisted on drawing attention to the establishment's name.
I always thought it an odd name, but I should have worked it out at the time - I was a student after all!
Quote from: radiator on 30 July, 2012, 11:20:05 AM
Never saw the little Dredd face hidden in the J of the old school Dredd logo until someone pointed it out on this board.
Holy shit! I've been looking at that logo for 20 years and have never noticed that.
Mind=blown :o
If you're going by the Irish Gaelic pronunciation, Sláine is 'slawn-ye' (that's as anglicised as I can make the phonetics! Press the play button on this page to hear someone say it.
http://www.forvo.com/word/sl%C3%A1ine/
Always called him 'Slain' myself though. And this is coming from an Irish person living in Clontarf :D
Could the famous trousers of Yess have been inspired by John Lennon? You decide...
(http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Arts/Arts_/Pictures/2012/11/28/1354126744480/Yoko-Ono-Collection-for-O-011.jpg)
http://www.guardian.co.uk/culture/2012/nov/28/yoko-ono-fashion-line-john-lennon
Unsure if im in the right thread here, as i think we used to have one for things we'd always assumed were one thing but really were another. Besides, im narked because im reduced to checking the board on my phone meaning i can read the advent calender comments thread, but havent been able to see the actual advent thread for DAYS. Fuckabollocks!
Anyway...
Reading H P lovecraft's 'The Colour Out Of Space' this evening, one of the characters refers to poison as "pizen". So, I ask you: aside from wondering if this is where Wagner and Grant lifted Fink's preferred description of his killing method from, have you like me been pronouncing it "pizzen" your whole life, and not a New England accented "pie-zen"?
SBT
I've always read it in my head as 'pizzen', though I knew it was a dang local accent pronunication of poison.
Quote from: Dash Decent on 09 December, 2012, 02:58:55 AM
I've always read it in my head as 'pizzen', though I knew it was a dang local accent pronunication of poison.
Given that the Angel family are much more likely to root for the Cowboys and the Longhorns than the Patriots, I think we can all carry on reading Fink's dialogue as a redneck
Pizzen. rather than a Southie
PAAAIII-z'n. The West Country and Cornwall might have shaped New England voices. but most hicks South of the 40th parallel follow the pronunciation models of their Scots-Irish forebears, and Wagner and Grant were presumably referring to the speech patterns of the older generation of Scots who brought them up as much as they were to Gabby Hayes (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7koigiUq7GE) and Walter Brennan (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EuLC07TbQTw).
It always cracked me up when John Wayne went on about his Paw as if he was in an episode of
The Broons (//http://).
'pizzen' though, would have two 'z's, no matter where you were from.
SBT
Quote from: SmallBlueThing on 09 December, 2012, 10:38:51 AM
'pizzen' though, would have two 'z's, no matter where you were from.
Nouns like
Quiz, which
end in a
z, take on an extra
z when functioning as a verb, but the word
poison (for example) takes on neither an extra
n nor an extra
s as part of its transformation into gerund form. The closest analogue I can think of in formal English for a bit of patois such as
pizen/pizening is
wizen/wizening.
Always read it as "pie-zen".
I always read it as "pie-zen" too, because some regional US dialects pronounce it like that, whereas nobody says "pizzen".
I always had a pretty clear voice in my head for what Fink sounded like - possibly more so than any other character. Kind of raspy and harsh but at the same time purring and soft
Worryingly, all of my rereads of Fink stories in recent years have been vocal-acted by The Crack Fox from The Mighty Boosh. Not so much an 'over my head' thing as a 'get the drokk out of my mind!' thing.
I'd say it's a bit more like 'puy-zin' than 'pie-zen'. I don't think anybody in the history of anything anywhere has ever called poison 'pizzen', (and I've heard a number of folk use the puyzin/piezen pronunciation in this neck of the South East Scottish woods).
Quote from: sauchie on 09 December, 2012, 11:33:10 AM
Nouns like Quiz, which end in a z, take on an extra z when functioning as a verb, but the word poison (for example) takes on neither an extra n nor an extra s as part of its transformation into gerund form. The closest analogue I can think of in formal English for a bit of patois such as pizen/pizening is wizen/wizening.
You should not attempt to apply correct grammatical form to accents/dialect. That way lies madness.
The 'Barry Penge' thing. Is that from something I should know?
It's Mr Overdrive's real name from Low Life, which Dirty Frank taunts him with - "Big Barry Penge! Big Barry Penge!""
Cool. I knew it was from Lowlife, but thought it was a reference to something else!
Quote from: WhitBloke on 11 December, 2012, 03:53:23 PM
Worryingly, all of my rereads of Fink stories in recent years have been vocal-acted by The Crack Fox from The Mighty Boosh. Not so much an 'over my head' thing as a 'get the drokk out of my mind!' thing.
"Ta gits that Nazi man Dredd, ah'm gonna need mah
paralyzin' poison an' mah squishy boots!"
That's it. My Fink-reading brain is now officially bended. But I am certain I know what his pizens are made from. Blood from a cat's face and shit... lots and lots of shit.
Oh. Wait. Wrong forum. :-\
Should we get in early and point out the "Arab Spring" connection to "Mutant Spring"?
Pat wagon = patrol wagon.
Dumb, I know.
Only clicked few days ago when I was catching up on reading backlog of stuff such ad Case Files 2!
A newcomer to 'Breaking Bad' explained to me the meaning of bent lawyer Saul Goodman's name.
Seemingly 'It's all good, man'.
Halo's mate Toy was [spoiler]a lesbian[/spoiler]. Seems so obvious now. Did I mention this before?
That America was satire.
Bash those dirty domeocrats Dredd!
In The Robohunter story Verdus there is a pastiche of bilbo baggins meeting gollom
thanks to a BBC4 doc, I only just found out that "Mr Mojo Rising" from LA woman is an anagram of Jim Morison.
This followed a superb Pink Floyd doc, so I'm wallowing in old cool music right now.
In Mandroid, the name of the wife who ends up as an automaton with no mind of her own is called Katherine Rosson.
(http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/f/fe/Stepfordwivesposter.jpg/225px-Stepfordwivesposter.jpg)
It is good to know 2000ad remains deep down, subversive and readers still notice.
New Rose by the Damned ::)
What's that about again Huffster? I got illuminated on it once and it clicked, but for the life off me I can't remember what it is.
its a really,really cunning word play that went over my young head.. until years later when it finally clicked!!
Quote from: Dandontdare on 09 February, 2013, 12:06:49 AM
thanks to a BBC4 doc, I only just found out that "Mr Mojo Rising" from LA woman is an anagram of Jim Morison.
No it isn't. There is no 'G' in 'Jim Morison' and there is only 1 'r'.
There is if its spelt Mr. Mojo Risin as he spelt it and you also spell his surname with 2 r's like he did.
It is if you spell it 'Mr. Mojo Risin' ;)
Oops!
Judge Ocks = Ox.
Only twigged that recently!
After first reading of it a couple of years ago, I only recently got the Lou Scannon gag.
Some judge's comment at the end of Dredd in Cardboard City - 'Guess that's how you solve a problem like Maria.' Funny how judges have a casual knowledge of 120-year-old musicals, but it was a great line now that I understand it.
Quote from: Ghastly McNasty on 25 March, 2013, 05:10:49 PM
After first reading of it a couple of years ago, I only recently got the Lou Scannon gag.
I just got that right now.
Quote from: radiator on 25 March, 2013, 03:26:28 PM
Judge Ocks = Ox.
Only twigged that recently!
God really I've known that for like forever... or well... at least since you posted that and I just read it.
Oh, fuck. I just got "Deadlock". :-[
Erm, is 'Hot Dog Run' a (nonsensical) pun on 'Hot Dog Bun'?
Quote from: radiator on 10 April, 2013, 11:27:19 AM
Erm, is 'Hot Dog Run' a (nonsensical) pun on 'Hot Dog Bun'?
It occurs to me know I have no idea why it should be called the Hot Dog Run. It's always just been a given that that is what it is. It doesn't even make sense in context with Hotties apparently being the MC1 term for hotdogs.
In Devlin Waugh : Swimming in blood....
Aquatraz...Undersea prison...obviously based on Alcatraz...( Got that one ! ).
Murray Koenig : The pest control 'exterminator' brought in to clear the infestation.....Missed this one as an amalgamation of Bill Murray from Ghostbusters and Walter Koenig as Chekov from Star Trek.
Quote from: SuperSurfer on 03 January, 2013, 02:58:57 PM
Pat wagon = patrol wagon.
Dumb, I know.
Only clicked few days ago when I was catching up on reading backlog of stuff such ad Case Files 2!
Perhaps a double meaning. In old NYC they refer to police vans as 'Paddy Wagons'. I'm not clear on the reason, either coined first when used in predominantly Irish areas of the city, or, more likely, because they were manned by a predominantly Irish police force.
Quote from: radiator on 10 April, 2013, 11:27:19 AM
Erm, is 'Hot Dog Run' a (nonsensical) pun on 'Hot Dog Bun'?
Dunno. If I've ever thought about it I'd reckon it was something to do with "hotdogging" in the sense of driving or riding in a deliberately extreme fashion.
Quote from: radiator on 25 March, 2013, 03:26:28 PM
Judge Ocks = Ox.
Only twigged that recently!
Maybe I'm being thick but I don't get the joke here.
Quote from: The Cosh on 10 April, 2013, 02:01:21 PM
Quote from: radiator on 25 March, 2013, 03:26:28 PM
Judge Ocks = Ox.
Only twigged that recently!
Maybe I'm being thick but I don't get the joke here.
Judge Ocks was very powerfully built and noted for his strength - i.e, as strong as an ox.
This may be obvious but the JD story about the release of Casey Steech, a perp that turned evidence against the mob, ran around the time of the release of actor Stacey Keach...who had just done time in a prison in the UK for smuggling drugs in...I think a small amount for personal use.
Venus Bluegenes - I got the blue genes bit easily enough but at the weekend I discovered a song called... Venus In Blue Jeans!
Anyone else find that when you get all these references it kind of takes something away from those old stories?
It all seemed so strange and mysterious when I was a kid and it all went over my head!
Quote from: Bubba Zebill on 10 April, 2013, 01:55:28 PM
Perhaps a double meaning. In old NYC they refer to police vans as 'Paddy Wagons'. I'm not clear on the reason, either coined first when used in predominantly Irish areas of the city, or, more likely, because they were manned by a predominantly Irish police force.
It was Irish cops - they were essentially given the jobs in exchange for voting for the Democrats.
M.
That Zenith was actually pretty smart, and [spoiler]managed to talk Scott Wallace out of nuking London without St John's help.[/spoiler]
I also thought for a long, long time that Berlin was a-bombed in reality.
Quote from: Mikey on 10 April, 2013, 03:59:26 PM
Quote from: Bubba Zebill on 10 April, 2013, 01:55:28 PM
Perhaps a double meaning. In old NYC they refer to police vans as 'Paddy Wagons'. I'm not clear on the reason, either coined first when used in predominantly Irish areas of the city, or, more likely, because they were manned by a predominantly Irish police force.
It was Irish cops - they were essentially given the jobs in exchange for voting for the Democrats.
M.
Ah!
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 11 April, 2013, 08:20:01 AM
That Zenith was actually pretty smart, and [spoiler]managed to talk Scott Wallace out of nuking London without St John's help.[/spoiler]
I also thought for a long, long time that Berlin was a-bombed in reality.
Explain...
QuoteExplain...
Well... I thought for a long time that Peter Saint John was speaking through Zenith using telepathy when Zenith [spoiler]convinced Wallace not to nuke London.[/spoiler] Later I realised that Saint John's plan was to [spoiler]telepathically cause Wallace to go into a coma, or possibly have a brain haemorrhage.[/spoiler] Zenith took [spoiler]the more humane approach of simply talking him out of it, while Saint John, being a bit of a bastard, later locked the door and let him suffocate or starve. I thought it was Zenith who locked him in until I re-read it years later.[/spoiler]
Unless you're talking about the a-bomb part - in which case I didn't realise, as a child, that the a-bombing of Berlin was just something that happened in Zenith's universe. I thought it really happened.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 11 April, 2013, 09:30:06 AM
I didn't realise, as a child, that the a-bombing of Berlin was just something that happened in Zenith's universe. I thought it really happened.
Do you remember Tharg's snotty reply to the guy who wrote in at that time to point out that only two nuclear devices were dropped on civilian populations during WWII, and that neither of them detonated over Berlin? Way to patronise a readership who grew up in a culture of war comics which at least gestured towards historical and technical accuracy.
This presumption of familiarity with the paradigm of alternate universes common in US comics came not very long after Tharg berated another reader for assuming that Anderson's psychic abilities and Johnny Alpha's mutant traits would conform to the depiction of those phenomena in the pages of
X-Men. I don't think Tharg's even real.
I remember that reply; it amused me at the time but thinking back on it, I have to agree with you...
On page five of the Dredd story The Satanist (Brothers of the blood TPB) - the page where Dredd looks through Vienna's personal possessions and mementos - there's a framed photograph of Rico sans helmet. The image isn't much more than a thumbnail, but the family's trademark shock of black hair is being worn in the bedhead fashion of a young Charlie Sheen. That would explain why the helmet sometimes sits a little high on Dredd's head.
(http://www.flix66.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/Charlie-Sheen-11.jpg)
He has Urbanised hair:
(http://imageshack.us/a/img688/6625/ricoc.png)
(http://imageshack.us/a/img585/1756/ricoii.png)
Someone needs to write a flashback story explaining why Rico's hair goes from Christopher Walken to George Clooney between that framed photograph and his arrival on Titan. The expanded version of The Return of Rico (http://www.2000ad.org/covers/2000ad/hires/951.jpg) Pat Mills wrote around the time of the Stallone film wasn't much less substantial.
Quote from: sauchie on 17 April, 2013, 07:34:08 PM
Someone needs to write a flashback story explaining why Rico's hair goes from Christopher Walken to George Clooney between that framed photograph and his arrival on Titan. The expanded version of The Return of Rico (http://www.2000ad.org/covers/2000ad/hires/951.jpg) Pat Mills wrote around the time of the Stallone film wasn't much less substantial.
His appearance in issue 4 of
Year One will be fleeting, but if we're lucky, it'll be an end-scene with Joe & Rico and a 126 year-old Walter White instructing them both on the merits of
the close-crop.
Although I knew McGruder was a Thatcher analogue, I never connected her referring to herself as 'we' and Thatcher's 'we are a grandmother'.
Does that make Dredd Geoffrey Howe?
Quote from: Steve Green on 17 April, 2013, 07:54:48 PM
Although I knew McGruder was a Thatcher analogue, I never connected her referring to herself as 'we' and Thatcher's 'we are a grandmother'.
Does that make Dredd Geoffrey Howe?
Excellent catch, and topical - use of first person plural is grounds for sectioning
. Shurely Shojan's the Howe analogue; making Dredd the Hesseltine figure who delivers the
coup de grâce.
We're back to haircuts again.
(http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-YmwhhLNvaFg/UW70TqO1G-I/AAAAAAAACHY/XUwAqz5s5rM/s320/ricosauve.JPG)
"Hi Brinna, what're you watching?"
- "John Cage: Atonal Avenger."
This only a few short weeks after the same writer had a character called Cornelius Cardew save the day. Don't worry, I didn't get that reference until much later either.
Quote from: The Cosh on 09 May, 2013, 12:11:31 AM
"Hi Brinna, what're you watching?"
- "John Cage: Atonal Avenger."
This only a few short weeks after the same writer had a character called Cornelius Cardew save the day. Don't worry, I didn't get that reference until much later either.
Sorry, I'm thick. Could you explain it? I remember it alright.
Cage and Cardew were both avant garde composers. In later life, Cardew became more interested in left wing politics than music and seems a pretty interesting character (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cornelius_Cardew). I wonder if Alan ever met him.
Anyway, I've just been rereading Halo Jones for the first time in many years. It's pretty good stuff.
Thanks!
Cage was the bloke who composed a three minute piece of silence, wasn't he?
Quote from: Dash Decent on 09 May, 2013, 11:26:16 PM
Cage was the bloke who composed a three minute piece of silence, wasn't he?
4'33" actually!
That's the one!
I do hate the way DJs always talk over the intro to that one.
Only when I was doing the art comp last month did I sus that Krool was a play on 'Cruel'. I teach people's bairns me!
Quote from: Dandontdare on 10 May, 2013, 07:54:15 AM
Quote from: Dash Decent on 09 May, 2013, 11:26:16 PM
Cage was the bloke who composed a three minute piece of silence, wasn't he?
4'33" actually!
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/2276621.stm
Pfffft. Looking at the Clint magazine thread I've just realised why It's called CLiNT.
Quote from: Ghastly McNasty on 16 May, 2013, 07:24:40 PM
Pfffft. Looking at the Clint magazine thread I've just realised why It's called CLiNT.
Are you a fan of the Droid Life character Flick?
*Sounds of another penny dropping*
Quote from: Trout on 16 May, 2013, 11:05:28 PM
Quote from: Ghastly McNasty on 16 May, 2013, 07:24:40 PM
Pfffft. Looking at the Clint magazine thread I've just realised why It's called CLiNT.
Are you a fan of the Droid Life character Flick?
Isn't his name Crumbs, though...?
Now I can't remember. I was sure it was Flick.
Pretty sure he started life as Flicker (because his job was to flick eraser crumbs off the pages), and the name got changed somewhere along the line.
Reading the new Dan Brown novel , Inferno , I've just twigged that the Grice series was called Purgatory , and the Dredd follow-up was called Inferno. Both were parts of the Divine Comedy by Dante. Should there have been a third part called Paradise...
Quote from: strontium71 on 20 May, 2013, 01:26:00 PM
Reading the new Dan Brown novel , Inferno , I've just twigged that the Grice series was called Purgatory , and the Dredd follow-up was called Inferno. Both were parts of the Divine Comedy by Dante. Should there have been a third part called Paradise...
yes, that was when Wagner came back :D
Speaking of that era . . .
The satire of Big Dave really went over my head, as a younger chap. As someone who's grown up to love stuff like South Park and Brass Eye, I really wish I was reading it for the first time now. I think I'd probably laugh quite a lot.
Quote from: strontium71 on 20 May, 2013, 01:26:00 PM
Reading the new Dan Brown novel, Inferno....
I hear Dan Brown novels are the only books actually allowed in Hell. Even as the ice-entombed Satan chews forever on his head and flays his back, Judas Iscariot has to listen to the audiobook of
The DaVinci Code for all eternity. That'll learn 'im.
Quote from: Dandontdare on 20 May, 2013, 02:16:37 PM
Quote from: strontium71 on 20 May, 2013, 01:26:00 PM
Reading the new Dan Brown novel , Inferno , I've just twigged that the Grice series was called Purgatory , and the Dredd follow-up was called Inferno. Both were parts of the Divine Comedy by Dante. Should there have been a third part called Paradise...
yes, that was when Wagner came back :D
With a story named 'The Pit'. Unintentional irony or subtle dig?
Suppose I might as well share my humiliation here for those unable to read about it elsewhere. It was only on seeing the trailer at the pictures this afternoon that I realised the title of World War Z is supposed to be a pun.
Quote from: The Cosh on 12 June, 2013, 08:05:44 PM
Suppose I might as well share my humiliation here for those unable to read about it elsewhere. It was only on seeing the trailer at the pictures this afternoon that I realised the title of World War Z is supposed to be a pun.
You're not American, so stop beating yourself up. Bobcat Goldthwaite's character in
Police Academy 2 and the handle of Ving Rhames's rapist in
Pulp Fiction prove the fuckers can't agree on the pronunciation themselves.
Err I feel really thick now for asking this but could you tell me what the pun is? :-[
World War Zee
World War Three
I still can't bring myself to pronounce it as 'Zee' out loud though.
I need a razor to go over my head. I look like Johnny Alpha from the eyebrows up.
And what is wrong with that? :D
Some of the more recent Dredd stuff went pretty much over my head before reading The Apocalypse War- after all, as I said here (http://forums.2000adonline.com/index.php/topic,38688.msg768179.html#msg768179), it is one of the defining moments in Dredd's entire run.
Same thing with ABC Warriors- Back to Earth made a lot more sense after reading some of the older stuff.
So something struck me earlier - is 'kneel before Zod' a pun on 'kneel before God"?
I wouldn't like THIS hanging over my head...
https://i.chzbgr.com/completestore/12/10/31/_88NhKDvOkeZd_rgJlEdrg2.jpg
Quote from: radiator on 17 June, 2013, 10:31:15 PM
So something struck me earlier - is 'kneel before Zod' a pun on 'kneel before God"?
Zod makes that joke in the film when near the beginning someone says 'dear God' and he replies, 'No, Zod'
Zenith's name was Robert Neal Cassady (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neal_Cassady) McDowell. Come on, I was only wee.
Watching Spaced for the umpteenth time, the penny finally dropped regarding the name of that nice psychic girl Tim met (and who gave him his own phone number): Cassandra. Yeah, it could be a coincidink but let's face it, it's not.
:lol:
Doesn't 'Cassandra' refer to a Greek or Roman myth about a woman who could tell the future?
Probably more a reference to that (as is Anderson's name in the first place).
I get the original reference, but given that Spaced is about as crammed full of nods to 2000AD as you could wish for, I think 'mindreading chick' probably refers to Cass Anderson...
Quote from: radiator on 18 July, 2013, 07:10:12 PM
Doesn't 'Cassandra' refer to a Greek or Roman myth about a woman who could tell the future?
Probably more a reference to that (as is Anderson's name in the first place).
I don't believe it.
Quote from: radiator on 18 July, 2013, 07:10:12 PM
Doesn't 'Cassandra' refer to a Greek or Roman myth about a woman who could tell the future?
Probably more a reference to that (as is Anderson's name in the first place).
Of course, Anderson isn't the only blonde woman with psychic abilities (http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_Ruf9JBv9V4U/SDWE82mHo_I/AAAAAAAAApo/N-jcKBo4xJ0/s1600-h/scan0001.jpg) on whom Wagner & Grant bestowed that moniker.
Cheers!
Jim
I haven't seen the episode in question, but if the joke of the character is that no-one believes her predictions, then it's probably a reference to the myth. The way some artists sometimes depict Anderson with reddish hair (Bisley and whoever coloured the Eagle covers are the two that spring to mind) is probably a reference to the daughter of Priam, King of Troy.
Quote from: Jim_Campbell on 18 July, 2013, 08:03:11 PM
Of course, Anderson isn't the only blonde woman with psychic abilities (http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_Ruf9JBv9V4U/SDWE82mHo_I/AAAAAAAAApo/N-jcKBo4xJ0/s1600-h/scan0001.jpg) on whom Wagner & Grant bestowed that moniker.
I like the look of this; Ortiz, demony stuff.... Probably expecting to much to ask if it was ever collected/
Quote from: johnnystress on 19 July, 2013, 10:09:21 AM
I like the look of this; Ortiz, demony stuff.... Probably expecting to much to ask if it was ever collected/
Not as far as I know, but there's a massive chunk of it scanned here (http://theyellowedpages.blogspot.co.uk/search/label/The%20House%20Of%20Daemon), although the oldest episode is at the bottom so, counter-intuitively, you have to start at the bottom and scroll
up.
Cheers!
Jim
Quote from: Jim_Campbell on 19 July, 2013, 10:44:30 AM
Quote from: johnnystress on 19 July, 2013, 10:09:21 AM
I like the look of this; Ortiz, demony stuff.... Probably expecting to much to ask if it was ever collected/
Not as far as I know, but there's a massive chunk of it scanned here (http://theyellowedpages.blogspot.co.uk/search/label/The%20House%20Of%20Daemon), although the oldest episode is at the bottom so, counter-intuitively, you have to start at the bottom and scroll up.
Cheers!
Jim
Arsom! Never read this before - thanks for linking that Jim :thumbsup:
Ro-Busters.
Robust.
Only occurred to me now.
(http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/3b/Paris_Tuileries_Garden_Facepalm_statue.jpg/300px-Paris_Tuileries_Garden_Facepalm_statue.jpg)
Not a play on words, just something I've missed in 35 years of re-reading: Walter waving Dredd on his way on the last page of Ch 2 of The Cursed Earth.
THINGS THAT WENT OVER YOUR HEAD...
Planes
Quote from: Jim_Campbell on 19 July, 2013, 10:44:30 AM
Quote from: johnnystress on 19 July, 2013, 10:09:21 AM
I like the look of this; Ortiz, demony stuff.... Probably expecting to much to ask if it was ever collected/
Not as far as I know, but there's a massive chunk of it scanned here (http://theyellowedpages.blogspot.co.uk/search/label/The%20House%20Of%20Daemon), although the oldest episode is at the bottom so, counter-intuitively, you have to start at the bottom and scroll up.
Cheers!
Jim
Great!! Always wanted to read the end of this after having read some random episodes back in my yoof.
Many thanks!
Quote from: glassstanley on 30 July, 2013, 09:31:19 PM
Not a play on words, just something I've missed in 35 years of re-reading: Walter waving Dredd on his way on the last page of Ch 2 of The Cursed Earth.
You and me both. Didnt notice Walter either, until fairly recently - and that's me pouring over
every line of that particular story, for the passed 35 years as well.
Dredd's gun has six types of ammunition, so it's a six shooter.
Anderson topless in The Apocalypse War. (as they blast a tunnel under the east-meg silo's)
I mentioned it on another thread and thought it might be of interest here too.
QuoteI mentioned it on another thread and thought it might be of interest here too.
Anderson topless is always of interest.
Anyway, I've just re-read
The Art of Kenny Who and realised that the boss of American comics giant Big 1 has a very familiar turn of phrase: 'Okay, 'nuff said. It's truth-tellin' time, tiger'.
The Krool, are like, 'Cruel.'
I only sussed that during the Bad Company Art comp, sheesh!
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 08 September, 2013, 06:46:49 PM
QuoteI mentioned it on another thread and thought it might be of interest here too.
'Okay, 'nuff said. It's truth-tellin' time, tiger'.
Ok...that did go over my head... Probably exposing a terrible ignorance of popular culcha ...but what's the reference?
Quote from: Bubba Zebill on 09 September, 2013, 12:41:33 PM
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 08 September, 2013, 06:46:49 PM
QuoteI mentioned it on another thread and thought it might be of interest here too.
'Okay, 'nuff said. It's truth-tellin' time, tiger'.
Ok...that did go over my head... Probably exposing a terrible ignorance of popular culcha ...but what's the reference?
those sound like pulsatingly powerful proclamations from the Might Marvel Bullpen - Excelsior!
...and has the same name as a certain assassin...now I get it! (never did read Marvel TBH)
Over on the thread for the new Nemesis colour collection I mentioned that the DJ at the very beginning of the book was based on Kenny Everett and that this fact went unnoticed by me for thirty three years. Well here's something else.
Was looking through the same volume and was having fun trying to see where O'Neil provided new art for Eagle Comics. Got to the 'Origin Of Excessus' story and for the life of me I couldn't see where the new art was inserted. So I got the Nemesis The Warlock Vol1 out to compare and was surprised to see that the pages were the same. This got me to thinking that for that volume they had also used the Eagle version and that I had just discovered something new.
Almost came on here to ask if anyone could compare the original version to these and was there a problem with losing the original artwork when they compiled the b&w collection.
It was only then, when I was trying to find what prog the story was originally published in that I realised it had never been published in the prog but was an annual story, and as such was already the correct dimensions and didn't need adjusting.
Sometimes things take a while to sink in!
I've wondered about characters based on tv personalities being unrecognisable to younger readers in reprints. I think Robin Day has been used a few times in Dredd and Walter the Wobot strips.
As a kid I was baffled by Hammerstein's: "And if ya can't stand the heat... ya shouldn't be in the kitchen!" I had no idea it was a saying. I just thought – why is he talking about kitchens?
Dear Tharg,
It has come to my attention that certain similarities exist between the Cursed Earth Maurader Scabby Hayes and the talented jazzman Tubby Hayes. Are they, by any chance, related?
Yours,
Edna Scrotes, Aged 12
Tubby
(http://i.imgur.com/wPWE7iT.jpg)
Scabby
(http://i.imgur.com/PPlLV1x.jpg)
Quote from: sauchie on 11 April, 2013, 09:02:15 PM
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 11 April, 2013, 09:30:06 AM
I didn't realise, as a child, that the a-bombing of Berlin was just something that happened in Zenith's universe. I thought it really happened.
Do you remember Tharg's snotty reply to the guy who wrote in at that time to point out that only two nuclear devices were dropped on civilian populations during WWII, and that neither of them detonated over Berlin? Way to patronise a readership who grew up in a culture of war comics which at least gestured towards historical and technical accuracy.
I know this is old, but to be fair Britain and Germany didn't (to my knowledge) deploy superhuman soldiers bred via knowledge from evil gods from a closed timeloop either.
Could be twaddle, now, but did Hester Hyman's surname have some kind of metaphorical significance? Her death bringing the mature world of politics to Dredd - breaking the, er, Hyman to signify the city's growing up, etc. Or am I talking a load of gubbins?
My umbrella.
Until some creep stole it? Call a judge citizen!
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 24 September, 2013, 07:59:00 AM
Could be twaddle, now, but did Hester Hyman's surname have some kind of metaphorical significance? Her death bringing the mature world of politics to Dredd - breaking the, er, Hyman to signify the city's growing up, etc. Or am I talking a load of gubbins?
I thought it was alluding to the idea of blood being shed - even though the spelling's different (Hyman/hymen) - but your version's more poetic. Hymen (capital H) was part of the Greek pantheon; associated with
the siege of Troy, disguised himself
under a hood to infiltrate and resist those who were
holding his loved ones captive ... and that's about as much as I know about that. Except that he wears a jaggy bunnet and carries a torch - kinda like a symbol (http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/22/Wenceslas_Hollar_-_The_Greek_gods._Hymen.jpg).
That synth noise during Pop Master, makes the words...
Quote from: sauchie on 24 September, 2013, 07:11:07 PM
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 24 September, 2013, 07:59:00 AM
Could be twaddle, now, but did Hester Hyman's surname have some kind of metaphorical significance? Her death bringing the mature world of politics to Dredd - breaking the, er, Hyman to signify the city's growing up, etc. Or am I talking a load of gubbins?
I thought it was alluding to the idea of blood being shed - even though the spelling's different (Hyman/hymen) - but your version's more poetic. Hymen (capital H) was part of the Greek pantheon; associated with the siege of Troy, disguised himself under a hood to infiltrate and resist those who were holding his loved ones captive ... and that's about as much as I know about that. Except that he wears a jaggy bunnet and carries a torch - kinda like a symbol (http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/22/Wenceslas_Hollar_-_The_Greek_gods._Hymen.jpg).
Ah, I see! You make a lot of sense, as always, and this seems to hold more water than my theory. I didn't know Hymen was a character from mythology. I love this board!
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 25 September, 2013, 05:07:26 PM
this seems to hold more water than my theory.
No, I think there's a lot of mileage in thinking of that incident as a loss of innocence - that's certainly the effect it had on readers' perceptions of the role of the judges and Dredd as a character. That makes it all the more difficult to get your head round Alan Grant's claim (http://www.2000adreview.co.uk/features/interviews/2005/grant/grant3.shtml) that the story was originally about nudism.
Quote from: sauchie on 25 September, 2013, 05:18:21 PMThat makes it all the more difficult to get your head round Alan Grant's claim (http://www.2000adreview.co.uk/features/interviews/2005/grant/grant3.shtml) that the story was originally about nudism.
Yeah, it was a weird one, that. If it was true, it's odd to think that editorial censorship led to what was then the most grown-up Dredd storyline to date. Have to admit I hated the Democracy stuff at the time, but I was only 11 at the time. I later realised it was the best bit of Dreddness that had ever been published.
Quote from: Proudhuff on 24 September, 2013, 07:29:28 PM
That synth noise during Pop Master, makes the words...
Yes it does. That '3 in 10' is a right bitch, isnt it. Never manage that part.
Just re-reading part 1 of The Life & Death of Johnny Alpha and noticed that the reporter is a mutant. Then I realised what her mutation is... she has 3 breasts! How did I miss that first time round?
Quote from: A.Cow on 05 November, 2013, 11:21:55 PM
Just re-reading part 1 of The Life & Death of Johnny Alpha and noticed that the reporter is a mutant. Then I realised what her mutation is... she has 3 breasts! How did I miss that first time round?
It was subtle, noticed it on the second prog she was in....or did I have Total Recall? ;)
Some of the guys on another thread just worked out what a fetish is... ::)
Though having said that, I can remember being in high school and finding out my brother thought a gazebo was some kind of animal!
Quote from: Dash Decent on 15 November, 2013, 04:10:59 PM
Some of the guys on another thread just worked out what a fetish is... ::)
Though having said that, I can remember being in high school and finding out my brother thought a gazebo was some kind of animal!
Which thread? Also, it was that Devlin Waugh / Dredd story that taught me what the original meaning of 'fetish' was.
Anyway, Thrill - power - a play on willpower? It just occurred to be the other day
Quote from: Dash Decent on 15 November, 2013, 04:10:59 PMThough having said that, I can remember being in high school and finding out my brother thought a gazebo was some kind of animal!
An oldie but a goldie:
(http://www.kenzerco.com/Operiodicals/kodt/kodt%20webstrips/WS_Gazebo_p1.jpg)
That's quite appropriate as it came up when he was playing one of the Infocom Zork adventures at the time.
It's taken me until episode 6 of 'Masters of Sex' to realise it's a play on his surname! :-[
I've only just got the joke in the title of the 'Cheap Thrills' thread. :-[
I loved the references to Skelmersdale (a.k.a. Skem) in this year's Strontium Dog stories.
It got me wondering whether John Wagner threw it in as a bit of a hidden gag for those-in-the-know. (Skem is frequently compared with Milton Keynes -- the main ghetto in SD -- due to an excessive number of roundabouts & copious concrete. Also, although rather more tenuous, some of the surrounding communities consider Skem to be a yer-sister-is-also-yer-mother kind of place, i.e. full of genetic mutations.)
The Second Robot War heats up in The Doomsday Scenario, and Dredd's creator provides the definitive in-story statement of authorial purpose:
(http://i1050.photobucket.com/albums/s410/sauchieboy/60c29da6-ddef-44d0-ac65-6b9655d71f12.jpg?t=1392472292)
As far as Dredd epics are concerned, it does have to be Wagner. He did the same thing, with only slightly more subtlety, in Strontium Dog the other week. Editorial made a similar gag with the cover for the Dredd story where The Flying Dutchman (http://www.2000ad.org/covers/2000ad/hires/459.jpg) showed up in MC1.
Incidental details like this (The Switch, prog 369) are the reason why everyone now has to think very carefully about plot contrivances which may add any new information about Justice Department and the city, or contradict the established mythos:
(http://i1050.photobucket.com/albums/s410/sauchieboy/ac02ae11-9db9-41e5-81a4-eabc75c23b75.jpg?t=1393664194)
It must have been great in the old days, when you could just type stuff like all judges enter the Academy at age five, or write yourself out of a corner by inventing something like the above, and not have to worry about the repercussions that might have for stories you or someone else might want to tell in 30 years time. Has some clever bugger - most likely Michael Carroll - ever used this incidental detail as a plot point in a story?
He probably will now.
(http://i1050.photobucket.com/albums/s410/sauchieboy/bcab9916-f7b3-4564-b539-242479b8ba4d.jpg?t=1394266678)
No, Castillo, that really doesn't make much sense at all. Vitus implanted thoughts in the lawgiver's mind? No wonder McGruder gave you such a hard time.
Tut! Plenty of Psis in Dredd's world have been shown to have the specific ability to fool or fog sensors and computers, including Dance. Castillo's just showing interdepartmental awareness.
As to me, I've just this morning realised that Moore's old pen name Curt Vile is a pun on magus-approved composer Kurt Weill, of LoEG: Century fame. Given that I've read a half-dozen biographies of Moore where it was almost certainly mentioned, that's a bit sad.
Quote from: TordelBack on 08 March, 2014, 08:44:11 AM
Plenty of Psis in Dredd's world have been shown to have the specific ability to fool or fog sensors and computers, including Dance.
Oh aye, but psychic abilities in Dredd World are usually very
specific indeed; judges specialise as empaths and precogs, and if a perp they encounter is a telekinetic (for example) they aren't usually depicted as being able to predict the future (for another example) as well. Anderson does a whole lot of new age crap, but that's mostly an extension of her abilities as a telepath.
I don't doubt that telekinesis can encompass the ability to change zeros to ones, but Vitus Dance has a particularly broad skill set
(pyrokinesis, telepathy, telekinesis, and precognition) which puts Anderson to shame. No wonder he thought he was the Messiah. It's certainly not a deal-breaker, but if Dance's abilities had been a little better defined and more
specific, I think
Doomsday and the stories leading up to it would have felt like more of a coherent piece.
Doomsday and
The Cal Files are both concerned with the manipulation of information and people, and if there had been an explicit equivalence drawn between the way Dance rearranges the sequences of the DNA in his victims' bodies, and the sensors of the gun, it would have supported the themes of a story about an entirely digital villain. A hitman with the ability to influence information systems and technology would be a better fit for Narcos than a Cursed Earth mutie and his scorpions *.
* my idea that the compound Narcos's cyber-assassin would use to enhance his abilities should be digitalis (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cardiac_glycoside#Examples), rather than scorpion venom, is probably best kept between us
The end of Revere Book II. By the time this came around, I'd largely forgotten all the stuff about leaps of faith and ritual rebirth in the original series. So I assumed that [spoiler]when Revere chucked himself off the car park roof then he was definitely dead and[/spoiler] the story was over for good.
I was pretty surprised when it came back for Book Three.
Something I've only just (i.e. this afternoon) realised: Armoured Gideon - Armageddon
The name badge of CJ Volt's personal protection officer in Mark Millar's voodoo assassin nonsense, The Big Hit (prog 1030):
(http://i1050.photobucket.com/albums/s410/sauchieboy/0654ccdf-90fb-4b9f-81cd-f3104820f8b6.jpg?t=1394385402)
I don't remember that one at all. Probably for the best. There was a Judge Gordon Rennie in Millar's Anderson text story, though
Decent gag that, but who is the artist? Craddock on colours, sure, but I can't figure out the linework...
I was long gone by then, mind.
I would guess Lee Sullivan.
Quote from: radiator on 10 March, 2014, 08:23:18 AM
I would guess Lee Sullivan.
Maybe, but I'm not sure. And now I realise I should just have looked it up (such a child of the 20th C, me):
Barney says "G. Stoddart, other artists also involved". Huh, who he/she/they? More googling suggests maybe Graham Stoddart of FQP/Dogbreath fame?
(http://www.futurequake.co.uk/imagebucket/DB28/Search&DestroyBlog.jpg)
Here's one that's still going over my head. Not because of a double-meaning, but because it's only ever been printed and not said out loud. Did the Sovs have Strato-'vees' or Strato-'fives'?
I always assumed 'Strato-vee' due to the V-shape of the craft...
Quote from: glassstanley on 16 March, 2014, 02:39:45 PM
Did the Sovs have Strato-'vees' or Strato-'fives'?
Either way, they were certainly things that went over your head.
I suspect Ming is correct, and this thinking can also be applied to Kim Raymond's H-Wagons. ;)
Quote from: TordelBack on 10 March, 2014, 08:43:45 AM
Barney says "G. Stoddart, other artists also involved". Huh, who he/she/they? More googling suggests maybe Graham Stoddart of FQP/Dogbreath fame?
Might be, but it's a very different style of art; Jack Covvella's is the other hand involved. The art on the strip has pleasant echoes of the great Steve Dillon's easy command of figure work and character, and the inking technique is similar too. There are some direct lifts from Dillon
Rogue Trooper panels, and the uniform and bike are explicitly Dillon's too. Some panels go off the Dillon model, and the competency of the figure work and composition in these are much more shaky.
The art's what would have happened if it was Steve Who?, rather than Kenny, who had his style appropriated by the replicator machines of BIG1 comics:
(http://i1050.photobucket.com/albums/s410/sauchieboy/d585ec1f-0046-49eb-b213-3b395998b8ff.jpg?t=1394896474)
(http://i1050.photobucket.com/albums/s410/sauchieboy/93735679-2655-44a3-8051-7d14d03a39f8.jpg?t=1394982744)
Quote from: TordelBack on 16 March, 2014, 03:16:39 PM
Quote from: glassstanley on 16 March, 2014, 02:39:45 PM
Did the Sovs have Strato-'vees' or Strato-'fives'?
Either way, they were certainly things that went over your head.
Great question! And a great answer for anyone without a stubb gun.
I've alwayssaid vee but, now you've brought it up, it's hard to avoid the comparison with. The Saturn V which would've been known to any schoolboy.
A third interpretation might be that, like the AK47, it's named after its inventor : Sergei Stratov.
...or Sergei Stratov the fifth?
Quote from: ming on 09 January, 2012, 11:00:01 AM
I'm thinking of stuff like Ro-Jaws and Hammerstein (Rogers & Hammerstein), the Slavers of Drule and all those other puns and references that drifted gracefully over my head as a kid... (Some of 'em still do.)
Anyway, I just spotted a 1949 Schlitz advert in a Grauniad New York photo gallery (http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/gallery/2012/jan/06/new-york-photography-in-pictures#/?picture=384053709&index=4) sporting the slogan: "The beer that made Milwaukee famous"...
I guess that's where the Dredd classic "The Fear that made Milwaukee famous" came from. I live and learn!
Resyk pronunciation went completely over my head for 35 years until the Dredd movie put it onscreen. I was always mentally pronouncing it as "Reesk". I was like "OH! Re-cyc!" out loud in the first showing. Not a proud moment unveiling my own dumbassery for so long.
(http://i1050.photobucket.com/albums/s410/sauchieboy/JudgeDreddTheMegazine345-Page49BentN.jpg?t=1395078788)
Bent N/Ben 10 ... no? Look, it's really clever - the N of the logo is actually bent.
Quote from: The Cosh on 16 March, 2014, 04:04:45 PM
Quote from: TordelBack on 16 March, 2014, 03:16:39 PM
Quote from: glassstanley on 16 March, 2014, 02:39:45 PM
Did the Sovs have Strato-'vees' or Strato-'fives'?
Either way, they were certainly things that went over your head.
Great question! And a great answer for anyone without a stubb gun.
I've alwayssaid vee but, now you've brought it up, it's hard to avoid the comparison with. The Saturn V which would've been known to any schoolboy.
A third interpretation might be that, like the AK47, it's named after its inventor : Sergei Stratov.
A listen to the BBC's
Apocalypse War suggests it probably is 'Vee', but has now thrown up 'Sove' for Sov, when I have always pronounced the 'o' as in 'dog'. Oh, the challenges of life :)
Its definitely Sovv rather than Sove.... definitely. Definitely I tell you!
Isn't the first syllable of 'Soviet' pronounced 'Sovv'?
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 19 March, 2014, 04:14:27 PM
Isn't the first syllable of 'Soviet' pronounced 'Sovv'?
Aye, but not if you're American.
Quote from: sauchie on 19 March, 2014, 04:53:55 PM
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 19 March, 2014, 04:14:27 PM
Isn't the first syllable of 'Soviet' pronounced 'Sovv'?
Aye, but not if you're American.
Nor indeed if you're Russian, where it's apparently something like 'sah-vee-eht-skeek'.
Just noticed that the other Judge who arrests the eponymous 'Bat Mugger' is "Judge Robin". 25 years it took me to spot that!
Quote from: The Corinthian on 22 March, 2014, 11:53:45 PM
Just noticed that the other Judge who arrests the eponymous 'Bat Mugger' is "Judge Robin". 25 years it took me to spot that!
Hah! That's great (and had completely passed me by as well).
I'm not sure it went over my head, exactly, but I don't think I realised that the November print date of John Wagner's (broad) satire of the Northern Ireland peace process meant it was probably written around marching season. Shouldn't both sides be Simps?
(http://i1050.photobucket.com/albums/s410/sauchieboy/e4aa7b5a-4e13-4f86-a7fc-231f8b5318c9.jpg?t=1396782045)
Just a few months ahead of the Good Friday Agreement, I'm glad Mo Mowlam didn't take her cue from Dredd's two-fisted solution to that Gordian Knot. Actually, I'm sure the BLAIR-1 strip meant the prog was banned from Whitehall.
(http://i1050.photobucket.com/albums/s410/sauchieboy/3c5e86d1-402e-4b34-baf8-0895b503aacc.jpg?t=1396782170)
Are the flashbacks in Trifecta tied back to a tea-and-biscuits meeting as a nod to Proust and his madeleines? Or is it something from the George Smiley stories?
Quote from: Dash Decent on 23 April, 2014, 02:20:14 AM
Are the flashbacks in Trifecta tied back to a tea-and-biscuits meeting as a nod to Proust and his madeleines? Or is it something from the George Smiley stories?
To make Frank and Jack convincing double agents, Smiley zaps 'em so they can't
recherché the
temps perdu. I'll eat my hat if the biscuit dunking breaking through that fog of memory isn't a la-de-da reference to poncey French books about sod all. Smiley's name and nature (and the fact he literally brings Frank
In From The Cold) make the Le Carre connection clear, but he looks much more like Alan Bennet than Alec Guiness, and the Hilda Ogden décor of Smiley's lair are much more
A Cream Cracker Under The Sofa than
Tinker Tailor.
What the common in "common or garden" meant. As we don't have commons north of Clapham, I just thought it was a really redundant phrase.
Quote from: The Cosh on 23 April, 2014, 07:34:13 AM
What the common in "common or garden" meant. As we don't have commons north of Clapham, I just thought it was a really redundant phrase.
Well feck me pink with a lead balloon. You learn something new every day
Quote from: sauchie on 23 April, 2014, 07:01:48 AM.. I'll eat my hat if the biscuit dunking breaking through that fog of memory isn't a la-de-da reference to poncey French books about sod all.
Or
The Transporter (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5FNQd2plVpw) version of same...
PSI Division - is that meant to read as P.S.I. Division? In which case the CSI link has gone over my head since the first Judge Death story until now. Always read it as 'Sigh Division'...
Yeah I've always read it as 'sigh' division. As in Psychic, guess it works either way.
Same here with 'Sigh' division for me, but I took it as a shortening of Psionics due to the spelling, plus the fact psionics is an umbrella term covering all manner of psychic abilities (telepathy, telekinesis, pyrokenesis etc - thanks Wikipedia! ;)) which would also make sense.
Quote from: amines2058 on 24 April, 2014, 06:23:51 AM
Same here with 'Sigh' division for me, but I took it as a shortening of Psionics due to the spelling, plus the fact psionics is an umbrella term covering all manner of psychic abilities (telepathy, telekinesis, pyrokenesis etc - thanks Wikipedia! ;)) which would also make sense.
I used to call it 'P.S.I.', until I saw the coverline that said 'Bridge of Psis'. Also, it would be horribly jarring to read it as Anderson saying something like 'The kid - She's a Pee Ess Eye!'
It's "sigh", as in psychic or psionic. Although a recent cover used the CSI pun and it had to be explained to me.
Quote from: The Cosh on 24 April, 2014, 08:34:04 AM
It's "sigh", as in psychic or psionic.
Of course it is — there's never been any suggestion that it's an acronym, has there? If so, what does it stand for?
Cheers
Jim
Also, the Greek letter Psi (the sound 'ps', and pronounced 'sigh' in English) is used as the Dept's symbol, and is associated with paranormal wotsits.
(http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/37/Greek_psi.png/800px-Greek_psi.png)
Sai?
(http://img1.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb20131211131718/mk_/images/4/40/WWWWPSIOCT-758.jpg)
Quote from: Jim_Campbell on 24 April, 2014, 09:01:34 AM
Quote from: The Cosh on 24 April, 2014, 08:34:04 AM
It's "sigh", as in psychic or psionic.
Of course it is — there's never been any suggestion that it's an acronym, has there? If so, what does it stand for?
Psychic Scene Investigation?
The idea that it might *not* be pronounced 'sigh' only occured when I saw a video with Book Cook referring to the strip as Anderson P.S.I.
I think the Sighs have it.
What we need is Tharg* to visit us all individually and read our progs aloud for us. Mind you, this message board would probably shrink by about 80%.
*And a droid who speaks Irish.
EDIT: Tordels, old boy, I never noticed that. It reminds me of this article: http://www.cracked.com/photoplasty_875_25-symbols-you-never-noticed-in-everyday-life/ (http://www.cracked.com/photoplasty_875_25-symbols-you-never-noticed-in-everyday-life/). The one about binary blew my mind (though not as much as cracked.com thinks things blow people's minds).
EDIT EDIT: That's doubly weird, Hawkmonger. I use those things in my martial arts class; never realised they looked like the letter they sound like.
Literally only just realised that 'Comixology' is a pun on 'Mixology' - ie, the preparation and mixing of Cocktails.
Quote from: TordelBack on 24 April, 2014, 09:07:29 AM
Also, the Greek letter Psi (the sound 'ps', and pronounced 'sigh' in English) is used as the Dept's symbol, and is associated with paranormal wotsits
Not only did I not know that, I hadn't even noticed that Psi Division
had a symbol.
(deep shame)
Quote from: sauchie on 24 April, 2014, 05:53:40 PM
Not only did I not know that, I hadn't even noticed that Psi Division had a symbol. (deep shame)
Yes, well, that may be because I'm probably talking out of my posterior as usual. I was absolutely sure there were loads of examples, from
Shamballa in particular, but a quick flick through the bookshelf reveals precisely
none.
Maybe it's.... [adjusts sunglasses]... all in the mind.
EDIT: Occurs to me it may actually appear in the Anderson-in-Space stories, and thus not Psi-Div
at all.
:lol: This is why I love this forum.
Like most, it's 'sigh' for me.
Not least because otherwise, EVERY punning 'Next Prog' and cover tagline falls flat.
Anderson is one of the worst punning offenders, I'd say.
The P is silent, as in "swimming pool"
Quote from: Fungus on 24 April, 2014, 07:19:43 PM
Anderson is one of the worst punning offenders, I'd say.
We are all guilty!
(http://i1180.photobucket.com/albums/x418/Dash_Decent/DonMartin4_zps2d7d6efd.jpg)
Quote from: Dandontdare on 24 April, 2014, 09:35:32 PM
The P is silent, as in "swimming pool"
dont think that P is silent but we know what you mean!
(SIGH)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CH1XGdu-hzQ&noredirect=1
When Deadlock and Nemesis are looking straight ahead it's (blindingly) obvious that they are connected to one another. Or it is now, but before I just didn't see the resemblance.
Quote from: Eightball on 25 April, 2014, 07:42:00 PM
When Deadlock and Nemesis are looking straight ahead it's (blindingly) obvious that they are connected to one another. Or it is now, but before I just didn't see the resemblance.
There's always been a passable similarity back in the day, even if it was just Deadlock's 'maw'.
Bisley's stint on the ABC Warriors in the late 80's was the first time I became acutely aware of it, and Deadlock's similarity to Nemesis has never been more pronounced (or cool looking) when drawn by Henry Flint.
Quote from: Link Prime on 25 April, 2014, 08:27:23 PM
Quote from: Eightball on 25 April, 2014, 07:42:00 PM
When Deadlock and Nemesis are looking straight ahead it's (blindingly) obvious that they are connected to one another. Or it is now, but before I just didn't see the resemblance.
There's always been a passable similarity back in the day, even if it was just Deadlock's 'maw'.
Bisley's stint on the ABC Warriors in the late 80's was the first time I became acutely aware of it, and Deadlock's similarity to Nemesis has never been more pronounced (or cool looking) when drawn by Henry Flint.
I've been watching that creator video of Kevin O'Neill discussing the origins of Nemesis and how he based the (previously unseen) character's head on the Blitzspear after discarding other concepts. It's an amazing coincidence that two characters seemingly created independently of each other should end up looking so similar. Either that or Kevin O'Neill has some weird recurring shit going on in his head.
Quote from: Eightball on 25 April, 2014, 10:35:20 PM
Kevin O'Neill has some weird recurring shit going on in his head
Understatement of the year, neebs.
Deadlock was originally meant to be the occupant of the Blitzspear.
Quote from: maryanddavid on 25 April, 2014, 10:52:46 PM
Deadlock was originally meant to be the occupant of the Blitzspear.
I demand an explanation, (S)He-Who-Is-Named-Twice.
2000AD annual 1983 page 68.
David will suffice, I suppose I really should change the name, totally greenhorn I thought username was email back when and used the current one, so I couldn't be arsed. I hate when someone changes their user and pic, I have no idea of who is posting with 5000 posts to their name, except Trout who always keeps it marine.
Back in 1978 at the tender age of 9, my family went on holiday -- my very first time -- to the exotic land of Weston Super Mare. So many things were different, including ITV. For the first time in my life I experienced a different TV region first-hand!
When I went to try to find my beloved 2000 AD in a newsagent I found this:
(http://www.2000ad.org/covers/2000ad/mediumres/78.jpg)
For months afterwards I was convinced that they just had their own regional version of 2000 AD, just like ITV. It was ages before I finally twigged that it was a one-off cover and a total coincidence.
Haha Cow :) Victim of a top cover.
:lol: It took me ages to find that Big Dave one during the Summer Offensive. I loved the cover but according to Viz it really doesn't help sales.
Also, thanks for the reference, David, I'll check it out when I get a chance
Wig dude in Alan Bennett's The Madness Of King George III responds to someone pointing out that he has acted illegally by quipping I AM THE LAW!
just wondering: Did anyone fail to realise that Frank Quitely was a pseudonym? I copped it straight away; but I'm only curious. I won't judge you for it. I'm on your side.
No way on this good Earth is Quitely a real surname. That much was obvious.
Beyond that, it wasn't a thrusting pun of a pseudonym, so I always assumed it was just a bit lame.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 03 May, 2014, 12:57:34 AM
just wondering: Did anyone fail to realise that Frank Quitely was a pseudonym? I copped it straight away; but I'm only curious. I won't judge you for it. I'm on your side.
Eh? I presumed it was a real name.
If there's a gag in there I don't get it.EDIT: Ah. Just looked it up -- hadn't realised it was a spoonerism.
Quote from: Fungus on 03 May, 2014, 02:23:59 AM
No way on this good Earth is Quitely a real surname. That much was obvious.
Well, yes, but Warren Pleece
is Warren's real name, I believe, so stranger things have happened...
Cheers
Jim
I often wondered if his brother Gary was just playing along with the joke, or whether the name Gary Pleece was a clever pun or reference I didn't understand.
I first saw Quitely's work on The Greens (http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-cBb8Ud0Loz0/Tyr0X8Ch8II/AAAAAAAAA3A/CrgYQnYydXM/s1600/Quitely_3.jpg) in Electric Soup, where the allusions to classic cartoonist of old made it seem much more obvious he was working under a pen name (the initials reminded me of Fred Quimby too). I'm not sure I would have twigged so readily if I'd been introduced to him in the world of action-adventure comics, where pseudonyms are much more rare. Shaky Kane and Smudge spring to mind, but I'm not sure Chris Halls/Cunningham or the occasional, temporary LJ Silver or Q Twerk count. Anyone want to inform me that Todd Macfarlane is actually Chaim Abrahamovitch?
I never copped the pun in Warren Pleece (even though there isn't one, but you know what I mean). I remember Frank Quitely in Electric Soup; clearly a big fish in a small pond. I seriously doubt if the Rocky McBlaw artist ever made it to DC.
Quote from: sauchie on 03 May, 2014, 10:05:23 AM
I often wondered if his brother Gary was just playing along with the joke, or whether the name Gary Pleece was a clever pun or reference I didn't understand.
I first saw Quitely's work on The Greens (http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-cBb8Ud0Loz0/Tyr0X8Ch8II/AAAAAAAAA3A/CrgYQnYydXM/s1600/Quitely_3.jpg) in Electric Soup, where the allusions to classic cartoonist of old made it seem much more obvious he was working under a pen name (the initials reminded me of Fred Quimby too). I'm not sure I would have twigged so readily if I'd been introduced to him in the world of action-adventure comics, where pseudonyms are much more rare. Shaky Kane and Smudge spring to mind, but I'm not sure Chris Halls/Cunningham or the occasional, temporary LJ Silver or Q Twerk count. Anyone want to inform me that Todd Macfarlane is actually Chaim Abrahamovitch?
Not forgetting Jock of course!
Not sure I would have caught it 'Quite Frankly'...a mate of mine, a big fan of The Greens (as was I), pointed it out to me. Always liked it as a pseudonym.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 06 May, 2014, 10:09:59 AM
I remember Frank Quitely in Electric Soup; clearly a big fish in a small pond. I seriously doubt if the Rocky McBlaw artist ever made it to DC
I bet
Electric Soup sold more copies in the nineties than most DC comics do now.
Not something that went over my head but rather went into my head and stayed there... Rather than start a thread for 'Ways that 2000AD warped your brain' (actually, not such a bad idea) I'll dump it here:
I find it impossible to hear Kenny Everett's voice without picturing him as drawn by Kevin O'Neill in Terror Tube.
(http://i.imgur.com/7jLUGZY.jpg)
Using Kenny Everett to make a tenuous (non-2000 AD) link to Top of the Pops, I've only just realised that TOTP dancers Lipps, Inc. is a pun on "lip-sync".
How the hell did I miss that for 35 years?
Probably the same way you've managed to confuse Legs & Co. with the folk who performed Funky Town.
Quote from: M.I.K. on 14 May, 2014, 02:07:29 AM
Probably the same way you've managed to confuse Legs & Co. with the folk who performed Funky Town.
D'Oh! I'll get me coat...
Just think, after a long roller-coaster of a career which included hosting daytime quiz shows, breakfast TV and helming some fondly-remembered but loss-making slapstick comedy films based on his old characters, Kenny would by now have a knighthood and a much-loved late night radio slot where he mixed his esoteric record collection with surreal links in a slower version of his clipped delivery, with regular guest appearances on Graham Norton where he would mortify Hollywood types like an old pro. :'(
Prog 1226 features a Dredd story (Robbie Morrison and Simon Fraser's Something Over My Shoulder Is Drooling ...) about a psychic kid called Kelvin who kills folk with his powers. Prog 1227 features Wagner and Duncan Fegredo's The Bad Juve ... which is about a psychic kid called Kelvin who uses his abilities to murder people. They're not clearly not supposed to be the same character either.
I can't remember the second one, but I do remember the first Calvin and Hobbes homage.
Quote from: Steve Green on 31 May, 2014, 06:55:11 PM
I can't remember the second one, but I do remember the first Calvin and Hobbes homage.
The kid in the Wagner story (http://i1050.photobucket.com/albums/s410/sauchieboy/AD1227-Page3BadJuve.jpg)'s called Kelvin, but his nickname is Spook.
Ah, yeah I remember that now. Was more along the lines of Primo(?) the Pyrokinetic.
I seem to remember the Robbie Morrison one was explicitly Calvin and Hobbes with a psychically manifested mutant tiger?
Quote from: Steve Green on 31 May, 2014, 07:39:40 PM
I seem to remember the Robbie Morrison one was explicitly Calvin and Hobbes with a psychically manifested mutant tiger?
It's exactly as great as that premise suggests (http://i1050.photobucket.com/albums/s410/sauchieboy/AD1226-Page4CCalvinampHobbes.jpg)!
(http://i1050.photobucket.com/albums/s410/sauchieboy/36cc5402-8dde-4576-92fa-306871dab77a.jpg?t=1401615691http://i1050.photobucket.com/albums/s410/sauchieboy/36cc5402-8dde-4576-92fa-306871dab77a.jpg?t=1401615691)
Wagner and Will Simpson's Chief Judge's Man (1244-1248) - The Public Deception Unit is a throwaway line someone should have gotten an entire series out of. Chief Judge's Man isn't a story I remember particularly fondly, but it contains another great line illustrating the cynicism and artifice of MC1, where a talk show host describes his guest's inflammatory rhetoric as having drawn gasps of astonishment from the show's audience simulator.
You make a great point, Sauchie. Prog 1874, the Terror Tale by Alec Worley and Mark Harrison features a spooky abandoned amusement park being explored by Daphne and Velma. The park is called Kitsuneland, presumably after its founder, 2000ad art genius Edmund Bagwell (nee Kitsune (http://comicbookdb.com/creator.php?ID=28597)):
(http://i1050.photobucket.com/albums/s410/sauchieboy/a4070d59-81da-450a-bf8e-1f050a7e28a8.jpg?t=1402258191)
Jeepers dirk/sauchie, cool solo dialogue thing you've got going there. :lol:
That went over my head, I assumed it was a mythology thing but then it's a cat and not a fox so you're probably on the money.
Quote from: Theblazeuk on 09 June, 2014, 10:29:10 AM
That went over my head, I assumed it was a mythology thing but then it's a cat and not a fox so you're probably on the money
No, I think you're probably right. Can you believe I never thought to google the word Kitsune (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kitsune)?
It only clicked this morning that the "four cred freezy whip" thread is named after an early moment in Block Mania.
It's only occurred to me now that 'dogchips' that G.I.s' personalities were stored on were so-called because real G.I.s' identities were engraved on dogtags. Christ, I'm thick.
Lucky they changed the name to biochips.
It wasn't until a recent purchase of The Art Of Kenny Who that it dawned on me that Scotland would have been bombed back into the stone age (becoming Cal Hab) due the fact that we have nukes at Faslane and therefore we would be a first strike target by the Sovs.
Quote from: 8-Ball on 26 June, 2014, 11:05:20 PM
due the fact that we have nukes at Faslane
Not after 2014... food for thought.
The planet Zed in Strontium Dog's 'The Killing' is so-called because the planet's real name is the unpronounceable ZDWHKKRSWRLD.
The planet-namers could just as easily have reinstated the missing vowels to give Whicker's World.
This post:
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 06 September, 2014, 10:23:56 PM
(http://i143.photobucket.com/albums/r153/brnwlsh/Batman-TheDarkKnightReturns-192.jpg)
Isn't it fairly obvious? :lol:
Guia para iniciantes que se interessam em ler o Juiz Dredd, feito pelo 2000 AD Brasil para o Grupo HQs S/A. Vale lembrar que a Juiz Dredd Megazine pode ser lida fora da ordem, a qualquer momento, por isso foi posicionada no final.
(https://scontent-b-lhr.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xpa1/t31.0-8/s720x720/1540492_338641236312068_4188980322905666297_o.png)
No Day The Law Died, and the Death Fist stories come before Blockmania? ¡Ay, caramba!
(http://img1.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb20130315213325/judgedredd/images/3/3e/DreddAnnual19890018.jpg)
Maybe this is the most obvious thing in the world (it certainly seems to be now) but it went right over my head until last night.
The Judge Dredd story 'Father Earth' printed in 1979 was obviously a dig at flower-power hippies and cultists but I don't think I ever knew how closely it was based on a real group.
Father Earth is almost identical to 'Father Yod' of the Source Family. Not only that but the Dredd story perfectly captures Yod's contradictions, messianic behaviour, increasing insanity, anti-science, apocalypticism and criminal origins.
(http://progressive.homestead.com/yahowa/webYAHOWABW.jpg)
In addition something happens in the Father Earth story that I thought ludicrously funny when I first read it. I won't spoil either the Dredd story or the documentary but there is a similarly ludicrous event in the history of Father Yod. Again, I found myself laughing.
Also, they move to new territory and are hounded by local police...anyway, several comparisons can be made.
It also gives me a new appreciation for the kind of writing (for impressionable young minds) that tears apart this kind of 'cultist' nonsense...and kicks dust in its face.
Check it out, this documentary is available on Netflix and it's (IMHO) mind blowing. Enjoy!
Trailer...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F3f4aleOAxo
I did wonder if this dated back to Garth Ennis' run, and Murphyville being turned into a theme park.
But it seems to be a more recent thing.
http://www.taytocrisps.ie/park/ (http://www.taytocrisps.ie/park/)
"Spudgun to chips"
Don't knock Tayto Park, it's surprisingly good fun - and in the process of expanding (much like its client base). However, despite the most elevated expectations, you will still be shocked by the quantity of crisps you will consume/acquire during your visit. Some stereotypes are just oft-repeated facts.
Good catch on Yod there, Bubba - never knew that.
Me neither. Douglas Wolk points out the frequent mentions of Lobsang Rampa (http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lobsang_Rampa) in the work of Wagner and Grant too, suggesting that obscure, semi-comic, mystical figures occupied a significant place in their imaginative lives. Grant says Wagner went through a phase where he wore a kaftan - maybe they had the same flirtation with alternative lifestyles and quackery as the rest of the ME generation.
I was re-reading The Restricted Files last night, and the story "Mega Miami" where illegally smuggled robots from Mexico were referred to as wustbacks, sorry, rustbacks. I remember reading this as a kid but it wasn't until much much later that I first heard the term 'wetback' and the penny dropped.
Ace Trucking Co's 'The Doppelgarp' involves a planetful of chickens and fowl-based puns, from 'Rooster Cogburn' to the 'Dave Cluck Five' - two of the jokes I did get as a child. Local scar-faced gang boss, Al Capon, flew right over my head until a recent re-read, now armed with the knowledge that a 'capon' happens to be a small variant of chicken.
Quote from: TordelBack on 08 September, 2014, 05:40:13 PM
Don't knock Tayto Park, it's surprisingly good fun - and in the process of expanding (much like its client base). However, despite the most elevated expectations, you will still be shocked by the quantity of crisps you will consume/acquire during your visit. Some stereotypes are just oft-repeated facts.
Good catch on Yod there, Bubba - never knew that.
Quote from: sauchie karate club on 08 September, 2014, 06:08:49 PM
Me neither. Douglas Wolk points out the frequent mentions of Lobsang Rampa (http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lobsang_Rampa) in the work of Wagner and Grant too, suggesting that obscure, semi-comic, mystical figures occupied a significant place in their imaginative lives. Grant says Wagner went through a phase where he wore a kaftan - maybe they had the same flirtation with alternative lifestyles and quackery as the rest of the ME generation.
Cheers, a big surprise to me too as I read that story forever ago. I missed references to Lobsang Rampa...are there any links to the Wolk mentions? ...well, if handy, much appreciated.
I'd never heard of Rampa or noticed the recurrence of the name until I read Wolk's blog - I'm sure I just thought it was a funny MC1 name, and it strikes me that might be just as likely an explanation of the apparent fascination as any possible Grant/Wagner interest in mysticism. One mention I did notice after reading Wolk's blog was a road sign reading Lobsang Ramp in the Wagner/Burns Megazine Dredd story
Sleaze:Quote"Satan" has a brief sequence involving one Lobsang Gump. That first name has shown up a few times over the years in Dredd-universe stories (including one of the Branch Moronians, and the more recent "Lobsang Rampage"); it has to be a reference to the dubious British mysticist Lobsang Rampa
http://dreddreviews.blogspot.co.uk/2011/12/judge-anderson-psi-division-shamballa.html
As for the other new-to-this-survey material here: "Lobsang Rampage"--another Lobsang Rampa joke!--isn't great, but it's the only Andy Clarke-drawn episode that's not part of a longer arc (although it calls on the Nero Narcos stuff for context)
http://dreddreviews.blogspot.co.uk/2012/08/mega-city-masters-03.html
Got to be deliberate then. Isn't Sleaze part of the lead in to Doomsday and Lobsang Rampage during the aftermath? Is that what those links actually say?
Kind of assumed the latter was a reference I was missing but thought it was maybe an MC1 thing which my lack of Megs had cost me.
At some point they may have had an interest in these alternative lifestyles...if you can call it that...but Father Earth really takes the mickey out of guru's...as do these Lobsang Rampa references. A youthful dalliance turned sour with the wisdom of maturity maybe perhaps. Good for them - and good for us :)
Is it possibly the source of Lobster Random too ?
Maybe we need an "Annotated 2000AD" thread to point things out as they come through?
Aux Drift = Rorke's Drift (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Rorke's_Drift).
Though the burning issue remains why none of the Aux has been called Ronnie Barker.
Quote from: Dash Decent on 10 September, 2014, 11:23:56 PM
Maybe we need an "Annotated 2000AD" thread to point things out as they come through?
Aux Drift = Rorke's Drift (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Rorke's_Drift).
Though the burning issue remains why none of the Aux has been called Ronnie Barker.
Good one. Hopefully you can get a royalty on that if Abnett tries to sneak it in.
Sadly, I am old enough to remember (and have built the cutouts from) the old Warhammer scenario Bllodbath at Orc's Drift (http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/29902/blood-bath-orcs-drift) so you wont catch me like that.
Quote from: Bubba Zebill on 08 September, 2014, 09:23:59 AM
(http://img1.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb20130315213325/judgedredd/images/3/3e/DreddAnnual19890018.jpg)
Maybe this is the most obvious thing in the world (it certainly seems to be now) but it went right over my head until last night.
The Judge Dredd story 'Father Earth' printed in 1979 was obviously a dig at flower-power hippies and cultists but I don't think I ever knew how closely it was based on a real group.
Father Earth is almost identical to 'Father Yod' of the Source Family. Not only that but the Dredd story perfectly captures Yod's contradictions, messianic behaviour, increasing insanity, anti-science, apocalypticism and criminal origins.
(http://progressive.homestead.com/yahowa/webYAHOWABW.jpg)
In addition something happens in the Father Earth story that I thought ludicrously funny when I first read it. I won't spoil either the Dredd story or the documentary but there is a similarly ludicrous event in the history of Father Yod. Again, I found myself laughing.
Also, they move to new territory and are hounded by local police...anyway, several comparisons can be made.
It also gives me a new appreciation for the kind of writing (for impressionable young minds) that tears apart this kind of 'cultist' nonsense...and kicks dust in its face.
Check it out, this documentary is available on Netflix and it's (IMHO) mind blowing. Enjoy!
Trailer...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F3f4aleOAxo
I read an interview with art droid Bolland in (fanzine) Arkensword back in the early 80's, & if I remember correctly, he says he modelled Father Earth on himself, since he sympathised with the 'green' point of view rather than Dredd's world view.
Quote from: The Cosh on 11 September, 2014, 12:03:13 AM
Quote from: Dash Decent on 10 September, 2014, 11:23:56 PM
Though the burning issue remains why none of the Aux has been called Ronnie Barker.
Good one. Hopefully you can get a royalty on that if Abnett tries to sneak it in.
Maybe I should come up with a huge list so no matter what Mr Abnett does I can claim I thought of it first. Okay, go!
1. Edward Woofwoof.
2. Er....
3.
Quote from: Dash Decent on 11 September, 2014, 12:25:22 PM
Quote from: The Cosh on 11 September, 2014, 12:03:13 AM
Quote from: Dash Decent on 10 September, 2014, 11:23:56 PM
Though the burning issue remains why none of the Aux has been called Ronnie Barker.
Good one. Hopefully you can get a royalty on that if Abnett tries to sneak it in.
Maybe I should come up with a huge list so no matter what Mr Abnett does I can claim I thought of it first. Okay, go!
1. Edward Woofwoof.
2. Er....
3.
On a slightly related note, it was only recently that I learned why Edward Woodward has so many Ds in his name...
[spoiler]Because otherwise he'd be called Ewar Woowar. :D[/spoiler]
Quote from: ming on 11 September, 2014, 12:31:42 PM
Quote from: Dash Decent on 11 September, 2014, 12:25:22 PM
Quote from: The Cosh on 11 September, 2014, 12:03:13 AM
Quote from: Dash Decent on 10 September, 2014, 11:23:56 PM
Though the burning issue remains why none of the Aux has been called Ronnie Barker.
Good one. Hopefully you can get a royalty on that if Abnett tries to sneak it in.
Maybe I should come up with a huge list so no matter what Mr Abnett does I can claim I thought of it first. Okay, go!
1. Edward Woofwoof.
2. Er....
3.
On a slightly related note, it was only recently that I learned why Edward Woodward has so many Ds in his name...
[spoiler]Because otherwise he'd be called Ewar Woowar. :D[/spoiler]
what do you call a man with 3 wooden heads?
Or even, do you know what you call a man balancing four planks on his head?
[spoiler]No? Well Edward Woodward would![/spoiler]
Only very recently twigged that the record shop in High Fidelity - Championship Vinyl - is a pun on 'Championship Final'.
In my defence I've only ever seen the (Americanised) film. And I hate football.
Also, obligatory:
Nothing goes over my head.
My reflexes are too fast.
I would catch them.
the joke
I operated on my own BRAIN,
to me was always BRIAN, as i read it as such, due to dyslexia and the utter inability to spell.
i only realised i may have been wrong years later when reading the Thrill power Overload story on it.
They saved Hitler's Brian!
Here's one I noticed today.
So there is an Austrian football team called "Sturm Graz".
You know that stuff the Judge's use to control riots? Not riot foam, the other one, Stumm Gas.
Is that close enough?
Quote from: Dash Decent on 11 September, 2014, 01:23:04 PM
Or even, do you know what you call a man balancing four planks on his head?
[spoiler]No? Well Edward Woodward would![/spoiler]
This joke, and the one in the previous post, went straight over my head... till I finally realised that it doesn't work in an Irish accent. Which is a pity, as I'd really like to tell it to people.
Sorry JBC. Maybe you can use this one instead:
What do you call a woman with a boat tied to her?
[spoiler]Maude.[/spoiler]
Failing that, how good are you at putting on other accents?
Just discovered that Steely Dan's 3rd album was called Pretzel Logic. The Dredd variant appeared I. prog 304.
So prog 1900's Block Judge, where injury to a presiding block judge means Dredd has to fill-in and deal with the mental residents of a rundown city block, is a fantastic 'new' story from Wagner and Ezquerra, is it? Some of us don't have the wool pulled over our eyes so easily- this 'new' 10 part mini-epic is doing nothing but expanding on the premise of a single issue story which was published a mere 13 years ago.
They've barely even bothered to change the title (Block Court, Wagner & Kennedy, prog 1284)
(http://i.imgur.com/VjhmPFR.jpg?1)
That Dolman's had more than face-change surgery:
(http://i.imgur.com/lOLQEo7.jpg?1)
She's had city reassignment surgery too. From Wagner and Marshall's Escape From Atlantis, prog 1285, 3/4/2002.
I was reading an old story last night where a Judge jumps in front of MacGruder to save her from an assassin.
The judge's name is Judge Coster.
tee hee
Quote from: Bad City Blue on 28 September, 2014, 01:19:49 PM
I was reading an old story last night where a Judge jumps in front of MacGruder to save her from an assassin. The judge's name is Judge Coster. tee hee
Different Chief Judge (Volt), different spelling of the name Costner:
Quote from: sauchie co-op on 09 March, 2014, 05:18:27 PM
The name badge of CJ Volt's personal protection officer in Mark Millar's voodoo assassin nonsense, The Big Hit (prog 1030, art by Graham Stoddard and Jack Couvella):
(http://i1050.photobucket.com/albums/s410/sauchieboy/0654ccdf-90fb-4b9f-81cd-f3104820f8b6.jpg?t=1394385402)
Quote from: Dash Decent on 19 September, 2014, 01:35:48 PM
Sorry JBC. Maybe you can use this one instead:
What do you call a woman with a boat tied to her?
[spoiler]Maude.[/spoiler]
Failing that, how good are you at putting on other accents?
Gaahh! I still can't use it! That said, I am alright at putting on other accents; at least until someone with that accent heards me.
Okay then, what do you call a man with no arms and no legs you find floating in your swimming pool?
[spoiler]Bob.[/spoiler]
Quote from: Dash Decent on 04 October, 2014, 10:12:04 PM
Okay then, what do you call a man with no arms and no legs you find floating in your swimming pool?
[spoiler]Bob.[/spoiler]
Stop. Right. Their.
Quote from: Dash Decent on 04 October, 2014, 10:12:04 PM
Okay then, what do you call a man with no arms and no legs you find floating in your swimming pool?
[spoiler]Bob.[/spoiler]
Well, that works in my accent... but everyone knows that one, no? [spoiler]Bob[/spoiler] was even a character in Will Self's
My Idea of Fun: a limbless Scotsman, he was, heroically working his way round a swimming pool.
Quote from: Dash Decent on 19 September, 2014, 01:35:48 PM
Sorry JBC. Maybe you can use this one instead:
What do you call a woman with a boat tied to her?
[spoiler]Maude.[/spoiler]
Failing that, how good are you at putting on other accents?
I still don't get this one. What sort of accent do you need?
'moored'
Quote from: The Cosh on 06 October, 2014, 02:36:58 PM
Quote from: Dash Decent on 19 September, 2014, 01:35:48 PM
Sorry JBC. Maybe you can use this one instead:
What do you call a woman with a boat tied to her?
[spoiler]Maude.[/spoiler]
Failing that, how good are you at putting on other accents?
I still don't get this one. What sort of accent do you need?
Try Winston Churchill?
I could never understand the 'better jaw, jaw, war, war' thing until done in that accent( ie don't pronnounce the Rs)
see also the current Kingdom Js Back/Bach, if you use the Loch 'ch' it doesn't work either ;)
Quote from: sauchie co-op on 09 September, 2014, 11:20:28 PM
I'd never heard of Rampa or noticed the recurrence of the name until I read Wolk's blog - I'm sure I just thought it was a funny MC1 name, and it strikes me that might be just as likely an explanation of the apparent fascination as any possible Grant/Wagner interest in mysticism. One mention I did notice after reading Wolk's blog was a road sign reading Lobsang Ramp in the Wagner/Burns Megazine Dredd story Sleaze:
Quote"Satan" has a brief sequence involving one Lobsang Gump. That first name has shown up a few times over the years in Dredd-universe stories (including one of the Branch Moronians, and the more recent "Lobsang Rampage"); it has to be a reference to the dubious British mysticist Lobsang Rampa
http://dreddreviews.blogspot.co.uk/2011/12/judge-anderson-psi-division-shamballa.html
As for the other new-to-this-survey material here: "Lobsang Rampage"--another Lobsang Rampa joke!--isn't great, but it's the only Andy Clarke-drawn episode that's not part of a longer arc (although it calls on the Nero Narcos stuff for context)
http://dreddreviews.blogspot.co.uk/2012/08/mega-city-masters-03.html
Would Lobsang Rampa also a reference to or even just a influence on the name of the character
Lobster Random? Or just pure coincidence?
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 06 October, 2014, 07:19:50 AM
... but everyone knows that one, no?
A man you find in the letterbox? [spoiler]Bill.[/spoiler]
A man you find on your doorstep? [spoiler]Matt.[/spoiler]
A man you find hanging on your wall? [spoiler]Art.[/spoiler]
A man with a seagull on his head? [spoiler]Cliff.[/spoiler]
A man with 20 rabbits up his bum (or nose, depending on audience)? [spoiler]Warren.[/spoiler]
A lady with only one leg? [spoiler]Eileen[/spoiler].
A Japanese lady with only one leg? [spoiler]Irene.[/spoiler]
A woman you see in the distance? [spoiler]Dot.[/spoiler]
A woman with sausages on her head? [spoiler]Barbie.[/spoiler]
A man with a shovel through his head? [spoiler]Doug.[/spoiler]
A man without a shovel through his head? [spoiler]Douglas.[/spoiler]
A man with no knees?[spoiler] Neil[/spoiler]
A man you find under a car? [spoiler]Jack.[/spoiler]
A man lifting crates onto a ship? [spoiler]Derek.[/spoiler]
A woman lying on a tennis court? [spoiler]Annette.[/spoiler]
A man dressed in a brown paper suit? [spoiler]Russell.[/spoiler]
A forum member with a sense of desperation? [spoiler]Dash Decent.[/spoiler]
Thus ends my career as a thread hijacker.
Quote from: Proudhuff on 06 October, 2014, 07:04:14 PM
Quote from: The Cosh on 06 October, 2014, 02:36:58 PM
Quote from: Dash Decent on 19 September, 2014, 01:35:48 PM
Sorry JBC. Maybe you can use this one instead:
What do you call a woman with a boat tied to her?
[spoiler]Maude.[/spoiler]
Failing that, how good are you at putting on other accents?
I still don't get this one. What sort of accent do you need?
Try Winston Churchill?
Aha! Remember the fun we had when the tagline on the Meg was: He is the Gore.
you missed the woman with a pint of lager balanced on her head - [spoiler]Beatrix[/spoiler]
Judge Dredd: Hard Day's Night, prog 1339 (5/7/2003), by Morrison, Goddard, Teague, Blythe:
(http://i.imgur.com/FiNK615.jpg?1)
So what's the story here? I'm working my way through progs from 2003, and I've previously seen the names of former boarders Mogzilla and [spoiler]Scojo[/spoiler] scrawled across walls and used as names of businesses. Was Tharg auctioning-off mentions for charity, or were creators just trying to curry favour with the squeakiest wheels on the relatively new phenomenon of message boards? Can I look forward to a shoot-out in the TordelBack Hottie House involving the Professor Bear Block Y-Dults?
I would have read those names at the time without having a clue who/what they referred to, since at that time The Internet was something my brother had to sneak me into his university and give me a loan of his login to access.
Quote from: sauchie welfare on 19 October, 2014, 02:51:07 PM
Judge Dredd: Hard Day's Night, prog 1339 (5/7/2003), by Morrison, Goddard, Teague, Blythe:
(http://i.imgur.com/FiNK615.jpg?1)
So what's the story here? I'm working my way through progs from 2003, and I've previously seen the names of former boarders Mogzilla and [spoiler]Scojo[/spoiler] scrawled across walls and used as names of businesses. Was Tharg auctioning-off mentions for charity, or were creators just trying to curry favour with the squeakiest wheels on the relatively new phenomenon of message boards? Can I look forward to a shoot-out in the TordelBack Hottie House involving the Professor Bear Block Y-Dults?
I would have read those names at the time without having a clue who/what they referred to, since at that time The Internet was something my brother had to sneak me into his university and give me a loan of his login to access.
That episode, if memory serves, also has a panel in a corridor where the names of many boarders from that time are scrawled on the wall.
Quote from: Richmond Clements on 19 October, 2014, 03:13:44 PM
That episode, if memory serves, also has a panel in a corridor where the names of many boarders from that time are scrawled on the wall.
You
do have a good memory, Rich. Saw this plethora of fan-wanking as I read on, but didn't want to double-post. Spurrier had been published by this point, but Barney says Arthur Wyatt was still just a fanboy like Jayzus B Christ (two mentions):
(http://i.imgur.com/96qxVf6.jpg?1)
Not actually 2000AD related, but I always knew that this * was called an asterisk, but it made me grin like a loon to find † is called an obelisk...
*Nothing to see here, move along
†I won't tell you again...
http://forums.2000adonline.com/index.php?topic=4947.0
Quote from: Richmond Clements on 19 October, 2014, 03:49:04 PM
http://forums.2000adonline.com/index.php?topic=4947.0
Cheers, Rich. Is that Molcher (longmanshort) moaning about not being in
2000ad? Haunting message boards in the early 21st century appears to have been a great way to get your work into the prog - I can't wait to read the serialisation of Hawkmonger's manga epic about polysexual deep sea divers in prog 2024.
Quote from: sauchie welfare on 19 October, 2014, 03:25:42 PM
Quote from: Richmond Clements on 19 October, 2014, 03:13:44 PM
That episode, if memory serves, also has a panel in a corridor where the names of many boarders from that time are scrawled on the wall.
You do have a good memory, Rich. Saw this plethora of fan-wanking as I read on, but didn't want to double-post. Spurrier had been published by this point, but Barney says Arthur Wyatt was still just a fanboy like Jayzus B Christ (two mentions):
(http://i.imgur.com/96qxVf6.jpg?1)
While it wasn't quite up there with Goaty's silver screen scrawls, I was chuffed. I had kind of begged him for it on the forum, to be fair
Old hat for many of you I am sure but where is Goaty (and any other forumlings) visible in Dredd?
I shall await my turn, in time.
Quote from: Theblazeuk on 20 October, 2014, 07:39:01 PM
Old hat for many of you I am sure but where is Goaty (and any other forumlings) visible in Dredd?
JOE SOAP's ugly mug can be seen on a billboard at the side of the skedway, Command Forces is part of the on-screen ticker during the news footage of disorder at the start of the film, Radiator is the radiator to which Kay is cuffed, and that bit of squiggly graffiti you can't quite make out says sauchie. Nobody is sure where Goaty was mentioned, and it's never been discussed here.
QuoteRadiator is the radiator to which Kay is cuffed
;) Surely...
I only realised embarrassingly recently that Kevin Rahm (Mad Men's Ted Chaough) is actually not just a very (very) well-preserved James Spader.
I mean, it's not just me who think that they look uncannily similar is it? (*Googles* apparently not, phew).
(https://i.chzbgr.com/maxW500/2651867648/h85085248/)
Given the shiny suits of the period, he reminded me of Commander Straker from UFO:
(http://www.showbiz411.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/ted-chaough.jpg)
(http://www.isoshado.org/6/6_merchandise_archivio/pr.fander.photo/itc105.JPG)
Was just re-reading Portrait of a Mutant, which features the Kreelers' symbol prominently -- vertical box with an X through. However, I realised that I don't actually know what the vertical box is supposed to represent. Presumably mutation but how?
(http://wingsoverscotland.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/kreelman.jpg)
No thermometers?
No hotdogs?
No Nintendo Wiis?
Please could someone put me out of my misery?
Quote from: A.Cow on 12 April, 2015, 06:50:20 AM
Was just re-reading Portrait of a Mutant, which features the Kreelers' symbol prominently -- vertical box with an X through. However, I realised that I don't actually know what the vertical box is supposed to represent. Presumably mutation but how?
(http://wingsoverscotland.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/kreelman.jpg)
No thermometers?
No hotdogs?
No Nintendo Wiis?
Please could someone put me out of my misery?
I think it's supposed to represent a strand of Mutant DNA.
Cheers
It's a mutant letterbox.
A lot of people in Yorkshire have vertical letterboxes. That explains where all Britain's mutants are then.
Quote from: A.Cow on 12 April, 2015, 06:50:20 AM
Was just re-reading Portrait of a Mutant, which features the Kreelers' symbol prominently -- vertical box with an X through. However, I realised that I don't actually know what the vertical box is supposed to represent. Presumably mutation but how?
(http://wingsoverscotland.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/kreelman.jpg)
No thermometers?
No hotdogs?
No Nintendo Wiis?
Please could someone put me out of my misery?
Looks a bit like the Norse rune Iar, 'serpent'.
Quote from: Lobo Baggins on 12 April, 2015, 12:07:19 PM
Looks a bit like the Norse rune Iar, 'serpent'.
...which is used to represent the dragon Nidhogg, which is also the term used for someone with no honour, the other word for which (Nīþ) became the Old English word nithe, which in modern English is...
Hate.
There you go... either Strontium Dog is much, much deeper than we thought or it's an absolutely
massive but nevertheless utterly brilliant coincidence!
At 40 years young, I only just got Adam Ant this year...
*sigh*
Quote from: Lobo Baggins on 12 April, 2015, 12:26:16 PM
Quote from: Lobo Baggins on 12 April, 2015, 12:07:19 PM
Looks a bit like the Norse rune Iar, 'serpent'.
...which is used to represent the dragon Nidhogg, which is also the term used for someone with no honour, the other word for which (Nīþ) became the Old English word nithe, which in modern English is...
Hate.
Have you played the game, you can get
it (http://store.steampowered.com/app/94400/) on
Steam.
Quote from: glassstanley on 16 March, 2014, 02:39:45 PM
Here's one that's still going over my head. Not because of a double-meaning, but because it's only ever been printed and not said out loud. Did the Sovs have Strato-'vees' or Strato-'fives'?
Necroposting somewhat...
I always assumed that the name was a reference to the guitars the Fender Stratocaster and the Gibson Flying V so it's always been 'Strato Vee' for me..
Quote from: A.Cow on 12 April, 2015, 06:50:20 AM
Was just re-reading Portrait of a Mutant, which features the Kreelers' symbol prominently -- vertical box with an X through. However, I realised that I don't actually know what the vertical box is supposed to represent. Presumably mutation but how?
Perhaps it's Cyclops from the X-men's visor (= mutant) crossed out (= no mutants) and turned sideways (= please don't sue us, Marvel).
Quote from: Lobo Baggins on 25 May, 2015, 07:23:37 PM
Quote from: glassstanley on 16 March, 2014, 02:39:45 PM
Here's one that's still going over my head. Not because of a double-meaning, but because it's only ever been printed and not said out loud. Did the Sovs have Strato-'vees' or Strato-'fives'?
Necroposting somewhat...
I always assumed that the name was a reference to the guitars the Fender Stratocaster and the Gibson Flying V so it's always been 'Strato Vee' for me..
Always been "Vee" for me, but hard one to prove without TB Grover on-hand. What slightly punctures this theory is that SATURN V was definitely "5".
(http://s.hswstatic.com/gif/spaceship-apollo-4.jpg)
Quote from: Lobo Baggins on 25 May, 2015, 07:23:37 PM
Quote from: glassstanley on 16 March, 2014, 02:39:45 PM
Here's one that's still going over my head. Not because of a double-meaning, but because it's only ever been printed and not said out loud. Did the Sovs have Strato-'vees' or Strato-'fives'?
Necroposting somewhat...
I always assumed that the name was a reference to the guitars the Fender Stratocaster and the Gibson Flying V so it's always been 'Strato Vee' for me..
I've always thought they were 'Stratospheric Vehicles', so Strato Vee for me too.
I thought it was because they were shaped like the letter 'V', no?
Yes, I thought 'V' because of the shape.
Quote from: A.Cow on 12 April, 2015, 06:50:20 AM
Was just re-reading Portrait of a Mutant, which features the Kreelers' symbol prominently -- vertical box with an X through. However, I realised that I don't actually know what the vertical box is supposed to represent. Presumably mutation but how?
(http://wingsoverscotland.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/kreelman.jpg)
No thermometers?
No hotdogs?
No Nintendo Wiis?
Please could someone put me out of my misery?
A mutant chromosome?
(http://i38.photobucket.com/albums/e129/jimmyalpha2008/18tnai9ptbayajpg.jpg)
An upright "no junk mail" sticker ? :)
Maybe a "no ballot box" symbol?
There was a gay jibe by some actress against some actor during Strontium Dog: Rage. I had no idea at the time. But then again, I never even copped that when some London thugs accused Clinton of being Swifty's 'lover boy' that they were accusing him of being gay; mainly because I had never heard of 'gay' at the time.
Also, speaking of gay jibes, I just noticed that Garth Ennis's first ever line of Dredd dialogue was 'Control, you got a stiff in Julian Clary Alley.'
Garth Ennis then completely abandoned the concept of joking about anal sex, of course, and certainly did not bang on and on ad nauseum about it in Preacher.
So I popped into Waterstones yesterday and it was bedlam - half the shop cordoned off with big screens so you couldn't see what was happening, lots of large security men and a massive queue of giddy (mainly teenage) girls stretching out of the shop and half way round the shopping centre. I asked one of the staff who was the cause of such excitement and discovered it was none other than ... Joey Graceffa!!!!
Nope, me neither.
Apparently he's a YouTube vlogger with something like 600 million viewers - the most famous dude you've never heard of.
I know (of) him. He's a nice enough fellow, but not in my sphere of interest.
Was just re-reading the Chopper Midnight Surfer story and realised that the billycord that keeps surfers attached to their board must originate from "umbilical cord". D'Oh! How can I have missed that all these years?
(http://s30.postimg.org/4ea5v9vk1/billycord.jpg)
I was only re-reading that the other day. You're probably right - do actual surfboards have billycords too? It sounds like an Ozification of 'umbilical' anyway
Yeah, you can get leg ropes for surfboards. It stops the board from being washed away from you if you fall off, saving you a potentially long swim trying to retrieve it.
A real dumbo one. Was reading Hachette Mandroid today and I don't think I ever realised an iso-cube is an isolation cube.
They should do a facepalm emoji.
Not sure if this has been posted earlier, but I've just been re-reading the very excellent Trifecta and I've only just noticed that the three villains involved in the Godcity conspiracy are called Bachmann, Turner and Overdrive.
Let's Rock!
Quote from: Spaceghost on 02 July, 2015, 08:57:22 AM
Not sure if this has been posted earlier, but I've just been re-reading the very excellent Trifecta and I've only just noticed that the three villains involved in the Godcity conspiracy are called Bachmann, Turner and Overdrive.
Let's Rock!
You've just blown my mind!
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 20 June, 2015, 12:14:19 PM
- do actual surfboards have billycords too? It sounds like an Ozification of 'umbilical' anyway
I've never heard them being called Billycords or 'Billys'... It's just yer 'Leash' that goes round the ankle.
Another good example of Mega-city slang I reckon! :thumbsup:
These three jokes from prog 500, arranged in order of unsuitability for my 11-year-old self:
(http://i143.photobucket.com/albums/r153/brnwlsh/2000ad%200500%2030_1.jpg)
(http://i143.photobucket.com/albums/r153/brnwlsh/2000ad%200500%2032.jpg)
(http://i143.photobucket.com/albums/r153/brnwlsh/2000ad%200500%2033.jpg)
I don't get the last two of those. How did Chopper get his nickname?
Also, I realised on Friday why Trainspotting is called Trainspotting. (I assume it is to do with tracks?)
I thought it was to do with the pointlessness of the situation they find themselves. The stations are all closed and there's no trains. Or something.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 05 July, 2015, 12:58:30 PM
(http://i143.photobucket.com/albums/r153/brnwlsh/2000ad%200500%2033.jpg)
:lol:
Quote from: The Enigmatic Dr X on 05 July, 2015, 06:44:43 PM
I don't get the last two of those. How did Chopper get his nickname?
Also, I realised on Friday why Trainspotting is called Trainspotting. (I assume it is to do with tracks?)
Venus is being flirtatious; hoping that Chopper is named after his... well, you know. Nemesis may be slightly hard of hearing. (I remember Jasper Carrott making the same joke, but our boy the Warlock got there first.)
As for Trainspotting, I think Tips is on the ball there. The novel sheds more light on it; when Begbie and Renton meet a alcoholic down-and-out (who [spoiler]turns out to be Begbie's father[/spoiler]) in the
disused Leith station where they've stopped in for a piss; and he drunkenly jokes something like 'Whit are youse up tae, lads? Trainspotting, eh?'
Irvine Welsh has written more than one truly dreadful book, but he is capable of flashes of utter genius - I'm thinking here of the cot death scene, [spoiler]whose chapter title in the book is 'It Goes Without Saying'. While this is the junkies' unspoken agreement that the heroin cook takes his hit before the bereaved mother gets a turn, it also alludes to how the baby dies before anyone finds out who the father was[/spoiler]. Or maybe I overthink these things.
Quote from: The Enigmatic Dr X on 05 July, 2015, 06:44:43 PM
Also, I realised on Friday why Trainspotting is called Trainspotting. (I assume it is to do with tracks?)
http://movies.stackexchange.com/questions/23571/what-is-the-meaning-of-the-title-trainspotting
Also note the wallpaper in Renton's childhood room at his parents' house, where he stays when he's forced to move back in with them.
It's got trains all over it.
Interesting detail regarding what happens to judges who don't make the grade and a rationalisation of why street judges injured in the line of duty aren't still patrolling the streets with robot legs and plasma cannons where their hands used to be * (Rennie/Richardson, House Of Pain, prog 1485):
(http://i.imgur.com/oQyMc9N.png?1)(http://i.imgur.com/q7KhPLA.png?2)
* it doesn't work completely - given the level of tech seen in mechs who appear outwardly human, such as Inga and Ueno Hama, which could surely be applied to prosthetics - but I'm going to fancon it and say the technology is too unreliable for use in situations where human lives depend upon it functioning 100%
After DOC all solutions to depleted Judge numbers would have to be considered. I guess however there is an inbuilt lack of trust in investing in tech after Mechanismo and those booby-trapped Lawgivers. Z
Quote from: Butch on 19 July, 2015, 10:18:15 AM
Interesting detail regarding what happens to judges who don't make the grade and a rationalisation of why street judges injured in the line of duty aren't still patrolling the streets with robot legs and plasma cannons where their hands used to be * (Rennie/Richardson, House Of Pain, prog 1485):
(http://i.imgur.com/oQyMc9N.png?1)(http://i.imgur.com/q7KhPLA.png?2)
See, this is why i love this forum. Your post has absolutely nothing to do with what the previous poster said, even though you're showing a story written by the same man.
This board is powered by Random, Jayzus.
Si Spurrier and Rob Williams obviously spent a great deal of 2006/7 feeling intellectually intimidated by BBC arts programming, since two different versions of The Culture Show and Mark Lawson made into the prog within a year of each other.
I don't know if there was some kind of miscommunication between Spurrier and Marshall (on Neoweirdies, prog 1496), or if making Merk Awesome's chassis and vocabulary more reminiscent of Stephen Fry (maybe Andrew Graham Dixon) was intended to make the scene a more general satire of the cognoscenti:
(http://i.imgur.com/E6gBSAz.png?1)
(http://i.imgur.com/8vRTshz.png?1)
Despite Spurrier bringing back Citizen Snork as a talent show judge, Williams's story (The Biographer, prog 1537) is by far the most interesting, getting round the difficulty of writing his first Dredd story in a very arch way - by writing a story about a writer finding it difficult to write a story about Judge Dredd. You thought all that metafictional stuff in Ichabod Azrael came out of nowhere:
(http://i.imgur.com/GGMzlo8.png?1)
(http://i.imgur.com/ggi0Kgy.png?1)
... and cleverly subverting the expected formal conventions of a Dredd strip:
(http://i.imgur.com/WSr64cO.png?1)
Wasted effort on you lot at the time - https://forums.2000adonline.com/index.php/topic,19856.msg335017.html#msg335017
RIP Shuggie McTighe (20??-2039), long standing head of Tek Division and wan a' Jock Tamson's bairns (apparently). Seen here with more hair than usual and without the headset he habitually wore, but then Jock's Sean Connery analogue isn't a perfect likeness either. Scotland gains independence by 2029 (at the latest) in the Dredd timeline (Rennie/Jock, Tartan Terrors, 1540, 06 Jun 2007):
(http://i.imgur.com/GR8yWjT.png?1)
Zippo in ABC Warriors.
A few days ago I came across a Sunday Times magazine I kept from 1989 which has a disturbing article on the My Lai massacre of almost 500 civilians by GIs during the Vietnam war. It really is a harrowing read. What is also upsetting is reading about determined attempts to cover-up the barbaric crimes committed (only bad guys commit war crimes).
After the massacres, groups of GIs entered hamlets and set them alight using Zippo lighters and they were called 'Zippo squads'.
Now I wonder if Pat Mills had that in mind when creating Zippo in ABC Warriors. I did know that US troops would carry Zippo lighters and engrave them with messages but didn't know (or had forgotten) there were 'Zippo squads'.
And having read the disturbing article, I wonder just what has been going on in the mostly underreported conflicts the West has been involved in, in the last decade or so. Other than what has come to light from sources such as Wikileaks, it seems to me that very little is ever reported on what actually happens on the ground.
I seem to recall the term zippo raid as similarly applicable. Z
Quote from: SuperSurfer on 09 August, 2015, 06:30:01 PM
After the massacres, groups of GIs entered hamlets and set them alight using Zippo lighters and they were called 'Zippo squads'. Now I wonder if Pat Mills had that in mind when creating Zippo in ABC Warriors.
I'd say that's almost certainly the case - the early sequences of the first book of Nemesis featuring Zippo had a very 'Nam aesthetic to them. Congratulations, SuperSoaker.
Robbie Morrison and Richard Elson's
Blindside (progs 1996-1999, August 2008) sees Dredd and a rookie with a brutal haircut (who's squeamish about killing) trapped in Phoenix Tower and unable to call for help, with a gang of bad guys trying to kill them.
The two judges are separated, a firefight in the dimly lit, empty corridors of the high-rise building ensues as they make their way to the top floor, and Dredd and the leader of the gang try to psyche each other out by yelling cliches into microphones while the rookie takes out her female opposite number.
Dredd doesn't have a lot of faith in the female rookie's abilities, and she makes several errors early in the story - including losing her gun - but she finally wins his respect by sneaking up behind and killing a bad guy who's standing over a weakened Dredd* with a gun instead of shooting him with the gun.
Alex Garland began writing the script for the 2012 Dredd film in 2006, but abandoned his early attempts before turning in his shooting script in 2008:
(http://i.imgur.com/H1YuIVg.jpg?1)
(http://i.imgur.com/e7g8KzJ.jpg?1)
* More in the spirit of this thread, after Dredd is blinded, Elson draws the visor of his helmet without the wee white lightning flashes, which is neat
Quote from: GordonR on 05 July, 2015, 11:56:50 PM
Also note the wallpaper in Renton's childhood room at his parents' house, where he stays when he's forced to move back in with them.
It's got trains all over it.
Well remembered. I thought it was Hibs posters and the like that were the bedroom walls.
Oz Chief Judge Bob was a future Bob Hawke.
I completely missed the J. Jone's butchers van from Dad's Army in Absalom a while back. I only noticed it flicking back through. I did think at the time 'that chap looks an awful lot like Corporal Jones!' I was half expecting 'they don't like it up 'em!' when the knives came out.
Must be a fan.
After wondering why Star Wars discussions always seem to veer towards euroscepticism, I've just twigged what "EU" stands for.
Just re-read the first Tharg strip. For the first time I realised that the queues of people waiting to see him arrive at work (as he thinks) are really just waiting for the bus.
Quote from: glassstanley on 05 September, 2015, 10:09:26 AM
Just re-read the first Tharg strip. For the first time I realised that the queues of people waiting to see him arrive at work (as he thinks) are really just waiting for the bus.
Talking of Tharg strips, I'm not entirely sure what 'The Shedding' (prog 283 - 285) is about...
It seems to be about when the notoriously strict senior editor Bob Bartholomew got replaced with the more easy going Barry Tomlinson, but that seems like a bit of an odd thing to put in the prog considering only the IPC staff would get the references!
I've also heard rumours it was written by Alan Moore...
Just came across this looking at The Lowry (http://www.thelowry.com/event/extraordinary-everyday-objects-and-actions-in-contemporary-art) website:
(http://www.richardsaltoun.com/media/na993r/460x360/6897c211d296872b853f9a0bbe6/8586_1000.jpg)
Soul City (Pyramid of Oranges), Roelof Lowe (1967)
Never realised it was a real art exhibit!
(http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_bDUK5U-yua8/TRBJnRfVOTI/AAAAAAAAALY/KedoYK4HR3A/S898-R/Mind%2Bthe%2BOranges%252C%2BMarlon%2521.jpg)
Prog 211's Future Shock is titled 'Ernesto Hornetz must die'. A pun that completely passed me by for the last 30+ years.
Yet another one I missed, from Moore and Gibson's classic from Tharg's Head Revisited.
Not sure about the 'Grawk' bit, but the first bit of dialogue is a cock joke, isn't it? (As in 'pointing Percy at the porcelain.) Not sure who it's meant to be or why they're saying it, but it seems to be either about wanking or pissing on the Halo Jones graphic novel. Charming.
EDIT - Hang on, is that a camera in his hands? Now I'm confused.
(http://i143.photobucket.com/albums/r153/brnwlsh/11698484_715352201943978_102862959000381588_n.jpg)
Quote from: glassstanley on 14 September, 2015, 08:03:34 AM
Prog 211's Future Shock is titled 'Ernesto Hornetz must die'. A pun that completely passed me by for the last 30+ years.
ummm ... I still don't get it?
A nest of hornets.
D'oh! ::)
I even tried saying it out loud, but didn't twig that. :-[
Quote from: Dandontdare on 14 September, 2015, 01:22:09 PM
D'oh! ::)
I even tried saying it out loud, but didn't twig that. :-[
Me too, DDD! :-[
Since we were pilfering Strontium Dog for the fan film, I noticed that I'd written Wulf using 'I' in a sentence - which sounded off when I thought about it.
Looking through the agency files, he pretty much always refers to himself in the third person (or uses we) except in the Ragnarok storyline, where his speech patterns are pretty normal, because he's actually speaking Old Norse and that's being translated by Alpha's Future Rosetta Stone, rather than his second language.
It's been said before, but I wonder why Wulf has a German accent when he's from Scandinavia? Sure, why not, I suppose
The Old Norse to English crash course isn't quite as good ;)
When Big Finish did the audios they had a thought that Wulf should pronounce Alpha's name "Yonny" but didn't go with it as it just doesn't sound right. Wise move.
Ja.
Quote from: Dash Decent on 15 October, 2015, 12:28:35 PM
When Big Finish did the audios they had a thought that Wulf should pronounce Alpha's name "Yonny" but didn't go with it as it just doesn't sound right. Wise move.
Such a shame!
Quote from: Hawkmonger on 15 October, 2015, 08:32:41 PM
Quote from: Dash Decent on 15 October, 2015, 12:28:35 PM
When Big Finish did the audios they had a thought that Wulf should pronounce Alpha's name "Yonny" but didn't go with it as it just doesn't sound right. Wise move.
Such a shame!
I don't know... sounds like the kind of thing that could get a tad irritating after a while. Suppose we'll never know.
Quote from: Dark Jimbo on 15 September, 2015, 05:04:01 PM
Quote from: Dandontdare on 14 September, 2015, 01:22:09 PM
D'oh! ::)
I even tried saying it out loud, but didn't twig that. :-[
Me too, DDD! :-[
It's like Twoflower's comments about his work in either Colour of Magic or the Light Fantastic. Inn Sewer Ants was easy but for a long time I didn't get 'Repeating Sound of Underground Spirits'.
Quote from: Tjm86 on 16 October, 2015, 07:16:37 AM
Quote from: Dark Jimbo on 15 September, 2015, 05:04:01 PM
Quote from: Dandontdare on 14 September, 2015, 01:22:09 PM
D'oh! ::)
I even tried saying it out loud, but didn't twig that. :-[
Me too, DDD! :-[
It's like Twoflower's comments about his work in either Colour of Magic or the Light Fantastic. Inn Sewer Ants was easy but for a long time I didn't get 'Repeating Sound of Underground Spirits'.
Especially as it's
"Reflected-sound-of-underground-spirits"... ;)
I've just discovered that Tlachtga is a hill a few miles away from my folks' house, where I grew up. I 'd always connected the name with some similarly titled Aztec or Inca sport I'd read about as a kid.
Quote from: ming on 16 October, 2015, 08:25:01 AM
Quote from: Tjm86 on 16 October, 2015, 07:16:37 AM
Quote from: Dark Jimbo on 15 September, 2015, 05:04:01 PM
Quote from: Dandontdare on 14 September, 2015, 01:22:09 PM
D'oh! ::)
I even tried saying it out loud, but didn't twig that. :-[
Me too, DDD! :-[
Sorry, working from memory in early hours of morning with hangover. Always a good combination, yes? ::)
It's like Twoflower's comments about his work in either Colour of Magic or the Light Fantastic. Inn Sewer Ants was easy but for a long time I didn't get 'Repeating Sound of Underground Spirits'.
Especially as it's "Reflected-sound-of-underground-spirits"... ;)
Quote from: ming on 16 October, 2015, 08:25:01 AM
Especially as it's "Reflected-sound-of-underground-spirits"... ;)
And the answer is? My first thought was 'economics' (
echo-gnomics) but gnomes aren't spirits so I'm at least half wrong.
Your answer is correct... Gnomes in their original fairytale conception were indeed spirits. Blame C. S. Lewis and that saucy Wil Huygen for your modern confusion!
Quote from: Tordelback on 17 October, 2015, 03:13:56 PM
Your answer is correct... Gnomes in their original fairytale conception were indeed spirits. Blame C. S. Lewis and that saucy Wil Huygen for your modern confusion!
That was the bit that threw me for a while as well. BTW thanks for correcting my misquote.
Quote from: Dash Decent on 17 October, 2015, 03:05:48 PM
Quote from: ming on 16 October, 2015, 08:25:01 AM
Especially as it's "Reflected-sound-of-underground-spirits"... ;)
And the answer is? My first thought was 'economics' (echo-gnomics) but gnomes aren't spirits so I'm at least half wrong.
What always confused me about that pun was that I don't pronounce economics in that way (Eek-o-nomics).
Dunno if this has been mentioned before but DJ1's look was obviously based on the Dr Feelgood logo
Just been watching HOUSE as it's great to
a) a Whodunnit but the disease is the killer and
b) see Hugh Laurie killing every line he gets
when I realised that his best friend Doctor (that he keeps interrupting and dragging out for a chat) is named Watson.
And anouther name for House is Home.
Home and Watson.
Holmes and Watson.
And I guess the junior doctors are his Baker STreet Irrascibles or whatever they were called - running off and doing errands for him.
Quote from: Tiplodocus on 06 November, 2015, 01:28:14 PM
when I realised that his best friend Doctor (that he keeps interrupting and dragging out for a chat) is named Watson.
His friend's name is Wilson, but House's address is 221 Baker Street (and he's an addict) so you're essentially correct. :)
Yup, House is fairly explicitly a version of Holmes. Great series, amazing central performance. Accidentally flicking between House and Blackadder III or IV can lead to mental collapse.
This week's Droid life ....
Sorry, this one got me. I just know I'm going to be going with the forehead slap when it finally clicks but at the moment 'I got nuthin!'
instead of a 3riller, it's a 3-roller.
Okay, it's not one of the best.
That's... pretty tenous. I don't feel so bad about not getting it now!
Here's one: I haven't read Dinosty yet, but whenever I see the name I read it as Dino-sty, like pig sty. I only recently realised it's Dino-stee, like Dynasty...
Quote from: Tordelback on 06 November, 2015, 02:26:32 PM
Yup, House is fairly explicitly a version of Holmes. Great series, amazing central performance. Accidentally flicking between House and Blackadder III or IV can lead to mental collapse.
Yeah, it was the explicit nature of it that hadn't twigged with me before - just about any 'tec with a tic show is riffing of Holmes but this glaringly obvious "It's exactly the bloody same except with diseases" had somehow passed me by.
Apocryphal or not but I have it in my head that
a) Laurie never told the producers he wasn't american and
b) when he had a novel published, he submitted it under a psuedonym so he couldn't be accused of riding the coat tails of his celebrity.
If true, "What a guy!"
Quote from: Tiplodocus on 09 November, 2015, 12:25:26 PM
Yeah, it was the explicit nature of it that hadn't twigged with me before - just about any 'tec with a tic show is riffing of Holmes but this glaringly obvious "It's exactly the bloody same except with diseases" had somehow passed me by.
I was particularly amused by Laurie's surprise that he was the lead character — he said that the show was untitled when he was sent a script to read and thought it was clearly about the kindly Dr Wilson and that House was his asshole side-kick.
Cheers!
Jim
Quote from: Dandontdare on 08 November, 2015, 09:01:45 PM
instead of a 3riller, it's a 3-roller.
Okay, it's not one of the best.
Said it would be a head slapper! I'm with Echidna on that one ....
This may have been covered in another thread dealing with 2000AD-related linguistics, but hey.
Listening (with great enjoyment) to a bunch of Thrill-Casts lately, I heard Ma.. er, Tharg refer to SQUAXX and he pronounced it SK-WAX. To me this has always, always been SK-WOX and it has shaken me to my core to hear TMO refer to it otherwise. Is there some kind of support group to help me through this?
Quote from: ming on 18 November, 2015, 01:13:56 PM
Listening (with great enjoyment) to a bunch of Thrill-Casts lately, I heard Ma.. er, Tharg refer to SQUAXX and he pronounced it SK-WAX. To me this has always, always been SK-WOX and it has shaken me to my core to hear TMO refer to it otherwise. Is there some kind of support group to help me through this?
You are right and Tharg is wrong. Simple as that.
I know it's buried in this thread somewhere already, but this week's Bad Company reminded me of one I missed to years: The Diary of Danny Franks...
Quote from: The Cosh on 18 November, 2015, 01:32:41 PM
Quote from: ming on 18 November, 2015, 01:13:56 PM
Listening (with great enjoyment) to a bunch of Thrill-Casts lately, I heard Ma.. er, Tharg refer to SQUAXX and he pronounced it SK-WAX. To me this has always, always been SK-WOX and it has shaken me to my core to hear TMO refer to it otherwise. Is there some kind of support group to help me through this?
You are right and Tharg is wrong. Simple as that.
So presumably you pronounce Tharg's home planet as KWOX-ANN?
Quote from: Cyber-Matt on 18 November, 2015, 06:04:24 PM
Quote from: The Cosh on 18 November, 2015, 01:32:41 PM
Quote from: ming on 18 November, 2015, 01:13:56 PM
Listening (with great enjoyment) to a bunch of Thrill-Casts lately, I heard Ma.. er, Tharg refer to SQUAXX and he pronounced it SK-WAX. To me this has always, always been SK-WOX and it has shaken me to my core to hear TMO refer to it otherwise. Is there some kind of support group to help me through this?
You are right and Tharg is wrong. Simple as that.
So presumably you pronounce Tharg's home planet as KWOX-ANN?
Ha! I genuinely do. Wouldn't have occurred to me there could be another way.
Quote from: The Cosh on 18 November, 2015, 06:10:13 PM
Quote from: Cyber-Matt on 18 November, 2015, 06:04:24 PM
Quote from: The Cosh on 18 November, 2015, 01:32:41 PM
Quote from: ming on 18 November, 2015, 01:13:56 PM
Listening (with great enjoyment) to a bunch of Thrill-Casts lately, I heard Ma.. er, Tharg refer to SQUAXX and he pronounced it SK-WAX. To me this has always, always been SK-WOX and it has shaken me to my core to hear TMO refer to it otherwise. Is there some kind of support group to help me through this?
You are right and Tharg is wrong. Simple as that.
So presumably you pronounce Tharg's home planet as KWOX-ANN?
Ha! I genuinely do. Wouldn't have occurred to me there could be another way.
Me too. Since 1970-whatever-it-was. I can't change now.
Skwox and kwokksan for me too. Also never even considered that it could be anything else. Anyway, that was Cyber-Mat pronouncing it wrong, not Tharg.
Skwox but Kwaksan here, just to be awkward. Clearly the puny human sensorium is ill-equipped for the complexities of Betelgeusian phonemes.
I've always thought it was a chicken noise rather than a duck noise.
I'm with Tordelback on this one, I'm afraid.
Quote from: M.I.K. on 18 November, 2015, 08:04:52 PM
..a duck noise.
(http://i.imgur.com/mcwQawF.jpg)
SK-WAX, SK-WAX*
But yeah, another one for SK-WOX here
I'm not ducking this issue: it's a quack! Z
Quaaaaxxan... You don't have to put on the red light...
(This is, I'll admit, dirty earworm tactics to make you all pronounce it like I do.)
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 18 November, 2015, 11:19:49 PM
Quaaaaxxan... You don't have to put on the red light...
(This is, I'll admit, dirty earworm tactics to make you all pronounce it like I do.)
That's how I pronounce it too...
P.S.: Beat you to that joke by ten years (http://www.michaelowencarroll.com/sp020.htm)!
Quote from: Mike Carroll on 18 November, 2015, 11:47:50 PM
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 18 November, 2015, 11:19:49 PM
Quaaaaxxan... You don't have to put on the red light...
(This is, I'll admit, dirty earworm tactics to make you all pronounce it like I do.)
That's how I pronounce it too...
P.S.: Beat you to that joke by ten years (http://www.michaelowencarroll.com/sp020.htm)!
You win this one, Carroll ;)
To my mind 'ua' is pronounced "wa"* , or possibly "wah" (although that pronunciation never occurred to me on looking at the words but I can see how an 'a" could be pronounced "ah").
It never occurred to me it would be pronounced "woh" or "wo". There is no letter 'o' in the word after all.
So its been the duck noise all the time for me. Which granted isn't that long, me being a relative newbie.
*Or it could be "ooa" , 'u' sounding like "oo" like the two 'u's in 'vacuum' but that sounds almost the same as "wa".
In a quandary, I danced a quadroon then bivouacked in quagmire near an aquafarm, with some Squaxx on Quaxxann.
I do love this thread. Thanks, all.
Okay, good point with the first two. I never thought of those. Aquafarm .... I would pronounce "achwahfahrm"*
*Although I think the " a" as "ah" might be a London accent thing. Never "aquohfarm".
Thinking about it, from a pronunciation point of view, English is kind of complicated, isn't it?
"Squad." Skwod.
Now I'm thinking of them too. Heh.
With the "keh" sound of a 'c', 'k' or an 'x'*, I would always pronounce a proceeding 'a' as in 'and' though. But I get where you sqoxans are coming from now. ;-)
* At least it's part of the x sound . xs...
This one might just be coincidence...
Aquila. A killer (harden the 'qu').
I say them like Tordelback as well. It never occurred to me there could be another way.
Only just realised that 'Blockbuster' refers to people queueing for tickets 'around the block'.
Always figured it was just some nonsense phrase.
Well, not so much something that went over my head as something I never noticed before. The last two frames of Necropolis - Burnt-up Dredd's face is normal again. Then it returns to burnt and scarred for the next few progs till he gets the rejuve job. How did I not spot this?
Quote from: radiator on 08 January, 2016, 08:37:13 PM
Only just realised that 'Blockbuster' refers to people queueing for tickets 'around the block'.
Always figured it was just some nonsense phrase.
Um ... sorry, not quite right. A "blockbuster" was a WW2 bomb (http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/english/blockbuster) and the term was then used in entertainment (from 1957 onwards (http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?search=blockbuster)) to describe a product with major impact. A similar example is the popular American phrase "it's the bomb" (referring to the atom bomb).
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 28 January, 2016, 07:56:19 AM
The last two frames of Necropolis - Burnt-up Dredd's face is normal again. Then it returns to burnt and scarred for the next few progs till he gets the rejuve job.
Nice spot, Jayzus, but Dredd goes into something that looks like a big toastie machine, with
DERMAHEAL written on the side. It's something that heals
skin, not a magic young-again machine, and nothing in the Dredd strip suggests he's ever had his youth restored.
Pointless pedantry aside, here's some pointless trivia. The Judge Dredd Annual 1984 features a story that's two pages of strip and four pages of a text personality test, to which judges subject perps. The arresting officer has a familiar name and moustache:
(http://i.imgur.com/a5yPEJK.png?1)
Don't mess with Sladek, or he'll haul your ass down to the SECTION house (?). Sladek & Kneepad turn up in prog 461's The Falucci Tape (http://www.2000ad.org/covers/2000ad/hires/463.jpg), in which Sladek ices Kneepad to cover up his extra-judicial liaison. All of this went over my head, despite a Tharg Note in 461 referring me to the 1984 annual.
D'OH!The test itself is worth reading, as it introduces the supporting cast of The Falucci Tape and gives Kneepad a rounded back story TB Grover obviously felt was too well developed to waste. It's an interesting example of the crazy levels of world building Wagner & Grant were doing at that time, as well as an odd experiment in form.
Quote from: Butch on 09 February, 2016, 08:37:16 PM
Nice spot, Jayzus, but Dredd goes into something that looks like a big toastie machine, with DERMAHEAL written on the side. It's something that heals skin, not a magic young-again machine, and nothing in the Dredd strip suggests he's ever had his youth restored.
Ahem.
(http://i143.photobucket.com/albums/r153/brnwlsh/2000AD%200711%2004.jpg) (http://s143.photobucket.com/user/brnwlsh/media/2000AD%200711%2004.jpg.html)
(Nice spot yourself on the Sladek thing though; I always wondered what story the Falucci Tape was referencing.)
Sensei
(http://i.imgur.com/xmUaUxf.png?1)
:lol:
There's a bit in The Empire Strikes Back where Yoda tries to look into the future to see what will become of Leia, Han and co. on Bespin. I always thought he said it was difficult to see because the future is "always emotion," which kind of made sense.
.
Only last week, reading a Star Wars novel, did I finally realise he actually said, "always in motion," which makes more sense. D'oh!
This cover would you believe it. Well, I never really paid it much attention, having not read the entire prog and I just this second noticed the logo.
No doubt some self-proclaimed expert has by now commented that you never mess with your logo and never cover it up and that their three-year-old daughter knows that and would do it better in Photoshop.
(http://www.2000adonline.com/application/media/progs/original/1965.jpg)
On a recent re-watch of Dredd, it occurred to me that Anderson's origin story was probably the standard model for all judges in that version of MC1. Basically, any nonscrot watching would assume that Dredd was also inducted as an orphan at age 9; which was probably the creators' intention.
It was also even more low-tech than I remembered - there really wasn't much there that wouldn't be possible to do today (bionic eyes, slo-mo and psi-powers being the exceptions). The vehicles even look a bit dated by today's standards. But don't get me wrong - I loved it for that. Dredd has always been about Dredd; about being a hard bastard breaking skulls; the sci-fi comes second.
Hmm, interesting. Maybe that "something else" Anderson mentioned was the fact that Dredd's a clone?
Quote from: SuperSurfer on 10 February, 2016, 01:40:01 AM
No doubt some self-proclaimed expert has by now commented that you never mess with your logo and never cover it up and that their three-year-old daughter knows that and would do it better in Photoshop.
There's certainly a fair old number of armchair designers* on this board!
*(
Not people who design armchairs, you understand).
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 11 February, 2016, 10:31:46 AM
It was also even more low-tech than I remembered - there really wasn't much there that wouldn't be possible to do today
When I first saw it at the pictures, it occurred to me that there was a lot of stuff in it akin to things from the early stories, that would have seemed quite futuristic if the film had come out in the 1980s, (talking bikes, cleaning robots, etc;).
Quote from: SuperSurfer on 10 February, 2016, 01:40:01 AM
No doubt some self-proclaimed expert has by now commented that you never mess with your logo and never cover it up and that their three-year-old daughter knows that and would do it better in Photoshop.
(http://i1167.photobucket.com/albums/q629/Simon_Jacques/619robinson_zpsmbzu1na2.jpg) (http://s1167.photobucket.com/user/Simon_Jacques/media/619robinson_zpsmbzu1na2.jpg.html)
These were the days SuperSurfer!
;)
Quote from: The Legendary Shark on 11 February, 2016, 11:39:21 AM
Hmm, interesting. Maybe that "something else" Anderson mentioned was the fact that Dredd's a clone?
All will be revealed in the sequel! Except, of course, it won't.
Maybe that bit did go over my head. I always thought she was about so say 'anger'. The frustration and rage of Dredd that bubbles beneath the service of control and discipline.
As a kid, the joke about a wrestler called The Undertaker having a manger called Paul Bearer went over my head for a long time.
Quote from: Theblazeuk on 12 February, 2016, 04:03:52 PM
Maybe that bit did go over my head. I always thought she was about so say 'anger'. The frustration and rage of Dredd that bubbles beneath the service of control and discipline.
No, she actually does say 'anger' before anything else. Whatever it is she's about to say remains a mystery.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 12 February, 2016, 07:54:55 PM
Quote from: Theblazeuk on 12 February, 2016, 04:03:52 PM
Maybe that bit did go over my head. I always thought she was about so say 'anger'. The frustration and rage of Dredd that bubbles beneath the service of control and discipline.
No, she actually does say 'anger' before anything else. Whatever it is she's about to say remains a mystery.
A penchant for Taffeta Ballgowns! Looks like both Dredd films borrowed something from the A.B.C Warriors.
Cheers
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 12 February, 2016, 07:54:55 PM
Quote from: Theblazeuk on 12 February, 2016, 04:03:52 PM
Maybe that bit did go over my head. I always thought she was about so say 'anger'. The frustration and rage of Dredd that bubbles beneath the service of control and discipline.
No, she actually does say 'anger' before anything else. Whatever it is she's about to say remains a mystery.
"I can feel anger and control. But there's something else, something behind the control, something almost... Oh, that's it. More anger."
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 12 February, 2016, 07:54:55 PM
Quote from: Theblazeuk on 12 February, 2016, 04:03:52 PM
Maybe that bit did go over my head. I always thought she was about so say 'anger'. The frustration and rage of Dredd that bubbles beneath the service of control and discipline.
No, she actually does say 'anger' before anything else. Whatever it is she's about to say remains a mystery.
Doubt.
But if course it's the unspoken mystery that makes the whole thing work.
Quote from: Echidna on 13 February, 2016, 08:24:54 AM
"I can feel anger and control. But there's something else, something behind the control, something almost... Oh, that's it. More anger."
"I can feel anger and control. But there's something else, something behind the control... an almost fanatical devotion to the Pope? No, wait, I can feel FOUR things, anger, control, an almost fanatical devotion to the Pope, and..."
Cheers
Jim
1 thing I never quite understood.
In the Terra-meks, what is the NOGEEEE that Fantas-tek is shouting all about? Was it just meaningless shouting?
This is so embarrassing.
FLO RIDA....it's F-L-O-R-I-D-A isn't it? I get up but my brain doesn't.
Quote from: IAMTHESYSTEM on 13 February, 2016, 10:10:39 AM
This is so embarrassing.
FLO RIDA....it's F-L-O-R-I-D-A isn't it? I get up but my brain doesn't.
Hey, you're well ahead of me.
Quote from: IAMTHESYSTEM on 13 February, 2016, 10:10:39 AM
This is so embarrassing.
FLO RIDA....it's F-L-O-R-I-D-A isn't it? I get up but my brain doesn't.
:D and when discussing the relative merits of assorted rapping men, one might debate their lyrical flow. The ability to ride said flow for a sustained period would be considered an asset.
I'm not sure that I ever twigged that Dredds apartment Rowdy Yates and Clint were so inextricably linked... but then I am getting old... but not that old for Rawhide it seems... ::)
(http://i1167.photobucket.com/albums/q629/Simon_Jacques/clint-eastwood-cowboy-favorites_zpsqzylhsuz.jpg) (http://s1167.photobucket.com/user/Simon_Jacques/media/clint-eastwood-cowboy-favorites_zpsqzylhsuz.jpg.html)
Strange; I was just reading about the Rowdy Yates thing on the imdb page for Dredd 3d before you posted that - never really made the connection that it was because Clint Eastwood had an influence on Dredd's character.
Of course, Rico lives there now, doesn't he? No more baths for Joe.
Quote from: Tordelback on 13 February, 2016, 08:29:41 AM
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 12 February, 2016, 07:54:55 PM
Quote from: Theblazeuk on 12 February, 2016, 04:03:52 PM
Maybe that bit did go over my head. I always thought she was about so say 'anger'. The frustration and rage of Dredd that bubbles beneath the service of control and discipline.
No, she actually does say 'anger' before anything else. Whatever it is she's about to say remains a mystery.
Woops! That's what I meant. :)
Doubt.
But if course it's the unspoken mystery that makes the whole thing work.
Just realised on a re-read of some old progs that there's pretty much always been a little bit of cheesecake-ish titillation in 2000ad - it was kind of part of the 'don't-show-your-parents' deal along with the violence. What made me think about that was how they used a photo of Sybil Danning as Saint Exmin from Battle Beyond the Stars to illustrate one of Ro-Jaws' old film columns - sweet Jesus. If Valkyries had actually been in any way sexy, it would have looked like this.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 14 February, 2016, 10:11:21 AM
Of course, Rico lives there now, doesn't he? No more baths for Joe.
That was one of my favourite Dredd's of late 80's, great art by Jim Baikie too... wonder if Rico ever found his rubber duck?
Not worth starting a separate thread for this, so apologies that it's slightly OT.
Re-reading the Titan 'Judge Dredd 12' for the umpteenth time today, and I finally noticed that the version of the cover of Prog 377 they use has the original dateline (14 July). After 376, the Prog stopped appearing for a few weeks due to industrial action, and when 377 finally appeared, the new dateline was Letra-setted in (with the wrong font).
I've only just realised what Gestapo Bob Harris' initials are...
Took years for me to realize what Resyk meant, and I used to think it was pronounced "Resick". Can't remember if I posted that before, if so this is a resyked post. :D
Quote from: The Cosh on 01 March, 2016, 11:23:33 PM
I've only just realised what Gestapo Bob Harris' initials are...
There's a song about this guy
Can any Scandinavian members translate?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LUMxJZFUAuc
Not comic related but...
You are supposed to crush Oxo cubes in their foil packet, flattening it, then tear the corner and pour.
Quote from: The Enigmatic Dr X on 13 March, 2016, 04:19:29 PM
Not comic related but...
You are supposed to crush Oxo cubes in their foil packet, flattening it, then tear the corner and pour.
This is....I....
'Stares out of window and contemplates whole existance'
I don't remember Linda Bellingham doing that. No wonder her husband's hair fell out...
Or was that Bisto?
So much to remember, so few brain cells left :(
Quote from: The Legendary Shark on 13 March, 2016, 06:25:46 PM
I don't remember Linda Bellingham doing that. No wonder her husband's hair fell out...
Or was that Bisto?
So much to remember, so few brain cells left :(
:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:
Quote from: The Enigmatic Dr X on 13 March, 2016, 04:19:29 PM
You are supposed to crush Oxo cubes in their foil packet, flattening it, then tear the corner and pour.
Unfortunately the same process doesn't work so well with crisps.
Quote from: The Enigmatic Dr X on 13 March, 2016, 04:19:29 PM
Not comic related but...
You are supposed to crush Oxo cubes in their foil packet, flattening it, then tear the corner and pour.
Shut up. Really?
Quote from: A.Cow on 13 March, 2016, 10:17:37 PM
Quote from: The Enigmatic Dr X on 13 March, 2016, 04:19:29 PM
You are supposed to crush Oxo cubes in their foil packet, flattening it, then tear the corner and pour.
Unfortunately the same process doesn't work so well with crisps.
Prawn cracker crushed in the bag and added to a soup of your choice. Delicious.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 13 March, 2016, 11:29:24 PM
Quote from: The Enigmatic Dr X on 13 March, 2016, 04:19:29 PM
Not comic related but...
You are supposed to crush Oxo cubes in their foil packet, flattening it, then tear the corner and pour.
Shut up. Really?
I know, I know. But that is what I was told, and shown. And it just seems so... obvious.
Quote from: The Enigmatic Dr X on 14 March, 2016, 07:44:05 AM
I know, I know. But that is what I was told, and shown. And it just seems so... obvious.
Everything I've ever known was wrong. :o
Quote from: The Legendary Shark on 13 March, 2016, 06:25:46 PM
I don't remember Linda Bellingham doing that...
Clearly a case of Oxo retconning the origins story of the cube to suit a modern audience ;)
Quote from: Woolly on 14 March, 2016, 07:56:39 AM
Quote from: The Legendary Shark on 13 March, 2016, 06:25:46 PM
I don't remember Linda Bellingham doing that...
Clearly a case of Oxo retconning the origins story of the cube to suit a modern audience ;)
Coming soon: All-Star Goddamn Oxo
EDIT - Fuck. My 5000th post, and I use it to make a shit joke about stock.
Re: Oxo cubes
See also...
...peeling a banana from the bottom...
...using the serrated edge on a box of aluminium foil to shear of the section of foil you require...
...and...
...breaking a segment of Toblerone off by pushing the top of the segment inwards instead of pulling it away from the rest of the bar.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 14 March, 2016, 08:01:44 AM
Quote from: Woolly on 14 March, 2016, 07:56:39 AM
Quote from: The Legendary Shark on 13 March, 2016, 06:25:46 PM
I don't remember Linda Bellingham doing that...
Clearly a case of Oxo retconning the origins story of the cube to suit a modern audience ;)
Coming soon: All-Star Goddamn Oxo
EDIT - Fuck. My 5000th post, and I use it to make a shit joke about stock.
Congrats. And, keep in mind it was a shit
comic-related joke
I've just found out that the Blankety Blank chequebook and pen was a silver trophy shaped like a chequebook, not an actual chequebook. I've also just noticed the play on words - blank cheque.
Grud, I'm thick.
When I was a kid, i thought the prize was a "cheque, book and pen".
I also thought that when something went "under the hammer" it got smashed up if no one bought it.
Quote from: Modern Panther on 20 March, 2016, 04:26:33 PM
When I was a kid, i thought the prize was a "cheque, book and pen".
I also thought that when something went "under the hammer" it got smashed up if no one bought it.
I've also just realised that it was the 'subscribers' notebook and pen' thread that subconsciously inspired me to look up the blankety blank chequebook and pen.
I've just seen the Judge Dan Francisco entry on Wikipedia. It doesn't mention that his show was a play on "The Streets of San Francisco" (which it has an article on, of course: here (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Streets_of_San_Francisco)).
Could it be that it went over the head of the person who wrote the entry?
Quote from: Dash Decent on 21 March, 2016, 11:49:52 AM
I've just seen the Judge Dan Francisco entry on Wikipedia. It doesn't mention that his show was a play on "The Streets of San Francisco" (which it has an article on, of course: here (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Streets_of_San_Francisco)).
Could it be that it went over the head of the person who wrote the entry?
This entry? (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judge_Francisco) Doesn't matter if it went over the head of the person writing the entry or not - if it can't be supported by external citations then it shouldn't be in the article, even it's a pretty obvious pun (as long as you've heard of the original show, that is). The name Dan Francisco is a bit more of an obvious pun though...
Quote from: sheridan on 21 March, 2016, 01:28:07 PM
Quote from: Dash Decent on 21 March, 2016, 11:49:52 AM
I've just seen the Judge Dan Francisco entry on Wikipedia. It doesn't mention that his show was a play on "The Streets of San Francisco" (which it has an article on, of course: here (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Streets_of_San_Francisco)).
Could it be that it went over the head of the person who wrote the entry?
This entry? (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judge_Francisco) Doesn't matter if it went over the head of the person writing the entry or not - if it can't be supported by external citations then it shouldn't be in the article, even it's a pretty obvious pun (as long as you've heard of the original show, that is). The name Dan Francisco is a bit more of an obvious pun though...
That level of citation-probity hardly gels with the supposition later in the same entry that Francisco's election is a response to Obama's. The Streets of Dan Francisco is far more obviously a deliberate pun, and one that actually explains the character's bizarre name. See also: Barbara Hershey.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 14 March, 2016, 08:01:44 AM
Quote from: Woolly on 14 March, 2016, 07:56:39 AM
Quote from: The Legendary Shark on 13 March, 2016, 06:25:46 PM
I don't remember Linda Bellingham doing that...
Clearly a case of Oxo retconning the origins story of the cube to suit a modern audience ;)
Coming soon: All-Star Goddamn Oxo
EDIT - Fuck. My 5000th post, and I use it to make a shit joke about stock.
could have been worse could have mentioned taking her up the OXO tower...
Quote from: Tordelback on 21 March, 2016, 01:59:42 PM
Quote from: sheridan on 21 March, 2016, 01:28:07 PM
Quote from: Dash Decent on 21 March, 2016, 11:49:52 AM
I've just seen the Judge Dan Francisco entry on Wikipedia. It doesn't mention that his show was a play on "The Streets of San Francisco" (which it has an article on, of course: here (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Streets_of_San_Francisco)).
Could it be that it went over the head of the person who wrote the entry?
This entry? (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judge_Francisco) Doesn't matter if it went over the head of the person writing the entry or not - if it can't be supported by external citations then it shouldn't be in the article, even it's a pretty obvious pun (as long as you've heard of the original show, that is). The name Dan Francisco is a bit more of an obvious pun though...
That level of citation-probity hardly gels with the supposition later in the same entry that Francisco's election is a response to Obama's. The Streets of Dan Francisco is far more obviously a deliberate pun, and one that actually explains the character's bizarre name. See also: Barbara Hershey.
Nooo.... why have a I never seen this before!! Barbara Hershey....Hershey Bar. (Slams head into desk crying at own stupidity!)
Quote from: amines2058 on 21 March, 2016, 04:58:20 PM
Quote from: Tordelback on 21 March, 2016, 01:59:42 PM
Quote from: sheridan on 21 March, 2016, 01:28:07 PM
Quote from: Dash Decent on 21 March, 2016, 11:49:52 AM
I've just seen the Judge Dan Francisco entry on Wikipedia. It doesn't mention that his show was a play on "The Streets of San Francisco" (which it has an article on, of course: here (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Streets_of_San_Francisco)).
Could it be that it went over the head of the person who wrote the entry?
This entry? (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judge_Francisco) Doesn't matter if it went over the head of the person writing the entry or not - if it can't be supported by external citations then it shouldn't be in the article, even it's a pretty obvious pun (as long as you've heard of the original show, that is). The name Dan Francisco is a bit more of an obvious pun though...
That level of citation-probity hardly gels with the supposition later in the same entry that Francisco's election is a response to Obama's. The Streets of Dan Francisco is far more obviously a deliberate pun, and one that actually explains the character's bizarre name. See also: Barbara Hershey.
Nooo.... why have a I never seen this before!! Barbara Hershey....Hershey Bar. (Slams head into desk crying at own stupidity!)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbara_Hershey
So is our Hershey named after a chocloate bar or the Actress? Now I am confused.
I think it's the actress - didn't she change her name to Barbara Seagull for a while after being possessed by the spirit of a seagull?
EDIT: yes she did - and she also "gave birth to their son, Free, who changed his name to Tom when he was nine years old" - now that's waht I call embarrssing mom syndrome!
Originally the confectioners, but if I remember correctly the 'Barbara' first name came from a readers' poll in the Meg.
Thanks Tordelback so everyone was right, and the real Barbara Hershey is a nutter. Glad that is all cleared up!
Quote from: Tordelback on 21 March, 2016, 05:58:24 PM
Originally the confectioners, but if I remember correctly the 'Barbara' first name came from a readers' poll in the Meg.
runner up was judgey mcjudgeface http://metro.co.uk/2016/03/20/boaty-mcboatface-leads-online-poll-for-name-of-new-research-ship-5763140/
Was out with a friend last night and learned something I'd been oblivious to.
Him: "Oh, I see Garry Shandling's died. Bummer."
Me: "Who's that?"
Him: "Garry Shandling. American comedian?"
Me: "Oh. Never heard of him."
Him: "The Larry Sanders Show?"
Me: "Eh? I vaguely remember that being on but I always assumed it was one of those shitey American chatshows they used to fill up empty bits of the schedules with."
Him: "..."
It was treated pretty horribly by whatever maniac was scheduling BBC 2 programmes though...
Huck Widney - who he?
I've wondered about who the hell Huck Widney was since Chopper tagged his block in UnAmerican Graffiti back in 1981. Any clues?
Heh, was reading the same thread I think.
No idea.
Quote from: Steve Green on 27 May, 2016, 06:14:40 PM
Heh, was reading the same thread I think.
Probably! Whenever I look at that page I always wonder about Huck Widney... Why couldn't it have been Rita Tushingham Block or Ernest Borgnine or someone? Bah!
:lol:
If Huck Widney's not a real person, it could be a Scottish dialect pun in-joke thing.
Quote from: M.I.K. on 28 May, 2016, 02:03:51 PM
If Huck Widney's not a real person, it could be a Scottish dialect pun in-joke thing.
I was thinking the same thing. To explain: in idiomatic lowland Scots,
would not becomes
widnae (wid-nay), just as
cannot gives way to
cannae (can-nay), and
will not transforms into
willnae (can-nay). An old Scottish joke relies on the same speech pattern:
What's the difference between Bing Crosby and Walt Disney? Bings sings but Walt DisneyI can't think of any similar joke that has the punchline
Huck widnae, though.
Quote from: Butch on 28 May, 2016, 04:31:25 PM
Quote from: M.I.K. on 28 May, 2016, 02:03:51 PM
If Huck Widney's not a real person, it could be a Scottish dialect pun in-joke thing.
I was thinking the same thing. To explain: in idiomatic lowland Scots, would not becomes widnae (wid-nay), just as cannot gives way to cannae (can-nay), and will not transforms into willnae (can-nay). An old Scottish joke relies on the same speech pattern:
What's the difference between Bing Crosby and Walt Disney? Bings sings but Walt Disney
I can't think of any similar joke that has the punchline Huck widnae, though.
Tom Sawyer wanted to swim in the Mississippi but Huck Widney /widnae...?
Quote from: ming on 28 May, 2016, 07:22:05 PM
Quote from: Butch on 28 May, 2016, 04:31:25 PM
Quote from: M.I.K. on 28 May, 2016, 02:03:51 PM
If Huck Widney's not a real person, it could be a Scottish dialect pun in-joke thing.
I was thinking the same thing. To explain: in idiomatic lowland Scots, would not becomes widnae (wid-nay), just as cannot gives way to cannae (can-nay), and will not transforms into willnae (can-nay). An old Scottish joke relies on the same speech pattern:
What's the difference between Bing Crosby and Walt Disney? Bings sings but Walt Disney
I can't think of any similar joke that has the punchline Huck widnae, though.
Tom Sawyer wanted to swim in the Mississippi but Huck Widney /widnae...?
There's the Billy Connelly classic about the Weegie in the phone box who gets redirected to the operator:
"Here daft lad, the fanes nae workin'! I'm tryin tae ring ma burd!"
"Is there money in the box?"
"No its jist meself!"
I don't get it.
I reckon it's "money" = "many"
-- Mike
Ah!
Just rereading some early Day of Chaos episodes, before the shit hit the fan. Lovely bit of Wagner irony here when you know what's coming...
(http://i143.photobucket.com/albums/r153/brnwlsh/08.jpg)
(http://i143.photobucket.com/albums/r153/brnwlsh/07.jpg)
Does anyone remember a Calhab Justice one-off, where a Brit-Cit transfer judge in Glascal is bullied and harassed until he [spoiler]finally snaps and murders a citizen for dropping litter[/spoiler]?
One local judge calls it [spoiler]'madness', while another says something like 'Naw, no' madness. I'll gie ye anither guess[/spoiler]'.
It's only a small thing, but it's baffled me ever since. If [spoiler]flying into a homicidal rage[/spoiler] isn't madness, what exactly is it?
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 04 August, 2016, 10:49:09 PM
It's only a small thing, but it's baffled me ever since. If [spoiler]flying into a homicidal rage[/spoiler] isn't madness, what exactly is it?
PMT?
Future shock?
Maybe he just turned Scotch. Why can't you Scotches be peaceful and sober like what we, the Mick,
are?
Here's one that's still going over my head... I've been re-reading Harry Twenty on the High Rock, and I get most of the jokes with the inmates' surnames and sentence lengths e.g. Svede Sixteen, Root Sixty Six etc.
But 'Genghis Eighteen' still escapes me. It sounds like it must be a pun. If it is, it's so obvious I'm missing it.
We have a disinfectant spray in Australia called "Glen 20" (Click!) (http://www.dettol.com.au/products/clean-surfaces/dettol-glen-20-disinfectant-spray/). All through my teenage years, whenever I heard it mentioned on an ad on the telly, I always thought of Harry on the High Rock and how this Glen bloke must be serving a sentence up there too.
I've just realised I've written 'Svede' instead of 'Swede'.
Walking the streets of Toronto at 1 am, a thought popped into my head.
Kreelman = cruel man.
Why did I never notice that before? Gagh!
I hadn't seen Alien when Varks first ran, and the funny thing about things that you read that contain pop cultural references is that when you become aware of the thing that's being referenced you can have a blank spot when re-reading the original and not make that connection.
That's why I only just noticed today that Sigourney Bean bears a striking resemblance to Ripley in a not-entirely un-xenomorphic tale of genetically metamorphosing aliens in the Meg.
Quote from: sheridan on 03 September, 2016, 10:29:54 PM
I hadn't seen Alien when Varks first ran, and the funny thing about things that yo
That's why I only just noticed today that Sigourney Bean bears a striking resemblance to Ripley in a not-entirely un-xenomorphic tale of genetically metamorphosing aliens in the Meg.
Extra marks for noting that Sigourney Bean sounds more than a bit like Sawney Bean, mass cannibal/average Scot.
Genghis 18. Now you've got me. Genghis Khan was a pretty nasty piece of work who depopulated large parts of Northern China; Central Asia and Russia. 18 - numbers to letters - AH - Adolf Hitler a pretty nasty piece of work who denuded Eastern Europe and western Russia of millions of people? I am most probably waaay off the mark mind you. Z
I'd never have twigged on this possible meaning, if you hadn't of posted. But certainly sounds like it could be plausible.
I first recall this 'numbers to letters' way of doing things from scumbag groups like Combat 18.
Which, just checking Wikipedia, formed in the early 90's. I guess this way of doing things was around a lot longer than that.
Ace Garps pointy head being inspired by the actual shape of an ace? Not sure if this is true, but it would make sense and it only just struck me as likely/possible
The tool generally referred to as a Dofore, will in fact Do For the job headslap
I had a friend, when I was a kid, who always talked about Doctor and Quinch.
It's not really an example of something going over your head. I suppose it was more a case of him not reading the strip title correctly.
My mate used to say 'Roger Trooper'.
I used to call Dash Decent Dash Descent.
Quote from: JamesC on 06 September, 2016, 12:41:02 PM
My mate used to say 'Roger Trooper'.
Brilliant.
Someone has to enter a Roger Moore / Rogue Trooper mash-up into this months comp.
*My little cousin called him 'Rocky Trooper', bizarrely enough.
One for Button man: I seem to remember an art entry titled Roque. trooper in the letters page many, many years ago. Z
.
Prog 1797, Carroll and Smudge's Heavy Ordnance. So Johnny Alpha and Dredd really do inhabit the same timeline* ...
(http://i.imgur.com/f3rxKCa.jpg)
Only the ever reliable Jimbo (https://forums.2000adonline.com/index.php?topic=36705.msg700643#msg700643) thought it worthy of mention at the time.
* I kid
In 1937, Westinghouse built the first "industrial atom smasher," a 5 MeV Van de Graaff electrostatic nuclear accelerator, so I guess by Dredd's time they may have branched out into weaponry...
Captain Irrelevant.
.
They branched out a wee while ago - they're the US network (http://www.cbs.com/) that makes rubbish like NCIS and Big Brother. They were a big name in consumer electronics in the fifties; presumably they found their way into 2000ad due to the same childhood nostalgia as a brand name like Hershey.
Quote from: JamesC on 06 September, 2016, 12:41:02 PM
My mate used to say 'Roger Trooper'.
He's actually based on a little known comics character called 'Roger Topper' from a comic called
Berk! from the mid sixties. He was a character who possesses a talking top hat with all sorts of special abilities, although for no apparent reason he never used any of them and would spend every episode arguing with the hat, then he'd hold his breath until his face turned blue.
Quote from: Frank on 07 September, 2016, 06:48:11 PM
.
They branched out a wee while ago - they're the US network (http://www.cbs.com/) that makes rubbish like NCIS and Big Brother. They were a big name in consumer electronics in the fifties; presumably they found their way into 2000ad due to the same childhood nostalgia as a brand name like Hershey.
John told me it was because his dad worked for them.
Quote from: Steve Green on 07 September, 2016, 07:19:49 PM
Quote from: Frank on 07 September, 2016, 06:48:11 PM
They branched out a wee while ago - they're the US network (http://www.cbs.com/) that makes rubbish like NCIS and Big Brother. They were a big name in consumer electronics in the fifties; presumably they found their way into 2000ad due to the same childhood nostalgia as a brand name like Hershey.
John told me it was because his dad worked for them.
Wow! Cheers, Steve.
You're welcome!
When I saw the cover of prog 167 I wondered why it said "Comic Rock" when - being the prog - it could've said "Prog Rock".
Sorry, posted too soon. Sentence two:
So their subtlety went over my head at the time.
I only just realised that Roseanne's Bar in Street Cred (Judge Dredd, Prog 1962) is a play on words on Roseanne Barr. I had connected that Roseanne took place in the Lobo Lounge, but didn't get the Bar/Barr bit until now :-|
Not sure I get the subtlety of Comic Rock...
I'm not sure if it went over my head or there's no connection, but reading Steve Mac's autobio, the whole grading of employees seems a lot like the categorising of droids in Robohunter.
Also wonder if the typewriter incident inspired Alec Trench?
From the intro to Slaine, in the prog before the strip started:
"At the age of 12 he had his first warp-spasm. At the age of 16 he learned the secret of the mound."
I'm not sure if this counts as something that went over my head at the time, or something I'm just reading too much into now.
Quote from: norton canes on 12 September, 2016, 02:34:29 PM
From the intro to Slaine, in the prog before the strip started:
"At the age of 12 he had his first warp-spasm. At the age of 16 he learned the secret of the mound."
I'm not sure if this counts as something that went over my head at the time, or something I'm just reading too much into now.
The secret of the mound is from when he was chained up in the mound on midsummer's day (I think - don't have my copies to hand right now).
It took me years to notice that the Resyk building is shaped like a coffin. I just thought it was a futuristic shape that McMahon had come up with.
Quote from: Rio De Fideldo on 12 September, 2016, 03:21:59 PM
It took me years to notice that the Resyk building is shaped like a coffin. I just thought it was a futuristic shape that McMahon had come up with.
I don't remember when I noticed that, but it was quite a way down the line :-)
Quote from: sheridan on 12 September, 2016, 03:58:04 PM
Quote from: Rio De Fideldo on 12 September, 2016, 03:21:59 PM
It took me years to notice that the Resyk building is shaped like a coffin. I just thought it was a futuristic shape that McMahon had come up with.
I don't remember when I noticed that, but it was quite a way down the line :-)
Feck. I honestly never noticed till now.
Also, I've just realised V (as in Vendetta) doesn't just signify V's cell number but also the 5th of November.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 07 October, 2016, 06:17:23 AM
Quote from: sheridan on 12 September, 2016, 03:58:04 PM
Quote from: Rio De Fideldo on 12 September, 2016, 03:21:59 PM
It took me years to notice that the Resyk building is shaped like a coffin. I just thought it was a futuristic shape that McMahon had come up with.
I don't remember when I noticed that, but it was quite a way down the line :-)
Feck. I honestly never noticed till now.
Also, I've just realised V (as in Vendetta) doesn't just signify V's cell number but also the 5th of November.
And Evie.
It was years before I realised "Resyk" was pronounced re-psych and was short for re-cycling.
I always pronounced "Ressk".
Way back in I think the original return of Rico story, the department that checks out all the new born sprogs is called 'birth control'.
something my 10 year old self had obviously never heard of at the time.
A lesser writer would have gone for the more obvious joke. But Wagner and / or Grant add an extra layer.
(http://i143.photobucket.com/albums/r153/brnwlsh/vera.jpg)
Rob Schneider was Fergee?!?!
Hurr-hurr-*SOB*
Quote from: Theblazeuk on 17 October, 2016, 03:37:58 PM
Rob Schneider was Fergee?!?!
Hurr-hurr-*SOB*
Nope, Fergie - it's spelt and pronounced differently (at least in my head, it's always been Fer-GEE not Fer-gey).
Although I admit that until recently I never realised that Junior Angel was Spud off of Trainspotting.
So... you think it's just coincidence? I think that was it - Dredd's non-judge sidekick, Fergee...
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 16 October, 2016, 01:07:44 PM
A lesser writer would have gone for the more obvious joke. But Wagner and / or Grant add an extra layer.
(http://i143.photobucket.com/albums/r153/brnwlsh/vera.jpg)
I must be thick. What joke am I missing in that panel?
Id've thought the standard response was "love a duck" which has been shifted to "lay a brick" which is a distortion of what ducks do. Can't remember but wasn't Vera's Dad a builder?
Course I could be completely wrong. ::)
"Sh*t a brick," Shirley?
Possibly. But don't call me Shirley!
Quote from: Tjm86 on 17 October, 2016, 05:48:08 PM
Id've thought the standard response was "love a duck" which has been shifted to "lay a brick"
See, that's what I thought was so clever about it. 'Love a duck' would have been the obvious gag, given that's what Clarkie is doing, but Wagner and Grant neatly sidestep your expectations.
Ah, fair enough.
I have an embarrassing one which occurred to me while listening to rock radio in someone's car t'other week.
The repeated phrase "That ain't workin'" in the song Money for Nothing by the group Dire Straits does not, in fact, mean "This method is not producing the required outcome." but "No physical effort is required to make a living this way."
To be fair, the former never seemed to make a lot of sense but then neither do 98% of song lyrics. I actually admire the way so many singers are able to belt out a series of non sequiturs without cringing.
Quote from: I, Cosh on 18 October, 2016, 09:22:19 AM
I have an embarrassing one which occurred to me while listening to rock radio in someone's car t'other week.
Yeah, yeah, yeah you say that Mr Rock FM
Nearly 30 years after it was published, I have only just spotted what was special about the logo on Prog 502 (the Christmas Prog). '2000AD featuring Santa Dredd'
Quote from: glassstanley on 18 October, 2016, 11:04:28 PM
Nearly 30 years after it was published, I have only just spotted what was special about the logo on Prog 502 (the Christmas Prog). '2000AD featuring Santa Dredd'
I've never noticed that either. Almost-teenage me must have been distracted by something else on the cover.
Quote from: sheridan on 18 October, 2016, 11:13:32 PM
Quote from: glassstanley on 18 October, 2016, 11:04:28 PM
Nearly 30 years after it was published, I have only just spotted what was special about the logo on Prog 502 (the Christmas Prog). '2000AD featuring Santa Dredd'
I've never noticed that either. Almost-teenage me must have been distracted by something else on the cover.
He was a darn sexy Fomorian alright.
Don't think I noticed the Santa Dredd bit either.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 18 October, 2016, 11:21:50 PM
Quote from: sheridan on 18 October, 2016, 11:13:32 PM
Quote from: glassstanley on 18 October, 2016, 11:04:28 PM
Nearly 30 years after it was published, I have only just spotted what was special about the logo on Prog 502 (the Christmas Prog). '2000AD featuring Santa Dredd'
I've never noticed that either. Almost-teenage me must have been distracted by something else on the cover.
He was a darn sexy Fomorian alright.
Don't think I noticed the Santa Dredd bit either.
But like all fantasy beefcakes and cheesecakes, spends all his time wandering around really cold places wearing next-to-nothing :-)
Quote from: I, Cosh on 17 October, 2016, 05:41:01 PM
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 16 October, 2016, 01:07:44 PM
A lesser writer would have gone for the more obvious joke. But Wagner and / or Grant add an extra layer.
(http://i143.photobucket.com/albums/r153/brnwlsh/vera.jpg)
I must be thick. What joke am I missing in that panel?
I didn't get it, either. Had to look it up. Apparently, in
Coronation Street, the character Vera Duckworth made frequent claims that she was (allegedly) related to royalty.
It's not 2000 AD-related, but I only recently realised that The Island of Doctor Moreau's titular character name also reads as "Doc Tomorrow" -- highly appropriate for a science fiction novel commenting on nature vs. nurture, vivisection & evolutionary theory and the consequences of such.
Note: The use of "Doc" as a familiar form or abbreviation for "Doctor" was well-established by the late 1800s, when the book was written.
Ha! Never spotted Santa Dredd (the commericalisation of X-Mas is complete. My predictive text replaced Santa with Santander!) I check that when home.
Prog 1704, Dredd - The Skinning Room. Page where the Judges find Riggs. She's been stripped naked & strapped down. Either she's had an ... intimate tattoo or she trims her pubes into the shape of the Justice Dept Eagle.
From watching today's episode of QI-XL, I found out that Lobsang Rampant block (from Rumble in the Jungle) was named after fake monk Lobsang Rampa.
The notebook given away recently as a subscriber gift had tweaked art... it had Dredd reading the Law on copyright infringement.
...that Archie had appeared in 2000AD prior to Zenith (and not just in that article about British comics which featured in an annual). (the robot appeared in Tharg and the Intruder (https://sheridanwilde.wordpress.com/2016/10/23/prog-24-get-a-load-of-this-ancient-water-god-drawing/), fulfilling a not-dissimilar role as Mek-Quake in Kings Reach Tower.
Quote from: The Enigmatic Dr X on 23 October, 2016, 11:58:14 PM
The notebook given away recently as a subscriber gift had tweaked art... it had Dredd reading the Law on copyright infringement.
That's how it was originally published, on the back of the 1st edition of Titan's Chronicles of Judge Dredd Vol 1. An early call for creator's rights.
...that the CIA paratroopers who killed Shako's mate and cubs were named Marx and Spencer.
Quote from: sheridan on 25 October, 2016, 01:28:07 AM
...that the CIA paratroopers who killed Shako's mate and cubs were named Marx and Spencer.
And I thought that story couldn't get any, um, cooler. Great spot, Sheridan!
Didn't read the first 46 pages (late to the party), but only just realised that Johnny Alpha must of course be the best S/D agent because he is the Alpha Dog!
Can't believe I missed that one...
Quote from: Angry Vince on 26 October, 2016, 07:05:07 AM
Didn't read the first 46 pages (late to the party), but only just realised that Johnny Alpha must of course be the best S/D agent because he is the Alpha Dog!
Can't believe I missed that one...
Never thought of that. Get whet!
(http://i1167.photobucket.com/albums/q629/Simon_Jacques/Frank%20W_zpssckyrzrk.jpg) (http://s1167.photobucket.com/user/Simon_Jacques/media/Frank%20W_zpssckyrzrk.jpg.html)
I was reading some old Armoured Gid and it's only just occurred to me that Franks surname 'Weitz' is a make of German camera...
...Which is not to be confused with the Jokers Camera in on the cover of the Killikng Joke. That ones 'Witz' - German for Joke of course.
I'm sure John Tolinson was aware of both these facts when he wrote the series and I've really enjoyed looking at Simon Jacobs glorious painted art on the run, they don't make em' like that anymore...
Si
Up to 1986 with my prog slog and I've noticed an instance of Mega-City slang I don't remember from reading them 30 years ago.
Did John Wagner or Alan Grant know what they were doing when they coined 'vag' as a term for vagrant?!
Quote from: norton canes on 03 January, 2017, 02:56:57 PM
Did John Wagner or Alan Grant know what they were doing when they coined 'vag' as a term for vagrant?!
The current three letter slang for the homeless is
bum. Same general area.
At the time of
Grindstone Cowboys, a few of us commented on the perfection of Dredd's typically terse response to Rico's doubts that he was ready to replace him -
"you'll do (http://i.imgur.com/yyLuE6b.png)" [1].
Maybe Dredd's job approval seemed so in character because the lazy old bugger was recycling his words of encouragement to Hershey when she worried she wasn't ready to replace Volt as Chief Judge -
"you'll do (http://i.imgur.com/SFc9TEh.png)" [2].
[1] Grindstone Cowboys, 1977
[2] Volt Face, 1167
Its a very new one that jumped out at me, perhaps others didnt see.
Jimp Heston in the recent Meg story Monkey Business.
Homage to Charlton Heston from the original (and best) Planet of the Apes movies ?.
Quote from: lincnashOZ on 13 January, 2017, 12:51:14 AM
Its a very new one that jumped out at me, perhaps others didnt see.
Jimp Heston in the recent Meg story Monkey Business.
Homage to Charlton Heston from the original (and best) Planet of the Apes movies ?.
Hmmm, thought that one was fairly obvious.
.
Hell Trekkers (387-415 (http://www.2000ad.org/?zone=thrill&page=profiles&choice=HELLTREK)). Expedition leader Lucas Rudd's wife is called Amber*. Future satire (http://www.conservativehome.com/profiles/2015/05/profile-amber-rudd-a-true-believer-in-climate-change.html).
* Catchphrase: 'take your radiation pills'
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 13 January, 2017, 05:05:45 PM
Quote from: lincnashOZ on 13 January, 2017, 12:51:14 AM
Its a very new one that jumped out at me, perhaps others didnt see.
Jimp Heston in the recent Meg story Monkey Business.
Homage to Charlton Heston from the original (and best) Planet of the Apes movies ?.
Hmmm, thought that one was fairly obvious.
And wasn't Charlton Heston Block the location of Monkey Business, way back in the 2100s?
Quote from: sheridan on 16 January, 2017, 02:05:28 AM
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 13 January, 2017, 05:05:45 PM
Quote from: lincnashOZ on 13 January, 2017, 12:51:14 AM
Its a very new one that jumped out at me, perhaps others didnt see.
Jimp Heston in the recent Meg story Monkey Business.
Homage to Charlton Heston from the original (and best) Planet of the Apes movies ?.
Hmmm, thought that one was fairly obvious.
And wasn't Charlton Heston Block the location of Monkey Business, way back in the 2100s?
My mistake - Charles Darwin Block was that particular location...
There was a Charlton Heston block but not related. From the City of Dredd
Charlton Heston Block
A large, well-to-do cityblock. Infected by the Block Mania, Heston formed an alliance with Ricardo Montalban Block, but was wiped out by poison gas Heston helped manufacture which accidentally leaked from the Dixy Plasteen Complex. (Block Mania; City Block)
Matheson Peat led a Block Mania-crazed Citi-Def squad from the Charlton Heston Frontliners, attacking neighbouring Michael Moore Block and the East-Meg One invasion army. Other Frontliner volunteers included Marriot, Mattocks, Rawlinson and Topley. They investigated the ruins of the Rejin Estate, where Peat discovered the half-mad Erik Rejin, the only survivor of his family. (The Final Cut)
By 2123, Heston Block had been annexed within Apetown's borders. The ape uplift Travis Perkins was raised in Apartment 1175. (The Fierce and the Furious)
Quote from: James Stacey on 17 January, 2017, 12:23:09 PM
There was a Charlton Heston block but not related. From the City of Dredd
Charlton Heston Block
A large, well-to-do cityblock. Infected by the Block Mania, Heston formed an alliance with Ricardo Montalban Block, but was wiped out by poison gas Heston helped manufacture which accidentally leaked from the Dixy Plasteen Complex. (Block Mania; City Block)
Matheson Peat led a Block Mania-crazed Citi-Def squad from the Charlton Heston Frontliners, attacking neighbouring Michael Moore Block and the East-Meg One invasion army. Other Frontliner volunteers included Marriot, Mattocks, Rawlinson and Topley. They investigated the ruins of the Rejin Estate, where Peat discovered the half-mad Erik Rejin, the only survivor of his family. (The Final Cut)
By 2123, Heston Block had been annexed within Apetown's borders. The ape uplift Travis Perkins was raised in Apartment 1175. (The Fierce and the Furious)
Ah-hah - so the apes got Charlton Heston in the end!
Meat Patrol from Meg #224 has Tommy Vercetti Social Club,Rockstar North Boulevard. :)
I was reading the Mega-Collection version of "Chasing Herod" last night and suddenly noticed that Lucy Melmoths' rather fetching zebra-print outfit had an actual tail attached, although it would appear to have been dropped by the time Pussyfoot 5 was published.
Quote from: Karl Urban on 22 January, 2017, 04:28:00 PM
Urban created a distinctive voice to make him seem tough: "In my research I came across a passage in one of the Dredd comics, saying Dredd's voice sounded like a saw cutting through bone. So for me that was kind of the starting point" The Huffington Post, 03/09/2012 (http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2012/09/03/dredd-3d-star-karl-urban-violence-shocked_n_1851730.html)
The Tenth Planet (http://i.imgur.com/pxD7aWO.png), Megazine 2.58 (July 1994), by John Wagner and Carlos Ezquerra.
Just occurred to me - Tale of the Dead Man might be a play on "dead men tell no tales"
I seem to be the only reader whose head this didn't go over. Just been catching up with January's progs and immediately recognised very thinly disguised versions of our erstwhile boarder (and my friend and former neighbour) Johnny Stress with his twin brother Danny. Johnny has the rockabilly 'do while Danny has the mutton chops. Unconvinced? One of the real brothers has, or had, a pet spaniel. Still unconvinced? Mike Carroll didn't even bother to change their surname!
PS I told Johnny today; he read through his latest progs and was suitably chuffed.
PPS I know you're still lurking here, McMonagle - hope you don't mind me posting this ;)
PPPS They're both way slimmer and handsomer than Tiernan Trevallion has them.
(https://scontent-lhr3-1.xx.fbcdn.net/v/t1.0-9/16406834_10154255561506629_8534137611465076556_n.jpg?oh=d0e209da970ba472e13def64c93796bd&oe=59077150)
John Burdis points out that the brothers' forenames - Fernando (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dQsjAbZDx-4) and Angelo (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RRLQs0w4ExY) - are not without significance. And of course, the story takes place on the Diana Rig(g).
Just following up on the Charlton Heston block references above — Charlton Heston was the first named block ("City Block 1", way back in prog 117). I'd forgotten it cropped up again...
Brigand Doom
Quote from: Steve Green on 08 February, 2017, 06:10:30 PM
Brigand Doom
Is it meant to sound like Brigadoom (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brigadoon)?
Brigadoon, I imagine so.
It took me way too long to cop that Armoured Gideon sounded like Armageddon.
Quote from: Steve Green on 08 February, 2017, 06:10:30 PM
Brigand Doom
Not convinced by this one.
When I saw that cover pop up on Facebook it reminded me that I've always suspected Dave D'Antiquis was a play on words but I've never been able to work out what it might be.
Quote from: I, Cosh on 08 February, 2017, 09:47:03 PM
Quote from: Steve Green on 08 February, 2017, 06:10:30 PM
Brigand Doom
Not convinced by this one.
When I saw that cover pop up on Facebook it reminded me that I've always suspected Dave D'Antiquis was a play on words but I've never been able to work out what it might be.
I always figured it was meant to sound like "Day of the Anti-Christ."
Dave the Old?
Quote from: Mike Carroll on 08 February, 2017, 09:53:46 PM
Quote from: I, Cosh on 08 February, 2017, 09:47:03 PM
... I've always suspected Dave D'Antiquis was a play on words but I've never been able to work out what it might be.
I always figured it was meant to sound like "Day of the Anti-Christ."
Oh, that's a good effort!
Just re-read the first couple of episodes of 'Bitch' and it defintitely went over my head that Durham Red's victim is called Ab Rancid.
Hewligan = Hooligan.
From a drunken moment of clarity, chatting to DDD at the 40th.
Quote from: Fungus on 12 February, 2017, 01:55:47 AM
Hewligan = Hooligan.
From a drunken moment of clarity, chatting to DDD at the 40th.
You got that it was also
Hewlett and Mil
ligan though?
Quote from: sheridan on 12 February, 2017, 02:16:05 AM
Quote from: Fungus on 12 February, 2017, 01:55:47 AM
Hewligan = Hooligan.
From a drunken moment of clarity, chatting to DDD at the 40th.
You got that it was also Hewlett and Milligan though?
Yup, of course.
M.A.C.H. Zero was quite macho. Only just spotted that one.
So you know how we never saw Nemesis in the first few episodes of Book 1 and he was only revealed later? (In the Sci-fi Special IIRC.)
Well actually he was on the cover of Prog 222 all along - he is there in orange on the left hand side border. I had never noticed that until this morning - take a look in the "Your Favourite Prog Covers" thread.
It is amazing how you can look at stuff but not see it properly - literally for years.
Quote from: Magnetica on 24 March, 2017, 06:38:16 AM
So you know how we never saw Nemesis in the first few episodes of Book 1 and he was only revealed later? (In the Sci-fi Special IIRC.)
Not quite... the Sci-Fi special marginally predated Nemesis Bk1. Nemesis didn't appear outside the Blitzspear in the first couple of shorts, but the reveal came in the 1981 Sci-Fi Special (July 1, according to Google), and Nemesis Book 1 started later in the same month. (I certainly recall knowing what Nemesis looked like before the first book ran...)
Thanks Jim. I couldn't quite remember when the Sci-if Special came out. But I do remember not being able to get hold of it at the time, so for me I didn't know what he looked like until he was shown a few episodes in.
It was only a couple of years later when I managed to get it.
Like Cornelius Cardew before him, I only recently made the connection between the great maestro Pilchards-in-Tomato-Sauce Clayderman and the composer Karlheinz Stockhausen (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=264HLeQIUv4).
I'd like to think the name came first and the story quickly improvised over a couple of pints later.
So what is the Cornelius Cardew thing?
Quote from: Magnetica on 24 March, 2017, 11:00:27 AM
So what is the Cornelius Cardew thing?
In addition to being Skizz's pipe fitting mate, he was an English avant-garde composer and "loony leftie" who grew up not terribly far from Northampton.
Quote from: I, Cosh on 24 March, 2017, 11:13:49 AM
Quote from: Magnetica on 24 March, 2017, 11:00:27 AM
So what is the Cornelius Cardew thing?
In addition to being Skizz's pipe fitting mate, he was an English avant-garde composer and "loony leftie" who grew up not terribly far from Northampton.
Good old Wikipedia: In Popular Culture (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cornelius_Cardew#In_popular_culture)
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 08 February, 2017, 08:25:18 PM
It took me way too long to cop that Armoured Gideon sounded like Armageddon.
I always thought it was from The Clash song Armagideon Time
Aux Drift = Rourke's Drift
Quote from: Fungus on 12 February, 2017, 03:02:23 AM
Quote from: sheridan on 12 February, 2017, 02:16:05 AM
Quote from: Fungus on 12 February, 2017, 01:55:47 AM
Hewligan = Hooligan.
From a drunken moment of clarity, chatting to DDD at the 40th.
You got that it was also Hewlett and Milligan though?
Yup, of course.
You know, that went right over my head. So bloody obvious now.
Kidney :o
Quote from: Proudhuff on 29 March, 2017, 01:08:41 PM
Kidney :o
Wow, really? You've only just noticed? Funny because it took me longer to notice Wulf was called Sternhammer because he was a stern fellow...with a hammer. :lol:
Yeah :-[
I never ran the two words together, until a recent Dogbreath issue...
Was just re-reading SD Agency Files 01, and noticed that Wulf's cucumber fetish was actually started by another character, the Wolrog Sergeant Kark in the Galaxy Killers. (He's smart as cucumber you know)
I've often wondered how Would got so obsessed with cucumbers being a viking, as isn't it a New World fruit?* Then again, the Norsemen did cross the great divide centuries before that Columbus chap.
I suspect he picked it up later, though.
* I'm sure it's technically a fruit having seed thing inside.
Better than Harry 20's weasel obsession, anyway.
Quote from: Mardroid on 03 April, 2017, 05:24:33 PM
I've often wondered how Would got so obsessed with cucumbers being a viking, as isn't it a New World fruit?* Then again, the Norsemen did cross the great divide centuries before that Columbus chap.
I suspect he picked it up later, though.
* I'm sure it's technically a fruit having seed thing inside.
According the Wikipedia cucumbers were first cultivated in India around 3000 years ago, and they're mentioned in the Old Testament. The first recorded mention in France is from the 9th century so maybe he visited France on a raid.
Botanically they're a fruit but they're treated as a vegetable from a culinary point of view.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 03 April, 2017, 06:06:41 PM
Better than Harry 20's weasel obsession, anyway.
That gets really weird when it's read in one sitting.
Quote from: Bad City Blue on 03 April, 2017, 08:46:48 PM
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 03 April, 2017, 06:06:41 PM
Better than Harry 20's weasel obsession, anyway.
That gets really weird when it's read in one sitting.
'Well, knock me down with a weasel.' Hmmmm
Hershey, Bar(bara)
Quote from: norton canes on 06 April, 2017, 12:21:04 PM
Hershey, Bar(bara)
I wonder if that one was intentional? I thought I read somewhere (possibly earlier in this thread) that the name was taken from
this Barbara Hershey (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbara_Hershey).
Quote from: sheridan on 06 April, 2017, 12:31:05 PM
Quote from: norton canes on 06 April, 2017, 12:21:04 PM
Hershey, Bar(bara)
I wonder if that one was intentional? I thought I read somewhere (possibly earlier in this thread) that the name was taken from this Barbara Hershey (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbara_Hershey).
Maybe this Hershey was named after the Hershey Bar... ;)
Quote from: sheridan on 06 April, 2017, 12:31:05 PM
Quote from: norton canes on 06 April, 2017, 12:21:04 PM
Hershey, Bar(bara)
I wonder if that one was intentional? I thought I read somewhere (possibly earlier in this thread) that the name was taken from this Barbara Hershey (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbara_Hershey).
She was named by a phone poll early in the Megazine's history which, if I recall, had no options so I assume they ended up with a load of random other possibility and two or three people who said Barbara because it was the name of an actress, or just sounded familiar.
I'd have gone with Carol (Carol Hersee has a vaguely similar name and has appeared more on British television than everyone else put together...) but didn't bother to ring in because it was something like a pound a minute.
Quote from: Rogue Judge on 06 April, 2017, 04:06:21 PM
Quote from: sheridan on 06 April, 2017, 12:31:05 PM
Quote from: norton canes on 06 April, 2017, 12:21:04 PM
Hershey, Bar(bara)
I wonder if that one was intentional? I thought I read somewhere (possibly earlier in this thread) that the name was taken from this Barbara Hershey (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbara_Hershey).
Maybe this Hershey was named after the Hershey Bar... ;)
And the Hershey chocolate bar was manufactured by a confectionary firm founded by a man named Hershey! Who knows whether there might not be some actual blood relation in ancestry between the actress and the chocolate bar magnate?
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 03 April, 2017, 06:06:41 PM
Better than Harry 20's weasel obsession, anyway.
Did anyone already mention that Harry 20 was
Escape From Alcatraz (starring Clint Eastwood)
IN SPAAAAACE... ? :lol:
Quote from: positronic on 06 April, 2017, 04:29:05 PM
Quote from: Rogue Judge on 06 April, 2017, 04:06:21 PM
Quote from: sheridan on 06 April, 2017, 12:31:05 PM
Quote from: norton canes on 06 April, 2017, 12:21:04 PM
Hershey, Bar(bara)
I wonder if that one was intentional? I thought I read somewhere (possibly earlier in this thread) that the name was taken from this Barbara Hershey (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbara_Hershey).
Maybe this Hershey was named after the Hershey Bar... ;)
And the Hershey chocolate bar was manufactured by a confectionary firm founded by a man named Hershey! Who knows whether there might not be some actual blood relation in ancestry between the actress and the chocolate bar magnate?
And maybe both of them are related to the CJ?
Quote from: sheridan on 06 April, 2017, 04:36:33 PM
Quote from: positronic on 06 April, 2017, 04:29:05 PM
Quote from: Rogue Judge on 06 April, 2017, 04:06:21 PM
Quote from: sheridan on 06 April, 2017, 12:31:05 PM
Quote from: norton canes on 06 April, 2017, 12:21:04 PM
Hershey, Bar(bara)
I wonder if that one was intentional? I thought I read somewhere (possibly earlier in this thread) that the name was taken from this Barbara Hershey (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbara_Hershey).
Maybe this Hershey was named after the Hershey Bar... ;)
And the Hershey chocolate bar was manufactured by a confectionary firm founded by a man named Hershey! Who knows whether there might not be some actual blood relation in ancestry between the actress and the chocolate bar magnate?
And maybe both of them are related to the CJ?
Well, apart from the fact that's she's a fictional character living in some possible 'what if' science-fictional future timeline... Judges all have common names we see in real life, so why not?
I wonder if it would violate any laws if some writer put in a reference to Hershey being a descendant of one of them?
Quote from: positronic on 06 April, 2017, 04:40:06 PM
Quote from: sheridan on 06 April, 2017, 04:36:33 PM
And maybe both of them are related to the CJ?
Well, apart from the fact that's she's a fictional character living in some possible 'what if' science-fictional future timeline... Judges all have common names we see in real life, so why not?
I wonder if it would violate any laws if some writer put in a reference to Hershey being a descendant of one of them?
You and your 'fiction'.
I still like that there's a MC1 Judge who's a descendant of Dutch Schaefer.
Quote from: positronic on 06 April, 2017, 04:40:06 PM
Quote from: sheridan on 06 April, 2017, 04:36:33 PM
Quote from: positronic on 06 April, 2017, 04:29:05 PM
Quote from: Rogue Judge on 06 April, 2017, 04:06:21 PM
Quote from: sheridan on 06 April, 2017, 12:31:05 PM
Quote from: norton canes on 06 April, 2017, 12:21:04 PM
Hershey, Bar(bara)
I wonder if that one was intentional? I thought I read somewhere (possibly earlier in this thread) that the name was taken from this Barbara Hershey (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbara_Hershey).
Maybe this Hershey was named after the Hershey Bar... ;)
And the Hershey chocolate bar was manufactured by a confectionary firm founded by a man named Hershey! Who knows whether there might not be some actual blood relation in ancestry between the actress and the chocolate bar magnate?
And maybe both of them are related to the CJ?
Well, apart from the fact that's she's a fictional character living in some possible 'what if' science-fictional future timeline... Judges all have common names we see in real life, so why not?
I wonder if it would violate any laws if some writer put in a reference to Hershey being a descendant of one of them?
That settles it - in my canon, Judge Hershey is officially a descendant of the chocolate founder Mr. Hershey and the cousin of Willy Wonka (twice removed)
Quote from: sheridan on 06 April, 2017, 04:45:25 PM
Quote from: positronic on 06 April, 2017, 04:40:06 PM
Quote from: sheridan on 06 April, 2017, 04:36:33 PM
And maybe both of them are related to the CJ?
Well, apart from the fact that's she's a fictional character living in some possible 'what if' science-fictional future timeline... Judges all have common names we see in real life, so why not?
I wonder if it would violate any laws if some writer put in a reference to Hershey being a descendant of one of them?
You and your 'fiction'.
I still like that there's a MC1 Judge who's a descendant of Dutch Schaefer.
Did anyone ever try looking in the phone directory (this was a thing before internet-capable smartphones, kids, ask your dads) for the name Dredd?
I just found this lad. I assume that's his real name; can't see why a Safeway's salesperson would need a pseuodonym.
https://www.linkedin.com/in/joe-dredd-020b6497 (https://www.linkedin.com/in/joe-dredd-020b6497)
Dredd was supposed to be black.
http://conventions.cps.neu.edu/videos/travis-dredd/
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 06 April, 2017, 10:38:12 PM
I just found this lad. I assume that's his real name; can't see why a Safeway's salesperson would need a pseuodonym.
https://www.linkedin.com/in/joe-dredd-020b6497 (https://www.linkedin.com/in/joe-dredd-020b6497)
I find his chin disappointing.
Quote from: JOE SOAP on 06 April, 2017, 10:50:50 PM
Dredd was supposed to be black.
That explains why he can wear such a close-fitting helmet.
Hold it there now hoss, Bernard Manning you ain't.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 06 April, 2017, 10:38:12 PM
I just found this lad. I assume that's his real name; can't see why a Safeway's salesperson would need a pseuodonym.
https://www.linkedin.com/in/joe-dredd-020b6497 (https://www.linkedin.com/in/joe-dredd-020b6497)
That's classic. So he worked installing CCTV systems (and later automated security gates) for a little over 3.5 years, then was unemployed for 2.5 years, and for the last 6.5 years has been working in the liquor department at Safeway (no title listed, so I'm guessing he's not the department manager). I wonder if he's familiar with his namesake? It's a fair bet he might have heard of the movie, though.
This is just like Busieks Supeman: Secret Identity. :D
Quote from: TordelBack on 07 April, 2017, 09:14:15 PM
Hold it there now hoss, Bernard Manning you ain't.
I just meant he's got no hair to get in the way. Nothing else. I've always thought Dredd's hair must be really worn down with the constant (23 hours 50 mins) a day of wearing such a tight helmet. And remember all the "it looks too big!" comments when we first saw Urban's more realistically-sized helmet.
Does Joe Dredd even have hair? How do we know, was it shown (from the back of his head, obviously) somewhere? Maybe it would make more sense if his head was shaved?
Didnt notice it the first time;one of the opening quotes in Nikolai Dante is atributed to "The Kama Sutra" translated by Richard Burton.:/
Sir Richard Burton was the translator of the Kama Sutra. He's a different Richard Burton to the one that married Elizabeth Taylor.
Well,in my defense,there are a lot of people with that name,so its easy to get confused. :)
Quote from: Dash Decent on 09 April, 2017, 02:48:05 PM
Sir Richard Burton was the translator of the Kama Sutra. He's a different Richard Burton to the one that married Elizabeth Taylor.
Both pale beside this one:
(http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-PytMr-25oWw/VTTOfZgpeQI/AAAAAAAABo8/Wo20YFHA4-A/s1600/287%2BBurt.jpg)
That also crossed my mind. :)
I guess this is a good place to ask as any.So a Kenny Who? related question-the bit about the company using a droid to reproduce Who's art is obviously a jab at another artist,but who?(pun not intended)Which American artist of the time was copying Cam Kennedy?
Quote from: Smith on 15 April, 2017, 05:07:02 PM
I guess this is a good place to ask as any.So a Kenny Who? related question-the bit about the company using a droid to reproduce Who's art is obviously a jab at another artist,but who?(pun not intended)Which American artist of the time was copying Cam Kennedy?
But this is before Cam Kennedy's actual American-published work, by some years, wasn't it? And I can't recall who was first to publish (not reprint) him in America. Had to be prior to Dark Horse's Star Wars, I think, so maybe DC?
I remember thinking that the Star Wars thing was what gained Cam Kennedy real acceptance by the Amercan market, though. Before that, he was too far from mainstream acceptability for the US. Which is why it seems odd to me that an American artist should be copying his style, if it wasn't that popular in America prior to Star Wars.
Kenny who is a bit of a take on the authors own attempts to break into American comics.So Kennedy probably recognized his style in somebodies work.
And even if it isnt always obvious,people at Big 2 were familiar with 2000ad.Take for example that odd period when every superhero adopted Zeniths style of jacket over costume.Granted Paradax did it first,but you know what I meant.
Quote from: Smith on 15 April, 2017, 05:35:57 PM
Kenny who is a bit of a take on the authors own attempts to break into American comics.So Kennedy probably recognized his style in somebodies work.
And even if it isnt always obvious,people at Big 2 were familiar with 2000ad.Take for example that odd period when every superhero adopted Zeniths style of jacket over costume.Granted Paradax did it first,but you know what I meant.
Oh definitely. Sometimes it has nothing to do with trying to copy something popular in an attempt to boost your own popularity. Sometimes its even the opposite, where the influenced artist seizes on a lesser-known's style in order to 're-invent' himself somewhat, figuring no one's going to catch it
because the artist being copied in less popular in the copyist's marketplace. I remember Keith Giffen got bagged by The Comics Journal for copying... who's the euro artist? Jose' Munoz? I've forgotten now.
Not
Cam tells the story about Kenny Who being all about a joke about a big two editor not knowing who he was and when introduced shouting 'Kenny Who?' at Wagner / him. This was when the Americans were looking to raid the UK talent pool and Wagner / Grant / Kennedy were pitching for a deal. He never mentioned the copying element so doubt that was part of the real-life contribution to the story.
Yes,it did.The same company made a droid that imitated Who's artwork.Which send him on an axe rampage and confrontation with Judge Dredd.
Beyond our Kenny;Meg #1-3
Quote from: Smith on 15 April, 2017, 05:35:57 PM
Kenny who is a bit of a take on the authors own attempts to break into American comics.
BBC interview with Cam KennedyWagner and Grant had pitched a story idea to DC Comics, which Kennedy would draw.
After initial keen interest, Kennedy said that the trio struggled to get confirmation that the strip was going ahead.
Kennedy said: "This was in the 80s when you had to try and reach people by phone. You couldn't text or email someone directly.
"Eventually it was decided one of us should go to New York and confront Denny O'Neil, a writer and editor mainly of Batman stories, about our pitch.
"It was me - the one furthest from the main airports and who had to take a ferry and then drive to Glasgow - who was picked to go.
"When I finally got to DC Comics, I was pointed down a corridor to O'Neil's office. This guy with braces holding up his troosers came out of the office just before I reached it.
"I asked him if he was Denny O'Neil and then told him I was Cam Kennedy from Scotland. He just looked at me and said "Kenny Who?"
Greatly amused, Wagner and Grant went on to write Kenny Who? as a character. In one strip, he travels to Mega-City One from the Caledonian Hab Zone (Calhab) in Scotland.
Kennedy said: "Kenny Who? ends up in jail and his wife and two kids then come over and confront Dredd. One of Kenny's kids pees on Dredd."
http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-scotland-highlands-islands-19014995
I assume Kenny Who was more a Jab at IPC/Fleetway and the battle for royalties etc.
(http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-GA_S-71DQGY/TuRvMC5A5wI/AAAAAAAAAY8/v-HPDa53dko/s1600/creatorsrights.jpg)
Quote from: JOE SOAP on 15 April, 2017, 06:28:30 PM
"I asked him if he was Denny O'Neil and then told him I was Cam Kennedy from Scotland. He just looked at me and said "Kenny Who?"
These kind of embarrassing international cultural
faux-pas could have been avoided, if only they'd invented Rosetta Stone Scottish for Americans back then.
Quote from: JOE SOAP on 15 April, 2017, 06:39:49 PM
I assume Kenny Who was more a Jab at IPC/Fleetway and the battle for royalties etc.
(http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-GA_S-71DQGY/TuRvMC5A5wI/AAAAAAAAAY8/v-HPDa53dko/s1600/creatorsrights.jpg)
I figured out that part,I was just wondering if Kennedy thought another artist was ripping him off.
Was it from that story where they let a bunch of the artists do one page of whatever they wanted, and they refused to print Mick McMahon's? I remember something about there being a charge of swiping leveled at somebody in that one (not McMahon's page, I think)?
Quote from: positronic on 15 April, 2017, 08:06:01 PM
Was it from that story where they let a bunch of the artists do one page of whatever they wanted, and they refused to print Mick McMahon's? I remember something about there being a charge of swiping leveled at somebody in that one (not McMahon's page, I think)?
https://books.google.ie/books?id=dyrcCgAAQBAJ&pg=PT21&lpg=PT21&dq=mike+mcmahon+prog+500&source=bl&ots=g4Ue_YcvCD&sig=LOGaBumg9I3vYSC8UYjk0MXl_NY&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjAw6mFmqfTAhXHB8AKHTF7Ab0Q6AEIRDAG#v=onepage&q=mike%20mcmahon%20prog%20500&f=false
I read the trade for Aux Drift yesterday. It wasn't until I got to the script section at the back that I realised the dog flying the biplane at the start is named Snoop, i.e. Snoopy in his Red Baron-baiting 'WWI flying ace' daydream persona.
In my defence I hadn't noticed Snoop's name given in the strip; there was so much name-calling going on between the pilot and gunner that I must've glossed over it. The name is there in the strip though.
Still waiting for a Ronnie Barker to turn up.
Quote from: JOE SOAP on 15 April, 2017, 08:34:41 PM
Quote from: positronic on 15 April, 2017, 08:06:01 PM
Was it from that story where they let a bunch of the artists do one page of whatever they wanted, and they refused to print Mick McMahon's? I remember something about there being a charge of swiping leveled at somebody in that one (not McMahon's page, I think)?
https://books.google.ie/books?id=dyrcCgAAQBAJ&pg=PT21&lpg=PT21&dq=mike+mcmahon+prog+500&source=bl&ots=g4Ue_YcvCD&sig=LOGaBumg9I3vYSC8UYjk0MXl_NY&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjAw6mFmqfTAhXHB8AKHTF7Ab0Q6AEIRDAG#v=onepage&q=mike%20mcmahon%20prog%20500&f=false
Right, that was it. "Tharg's Head Revisited", in Prog 500. And it
was Mick McMahon accusing the plagiarization? I wasn't sure if Cam Kennedy had been involved in that and drawn a page, perhaps utilizing Kenny Who? to comment on another artist appropriating his work.
Thanks for pointing out those 2000 AD creator interview collections, Joe. I wasn't aware those existed, if apparently only available in digital -- I'm trying to avoid Kindle's format though. Have to think about those.
Quote from: positronic on 16 April, 2017, 02:29:41 AMRight, that was it. "Tharg's Head Revisited", in Prog 500. And it was Mick McMahon accusing the plagiarization? I wasn't sure if Cam Kennedy had been involved in that and drawn a page, perhaps utilizing Kenny Who? to comment on another artist appropriating his work.
That page is reprinted in
Judge Dredd: The Mega-History (along with the Brian Bolland page that was also cut from the same strip) and the commentary makes it clear which specific artist McMahon was accusing - but it wasn't Kennedy.
The McMahon replacement page that was published in Prog 500 counts as a thing that went over my head, because it alludes to the censorship without saying too much. As a kid I could tell something was up but had no idea what.
Quote from: The Corinthian on 16 April, 2017, 10:44:32 AM
Quote from: positronic on 16 April, 2017, 02:29:41 AMRight, that was it. "Tharg's Head Revisited", in Prog 500. And it was Mick McMahon accusing the plagiarization? I wasn't sure if Cam Kennedy had been involved in that and drawn a page, perhaps utilizing Kenny Who? to comment on another artist appropriating his work.
That page is reprinted in Judge Dredd: The Mega-History (along with the Brian Bolland page that was also cut from the same strip) and the commentary makes it clear which specific artist McMahon was accusing - but it wasn't Kennedy.
It was Brett Ewins. That's in the link that Joe Soap posted to the relevant Google Books page from the
2000 AD Creator Interviews Vol. 04. Ewins is quoted in response to McMahon's page from "Tharg's Head Revisited", so you may want to check it out.
I knew I'd seen those "Tharg's Head Revisited" pages reprinted somewhere in one of the books I have, I just couldn't remember where to reference it, and the details of the events surrounding the controversial story were hazy in my memory.
Quote from: positronic on 17 April, 2017, 06:03:11 AM
It was Brett Ewins. That's in the link that Joe Soap posted to the relevant Google Books page from the 2000 AD Creator Interviews Vol. 04. Ewins is quoted in response to McMahon's page from "Tharg's Head Revisited", so you may want to check it out.
If I read it right, Ewins argued that deadlines (& the need to emulate existing artists) led to the tracing incident, which he claimed was a one-off.
Going back to the
Kenny Who? story, I suspect that Wagner & Kennedy were referencing a problem which had become a general issue in the industry at the time (rather than something that had happened to Cam himself).
It's interesting to note that the same thing has happened with composers of big-budget Hollywood movie soundtracks (https://youtu.be/7vfqkvwW2fs?t=9m43s (https://youtu.be/7vfqkvwW2fs?t=9m43s)) who are being asked to emulate existing temp tracks used during editing. Some things never change!
Quote from: A.Cow on 17 April, 2017, 01:53:36 PM
Quote from: positronic on 17 April, 2017, 06:03:11 AM
It was Brett Ewins. That's in the link that Joe Soap posted to the relevant Google Books page from the 2000 AD Creator Interviews Vol. 04. Ewins is quoted in response to McMahon's page from "Tharg's Head Revisited", so you may want to check it out.
If I read it right, Ewins argued that deadlines (& the need to emulate existing artists) led to the tracing incident, which he claimed was a one-off.
Going back to the Kenny Who? story, I suspect that Wagner & Kennedy were referencing a problem which had become a general issue in the industry at the time (rather than something that had happened to Cam himself).
It's interesting to note that the same thing has happened with composers of big-budget Hollywood movie soundtracks (https://youtu.be/7vfqkvwW2fs?t=9m43s (https://youtu.be/7vfqkvwW2fs?t=9m43s)) who are being asked to emulate existing temp tracks used during editing. Some things never change!
Or even something like... in the early days of Silver Age Marvel comics, when they'd bring in a new artist to be a new regular penciller on a series that was usually kicked off by an issue (or several) pencilled by Jack Kirby, Stan Lee would often have Kirby do page breakdowns (or layouts) for the incoming artist, to try to give the new artist a feel for the sensibility that Lee wanted the series to capture. Basically the direction here (if not issued as a direct order in as many words) was, "do it like Kirby would", and "here's how, to give you a feel for it".
I can understand what Ewins is trying to say there, in a way. John Romita, when he took over the pencilling of
The Amazing Spider-Man from Steve Ditko, was terrified that he was going to be reviled by the readers as a pretender and an also-ran. He was convinced he was going to go down as the artist who wound up getting the series cancelled. He knew the readers were
used to Ditko's artwork, and
liked it -- and that was the kind of Spider-Man they expected and wanted to see. So on his earliest issues he held back on his own natural style, and tried to draw it more towards what he perceived as the readers' desires.
When you're the new guy you probably think you're being asked to fill some big shoes, and you're going to suffer by comparison to the already-popular artists who have been established as fan-favorites. If your natural style isn't anything like the popular guy's style, you try to cheat and force yourself to draw the way they do, and you resort to swiping, because there's no way you can follow "in the tradition of" without leaning heavily on the readers' familiarity with previous stories. Whether or not an editor may have encouraged (or even suggested or requested) that sort of thing is another thing we'll probably never know.
Now I'm not going to say either McMahon or Ewins is right or wrong here, at least not without having studied closely specific pages and panels that are the bones of contention. Was it really only a one-time thing? That would seem to portray McMahon as a particularly over-reactive sort of artist. Or did Ewins really take shortcuts more often that he's willing to admit, and he's just trying to soft-pedal his guilt after being caught at it? I really don't know -- all I'm saying is I can understand it somewhat in light of the practical demands of how the comics industry works, and how comics fans & readers think. In the old days, it wasn't like today. It just wasn't always so simple and straightforward as "Just give it your best and be yourself; I'm sure everything will turn out fine and the readers will love it."
Quote from: A.Cow on 17 April, 2017, 01:53:36 PM
If I read it right, Ewins argued that deadlines (& the need to emulate existing artists) led to the tracing incident, which he claimed was a one-off.
Apart from the innumerable swipes from Gibbons in his Rogue Trooper run, and the similar number of Bolland lifts on Anderson, which were also (presumably) "one-offs".
IIRC, the specific thing that enraged Mick, was Brett's cover for GW's 'Judgement Day' RPG scenario, which he felt was a fairly shameless swipe of Mick's iconic Cursed Earth cover...
(https://i.ytimg.com/vi/-Ge006dwDYs/maxresdefault.jpg)
(http://static1.comicvine.com/uploads/scale_small/0/9116/328958-19752-125200-1-2000-a-d.jpg)
Quote from: Jim_Campbell on 17 April, 2017, 06:34:57 PM
Quote from: A.Cow on 17 April, 2017, 01:53:36 PM
If I read it right, Ewins argued that deadlines (& the need to emulate existing artists) led to the tracing incident, which he claimed was a one-off.
Apart from the innumerable swipes from Gibbons in his Rogue Trooper run, and the similar number of Bolland lifts on Anderson, which were also (presumably) "one-offs".
IIRC, the specific thing that enraged Mick, was Brett's cover for GW's 'Judgement Day' RPG scenario, which he felt was a fairly shameless swipe of Mick's iconic Cursed Earth cover...
(https://i.ytimg.com/vi/-Ge006dwDYs/maxresdefault.jpg)
(http://static1.comicvine.com/uploads/scale_small/0/9116/328958-19752-125200-1-2000-a-d.jpg)
Well, this is another example where you don't know. I mean you don't know whether the art editor at Games Workshop just called up Brett Ewins and hired him because he WAS Brett Ewins, or maybe the art editor was really hoping to hire Mick McMahon but he wasn't available (too busy with 2000 AD assignments) or wasn't interested (not offered enough money). Or even if the art editor
thought somehow (misunderstanding, or just ignorance?) he had hired the Judge Dredd artist who had drawn the cover of Prog 61, specifically
because he wanted a cover for the Judgment Day module to look like the cover of Prog 61. We just don't know what the particular circumstances around that cover were, because sometimes "art direction" can be very much like "I was only following orders", and that's just exactly what the art editor ordered.
In essence, we can't really know whether Ewins was hired for the GW job and given an entirely free hand in choosing how to compose the cover for that module. In that respect, using an independently-contracted example of a swipe which falls outside the aegis of a normal 2000 AD publication, seems like not the best proof of guilt in and of itself. Its only value is if it can be persuasive as a particular egregious instance among many many others. I don't say those hypothetical "many" don't exist, but narrowing it down to just one (and one in which the genesis of the cover concept might be said to be outside the normal operations of 2000 AD editorial, and thus especially dubious) is far less persuasive than if the choice of layout and subject for the cover could be narrowed down to no other realistic possibility than the executor of the actual drawing. Sometimes, the actual job of work is to execute a swipe. That really does happen.
Quote from: positronic on 17 April, 2017, 07:19:15 PM
Quote from: Jim_Campbell on 17 April, 2017, 06:34:57 PM
Quote from: A.Cow on 17 April, 2017, 01:53:36 PM
If I read it right, Ewins argued that deadlines (& the need to emulate existing artists) led to the tracing incident, which he claimed was a one-off.
Apart from the innumerable swipes from Gibbons in his Rogue Trooper run, and the similar number of Bolland lifts on Anderson, which were also (presumably) "one-offs".
IIRC, the specific thing that enraged Mick, was Brett's cover for GW's 'Judgement Day' RPG scenario, which he felt was a fairly shameless swipe of Mick's iconic Cursed Earth cover...
(https://i.ytimg.com/vi/-Ge006dwDYs/maxresdefault.jpg)
(http://static1.comicvine.com/uploads/scale_small/0/9116/328958-19752-125200-1-2000-a-d.jpg)
Well, this is another example where you don't know. I mean you don't know whether the art editor at Games Workshop just called up Brett Ewins and hired him because he WAS Brett Ewins, or maybe the art editor was really hoping to hire Mick McMahon but he wasn't available (too busy with 2000 AD assignments) or wasn't interested (not offered enough money). Or even if the art editor thought somehow (misunderstanding, or just ignorance?) he had hired the Judge Dredd artist who had drawn the cover of Prog 61, specifically because he wanted a cover for the Judgment Day module to look like the cover of Prog 61. We just don't know what the particular circumstances around that cover were, because sometimes "art direction" can be very much like "I was only following orders", and that's just exactly what the art editor ordered.
In essence, we can't really know whether Ewins was hired for the GW job and given an entirely free hand in choosing how to compose the cover for that module. In that respect, using an independently-contracted example of a swipe which falls outside the aegis of a normal 2000 AD publication, seems like not the best proof of guilt in and of itself. Its only value is if it can be persuasive as a particular egregious instance among many many others. I don't say those hypothetical "many" don't exist, but narrowing it down to just one (and one in which the genesis of the cover concept might be said to be outside the normal operations of 2000 AD editorial, and thus especially dubious) is far less persuasive than if the choice of layout and subject for the cover could be narrowed down to no other realistic possibility than the executor of the actual drawing. Sometimes, the actual job of work is to execute a swipe. That really does happen, and is not known to be uncommon in merchandising art.
I wasn't aware of that at all. Strangely Prog 61 is my favourite cover and I do have that RPG book but I don't remember ever looking at them and going "wait a minute".
I also wasn't aware of any alleged copying of Bolland and Gibbons work. Shows how observant I've been. Anyone have any examples of these?
To be fair to Brett Ewins he still did have a style distinctive from the others (in my eyes anyway). I have a vague memory of Alan Davis not being best pleased with some of Bryan Hitch's early work.
Quote from: positronic on 17 April, 2017, 07:19:15 PM
Well, this is another example where you don't know. —SNIP—
Well, that really was an awful lot of words deployed in service of disagreeing with a point I didn't make.
Quote from: Jim_Campbell on 17 April, 2017, 11:47:06 PM
Quote from: positronic on 17 April, 2017, 07:19:15 PM
Well, this is another example where you don't know. —SNIP—
Well, that really was an awful lot of words deployed in service of disagreeing with a point I didn't make.
I read it as "you don't know" in the vernacular (i.e. "one doesn't know") rather than it being a personal reference. Or have I misunderstood?
I always find the "Brett the copyist" discussion fascinating, because that was his style. When I started reading 2000AD regularly, Ewins was the main man. His Rogue Trooper, his Dredd, his Anderson, his Dark Judges. I neither knew nor cared that some of his figures were heavily referenced or even exact copies of other artists' panels: it all looked like Ewins to me, and it all looked good. And I still feel that way: his chunky-tech heavy-black pages are bold and lively, and everything fits together, the borrowed bits and the new bits, all making for a good looking well-told strip. Even the re-using of blown up pixelated photocopies of his own work on Bad Company works within his scheme, actually becoming something interesting in its own right rather than a 'cheat'. A style born of necessity, but one that really works.
Incidentally, that Judgement Day cover not only graces one of the best RPG modules I ever played, it's also a superb image, regardless of the Dredd being traced from McMahon: it's inked and coloured n such a way as to form the heart of a great new cover . And it's also perhaps worth noting that all the interior illustrations, and all the interior art in the main boxed set, are reprinted panels from the comic: at least here we got something partly new. Stick an 'after McMahon' box in the corner and we're good.
I can of course see how that is/was irritating for the artists concerned, and what the wider issues are, but I can't feel that way myself. When i look at the work I just see good comics.
Quote from: A.Cow on 18 April, 2017, 12:57:30 AM
I read it as "you don't know" in the vernacular (i.e. "one doesn't know") rather than it being a personal reference. Or have I misunderstood?
The rest of the post was a discussion of things I didn't say. All I said was that Ewins had form for swiping, and that I'd read that Mick was particularly narked about that specific cover -- ISTR he didn't name Brett but said that an unnamed artist had got paid more for tracing a Dredd cover of his for Games Workshop than he'd been paid for doing it in the first place. Didn't require a
huge amount of detective work from there.
FWIW, I owned Judgement Day, too, and I never clocked the swipe until it was mentioned. When you put the two side-by-side, however, it
is pretty blatant.
Quote from: A.Cow on 18 April, 2017, 12:57:30 AM
Quote from: Jim_Campbell on 17 April, 2017, 11:47:06 PM
Quote from: positronic on 17 April, 2017, 07:19:15 PM
Well, this is another example where you don't know. —SNIP—
Well, that really was an awful lot of words deployed in service of disagreeing with a point I didn't make.
I read it as "you don't know" in the vernacular (i.e. "one doesn't know") rather than it being a personal reference. Or have I misunderstood?
Yes, perhaps I should have said "nobody knows", but that's it. There's a basic inequality in trying to judge the motives behind the creation of a piece of Dredd merchandising art against what was normally being published in 2000 AD.
And then there's this... I'd love to know how this one came about; swipe or no swipe it still remains one of my favourite Future Shocks.
Quote from: ming on 16 March, 2014, 08:56:52 PM
This just came up in discussion on the FB art group... The classic Gary Rice / Brett Ewins Future Shock from Prog 206, 'The Last Man' bears a striking resemblance to a story published in Heavy Metal the very same month (April 1981). As detailed in the blog linked to below, "'Good-bye, Soldier !', written by Ricardo Barreiro, with distinctive black and white art by Juan Giminez".
Anyone know whether this was printed in French earlier in Metal Hurlant?
(http://i.imgur.com/HNV18rf.jpg)
You can see the whole story via the link below; too similar to be a coincidence, although Brett's visuals for the ending are unbeatable...
http://theporporbooksblog.blogspot.no/2011/04/heavy-metal-magazine-april-1981-heavy.html
Quote from: positronic on 18 April, 2017, 08:57:31 AM
Yes, perhaps I should have said "nobody knows", but that's it. There's a basic inequality in trying to judge the motives behind the creation of a piece of Dredd merchandising art against what was normally being published in 2000 AD.
Again, I didn't say anything about motive, only that Ewins had previous form for swiping and that McMahon had expressed displeasure at the close similarities between his Dredd art and a piece of GW cover art by another artist. The only motive I'd speculate on in that scenario is, given his tireless experimentation and reinvention of his style, that Mick probably felt he'd have done a better job on a homage to his Prog 61 cover than another artist doing a fairly straight lift.
Quote from: Jim_Campbell on 17 April, 2017, 06:34:57 PM
Quote from: A.Cow on 17 April, 2017, 01:53:36 PM
If I read it right, Ewins argued that deadlines (& the need to emulate existing artists) led to the tracing incident, which he claimed was a one-off.
Apart from the innumerable swipes from Gibbons in his Rogue Trooper run, and the similar number of Bolland lifts on Anderson, which were also (presumably) "one-offs".
To clarify lest anyone misinterprifies, Brett said he swiped once-only from Mick not that he hadn't done so from other artists. From 2000 AD: THE CREATOR INTERVIEWS:
Quote from: Brett Ewins
There was one image that I did, as I was racing against time, where I used a Mike McMahon image -- I only did that once . . . But there are times I've had to lift an artist because otherwise there's not going to be anything on that page. So there's a couple of times I've had to trace stuff off, but literally there's only one time I've had to do that with Mick's work.
Quote from: Eric Plumrose on 18 April, 2017, 10:53:41 AM
To clarify lest anyone misinterprifies, Brett said he swiped once-only from Mick not that he hadn't done so from other artists. From 2000 AD: THE CREATOR INTERVIEWS:
Interesting. Thanks for that.
Quote from: Jim_Campbell on 18 April, 2017, 10:04:01 AM
Quote from: positronic on 18 April, 2017, 08:57:31 AM
Yes, perhaps I should have said "nobody knows", but that's it. There's a basic inequality in trying to judge the motives behind the creation of a piece of Dredd merchandising art against what was normally being published in 2000 AD.
Again, I didn't say anything about motive, only that Ewins had previous form for swiping and that McMahon had expressed displeasure at the close similarities between his Dredd art and a piece of GW cover art by another artist. The only motive I'd speculate on in that scenario is, given his tireless experimentation and reinvention of his style, that Mick probably felt he'd have done a better job on a homage to his Prog 61 cover than another artist doing a fairly straight lift.
No, you didn't mention motives. What I'm saying is that you/we/anyone shouldn't just
assume that Ewins received NO specific directions from Games Workshop prior to the execution of the final Judgement Day cover assignment illustration.
Possibilities include verbal instruction, visual references, etc. -- down to the point of Ewins potentially having executed the illustration based on a cover layout designed by someone else that was supplied to him, or even the possibility that he was specifically given or sent a copy of McMahon's cover for Prog 61, and directed to include that image of McMahon's Dredd on his Lawmaster.
A merchandising art assignment isn't directly comparable (if Ewins is being tried for the accusation of swiping) against a normal page of artwork Ewins might have drawn for a story published in 2000 AD, where I think we can fairly assume that the 2000 AD art director isn't micro-managing the details of composition on every story page. 2000 AD covers may be treated differently than interior pages in terms of how much they are art-directed.
Maybe I should just have lifted the URL of the actual image in your post, as opposed to simply quoting the entire thing. My comments weren't directed at you personally for what you said, I'm just raising the point because it seems like something people fail to consider when debating the guilt of "swiping".
Quote from: TordelBack on 18 April, 2017, 01:14:37 AM
I always find the "Brett the copyist" discussion fascinating, because that was his styleit all looked like Ewins to me, and it all looked good.
Yup. Unlike one art droid who still can't settle on whom he wants to be and once O'Rourked 1981-vintage-Mick's
entire style, I don't think at any point I've ever looked at Brett's artwork and been unconvinced by him
stylistically. It's also kinda fun picking out his swipes (there's at least two I can think of in 'The Case of the Urban Gorillas' from the 1981 2000 AD Annual).
Quote from: TordelBack on 18 April, 2017, 01:14:37 AM
Stick an 'after McMahon' box in the corner and we're good.
As Cliff did here:
(https://encrypted-tbn1.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTCjkkg5HZVVC3l8ecL0dbAM_CE_tRbmXzDRwU-mpH4dg1pwd_2)
On re-reading - I've just realised that the Dredd Strip 'Night of the Bloodbeast' (Prog. 138) features cameos from Digby (Dan Dare), The Spirit, E-Man and at least three other characters who are clearly meant to be someone but I don't know who...
Quote from: JudgeJudi on 22 April, 2017, 07:10:16 PM
On re-reading - I've just realised that the Dredd Strip 'Night of the Bloodbeast' (Prog. 138) features cameos from Digby (Dan Dare), The Spirit, E-Man and at least three other characters who are clearly meant to be someone but I don't know who...
E-Man? Now there's an unlikely cameo homage. I was reading another 2000 AD story the other day and almost thought I saw an homage to John Byrne's robot character ROG-2000 from Charlton Comics, but after looking more closely, I decided it was probably a simple coincidence of similar design. Obviously that wasn't the case in Prog 138, since several different characters appeared in cameo homages.
I also just finished reading Judge Dredd: The Cape & Cowl Crimes, a collection of stories satirizing various popular superhero characters from other publishers.
Quote from: positronic on 23 April, 2017, 01:28:45 AM
Quote from: JudgeJudi on 22 April, 2017, 07:10:16 PM
On re-reading - I've just realised that the Dredd Strip 'Night of the Bloodbeast' (Prog. 138) features cameos from Digby (Dan Dare), The Spirit, E-Man and at least three other characters who are clearly meant to be someone but I don't know who...
E-Man? Now there's an unlikely cameo homage. I was reading another 2000 AD story the other day and almost thought I saw an homage to John Byrne's robot character ROG-2000 from Charlton Comics, but after looking more closely, I decided it was probably a simple coincidence of similar design. Obviously that wasn't the case in Prog 138, since several different characters appeared in cameo homages.
I wonder who the man at back left is intended to be and the woman?
http://imgur.com/a/oEOIr
(Cannot work out how to embed?)
Quote from: JudgeJudi on 23 April, 2017, 12:53:44 PM
Quote from: positronic on 23 April, 2017, 01:28:45 AM
Quote from: JudgeJudi on 22 April, 2017, 07:10:16 PM
On re-reading - I've just realised that the Dredd Strip 'Night of the Bloodbeast' (Prog. 138) features cameos from Digby (Dan Dare), The Spirit, E-Man and at least three other characters who are clearly meant to be someone but I don't know who...
E-Man? Now there's an unlikely cameo homage. I was reading another 2000 AD story the other day and almost thought I saw an homage to John Byrne's robot character ROG-2000 from Charlton Comics, but after looking more closely, I decided it was probably a simple coincidence of similar design. Obviously that wasn't the case in Prog 138, since several different characters appeared in cameo homages.
I wonder who the man at back left is intended to be and the woman?
(http://i.imgur.com/d71FOv0.png)
(Cannot work out how to embed?)
Unless the spear is significant in some way, I'd be inclined to say the man looks like he's wearing glasses (or has bags under his eyes), and possibly has a mustache. This seems more likely to be an editor, writer, or artist for 2000 AD, but I have no idea who it might be. Anyone want to take a guess?
As for the woman, I'm still trying to figure out exactly what she's wearing on her head. Seems like she must be a comics character, but nary as clue as to which one.
How to embed:1. apparently links to
imgur site are not allowed
2. workaround for #1: right-click on image on
imgur page, choose Open in New Tab
3. copy URL from address bar in tab (your image by itself) you just opened in #2
4. in your reply, paste image URL (should end in .jpg, .gif, or .png) where you want it to appear in post, then highlight
5. click on [img] icon = box on far left, 2nd row, right above row of smileys
6. click on Preview before actually posting it, to make sure you got it right
7. should work, but feel free to ask if it doesn't
8. I already did it for you in quoting your post above, but test it yourself just to make sure you know how to do it.
@judgejudi -
One more to add:
9. right-click on any image you find on web, choose "Copy image address" to copy URL, then as above from #4.
I'd have said the guy at the back left was John Belushi. The girl, I dunno, she has an early Alex Raymond vibe... Dale Arden, Jane?
I can rule out Dale Arden for you. Jane (from the British comic strip, right?) wasn't a costumed character, AFAIK. I really can't make out that unique headgear she's sporting in that drawing. The shoulder-length gloves should offer some clue though, I would think.
Quote from: positronic on 23 April, 2017, 02:36:21 PM
Unless the spear is significant in some way, I'd be inclined to say the man looks like he's wearing glasses (or has bags under his eyes), and possibly has a mustache. This seems more likely to be an editor, writer, or artist for 2000 AD, but I have no idea who it might be. Anyone want to take a guess?
Looks a bit like John Wagner...
Quote from: positronic on 23 April, 2017, 02:36:21 PM
As for the woman, I'm still trying to figure out exactly what she's wearing on her head. Seems like she must be a comics character, but nary as clue as to which one.
She's wearing a pillbox hat with a veil (the picture is a lot clearer in the original prog), so I'm guessing she's a femme fatale from The Spirit.
Quote from: Lobo Baggins on 23 April, 2017, 03:09:17 PM
Quote from: positronic on 23 April, 2017, 02:36:21 PM
Unless the spear is significant in some way, I'd be inclined to say the man looks like he's wearing glasses (or has bags under his eyes), and possibly has a mustache. This seems more likely to be an editor, writer, or artist for 2000 AD, but I have no idea who it might be. Anyone want to take a guess?
Looks a bit like John Wagner...
Quote from: positronic on 23 April, 2017, 02:36:21 PM
As for the woman, I'm still trying to figure out exactly what she's wearing on her head. Seems like she must be a comics character, but nary as clue as to which one.
She's wearing a pillbox hat with a veil (the picture is a lot clearer in the original prog), so I'm guessing she's a femme fatale from The Spirit.
Hmm. Doesn't look like any of the familiar Spirit
femmes fatale to me.
Now that I'm staring at the man, I wonder if that spear is his...? If that's the case, then he's almost certainly holding that spear, which would seem to bust my theory that the drawing was of some artist, writer or editor for 2000 AD. But then this wild idea just shot into my head, a vague recollection of some Euro comic character strip called (appropriately enough) ... "THE MAN", which was a long-running thing about a caveman or neanderthal's typical daily adventures. Ring any bells with anyone? It's kind of hard to use in a search engine...
This? (http://comixjoint.com/man-2nd.html)
Quote from: The Legendary Shark on 23 April, 2017, 03:30:25 PM
This? (http://comixjoint.com/man-2nd.html)
Not Bode's. This was another Man, less cartoonish (not Alley Oop, either). I can't recall the actual country of origin, possibly Spain, or somewhere in South America... never mind the artist's name.
The only caveman character I can think of is Tor which was a Joe Kubert creation. I don't think that's him though and I'm inclined to agree its likely a 2000AD celebrity. The way he is just looking forward at the reader. I've never seen Garry Leach so I'm just wondering if its him?
I think the female is likely a Spirit character as her arm is locked with his.
No idea about the spear though.
Something else I missed first time around - all the on-going talk about Dredd's age - Bizmo Klux (the Radbeast from Night of the Radbeast) is a springly 134 when they throw him in the pit... (born July 12th 1971).
Quote from: JudgeJudi on 23 April, 2017, 09:36:39 PM
Something else I missed first time around - all the on-going talk about Dredd's age - Bizmo Klux (the Radbeast from Night of the Radbeast) is a springly 134 when they throw him in the pit... (born July 12th 1971).
Yes, I remember thinking when I first read it that the Biz was a little bit older than me (or will be, in 2104).
I just read a story in the 2000 AD's Greatest: Celebrating 40 Years collection where Kevin O'Neill appears as a character (who turns out to be the perp in this Dredd story). Can't remember the title or the Prog, but in the story O'Neill tries to sell Dredd a Dream Machine (which is like some kind of holographic TV that projects virtual fantasies). His name is mentioned several times in the story, so it isn't like one of those cameo background characters named after one of the 2000 AD staff or creator-droids.
In the plot of the story O'Neill is a really a disgruntled ex-employee of the company selling the dream machines, and O'Neill is going around as a (unauthorized) door-to-door salesman so that he can sneak into the conapts of the company's higher-ups and off them. It's one of the early Progs, because Dredd's in his apartment, and his housekeeper Maria and Walter the Wobot are there. The art wasn't by O'Neill but drawn by Carlos Ezquerra. I don't know if Ezquerra drew O'Neill as an actual caricature of his likeness.
Quote from: Tony Angelino on 23 April, 2017, 04:50:41 PM
I've never seen Garry Leach so I'm just wondering if its him?
That was my initial thought too, especially after finding a photo (http://static.comicvine.com/uploads/scale_small/0/9241/691694-03_x_force_05.jpg) of him (making presumptions about what he might look like younger). However, it would not explain the spear.
Quote from: A.Cow on 24 April, 2017, 08:52:11 AM
Quote from: Tony Angelino on 23 April, 2017, 04:50:41 PM
I've never seen Garry Leach so I'm just wondering if its him?
That was my initial thought too, especially after finding a photo (http://static.comicvine.com/uploads/scale_small/0/9241/691694-03_x_force_05.jpg) of him (making presumptions about what he might look like younger). However, it would not explain the spear.
A visual theatrical pun on being a background extra?
Quote from: positronic on 24 April, 2017, 08:24:59 AM
I just read a story in the 2000 AD's Greatest: Celebrating 40 Years collection where Kevin O'Neill appears as a character (who turns out to be the perp in this Dredd story). Can't remember the title or the Prog, but in the story O'Neill tries to sell Dredd a Dream Machine (which is like some kind of holographic TV that projects virtual fantasies). His name is mentioned several times in the story, so it isn't like one of those cameo background characters named after one of the 2000 AD staff or creator-droids.
In the plot of the story O'Neill is a really a disgruntled ex-employee of the company selling the dream machines, and O'Neill is going around as a (unauthorized) door-to-door salesman so that he can sneak into the conapts of the company's higher-ups and off them. It's one of the early Progs, because Dredd's in his apartment, and his housekeeper Maria and Walter the Wobot are there. The art wasn't by O'Neill but drawn by Carlos Ezquerra. I don't know if Ezquerra drew O'Neill as an actual caricature of his likeness.
It's 'Krong' from prog 5, isn't it?
(https://mydreddfulyear.files.wordpress.com/2013/06/prog-05.jpg)
Quote from: norton canes on 24 April, 2017, 09:32:07 AM
Quote from: positronic on 24 April, 2017, 08:24:59 AM
I just read a story in the 2000 AD's Greatest: Celebrating 40 Years collection where Kevin O'Neill appears as a character (who turns out to be the perp in this Dredd story). Can't remember the title or the Prog, but in the story O'Neill tries to sell Dredd a Dream Machine (which is like some kind of holographic TV that projects virtual fantasies). His name is mentioned several times in the story, so it isn't like one of those cameo background characters named after one of the 2000 AD staff or creator-droids.
In the plot of the story O'Neill is a really a disgruntled ex-employee of the company selling the dream machines, and O'Neill is going around as a (unauthorized) door-to-door salesman so that he can sneak into the conapts of the company's higher-ups and off them. It's one of the early Progs, because Dredd's in his apartment, and his housekeeper Maria and Walter the Wobot are there. The art wasn't by O'Neill but drawn by Carlos Ezquerra. I don't know if Ezquerra drew O'Neill as an actual caricature of his likeness.
It's 'Krong' from prog 5, isn't it?
(https://mydreddfulyear.files.wordpress.com/2013/06/prog-05.jpg)
Yes, that's the one. Funny that I forgot the reveal at the end about citizen O'Neill originally being the creator of SFX robot monsters (Dino DeLaurentis' KING KONG remake was in theaters at about the time that prog was published), and the reason he wanted revenge on the dream machine company execs was that feelgood holotech fantasies ruined the market for monster movies!
I don't know if anyone can say whether or not Ezquerra actually caricatured the 2000 AD artist's likeness there. I've never seen any pictures of Kevin O'Neill from the late 1970s, so I don't know what he looked like then.
Oh, and I think prog 5 is Carlos' actual first published Dredd too, isn't it? The very first Dredd story he drew wasn't published until later, right?
Quote from: positronic on 24 April, 2017, 10:02:59 AM
I don't know if anyone can say whether or not Ezquerra actually caricatured the 2000 AD artist's likeness there. I've never seen any pictures of Kevin O'Neill from the late 1970s, so I don't know what he looked like then.
According to Dave Gibbons on the Face Book recently, Kevin O'Neill played the part of 'the Office Junior' (presumably, Billy Preston) in the Big E photostories in Tornado, but I seem to recall either O'Neill or Ezquerra saying that they'd never actually met at the time Krong was being drawn so the O'Neill character looked nothing like O'Neill the Art Bodger.
Quote from: Lobo Baggins on 23 April, 2017, 03:09:17 PM
Looks a bit like John Wagner...
That was my first thought too.
There seems to be someone behind the Spirit's lady friend (you can see something between her and Dredd), so perhaps that person is the spear-bearer?
Other characters at the party include -
(http://i123.photobucket.com/albums/o320/Lobo_Baggins/Party01_zps4fprxhqy.jpg) (http://s123.photobucket.com/user/Lobo_Baggins/media/Party01_zps4fprxhqy.jpg.html)
Biffo the Bear from the Beano, possible Peter Pan with vuvuzela, Howard the Duck, Starzan from Wally Wood's Sally Forth and Popeye.
(http://i123.photobucket.com/albums/o320/Lobo_Baggins/Party%2002_zpsfvzckwsn.jpg) (http://s123.photobucket.com/user/Lobo_Baggins/media/Party%2002_zpsfvzckwsn.jpg.html)
Stan Laurel
(http://i123.photobucket.com/albums/o320/Lobo_Baggins/Party%2003_zps8krwc9oz.jpg) (http://s123.photobucket.com/user/Lobo_Baggins/media/Party%2003_zps8krwc9oz.jpg.html)
Little Bo Peep (plus sheep).
And a better scan of the final scene (although it still doesn't help)...
(http://i123.photobucket.com/albums/o320/Lobo_Baggins/Party%2004_zps7jl38kdh.jpg) (http://s123.photobucket.com/user/Lobo_Baggins/media/Party%2004_zps7jl38kdh.jpg.html)
Quote from: Lobo Baggins on 24 April, 2017, 02:06:26 PM
Biffo the Bear from the Beano, possible Peter Pan with vuvuzela, Howard the Duck, Starzan from Wally Wood's Sally Forth and Popeye.
Wow, that's
awfully specific. I would just have guessed Tarzan. Was that quoted from somewhere?
Prog. 437's "something abnormal about norman" features Judges Amos and Andy (who seem to either be twins or clones).
How did I miss first time around reading Judgement Day:
Judge Bruce is Lenny Bruce...
That Sabbat is a parody of the Dennis the Menace character Soppy Walter and even worse I missed that Dennis turns up himself!
Quote from: JudgeJudi on 30 April, 2017, 08:59:51 PM
That Sabbat is a parody of the Dennis the Menace character Soppy Walter and even worse I missed that Dennis turns up himself!
Sabbath is the most piss-poor excuse for a major Dredd villain ever conceived, and Judgement Day was the worst 'epic' until Helter Skelter... and I include Inferno in that assessment.* I quite liked some of Ennis' shorter Dredds, but his extended storylines bear no kind of scrutiny at all.
*All right, maybe the Egyptian thing deserves the real turkey award, but still...!
Quote from: JudgeJudi on 30 April, 2017, 08:59:51 PM
How did I miss first time around reading Judgement Day:
Judge Bruce is Lenny Bruce...
That Sabbat is a parody of the Dennis the Menace character Soppy Walter and even worse I missed that Dennis turns up himself!
But an Aussie version of Lenny Bruce? I can see where I'd miss that; I'd just assumed it was perhaps a common surname in Australia. At any rate, he doesn't get much on-panel time in Judgment Day, but perhaps you're thinking of OZ.
It's easy to see where I'd not recognize the Sabbat thing, since the only Dennis the Menace I'm familiar with is the American comic panel (later a long-running comic
book) created by Hank Ketcham, and the other Dennis appeared in The Beano, which I've never read.
Quote from: Jim_Campbell on 01 May, 2017, 12:06:39 AM
Judgement Day was the worst 'epic' until Helter Skelter... and I include Inferno in that assessment.* I quite liked some of Ennis' shorter Dredds, but his extended storylines bear no kind of scrutiny at all.
Would the shorter ones you're referring to be included in the Dredd Garth Ennis Collection TP? I have that, but was putting off reading it after reading Judgment Day, which seemed more of a by-the-numbers sort of account of epic-scale mass destruction like you'd find in a typical Marvel crossover story -- but it definitely doesn't help that the villain can't really be taken seriously. Dredd's character is more or less reduced to assuming command of the crisis and barking orders like a drill sergeant.
Quote from: positronic on 01 May, 2017, 06:53:36 AM
Quote from: JudgeJudi on 30 April, 2017, 08:59:51 PM
How did I miss first time around reading Judgement Day:
Judge Bruce is Lenny Bruce...
That Sabbat is a parody of the Dennis the Menace character Soppy Walter and even worse I missed that Dennis turns up himself!
But an Aussie version of Lenny Bruce? I can see where I'd miss that; I'd just assumed it was perhaps a common surname in Australia. At any rate, he doesn't get much on-panel time in Judgment Day, but perhaps you're thinking of OZ.
It's easy to see where I'd not recognize the Sabbat thing, since the only Dennis the Menace I'm familiar with is the American comic panel (later a long-running comic book) created by Hank Ketcham, and the other Dennis appeared in The Beano, which I've never read.
Interesting fact about the two Dennises - they were both published for the first time, completely independently, on the exact same day: 12 March 1951.
Quote from: positronic on 01 May, 2017, 06:53:36 AM
At any rate, he doesn't get much on-panel time in Judgment Day, but perhaps you're thinking of OZ.
If I was thinking of OZ, I'd mention OZ.
Quote from: JudgeJudi on 01 May, 2017, 09:15:17 AM
Quote from: positronic on 01 May, 2017, 06:53:36 AM
At any rate, he doesn't get much on-panel time in Judgment Day, but perhaps you're thinking of OZ.
If I was thinking of OZ, I'd mention OZ.
Well, I meant specifically relative to Judge Bruce being an homage to Lenny Bruce. I read Judgment Day, but given Judge Bruce's not-large speaking role in that, even after you point it out, I'm still having a hard time recognizing the homage to Lenny Bruce.
I thought you meant that the homage/parody (other than just the name) was evident in terms of character dialogue, since the Judge uniform would obscure any physical resemblance of Judge Bruce to Lenny Bruce, especially in Judgment Day where he's mostly seen towards the end of the story in that Samurai Ground Attack Armor, so I assumed the homage was more recognizable through characterization in his earlier appearances. Or maybe there was just some bit of Judge Bruce's dialogue in that which escaped me.
I don't think the 'homage' goes past the name. I couldn't tell there being any other similarity between Judge Bruce and Lenny Bruce.
The name Bruce is associated to Australia, which is probably how the original writers gave the character that name, but even then its more as a forename.
Quote from: Tony Angelino on 01 May, 2017, 12:36:48 PM
I don't think the 'homage' goes past the name. I couldn't tell there being any other similarity between Judge Bruce and Lenny Bruce.
The name Bruce is associated to Australia, which is probably how the original writers gave the character that name, but even then its more as a forename.
Okay, I've just paged through Judgment Day now, and I see the reference JudgeJudi is referring to -- it's on page 99 of the print collection, where Judge Charlie Joyce calls Judge Bruce "Lenny". I wasn't getting what she was saying at first, because if it was just the name, then didn't Judge Bruce already exist before Judgment Day? -- But I gather then that Judgment Day is where Judge Bruce -- who was
not originally created to be an homage/parody to American comedian Lenny Bruce --
became an homage to Lenny Bruce, when Garth Ennis supplied Judge Bruce with a first name, which he'd never had before that. Pardon my confusion, JudgeJudi.
Haven't read 'Judgement Day' and it's been an age since I flicked through 'Oz' but doesn't giving Judge Bruce a 'first' name kind of miss the point? In that 'Bruce' is his first name? What with the Oz Judges being far more laid-back, they're all referred to by their givens!
Or is that something that should have gone over my head?
Quote from: positronic on 01 May, 2017, 06:53:36 AM
Quote from: JudgeJudi on 30 April, 2017, 08:59:51 PM
How did I miss first time around reading Judgement Day:
Judge Bruce is Lenny Bruce...
That Sabbat is a parody of the Dennis the Menace character Soppy Walter and even worse I missed that Dennis turns up himself!
But an Aussie version of Lenny Bruce? I can see where I'd miss that; I'd just assumed it was perhaps a common surname in Australia. At any rate, he doesn't get much on-panel time in Judgment Day, but perhaps you're thinking of OZ.
This may be a case of something going over Garth Ennis' head...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eyVX3uJpqxc
...or more likely he just didn't care.
Regards,
Robin
Quote from: Eric Plumrose on 01 May, 2017, 04:40:04 PM
Haven't read 'Judgement Day' and it's been an age since I flicked through 'Oz' but doesn't giving Judge Bruce a 'first' name kind of miss the point? In that 'Bruce' is his first name? What with the Oz Judges being far more laid-back, they're all referred to by their givens!
Or is that something that should have gone over my head?
It seems there should be some consistency, but what are the other Oz Judges' names?
Let's not forget that this has been a point of confusion ever since Judge
Rico (who technically, should also have been Judge
Dredd).
Quote from: Robin Low on 01 May, 2017, 05:15:21 PM
Quote from: positronic on 01 May, 2017, 06:53:36 AM
Quote from: JudgeJudi on 30 April, 2017, 08:59:51 PM
How did I miss first time around reading Judgement Day:
Judge Bruce is Lenny Bruce...
That Sabbat is a parody of the Dennis the Menace character Soppy Walter and even worse I missed that Dennis turns up himself!
But an Aussie version of Lenny Bruce? I can see where I'd miss that; I'd just assumed it was perhaps a common surname in Australia. At any rate, he doesn't get much on-panel time in Judgment Day, but perhaps you're thinking of OZ.
This may be a case of something going over Garth Ennis' head...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eyVX3uJpqxc
...or more likely he just didn't care.
Regards,
Robin
It's likely something much more obvious when reading Oz or Chopper than Judgment Day, where Bruce is out of his element. (Hard to be laid-back about voting to nuke those
other five Mega-Cities, too...)
But yes, Monty Python. Garth Ennis really should have known that, unless he's much younger than I think he is... but maybe we can use the excuse that Lenny is his
last name. Judge Bruce Lenny. "Lenny" is a single word in a dialogue balloon uttered by Judge Joyce of Murphytown. (Personally I'd have voted for his first and last name being the same -- Judge Bruce Bruce.)
Quote from: positronic on 01 May, 2017, 09:40:27 PM
Let's not forget that this has been a point of confusion ever since Judge Rico (who technically, should also have been Judge Dredd).
I've always presumed that Judge names work the same way as South American footballers: some use surnames, some use nicknames, and a few use first names.
We've also seen this issue explored: when Rico II shows up in MC2 he too is a Cadet Dredd, but elects to take 'Rico' to avoid confusion (and give his clone-uncle another shake). Presumably a similar decision was made before: two identical Judge Dredds is asking for trouble.
There must be more than one Judge Smith or Judge Jones - I always wondered how Justice Department dealt with that. Maybe they get a number as well, like the Welsh soldiers in Zulu (eg., 347 Jones), or maybe they use first or nicknames as already suggested. My favourite idea is that their badges contain some kind of bluetooth identifying transmitter thingummies.
Quote from: The Legendary Shark on 02 May, 2017, 06:25:15 AM
My favourite idea is that their badges contain some kind of bluetooth identifying transmitter thingummies.
Don't the badges also contain a small explosive charge, or did I dream that?
Belt buckle does.
Quote from: The Legendary Shark on 02 May, 2017, 06:25:15 AM
There must be more than one Judge Smith or Judge Jones - I always wondered how Justice Department dealt with that. Maybe they get a number as well, like the Welsh soldiers in Zulu (eg., 347 Jones), or maybe they use first or nicknames as already suggested. My favourite idea is that their badges contain some kind of bluetooth identifying transmitter thingummies.
First names possibly? Frank can't be the only Judge to have his forename on his badge.
Maybe first name then initials, SMITH, JF.
I think you'll find Judge Frank's first name is Dirty.
It never occurred to me that Bruce was his first name. The only other named Oz judge i remember was Chief Judge Bob, though, so it kind of makes sense - or did, at least, till the Lenny bit was added.
What also went over my head, of course, was that Bob was inspired by Bob Hawke.
Am I missing something or is there a bit of overthinking going on here?
Oz. Judge Bruce is a throwaway joke by the writers based on national stereotypes and it being funny to have a forename for a surname.
Judgement Day. "Alright, Lenny?" is a throwaway joke by the character based on the writer's youthful belief in the superiority of his own tastes in popular culture, in this case heavily influenced by Bill Hicks. It's not saying that's the judge's actual name.
It's the same as me being introduced to someone called Mr Marx and saying "Alright, Harpo?"
Quote from: I, Cosh on 02 May, 2017, 02:46:54 PM
Am I missing something or is there a bit of overthinking going on here?
Oz. Judge Bruce is a throwaway joke by the writers based on national stereotypes and it being funny to have a forename for a surname.
Judgement Day. "Alright, Lenny?" is a throwaway joke by the character based on the writer's youthful belief in the superiority of his own tastes in popular culture, in this case heavily influenced by Bill Hicks. It's not saying that's the judge's actual name.
It's the same as me being introduced to someone called Mr Marx and saying "Alright, Harpo?"
My thought was that the Judgement Day line was a throwaway line, as you say (though I've not read the panels in question in some time).
Quote from: I, Cosh on 02 May, 2017, 02:46:54 PM
Am I missing something or is there a bit of overthinking going on here?
From the strip that brought you: Barbara Hershey; Stan Lee; Judges Fuego, Coppit, Fodder, "Cal", and Solomon, to name but a few? Shirley not!
Cosh is correct...
I once knew someone who had the nickname Tooky because his first name was Barry.
Quote from: Fungus on 02 May, 2017, 04:51:25 PM
Cosh is correct...
While I would contend that 'Bruce' is a not unusual surname and that any humour derived from it being used as such
is in itself an example of overthinking . . . fair dinkum!
Quote from: TordelBack on 02 May, 2017, 02:04:55 AM
We've also seen this issue explored: when Rico II shows up in MC2 he too is a Cadet Dredd, but elects to take 'Rico' to avoid confusion (and give his clone-uncle another shake). Presumably a similar decision was made before: two identical Judge Dredds is asking for trouble.
An excellent point, although it does makes you wonder why they
both wouldn't identified by their first names, since they were cloned and entered the academy at the same time. While they're both clones of Fargo, yet not
named Fargo, wouldn't it have been easier to just give them both different surnames?
Still, when you think about it, there must be a
lot of Judges who have the same last names (not necessarily related to each other), in a city as large as the Big Meg?
Quote from: positronic on 01 May, 2017, 09:40:27 PMLet's not forget that this has been a point of confusion ever since Judge Rico (who technically, should also have been Judge Dredd).
He was, originally.
(https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/b/b6/Rico2.jpg)
Quote from: JOE SOAP on 03 May, 2017, 02:58:50 AM
Quote from: positronic on 01 May, 2017, 09:40:27 PMLet's not forget that this has been a point of confusion ever since Judge Rico (who technically, should also have been Judge Dredd).
He was, originally.
(https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/b/b6/Rico2.jpg)
Yet there are also flashback sequences that show him with a badge that reads RICO, so someone chose to retcon that appearance in subsequent flashbacks. The original panel makes more sense, so why they didn't leave it that way... is probably what TordelBack says, that it would be too confusing having 2 Judge Dredds who look identical (until Rico's incarceration on Titan).
Hindsight is 20/20, but they could have avoided those problems by just giving both of Judge Fargo's clones different last names.
Quote from: sheridan on 02 May, 2017, 02:51:48 PM
Quote from: I, Cosh on 02 May, 2017, 02:46:54 PM
Am I missing something or is there a bit of overthinking going on here?
Oz. Judge Bruce is a throwaway joke by the writers based on national stereotypes and it being funny to have a forename for a surname.
Judgement Day. "Alright, Lenny?" is a throwaway joke by the character based on the writer's youthful belief in the superiority of his own tastes in popular culture, in this case heavily influenced by Bill Hicks. It's not saying that's the judge's actual name.
It's the same as me being introduced to someone called Mr Marx and saying "Alright, Harpo?"
My thought was that the Judgement Day line was a throwaway line, as you say (though I've not read the panels in question in some time).
The single panel is on page 99 of the trade paperback. After a brief snippet of conversation between Judge Bruce and Judge Joyce, as they're parting, Judge Bruce looks at Judge Joyce and says "Charlie.", and Judge Joyce looks back at Judge Bruce and says "Lenny." That's the whole thing.
Quote from: I, Cosh on 02 May, 2017, 02:46:54 PM
Judgement Day. "Alright, Lenny?" is a throwaway joke by the character based on the writer's youthful belief in the superiority of his own tastes in popular culture, in this case heavily influenced by Bill Hicks.
Young Garth Ennis? Forcing his pop culture tastes down the reader's throat? Surely not...
Quote from: positronic on 03 May, 2017, 03:56:59 AM
The single panel is on page 99 of the trade paperback. After a brief snippet of conversation between Judge Bruce and Judge Joyce, as they're parting, Judge Bruce looks at Judge Joyce and says "Charlie.", and Judge Joyce looks back at Judge Bruce and says "Lenny." That's the whole thing.
I remember it being something more like 'Heh! Nice one, Charlie.' 'Alright, Lenny. I'm just off to the jacks.'
Quote from: positronic on 03 May, 2017, 02:42:51 AM
Quote from: TordelBack on 02 May, 2017, 02:04:55 AM
We've also seen this issue explored: when Rico II shows up in MC2 he too is a Cadet Dredd, but elects to take 'Rico' to avoid confusion (and give his clone-uncle another shake). Presumably a similar decision was made before: two identical Judge Dredds is asking for trouble.
An excellent point, although it does makes you wonder why they both wouldn't identified by their first names, since they were cloned and entered the academy at the same time. While they're both clones of Fargo, yet not named Fargo, wouldn't it have been easier to just give them both different surnames?
Still, when you think about it, there must be a lot of Judges who have the same last names (not necessarily related to each other), in a city as large as the Big Meg?
Judge Baker was the first victim of the Solar Sniper in 2099.
A different Judge Baker was also a judge reported to the Council of Judges by Judge-Tutor Schwartz for corrupting cadets about twenty years later...
So I wonder if there are multiple Judge Cody's* clones out there also with naming confusing (I seem to remember an annual claiming about a third of the judges were clones)?
* I think it was Cody....
Quote from: positronic on 03 May, 2017, 03:42:04 AMYet there are also flashback sequences that show him with a badge that reads RICO, so someone chose to retcon that appearance in subsequent flashbacks. The original panel makes more sense, so why they didn't leave it that way... is probably what TordelBack says, that it would be too confusing having 2 Judge Dredds who look identical (until Rico's incarceration on Titan).
Hindsight is 20/20, but they could have avoided those problems by just giving both of Judge Fargo's clones different last names.
Of course, but no one thought there'd be lots of debatin' a 'one-off' comic character's name 4 weeks, let alone
40 years, after he met his contemporaneous end.
Quote from: JOE SOAP on 03 May, 2017, 09:49:22 PM
Quote from: positronic on 03 May, 2017, 03:42:04 AMYet there are also flashback sequences that show him with a badge that reads RICO, so someone chose to retcon that appearance in subsequent flashbacks. The original panel makes more sense, so why they didn't leave it that way... is probably what TordelBack says, that it would be too confusing having 2 Judge Dredds who look identical (until Rico's incarceration on Titan).
Hindsight is 20/20, but they could have avoided those problems by just giving both of Judge Fargo's clones different last names.
Of course, but no one thought there'd be lots of debatin' a 'one-off' comic character's name 4 weeks, let alone 40 years, after he met his contemporaneous end.
I read that it was written as a quick fill-in story (Progs 29-30 being all Mills wrote of Dredd until the longer Cursed Earth saga from Progs 61-70, 81-85), so obviously no thought was given to the lasting ramifications, never mind that it would become a cornerstone of the Dredd mythos. This being the very first hint we get of Dredd's origins, though, maybe it ought to have been more foreseeable.
I've wondered if Pat Mills might have gotten the idea from
Rich Man, Poor Man, which would have still been fresh in people's minds at that time.
I must admit you have to adjust that perception a little when you consider that as of Prog 30, Dredd might still be being viewed as of less significance to 2000 AD than say, M.A.C.H. 1 or Dan Dare.
Quote from: positronic on 04 May, 2017, 12:47:53 AM
I read that it was written as a quick fill-in story (Progs 29-30 being all Mills wrote of Dredd until the longer Cursed Earth saga from Progs 61-70, 81-85), so obviously no thought was given to the lasting ramifications, never mind that it would become a cornerstone of the Dredd mythos. This being the very first hint we get of Dredd's origins, though, maybe it ought to have been more foreseeable.
Comics rarely lasted more than 5 years so it was all rather fluid – Dredd almost had an ex-girlfriend (https://books.google.ie/books?id=ReEQDQAAQBAJ&pg=PT79&lpg=PT79&dq=dredd%27s+girlfriend+blood+of+satanus&source=bl&ots=0z_CcI1vfr&sig=1UdD8UAHqYyhb4CZgk80_Qm1enY&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjEnJCL9tTTAhVKCsAKHagdDlIQ6AEINjAD#v=onepage&q=dredd's%20girlfriend%20blood%20of%20satanus&f=false).
Someone might have pointed this out before but I was reading the Wally Squad story from 1984 (Wagner/Grant/Ewins) in the Mega Collection recently and noticed that the two undercover Judges surnames are Pino and Shea.
I don't know whether this is some play on Pinochet, the former ruler of Chile, or just a coincidence.
Quote from: JOE SOAP on 04 May, 2017, 01:00:30 AM
Quote from: positronic on 04 May, 2017, 12:47:53 AM
I read that it was written as a quick fill-in story (Progs 29-30 being all Mills wrote of Dredd until the longer Cursed Earth saga from Progs 61-70, 81-85), so obviously no thought was given to the lasting ramifications, never mind that it would become a cornerstone of the Dredd mythos. This being the very first hint we get of Dredd's origins, though, maybe it ought to have been more foreseeable.
Comics rarely lasted more than 5 years so it was all rather fluid – Dredd almost had an ex-girlfriend (https://books.google.ie/books?id=ReEQDQAAQBAJ&pg=PT79&lpg=PT79&dq=dredd%27s+girlfriend+blood+of+satanus&source=bl&ots=0z_CcI1vfr&sig=1UdD8UAHqYyhb4CZgk80_Qm1enY&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjEnJCL9tTTAhVKCsAKHagdDlIQ6AEINjAD#v=onepage&q=dredd's%20girlfriend%20blood%20of%20satanus&f=false).
Well, nominally 2000 AD was a part of the boys' comic group of IPC, and past standards held that boys outgrew the comic-reading habit after a few years. That was the common wisdom, but they were proven wrong by people like us, and by the types of editors and creators working for comics like 2000 AD, or a symbiosis of those two things.
That said, a lot of the older strips are based on action-adventure fantasy premises that don't really bear close scrutiny in terms of realism. There's a kind of tension between the older-style treatment of Dredd as almost inhuman or superhuman, to the more modern approach of wanting to deal in a thoughtful way with real-world concerns for a older audience, and have an interesting depth of characterization. As it happens, I just read the trade collection
Mutants in Mega-City One, and you couldn't ask for a better study in contrasts between the older and newer Dredd stories in it, and how they treat not only the mutant characters, but the sea-change in attitudes in Dredd in the intervening years.
Of course, what's not alluded to at all in the trade paperback is what came in-between the mostly-older reprints in the first half of the book (and aside from just a couple of stories in the first half, they aren't mostly what you would call "gems"). The second half, representing the book's title story, mostly tells one long tale (in the aftermath of
Origins), where Dredd has discovered his mutant "cousins", descendants of Eustace Fargo's twin brother, now low-level mutants living in the Cursed Earth. It's a very good, and very powerful story, another feather in John Wagner's cap, as are the follow-on stories which carry on the main thread (how I wish the
entire book had been stories from this particular run!)
And yet the story raised so many questions in my mind about what would happen if Dredd would apply the same philosophical/ethical/moral questioning to many of the laws he's enforcing on a daily basis (and a certain percentage of other judges could be expected to follow suit) regarding The Law vs. true Justice, that I realized that sort of realism carried to its logical conclusion would ultimately completely undermine the basic fantasy premise that the Judge System is based on.
It also raised a whole host of questions about Dredd himself -- where is his conscience/ethics/morality coming from, if he's entirely a product of institutional conditioning from birth to adulthood? Did they
teach him to question the law and higher authority at the academy?? Dredd (and Rico) had
no parents,
no leisure time,
no hobbies or interests, almost
zero freedom of choice compared to any normal person, NO social or emotional ties to
anyone outside of the justice system, and they'd both been raised entirely as a tools of the state, with the sole purpose to
preserve that state, as part of an experiment.
Knowing how differently Joe and Rico turned out, even though they were both genetically identical, and
also both subject to the exact same influences of indoctrination from birth, turns the whole "nature or nurture" conundrum of psychiatry and sociology on its head. It makes me think there's got to be a huge past continuity story waiting to be told somewhere explaining just
how it is that the two turned out so differently -- when you stop to consider that they originally fit the old expression "like two peas in a pod" more closely than any two individuals (even identical twins) EVER have in the real world.
Quote from: positronic on 08 May, 2017, 08:30:08 PM
It makes me think there's got to be a huge past continuity story waiting to be told somewhere explaining just how it is that the two turned out so differently
It's called 'Blood Cadets'. It's extremely good. You'll get it in the 'Brothers of the Blood' TPB.
Quote from: positronic on 08 May, 2017, 08:30:08 PM
It makes me think there's got to be a huge past continuity story waiting to be told somewhere explaining just how it is that the two turned out so differently -- when you stop to consider that they originally fit the old expression "like two peas in a pod" more closely than any two individuals (even identical twins) EVER have in the real world.
One word -
bloodline. As soon as the concept of the bloodline flaw was introduced it's as much explanation as you ever really need for Fargo/Rico/Kraken/Nimrod.
Thank you Greg and Jimbo. As it happens, Brothers of the Blood was one of a handful of outstanding story arcs that Doug Wolk (of the Dredd Reckoning blog/review) picked as one of his worthy-of-recommendation titles, so it was already on my list.
Anyone want to weigh in with bouquets or brickbats for the Tour of Duty and Day of Chaos storylines, which are also tentatively on my list?
Quote from: positronic on 08 May, 2017, 08:57:11 PM
Anyone want to weigh in with bouquets or brickbats for the Tour of Duty and Day of Chaos storylines, which are also tentatively on my list?
Both great - make sure to read them in order, is all. DoC riffs a lot on much of what happened in ToD. Also a very good idea to be up to speed with PJ Maybe's shenanigans before then, as he plays a pivotal role in both epics, one way or another.
Seconded - defo read the complete PJ Maybe before ToD and DoC
So far the reading list of post-Necropolis Dredd TP collections I've got is this:
[X] - The Garth Ennis Collection (Not bad, enjoyed the Emerald Isle/Judge Joyce stories.)
[X] - Judgment Day (Purchased long ago; wanted it for the Strontium Dog crossover. Didn't know any better!)
[ ] - The Pit
[ ] - The Carlos Ezquerra Collection
[X] - Origins (Absolutely amazing! They should all be this good.)
[X] - Mutants in Mega-City One (1st half, fair/poor; 2nd half, excellent!)
[ ] - Brothers of the Blood
[ ] - The Complete PJ Maybe > https://shop.2000ad.com/catalogue/GRN279 (https://shop.2000ad.com/catalogue/GRN279)
[ ] - Tour of Duty (2 vols.)
[ ] - Day of Chaos (3 vols.)
I've also heard Trifecta is good, but I figure the list is long enough for now. Then again, I could probably add anything that was predominantly Wagner and/or Ezquerra stories without too much persuasion!
I'd maybe prioritise Trifecta over the DoC:Fallout volume, which is by no means essential and mainly a case of Carroll and Williams setting things up for ongoing storylines that aren't actually resolved in that book. That said, I suspect you ought to be au fait with both The Simping Detective and Low Life before tackling Trifecta*, so that's just adding even more to your reading list...!
Titan is maybe the best call for a post-DoC volume, but once again you really will need some familiarity with Low Life for that one...
*Also, given the scripters' very strong 'voices', SD and LL are just that bit more subjective than your average Dredd script - you may love 'em, they may fail completely to be your cup of tea.
Quote from: Dark Jimbo on 10 May, 2017, 06:20:37 PM
I'd maybe prioritise Trifecta over the DoC:Fallout volume, which is by no means essential and mainly a case of Carroll and Williams setting things up for ongoing storylines that aren't actually resolved in that book. That said, I suspect you ought to be au fait with both The Simping Detective and Low Life before tackling Trifecta*, so that's just adding even more to your reading list...!
Titan is maybe the best call for a post-DoC volume, but once again you really will need some familiarity with Low Life for that one...
*Also, given the scripters' very strong 'voices', SD and LL are just that bit more subjective than your average Dredd script - you may love 'em, they may fail completely to be your cup of tea.
Okay... according to Dredd Reckoning, Trifecta includes:
QuoteTrifecta
(Judge Dredd stories from 2000 AD Progs 1803 and 1806-1812, The Simping Detective stories from 2000 AD Progs 1804-1811, and Low Life stories from 2000 AD Progs 1805-1811)
... should I need more than that to understand what's going on in
Titan? I don't need to read all three Mega-City Undercover volumes first, do I?
Also, I've read a couple of chapters of
Insurrection, and found the basic premise of that spinoff (space mining colonists decide to secede from Mega-City One) to be pretty interesting. I know the story's been collected in a couple of volumes, which I'm
presuming require no real background reading... Any thoughts?
The other spinoff series (besides Judge Anderson) that I like is Hondo City. I read
Hondo City Law (because it was easy to get) before realizing that there had been another volume of earlier stories (
Shimura) released some years ago (and now out-of-print). Trying to find a copy of that one now, while I await the copy of
Hondo City Justice that I ordered last week.
Quote from: positronic on 11 May, 2017, 12:35:07 PM
Also, I've read a couple of chapters of Insurrection, and found the basic premise of that spinoff (space mining colonists decide to secede from Mega-City One) to be pretty interesting. I know the story's been collected in a couple of volumes, which I'm presuming require no real background reading... Any thoughts?
You don't need any background reading for Insurrection, though Insurrection itself is background reading for another, more recent series. But I'm not going to tell you what that series is as it's a surprise appearance ;-)
Quote from: sheridan on 11 May, 2017, 12:53:15 PM
You don't need any background reading for Insurrection, though Insurrection itself is background reading for another, more recent series. But I'm not going to tell you what that series is as it's a surprise appearance ;-)
I must confess I'm puzzled by this - another megazine strip?
Quote from: JudgeJudi on 11 May, 2017, 09:13:50 PM
Quote from: sheridan on 11 May, 2017, 12:53:15 PM
You don't need any background reading for Insurrection, though Insurrection itself is background reading for another, more recent series. But I'm not going to tell you what that series is as it's a surprise appearance ;-)
I must confess I'm puzzled by this - another megazine strip?
from Wikipedia:
QuoteInsurrection is a series by Dan Abnett published in Judge Dredd Megazine starting in January 2009. Abnett explains that "the actual brief was to bring to the Dredd Universe something of the epic war-in-space scale of the stuff I write for Warhammer 40K. Tharg (Matt to his friends) wanted a stonking big space war story that would suit the universe of the Mega-Cities".
The series was drawn by artist Colin MacNeil, who has also worked on a number of Warhammer 40K stories, and one reviewer notes the similarities suggesting "MacNeil is reprising exactly the same art style that he used on the "Bloodquest" strip in the Warhammer Monthly comic."
The reception has been positive with reviews of the first episode suggesting "With cracking art and a storming first episode I have to say 'Insurrection' has the potential to be the best Dredd off world spin-off ever" and "This was as good a first episode as I can remember reading and I can see Insurrection having the legs to deliver on that initial promise." Reviews only got better after that, including: "Quite simply, this is the best non-Dredd story ever to run in the Megazine" and "glorious"
I forget now where I read the first couple of chapters of this story... might have been a past FCBD issue, or one of those 2000 AD Specials, but my reaction was much the same. Pretty impressive. Didn't hurt that I was already a fan of both Dan Abnett and Colin MacNeil, either, I guess.
Insurrection (Books I & II):
Mega-City One mining colony K-Alpha 61 has declared independence from the 'Big Meg' and renamed itself Liberty. This act of defiance has angered the Justice Department's Special Judicial Squad and in a bid to stop further colonies from rebelling, war is inevitable...https://shop.2000ad.com/catalogue/XB423 (https://shop.2000ad.com/catalogue/XB423)
Insurrection: Liberty (Book III):
MEGA-CITY COLONIAL SPACE, 2135 AD. Mining colony K Alpha 61 renamed itself Liberty after cutting loose from the Big Meg. Furious at this dissent, and in a bid to stop the revolt spreading to other colonies, the SJS launched a blistering attack on Colonial Marshal Karel Luther's forces. Now, the alien Zhind have stepped up their attacks on the colony worlds causing an uneasy alliance to form between the SJS and the insurrectionists...https://shop.2000ad.com/catalogue/XB538 (https://shop.2000ad.com/catalogue/XB538)
Quote from: JudgeJudi on 11 May, 2017, 09:13:50 PM
Quote from: sheridan on 11 May, 2017, 12:53:15 PM
You don't need any background reading for Insurrection, though Insurrection itself is background reading for another, more recent series. But I'm not going to tell you what that series is as it's a surprise appearance ;-)
I must confess I'm puzzled by this - another megazine strip?
Yep! [spoiler]Lawless[/spoiler]
Not exactly 2kAD related,but I guess this is as good as thread as any.Rodney has a Dan Dare shirt in a few episodes.Took me years to notice that.:)
(http://itsgoneviral.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/Dan-Dare.jpg)
Billiam Zinkywink in an old Anderson strip - I wasn't too well versed in American comics at the time (I'm still not that much, but more so than then) - but clearly a play on Bill Sienkievicz.
Michael Palin also wore the same t-shirt design in Around The World In 80 Days.
(http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2014/03/14/article-2580094-1C4C8A9C00000578-431_306x457.jpg)
Quote from: Smith on 24 May, 2017, 01:46:42 PM
Not exactly 2kAD related,but I guess this is as good as thread as any.Rodney has a Dan Dare shirt in a few episodes.Took me years to notice that.:)
(http://itsgoneviral.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/Dan-Dare.jpg)
Sure it's related. Dan Dare appeared in 2000AD, even if the t-shirt pictures the Frank Hampson-illustrated original version of Dan Dare from EAGLE, and even if ownership of the Dan Dare character has gone its own way since the days when IPC had the publishing rights to the character.
You've got the people who only like the original Frank Hampson version of Dan Dare in the same way as you've got the people who only like the original Alex Raymond version of Flash Gordon. Then you've got the people who like both the Raymond Flash Gordon and the later version by Dan Barry, and the people who like both the Hampson Dan Dare and the later version from 2000AD, even though in both cases the two versions are substantially different. The original artists on both characters each worked on them for just about a decade. Even though they were both science fiction heroes, they're less alike as characters than they are in the parallels between their original incarnations and their later incarnations.
I was saying that Im not sure if this was the right thread,but nevermind...
First episode aired in September 1981,so it misses the Dans 2000AD run by a bit.IIRC Eagle relaunched around that time.
Same shirt shows up later in a series 2 episode,and maybe later again,but Im not sure.
Quote from: positronic on 25 May, 2017, 11:39:14 AM
You've got the people who only like the original Frank Hampson version of Dan Dare in the same way as you've got the people who only like the original Alex Raymond version of Flash Gordon. Then you've got the people who like both the Raymond Flash Gordon and the later version by Dan Barry, and the people who like both the Hampson Dan Dare and the later version from 2000AD, even though in both cases the two versions are substantially different. The original artists on both characters each worked on them for just about a decade. Even though they were both science fiction heroes, they're less alike as characters than they are in the parallels between their original incarnations and their later incarnations.
My head hurts!
Quote from: A.Cow on 25 May, 2017, 08:31:52 PM
Quote from: positronic on 25 May, 2017, 11:39:14 AM
You've got the people who only like the original Frank Hampson version of Dan Dare in the same way as you've got the people who only like the original Alex Raymond version of Flash Gordon. Then you've got the people who like both the Raymond Flash Gordon and the later version by Dan Barry, and the people who like both the Hampson Dan Dare and the later version from 2000AD, even though in both cases the two versions are substantially different. The original artists on both characters each worked on them for just about a decade. Even though they were both science fiction heroes, they're less alike as characters than they are in the parallels between their original incarnations and their later incarnations.
My head hurts!
fuckin' hell... it's like being back at school and getting lectured everyday innit?
Aeroplanes.
I think Frank Hampson's Dan Dare for the original EAGLE was brilliant. I've barely read any of the IPC incarnation of the character, but what I've read about it doesn't encourage me.
Obviously in the early days of 2000AD the publisher felt that the history and name value of Dan Dare was important, but it isn't clear whether the readership of 2000AD felt the same way, and from what I've read about the 2000AD (and later EAGLE revival) of Dan Dare, there never seemed to be a clear creative team or direction for the series. I'm sure there must have been some readers whose first exposure to the character was the later Dan Dare, who felt differently.
I know the later 2000AD and EAGLE strips were collected in 2 trade volumes within the last decade or so, but where was the classic EAGLE Dan Dare most recently reprinted? I have a few of the earlier collections, which I believe were published by Titan Books (don't quote me on that, I'd have to go check).
Quote from: positronic on 26 May, 2017, 07:19:30 AM
Obviously in the early days of 2000AD the publisher felt that the history and name value of Dan Dare was important, but it isn't clear whether the readership of 2000AD felt the same way, and from what I've read about the 2000AD (and later EAGLE revival) of Dan Dare, there never seemed to be a clear creative team or direction for the series. I'm sure there must have been some readers whose first exposure to the character was the later Dan Dare, who felt differently.
I'd never thought about it, but I started reading Eagle and 2000AD at around the same time, so I was introduced to the name Dan Dare by the New Eagle version - the original's grandson, I believe, though the original did pop up via time travel. That's the Eagle original, not the post-cryosleep 2000AD original.
Quote from: sheridan on 26 May, 2017, 12:10:03 PM
Quote from: positronic on 26 May, 2017, 07:19:30 AM
Obviously in the early days of 2000AD the publisher felt that the history and name value of Dan Dare was important, but it isn't clear whether the readership of 2000AD felt the same way, and from what I've read about the 2000AD (and later EAGLE revival) of Dan Dare, there never seemed to be a clear creative team or direction for the series. I'm sure there must have been some readers whose first exposure to the character was the later Dan Dare, who felt differently.
I'd never thought about it, but I started reading Eagle and 2000AD at around the same time, so I was introduced to the name Dan Dare by the New Eagle version - the original's grandson, I believe, though the original did pop up via time travel. That's the Eagle original, not the post-cryosleep 2000AD original.
I was under the impression that when Eagle was revived in the 1980s, it was published by IPC. Is that not the case? Or did they just choose to ignore what 2000AD had done with the character?
Have the stories you're talking about had a reprint collection somewhere?
Quote from: positronic on 26 May, 2017, 02:48:03 PM
Quote from: sheridan on 26 May, 2017, 12:10:03 PM
Quote from: positronic on 26 May, 2017, 07:19:30 AM
Obviously in the early days of 2000AD the publisher felt that the history and name value of Dan Dare was important, but it isn't clear whether the readership of 2000AD felt the same way, and from what I've read about the 2000AD (and later EAGLE revival) of Dan Dare, there never seemed to be a clear creative team or direction for the series. I'm sure there must have been some readers whose first exposure to the character was the later Dan Dare, who felt differently.
I'd never thought about it, but I started reading Eagle and 2000AD at around the same time, so I was introduced to the name Dan Dare by the New Eagle version - the original's grandson, I believe, though the original did pop up via time travel. That's the Eagle original, not the post-cryosleep 2000AD original.
I was under the impression that when Eagle was revived in the 1980s, it was published by IPC. Is that not the case? Or did they just choose to ignore what 2000AD had done with the character?
Have the stories you're talking about had a reprint collection somewhere?
When 2000AD was launched by IPC in 1977 they tacked on the Dan Dare name to their more punky Bowie-esque space hero and got around it by saying he'd been in cryo for however-long-it-is. When new Eagle was launched four or five years later, also by IPC, they again tacked on the Dan Dare name to their space hero (more military, not so punky) and got around it by saying he was the grandson of the character the reader's parents would have read about when they were kids. Once it had been running a few years, for some reason, they brought the original Dan Dare (ignoring the space accident / cryo / face change / cosmic claw). I didn't say that neither was published by IPC.
Quote from: sheridan on 26 May, 2017, 03:49:20 PM
Quote from: positronic on 26 May, 2017, 02:48:03 PM
Quote from: sheridan on 26 May, 2017, 12:10:03 PM
Quote from: positronic on 26 May, 2017, 07:19:30 AM
Obviously in the early days of 2000AD the publisher felt that the history and name value of Dan Dare was important, but it isn't clear whether the readership of 2000AD felt the same way, and from what I've read about the 2000AD (and later EAGLE revival) of Dan Dare, there never seemed to be a clear creative team or direction for the series. I'm sure there must have been some readers whose first exposure to the character was the later Dan Dare, who felt differently.
I'd never thought about it, but I started reading Eagle and 2000AD at around the same time, so I was introduced to the name Dan Dare by the New Eagle version - the original's grandson, I believe, though the original did pop up via time travel. That's the Eagle original, not the post-cryosleep 2000AD original.
I was under the impression that when Eagle was revived in the 1980s, it was published by IPC. Is that not the case? Or did they just choose to ignore what 2000AD had done with the character?
Have the stories you're talking about had a reprint collection somewhere?
When 2000AD was launched by IPC in 1977 they tacked on the Dan Dare name to their more punky Bowie-esque space hero and got around it by saying he'd been in cryo for however-long-it-is. When new Eagle was launched four or five years later, also by IPC, they again tacked on the Dan Dare name to their space hero (more military, not so punky) and got around it by saying he was the grandson of the character the reader's parents would have read about when they were kids. Once it had been running a few years, for some reason, they brought the original Dan Dare (ignoring the space accident / cryo / face change / cosmic claw). I didn't say that neither was published by IPC.
No, my bad -- I just assumed that if both comics were published by IPC, the Dan Dare character would be the same version from 2000AD to the new Eagle comic, since they were only separated by four or five years (actually I didn't think it was even by that much).
Just to make sure I understand this correctly, how much of a gap of time was there between when DD
stopped being published in 2000AD and when it
began again in the new Eagle? Do you think IPC assumed two totally different audiences for the character in the two different comics?
Totally different editorial groups, no doubt, and perhaps the new Eagle editor felt they had to try to prove that
their version was better than the earlier 2000AD version.
So what happened later? Was the Dan Dare copyright challenged and/or recaptured by the Hampson estate, or... ??
I know this has been mooted before, but at the time I never thought of it.
When Johnny Alpha got killed by the big flying thingy - why did no-one use the old time bomb or such device to sort the situation. I know it wasn't as simple as that, but time tricks have been used all over the early SD stories...
Still we have a reanimated Johnny now, which still feels rather ... odd
No-one had any equipment in the Lyran dimension - other than a skateboard and Johnny's last scraps - so it would probably have to have used the Doghouse time machine, which was destroyed. Based on later events, a carefully-set timebomb should get you there, but you have the problem of how to programme co-ordinates for a mystical dimension - and the paradoxical issues of taking a trip to prevent a death which caused your trip. Note that all Johnny's timejobs are by way of retributive justice or fixing a problem caused by time travel, never prevention of an event that has already occurred.
Plus the Moses Incident sets a precedent for not using t-weapins to undo a death.
There's a scene in one of the stories where Johnny talks about how expensive those Time Bombs are -- just ONE of them would be far more expensive than an average bounty he could collect, so he can really only afford them when the bounty he's after is a huge payday for him, and he's already got the scratch to invest in equipment. You get the impression he's only got them with him for special high-paying tricky jobs.
Quote from: positronic on 27 May, 2017, 03:56:37 PM
There's a scene in one of the stories where Johnny talks about how expensive those Time Bombs are
I suspect that's storywriting logic to avoid an easy get-out. (C.f.
Dr Who sonic screwdriver vs. deadlock seal,
Star Trek transporter malfunction)
Mork Whisperer - they come in at 300K creds a pop - earlier on Johnny chucked them around fairly freely but it made sense to make them expensive (Mork Whisperer), risky (Blood Moon), or illegal (Life and Death)
How they're used in Blood Moon doesn't really make much sense in the way they're traditionally used - Johnny manages to use it to travel interplanetary distances to a specific time, and back again.
The magic dimension thing could have been explained away - they have d-warp technology after all.
But it's too easy to just hand wave away death with no repercussions. In Life and Death, Feral paid a price and Johnny wasn't exactly undamaged by his revival.
Quote from: TordelBack on 27 May, 2017, 03:26:52 PM
No-one had any equipment in the Lyran dimension - other than a skateboard and Johnny's last scraps - so it would probably have to have used the Doghouse time machine, which was destroyed. Based on later events, a carefully-set timebomb should get you there, but you have the problem of how to programme co-ordinates for a mystical dimension - and the paradoxical issues of taking a trip to prevent a death which caused your trip. Note that all Johnny's timejobs are by way of retributive justice or fixing a problem caused by time travel, never prevention of an event that has already occurred.
Plus the Moses Incident sets a precedent for not using t-weapins to undo a death.
Yeah, the whole Schicklegruber Grab is not based around stopping Hitler but to bring him to justice when it won't affect the timeline.
I don't think it's made explicitly clear how the time drogues work, he's brought people back temporarily but switched it off again after he's got the info.
Or a dead guy's fate doesn't change, it's just postponed.
We tweaked it for the fan film, a drogue is just a localised (and temporary) reversal - which eventually collapses.
Technically someone could time bomb back to Stonehenge and stop the whole thing, but then you end up with a Max Bubba/Ragnarok situation.
Or even go back to Moondog Mountain and stop Bubba, and have similar repercussions on the future.
A price must be paid.
Quote from: Steve Green on 27 May, 2017, 06:44:53 PM
The magic dimension thing could have been explained away - they have d-warp technology after all.
Sure, but presumably all the effort that Sagan and the Lyrans went to with Malak Brood's bones and Stonehenge was to ensure a one-way trip. If you could just use a D-jump in and out, technology available to the Stronts, that was an awful lot of bother. And on the subject of Malak Brood, it was obvious that Johnny would have done anything to bring Moses back, and yet he had to resort to wizardry: just as Precious and Middenface did. So I'd judge changing the past to bring someone back from the dead is a no-no in SD universe.
Yeah, in Blood Moon he says 'time could fold in on itself'
Although Max Bubba did an awful lot more than just saving one person.
Doesn't really explain the nebulous nature of the time drogue in the strip though.
In the first case Johnny actively switches it off, the second the guy playing cards is shot a second time.
I guess the drogue is a temporary (and safer) solution, it just postpones things, doesn't change the future permanently?
Quote from: Steve Green on 27 May, 2017, 06:44:53 PM
The magic dimension thing could have been explained away - they have d-warp technology after all.
But it's too easy to just hand wave away death with no repercussions. In Life and Death, Feral paid a price and Johnny wasn't exactly undamaged by his revival.
Speaking of magic dimensions and "Get Out of Death FREE" passes, that's pretty much happened on Johnny's earlier
Journey To Hell. I guess if you're trapped in a hellish other dimension where the plain-old nonexistence that follows real death might seem highly preferable, you might start being a lot more cautious with using both d-jump and t-jump technology afterwards, because you just never know where you might wind up. After escaping that place you might breath a sigh of relief and reflect that it was better than having died the real death that the panic-button d-warping avoided, but that's because you wound up escaping. While you were trapped there in that dimension at the time it sure mightn't have seemed like the better alternative, though.
I think there's some interesting stuff that hasn't been done with the time weaponry yet (at least as far as I know)
I was expecting Johnny to use it to transport a bomb in Dogs of War, a bomb within a bomb.
A more vicious stront could use a drogue to have someone straddled between life and death, rocking the device forwards and backwards.
Johnny's first use of it is 'talk or I'll make you die a thousand times' but he's not that vindictive.
Stix with a time drogue however...
Quote from: Steve Green on 27 May, 2017, 07:26:08 PM
A more vicious stront could use a drogue to have someone straddled between life and death, rocking the device forwards and backwards.
That's pretty much what a Time Trap does - I suppose it would depend if the targets were aware they were trapped in a loop, though (it's never explicitly stated one way or the other, but Kreelman appears to recall being trapped in Outlaw.)
I was thinking more working like a vcr, where the operator could really pause someone in agony at the worse possible moment.
The time-trap is a bit of a weird one - originally it talked about them repeating until they starve to death but Kreelman was trapped for 2 years.
Quote from: Steve Green on 27 May, 2017, 06:52:15 PM
Quote from: TordelBack on 27 May, 2017, 03:26:52 PM
No-one had any equipment in the Lyran dimension - other than a skateboard and Johnny's last scraps - so it would probably have to have used the Doghouse time machine, which was destroyed. Based on later events, a carefully-set timebomb should get you there, but you have the problem of how to programme co-ordinates for a mystical dimension - and the paradoxical issues of taking a trip to prevent a death which caused your trip. Note that all Johnny's timejobs are by way of retributive justice or fixing a problem caused by time travel, never prevention of an event that has already occurred.
Plus the Moses Incident sets a precedent for not using t-weapins to undo a death.
Yeah, the whole Schicklegruber Grab is not based around stopping Hitler but to bring him to justice when it won't affect the timeline.
A price must be paid.
This is more complicated than I first thought. I'm just reading the Schicklegruber Grab and pondering at the 'time room' with interest. It asks more questions than there are answers about how the Strontuim Dogs use the whole time flux. Alpha keeps popping up in Dredd and vice versa, but which version of Alpha?
I still find it hard to read the current SD stories with the resurrected Johnny, part of me thinks it would be better off if we kept the flashback tales with Wulf (He's very much missed as a partner and the film brings this home).
Johnny's new life needs a bit more time and strong stories I'm hoping and
dare I say this, a new Artist such as Chris Weston who has always said he would like a go, might bring something new to the franchise for a spell to give Carlos a run on Dredd.
A price must be paid indeed... :think:
I'm not sure it's that complicated?
Alpha's visits to MC-1 shift with Dredd, so in Top Dogs Wulf is alive, Judgement Day is later in both Dredd and Alpha's respective timelines (Wulf Dead), and By Private Contract it's later still with the post resurrection Alpha Gang.
I really enjoyed the untold tales - The Ragnarok Job and Rage were great and everything, but losing Wulf left a big viking shaped hole to fill.
Middenface worked well as a replacement in the Rammy, but yeah I really miss the big guy.
I wouldn't mind seeing him brought back for a story, in some temporary alt dimension version just to have him bickering with that shitlord Kid Knee Jr.
Listening to the Mega-City One Book Club podcast, I suddenly realised Kid Knee is a pun, not just a wild-west themed nickname based on his mutation. I don't know how I missed that.
Kidney? ;)
It was already spotted by others (http://forums.2000ad.com/index.php?topic=38748.msg769866#msg769866) back in the day, but I killed myself laughing re-reading Megazine 337 when I realised that Mike Collins' rendition of MC-1's Alien Zoo was based on Dudley Zoo in the West Midlands.
(https://preview.ibb.co/i1HNca/Dudley_Zoo.jpg) (https://ibb.co/gag4qv)
It's very apt. To explain for those who've never lived in the Black Country, there's something undoubtedly incongruous about exotic animals living on a hill (with ski-lifts) in the middle of a run-down market town surrounded by smoke-encrusted factories & pound shops.
Quote from: Smith on 29 May, 2017, 02:06:03 PM
Kidney? ;)
Is it really? Kidney? :think:
Well that certainly flew several feet over my bonce as I wished for that particular Stronty Dogs's testicles to meet a rather forceful object...
Doctor Fungus Bellamy. Nice.
Quote from: Smith on 29 May, 2017, 02:06:03 PM
Kidney? ;)
I never got the pun, Kidney? What relevance has that got to his mutation. :|
Kid Knee (He's a bloke who fancies himself a hardcase, (hence the Western, 'kid' Billy, etc) with his head in his knee.)
Kidney (Sounds the same.)
While the name Kid Knee didn't go over my head when I was a nipper the name Durham Red continues to do so.
For some reason I seem to remember a school friend and myself thinking it was a type of chicken. I don't think this is the case though.
There is a brick called a Durham Red and there is a breed of cow called a Durham and is sometimes known as a Durham Red.
Maybe this has come up before but anyone know where Wagner/Grant got her name from?
Quote from: Tony Angelino on 30 May, 2017, 10:54:48 PM
While the name Kid Knee didn't go over my head when I was a nipper the name Durham Red continues to do so...
Maybe this has come up before but anyone know where Wagner/Grant got her name from?
It's a football thing. If Alan Grant had got his way, she'd have been called Chelsea Blue!
Quote from: Dark Jimbo on 31 May, 2017, 12:06:54 AM
Quote from: Tony Angelino on 30 May, 2017, 10:54:48 PM
While the name Kid Knee didn't go over my head when I was a nipper the name Durham Red continues to do so...
Maybe this has come up before but anyone know where Wagner/Grant got her name from?
It's a football thing. If Alan Grant had got his way, she'd have been called Chelsea Blue!
Just as a name, I think "Chelsea Blue" is actually better, if for no other reason than Chelsea is a female name, as well as a place.
That said, I can see a couple of reasons why "Durham Red" was a preferable choice for this character. Red as in "blood red" works better for a mutant vampire (and the name Chelsea Blue would also have affected the character's color scheme).
Also, blue is already associated with the Genetic Infantry, and we already had a Venus Bluegenes, so it seems like the Rogue Trooper franchise already has the color blue locked up. No need for two blue spinoff characters.
It's interesting that just a couple of years later, Nancy Collins' vampire character Sonja Blue first appeared in the novel
Sunglasses After Dark.
Middenface McNulty went over my head. Obviously it's alliterative, but what's the joke?
I had to look up "midden"... (a dunghill or refuse heap).
John told me that Middenface was originally described as having all sorts of crap on his face, rather than his head - bits of broken glass etc.
There's even a mention of that in one line of the Kreeler Conspiracy.
Carlos decided otherwise, which is why we have the lumpit-headed character we know and love.
Quote from: positronic on 31 May, 2017, 06:08:30 AM
Middenface McNulty went over my head. Obviously it's alliterative, but what's the joke?
I had to look up "midden"... (a dunghill or refuse heap).
Not really a pun but his actual (mildly funny) name. McNulty is his real surname, and Middenface is just thesort of thing a dusgruntled scottish parent might christen a mutant baby.
Quote from: Dark Jimbo on 31 May, 2017, 09:40:32 AM
Not really a pun but his actual (mildly funny) name. McNulty is his real surname, and Middenface is just thesort of thing a dusgruntled scottish parent might christen a mutant baby.
I presume they actually christened him Archibald, since that's his real name. Can't remember much about the Young Middenface series, so dunno if it tells us when he first acquired the nickname.
Quote from: Tony Angelino on 30 May, 2017, 10:54:48 PM
While the name Kid Knee didn't go over my head when I was a nipper the name Durham Red continues to do so.
For some reason I seem to remember a school friend and myself thinking it was a type of chicken. I don't think this is the case though.
There is a brick called a Durham Red and there is a breed of cow called a Durham and is sometimes known as a Durham Red.
Maybe this has come up before but anyone know where Wagner/Grant got her name from?
Not from the pen of TB Grover, but in a (now apocryphal) flashback tale by Peter Hogan (& Mark Harrison), it was revealed that Red obtained the name Durham from her first husband.
Her name is therefore a misinterpretation; it should be 'Red Durham'.
Quote from: Greg M. on 31 May, 2017, 09:47:19 AM
I presume they actually christened him Archibald, since that's his real name. Can't remember much about the Young Middenface series, so dunno if it tells us when he first acquired the nickname.
D'oh! I did know it was Archibald, as well...!
Quote from: positronic on 31 May, 2017, 06:08:30 AM
I had to look up "midden"... (a dunghill or refuse heap).
I have a Scottish friend from Aberdeen that used to call me a Midden, I thought it was a term of endearment... the cheeky mare.
Quote from: Link Prime on 31 May, 2017, 09:55:58 AM
Her name is therefore a misinterpretation; it should be 'Red Durham'.
... if her cultural heritage is one that puts the family name second. (Much of south-east Asia puts the family name first.)
Quote from: A.Cow on 31 May, 2017, 04:58:39 PM
Quote from: Link Prime on 31 May, 2017, 09:55:58 AM
Her name is therefore a misinterpretation; it should be 'Red Durham'.
... if her cultural heritage is one that puts the family name second. (Much of south-east Asia puts the family name first.)
Sure, but not in this case- I'm pretty certain it was explicitly stated that Durham is her (married) surname.
And her 'real' first name is Lucy. *
* According to Ho-Gan.
Lucy Durham: dosn't she present shows on Edwardian kitchenware?. Good job this is the work of a notorious fantasist.
Death Aid Part One:
"Control, this is Dredd. You got a stiff in Julian Clary Alley."
On an equally dubious note, I've finally tracked down the Bisley graffiti that David Bushop mentions having to censor in the Future Shock documentary.He's mis-remembering the actual graffiti. It's '<scratched out> bandit' rather than 'Gaylord'. It's in Meg vol 2 #62 if you want to find the name of the celeb...
I remember a Judge Gaylord in another Ennis Dredd. The young Garth was, it seems, obsessed with gay.
Quote from: Jacqusie on 31 May, 2017, 02:26:33 PM
Quote from: positronic on 31 May, 2017, 06:08:30 AM
I had to look up "midden"... (a dunghill or refuse heap).
I have a Scottish friend from Aberdeen that used to call me a Midden, I thought it was a term of endearment... the cheeky mare.
It's a little hard to explain, but something like "ya wee midden" could be used affectionately or as an insult.
Quote from: TordelBack on 31 May, 2017, 09:32:49 PM
Lucy Durham: dosn't she present shows on Edwardian kitchenware?
We could start a campaign to get Beeny's forename changed to Sarah.
Quote from: Link Prime on 31 May, 2017, 08:31:43 PM
Quote from: A.Cow on 31 May, 2017, 04:58:39 PM
Quote from: Link Prime on 31 May, 2017, 09:55:58 AM
Her name is therefore a misinterpretation; it should be 'Red Durham'.
... if her cultural heritage is one that puts the family name second. (Much of south-east Asia puts the family name first.)
Sure, but not in this case- I'm pretty certain it was explicitly stated that Durham is her (married) surname.
And her 'real' first name is Lucy. *
* According to Ho-Gan.
She's also from somewhere near Milton Keynes (she moves there after her parents die when she's 10) rather than from Durham, too - and that's in Island of the Damned by Alan Grant.
I'm saying she's originally from Oxford. I don't think she'd 'ave a Durh'm accent wi'oot it toornin' up in 'er dialogue, pet...
Quote from: I, Cosh on 02 June, 2017, 03:38:04 AM
Quote from: Jacqusie on 31 May, 2017, 02:26:33 PM
Quote from: positronic on 31 May, 2017, 06:08:30 AM
I had to look up "midden"... (a dunghill or refuse heap).
I have a Scottish friend from Aberdeen that used to call me a Midden, I thought it was a term of endearment... the cheeky mare.
It's a little hard to explain, but something like "ya wee midden" could be used affectionately or as an insult.
Aha, that's was she used to call me "ya wee Midden" - I did probably talk a load of dung in those days though.
Middenface has lumps on his head and some artists flattered his face more than others I suppose, Simon Harrisons Middenface looked a bit dungy at times!
Quote from: Lobo Baggins on 02 June, 2017, 01:38:53 PM
Quote from: Link Prime on 31 May, 2017, 08:31:43 PM
Quote from: A.Cow on 31 May, 2017, 04:58:39 PM
Quote from: Link Prime on 31 May, 2017, 09:55:58 AM
Her name is therefore a misinterpretation; it should be 'Red Durham'.
... if her cultural heritage is one that puts the family name second. (Much of south-east Asia puts the family name first.)
Sure, but not in this case- I'm pretty certain it was explicitly stated that Durham is her (married) surname.
And her 'real' first name is Lucy. *
* According to Ho-Gan.
She's also from somewhere near Milton Keynes (she moves there after her parents die when she's 10) rather than from Durham, too - and that's in Island of the Damned by Alan Grant.
I'm saying she's originally from Oxford. I don't think she'd 'ave a Durh'm accent wi'oot it toornin' up in 'er dialogue, pet...
She has a Durham accent in the SD film, i was pleased to note.
I'm nearly 50 and only now thanks to the Forum do I get "Rogers & Hammerstein". Perhaps that's what happens when you grow up listening to The Clash and Joy Division...or I'm just a lot dimmer than I realize.
Quote from: JUDGE ALFISH on 04 June, 2017, 08:44:54 PM
I'm nearly 50 and only now thanks to the Forum do I get "Rogers & Hammerstein". Perhaps that's what happens when you grow up listening to The Clash and Joy Division...or I'm just a lot dimmer than I realize.
I think those are the best pun names in the history of the Prog. Really clever. I figured that one out very early on and I think it may have been down to seeing The Sound of Music on TV when I was quite young. The name Hammerstein in particular just stuck with me.
Quote from: JUDGE ALFISH on 04 June, 2017, 08:44:54 PM
I'm nearly 50 and only now thanks to the Forum do I get "Rogers & Hammerstein". Perhaps that's what happens when you grow up listening to The Clash and Joy Division...or I'm just a lot dimmer than I realize.
"Rogers" = "RO-Jaws" is a
bit stretchy, even for a pun. Especially since to be technically accurate it's "RoDgers & Hammerstein"... which sounds even
less alike. Although now that you mention it, now their song-and-dance duet on the stage at Greasy Gracie's does make make more sense in context.
Hmmm really? I don't think it is that much of a stretch...especially for a pun(???).
To be technically accurate... I just can't believe that a battle droid would strike up a friendship with a sewer droid. The whole thing's a bit far-fetched if you ask me.
I was familiar with Ro-jaws and Hammerstein about five years before I'd heard of the other duo.
Quote from: Fungus on 05 June, 2017, 08:50:44 AM
To be technically accurate... I just can't believe that a battle droid would strike up a friendship with a sewer droid. The whole thing's a bit far-fetched if you ask me.
Mills addressed that, though. In the original Ro-Busters, they seemed like a bickering odd couple, but then in the later Return Trilogy [spoiler]we learned some things about Hammerstein that explain why he wasn't acting like his usual sober warbot self, and even got a rationale explaining Ro-Jaws' "faulty obedience and courtesy circuits".[/spoiler] In other words, Ro-Jaws is not a typical sewer droid any more than Hammerstein is a typical ABC Warrior, or even a typical Hammerstein Mk III warbot.
I have a harder time believing that a sewer droid and a warbot would have even the most minimal levels of musical song-and-dance routines programmed into them. :lol:
Quote from: Magnetica on 05 June, 2017, 06:01:05 AM
Hmmm really? I don't think it is that much of a stretch...especially for a pun(???).
I'd say it's a perfect pun. Any less 'stretchy' and it'd be a boring homonym (or just a kid's joke like the one about the shipwrecked survivors of a collision between two ships with cargoes of red and blue paint respectively). The truly great puns
require the consumer to do a bit of the legwork.
Quote from: TordelBack on 05 June, 2017, 03:29:08 PM
Quote from: Magnetica on 05 June, 2017, 06:01:05 AM
Hmmm really? I don't think it is that much of a stretch...especially for a pun(???).
I'd say it's a perfect pun. Any less 'stretchy' and it'd be a boring homonym (or just a kid's joke like the one about the shipwrecked survivors of a collision between two ships with cargoes of red and blue paint respectively). The truly great puns require the consumer to do a bit of the legwork.
But not having any official logo, I always thought of them as "Hammerstein and Ro-Jaws", because that's how it tends to work... the take-charge big hero guy gets first billing, followed by "and..." his diminutive, comic-relief buddy. That tends to make the joke much harder to recognize, too.
I think that just you to be honest. I always remembered it as Ro-jaws and Hammerstein... because it sounds better that way.
Not sure the big guy always gets mentioned first. Little and Large for instance.
Or Laurel and Hardy.
As a pun it's glorious. I've sometimes wondered if PM punched the air (or something/someone more tangible) when he hit upon it.
How do you find Kingdom, on this basis ? :o That'll be tough going.
Kingdom doesn't work for me in that sense. Gene (the) Hackman, Paul Numan, Clara Bow etc. Too contrived for me personally.
I guess the other part is that for the longest time, it was ABC Warriors, and not Ro-Busters, that was the returning feature, and they were (except for Khaos stories in the early 1990s) Hammerstein's crew. He's the Sgt. Rock to their Easy Company, or the Sgt. Fury to their Howling Commandos.
Ro-Jaws, being a mere sewer droid designed for garbage disposal and cleaning out sewer drains, and therefore essentially weaponless, couldn't contribute much in the way of being a soldier, even if he did make a fair serviceable first responder in the Ro-Busters disaster squad.
It was only after reading The Complete Nuts and Bolts that I truly appreciated what a great character Ro-Jaws is, and now he's replaced Hammerstein as my favorite mek. Of course I'd read a scattered sampling of the Ro-Busters stories way back when, but never the entire thing.
I particularly enjoyed reading "Ro-Jaws' Memoirs", which told his backstory of how it was he wound up in that used-robot showroom in the first place. Now that he's taken a somewhat more prominent role with the ABC Warriors in the ongoing struggle for robot liberation, I hope he may continue exclaiming "Manky Moses!" until at last cludgie is unclogged. :D
He does get most of the best lines!
'What sort of robot is this? What does it run on?'
'I'll give you a clue, luv - humans talk a lot of the stuff I eat.'
General Armz. I only got it the other day.
I saw Paul Merton interviewed by Richard Herring last night, where he performed his 'Policeman giving evidence after having taken hallucinogenic drugs' routine.
Reminded me a little of that Dredd with McCarthy on art duties - no idea if it was an inspiration (the original inspiration for the routine was a documentary about operation Julie, where there was a drugs factory bust and the air was thick with hallucinogens)
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 06 June, 2017, 07:55:34 AM
General Armz. I only got it the other day.
Um ... not sure I get it. I may be being extra thick here so please forgive me for asking for elucidation.
Quote from: A.Cow on 06 June, 2017, 05:01:59 PM
Um ... not sure I get it. I may be being extra thick here so please forgive me for asking for elucidation.
I thought it existed entirely to set up the "A Farewell to Armz?" next prog tagline...
Quote from: Tony Angelino on 05 June, 2017, 05:46:58 PM
Kingdom doesn't work for me in that sense. Gene (the) Hackman, Paul Numan, Clara Bow etc. Too contrived for me personally.
I always thought it was the kind of thing geek genehackers would do, name their creations after favourite stuff from movies music etc... there is a Skynet somewhere! :o
Indeed. It's also a pretty important part of the Aux culture: these are the kind of stupid names people give dogs, but taken completely un-ironically by the recipients, and in many cases used pridefully and literally, with consequences for how they view their own personalities and capabilities. It's a very well developed gag.
Quote from: Tony Angelino on 05 June, 2017, 05:46:58 PM
Kingdom doesn't work for me in that sense. Gene (the) Hackman, Paul Numan, Clara Bow etc. Too contrived for me personally.
Me neither, I think if Dan Abnett left all the daft names in Sin/Dex world that would be ok (as it's premise is it's daft) but it gets a bit much when they start cropping up anywhere and everywhere. Ted Behr anyone? Jeez...
I'm just waiting for Dixie Normous and Ivor Biggen to liven things up in the snore fest that is Brink...
I still say Kingdom needs a Ronnie Barker.
Quote from: Dash Decent on 07 June, 2017, 12:32:57 PM
I still say Kingdom needs a Ronnie Barker.
Was there a Jack Offenbark?
Quote from: Lobo Baggins on 07 June, 2017, 02:05:59 PM
Quote from: Dash Decent on 07 June, 2017, 12:32:57 PM
I still say Kingdom needs a Ronnie Barker.
Was there a Jack Offenbark?
Surely we should have
Samuel L. Dachshund?
Say Woof one more time, motherf*cker - I dare you, I double dare you...
Things that went over Blackblood's head -- General Public.
Not so much something that went over my head as something that went unnoticed until this morning: my copy of The ABC Warriors: The Third Element paperback actually reads 'The THRID Element' on the spine.
Quote from: hippynumber1 on 08 June, 2017, 11:43:58 AM
Not so much something that went over my head as something that went unnoticed until this morning: my copy of The ABC Warriors: The Third Element paperback actually reads 'The THRID Element' on the spine.
Not to mention crediting Tony Skinner - who isn't in the book - but not Henry Flint, who very much is. No proofreading going on at all that day!
Quote from: Dark Jimbo on 08 June, 2017, 01:04:17 PM
No proofreading going on at all that day!
Either that or lots of 100°-proof reading.
(https://19818-presscdn-pagely.netdna-ssl.com/wp-content/uploads/64f/2f/ptadrunk.gif)
Not so much over my head but something I hadn't noticed before last night. The Judges radio chatter at the very start of "Judge Minty" includes the old "Letsby Avenue" pun. Classic!
Reading the new Lawless book, I only just realised Kill a Man Jaroo is a pun on Kilimanjaro.
Quote from: CalHab on 22 June, 2017, 04:37:31 PM
Reading the new Lawless book, I only just realised Kill a Man Jaroo is a pun on Kilimanjaro.
Ah c'mon.
That's Justin Credible.
Quote from: Dash Decent on 17 June, 2017, 12:26:46 PM
Not so much over my head but something I hadn't noticed before last night. The Judges radio chatter at the very start of "Judge Minty" includes the old "Letsby Avenue" pun. Classic!
I'd hazard a guess that's Mr Carroll's doing.
Quote from: CalHab on 22 June, 2017, 04:37:31 PM
Reading the new Lawless book, I only just realised Kill a Man Jaroo is a pun on Kilimanjaro
About half way though it, and noticed that another Uplift is called 'Kay Too'.
I wonder if Marshall Lawson will EVER ARREST them?!
My grud...
Ro-Busters is a pun on 'robust'!
HOW HAVE I NEVER SEEN THAT?!?
Quote from: Lobo Baggins on 28 June, 2017, 06:43:45 PM
My grud...
Ro-Busters is a pun on 'robust'!
HOW HAVE I NEVER SEEN THAT?!?
(http://i1144.photobucket.com/albums/o499/woolly76/abc_zpsvmkwhihh.jpg) (http://s1144.photobucket.com/user/woolly76/media/abc_zpsvmkwhihh.jpg.html)
[spoiler]Fuck![/spoiler] Can't believe I've had to have that pointed out to me! :-[
Quote from: Woolly on 28 June, 2017, 10:16:10 PM
(http://i1144.photobucket.com/albums/o499/woolly76/abc_zpsvmkwhihh.jpg) (http://s1144.photobucket.com/user/woolly76/media/abc_zpsvmkwhihh.jpg.html)
[spoiler]Fuck![/spoiler] Can't believe I've had to have that pointed out to me! :-[
I know, right?
It's the Beatles and Cromer all over again...
Quote from: Lobo Baggins on 28 June, 2017, 06:43:45 PM
Ro-Busters is a pun on 'robust'!
No, you fools! It's a play on the name Rob Usters, the American character actor who famously played the roles of both Rogers and Hammerstein in the 1958 biographical radio play
"One Day We'll Be So Famous They'll Name A Pair Of Comedy Robots After Us".
Quote from: Jim_Campbell on 29 June, 2017, 07:35:36 AM
Quote from: Lobo Baggins on 28 June, 2017, 06:43:45 PM
Ro-Busters is a pun on 'robust'!
No, you fools! It's a play on the name Rob Usters, the American character actor who famously played the roles of both Rogers and Hammerstein in the 1958 biographical radio play "One Day We'll Be So Famous They'll Name A Pair Of Comedy Robots After Us".
Also starring Aebis E. Woryorz.
Just re-read an old Killing Time GN. I think I was about 17 last time I read it, and really didn't cop that 'call me Ishmael' was a Moby Dick reference. And maybe, now that I think of it, the whole story is an intentional allusion to Moby Dick; given that its main theme is the hunt for a colossal monster.
the down of an elephant / duck joke - 7 years!! no kidding!!
Just realised that 'Jimp' is a contraction of Judge impersonator doohhh, I'll get me coat :)
filippo
Really?That was even explained a few times in the strip.:)
Quote from: Smith on 13 July, 2017, 08:52:34 PM
Really?That was even explained a few times in the strip.:)
Filippo wins the thread! (keep 'em coming though!)
On a bit of a prog slog through the 300's at the moment and just got to the end of Fort Neuro. One of the Nort Generals is General Vagner. A guest writer cameo for our esteemed Dredd writer? Or am I reading too much into it?
More likely a reference to the composer chappy (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Wagner), whose music was appropiated by the nazis, but may be a slight nod to oor John as well.
Quote from: M.I.K. on 15 July, 2017, 07:59:25 PM
More likely a reference to the composer chappy (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Wagner), whose music was appropiated by the nazis, but may be a slight nod to oor John as well.
Similar Wagner/Wagner connection here (also a thing that went over my head at the time):
(http://www.2000ad.org/covers/2000ad/mediumres/459.jpg)
Was Wagner's real name common knowledge at that point? That's one of a few in-jokes referencing his identity (e.g. Fly's Eyes Wagner, Cadet Wagner's entry on the Honour Roll in Mutie the Pig) which appeared when he and/or Alan Grant were going by John Howard, TB Grover etc. (or uncredited, in the case of MTP)
Quote from: Echidna on 16 July, 2017, 03:21:46 PM
Was Wagner's real name common knowledge at that point? That's one of a few in-jokes referencing his identity (e.g. Fly's Eyes Wagner, Cadet Wagner's entry on the Honour Roll in Mutie the Pig) which appeared when he and/or Alan Grant were going by John Howard, TB Grover etc. (or uncredited, in the case of MTP)
The examples you've given are in the first three years (and I think two are in the first six months, before the Compu-73e credit cards had been introduced). Fort Neuro was around Prog 300, and we were well used to credit cards by that point (they'd also spread to other IPC comics, though obviously without the sci-fi angle).
While watching Bone Tomahawk, it suddenly occurred to me where Tommy 'Hawk' Hill from Twin Peaks got his nickname. I'm thick, I know, and it was probably explained in the original two series, but there you go
Here is a hilarious SinDex one-Dirty deeds done dirt cheap is a song/album title.
Yeah,that took me a while.:|
Is Mickey Challis the Knight of Cups?
I've just learned the word factotum, and realised I've missed a long-running Sin / Dex pun.
Speaking of, I only tumbled to their names' meaning when I spotted Roman soldiers marching to "sinister, dexter, sinister, dexter -halt!" in a rerun of Frankie Howerd's Up Pompei![/] tv series. Smut and education in one amusing package.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 06 January, 2018, 09:53:45 PM
I've just learned the word factotum, and realised I've missed a long-running Sin / Dex pun.
What shocks me about this is that you've never read any Bukowski!
Fraid not, though I know quite a bit about him due to a Bukowski-obsessed friend. Probably time to start reading him.
I sussed the meaning of Sinister and Dexter's names from the start; but I have no recollection as to how, given that I never learned Latin. The Um Louts were a mystery to me until I went to work in Germany a few weeks after they were introduced.
Yep, left handed people are bad and sinister.
If you're ambi-dexter-ous, it's like you have two right (i.e. good/useful) hands.
Quote from: Dash Decent on 08 January, 2018, 09:20:09 AM
Yep, left handed people are bad and sinister.
Damn straight. Almost as bad as frecks, in my experience.
I vaguely recall that one of the early SinDex strips actually has a little bubble explaining this very reference, as least it did in the DC-printed collections. Not going to dig them out to check mind.
Leaving my education to the likes of Frankie Howerd probably wasn't my most astute adjudicature, Missus.
Quote from: Theblazeuk on 08 January, 2018, 09:57:36 AM
I vaguely recall that one of the early SinDex strips actually has a little bubble explaining this very reference, as least it did in the DC-printed collections. Not going to dig them out to check mind.
I don't remember that being in the Prog.
I have literally just THIS SECOND realised that when Fink Angel refers to his "pizen" it's his Cursed Earth Drawl way of saying "poison" 🤯
Quote from: DrRocka on 22 January, 2018, 12:35:33 AM
I have literally just THIS SECOND realised that when Fink Angel refers to his "pizen" it's his Cursed Earth Drawl way of saying "poison" 🤯
What on earth did you
think he meant?!
I've no idea! I must have been about 9 or 10 when I first read The Fink so all I can assume is that I thought it was some kind of futurespeak that meant nothing. I do love a good 2am moment of sudden realisation.
Next up, I'll be revealing that Monty Python and Pink Floyd weren't actually real people, and that the world wasn't actually black and white until someone invented colour in the late sixties.....
Quote from: DrRocka on 22 January, 2018, 09:12:12 AM
Pink Floyd [was]n't actually real people...
He was, he just wasn't well and stayed back at the hotel.
Quote from: TordelBack on 22 January, 2018, 09:16:15 AM
Quote from: DrRocka on 22 January, 2018, 09:12:12 AM
Pink Floyd [was]n't actually real people...
He was, he just wasn't well and stayed back at the hotel.
Yeah but, which ones Pink?
Quote from: TordelBack on 22 January, 2018, 09:16:15 AM
Quote from: DrRocka on 22 January, 2018, 09:12:12 AM
Pink Floyd [was]n't actually real people...
He was, he just wasn't well and stayed back at the Hotel
Well done, that man! Made me smile.
Cheers
And reading this, I've just this second realised that when Fink says "pizen", he is probably saying "pye-zen" and not "pizzen", as I have been reading the whole of my damn life.
SBT
Quote from: Dash Decent on 08 January, 2018, 09:20:09 AM
Yep, left handed people are bad and sinister.
If you're ambi-dexter-ous, it's like you have two right (i.e. good/useful) hands.
And right handed people are dextrous / have greater dexterity.
Something it took me three stories to realise was why Harry Heston is called Heston (Planet of the Apes).
Just been watching loads and loads of Steptoe and Son (it was a bit before my time) and realised that Look Out for Lefty (in Action, also a bit before my time) is blatantly Steptoe meets Roy of the Rovers.
Bit of S&S trivia: the "Son" in Steptoe and Son is Albert, not Harold.
Quote from: The Legendary Shark on 08 February, 2018, 11:16:36 PM
Bit of S&S trivia: the "Son" in Steptoe and Son is Albert, not Harold.
Just discovered that recently too!
Heh, poor old Harold hasn't even got his name on the gate. Those old fashioned writers really thought things through!
Quote from: The Legendary Shark on 08 February, 2018, 11:26:40 PM
Heh, poor old Harold hasn't even got his name on the gate. Those old fashioned writers really thought things through!
Never twigged that, absolute genius.
That's inspired :)
Very likely it occurred to them in a flash (no planning required) but in any case it's just perfect...
On the same note but a different track, I remember an interview with Bob Larbey and John Esmonde in which they revealed a secret about Margo from The Good Life which informed their writing of the character but was never revealed in the series. As a teenager, Margo fell for a boy from the wrong side of the tracks and was sent away to have an abortion. Though not a suitable topic for sit-com, this character fact explains her secret attraction to the unconventional Tom, her repressed loathing of her conventional husband and her obsession with keeping up a respectable appearance.
I think they had similar secrets for all the characters in the series but I can't remember what they were or if they revealed them.
Now that's how to write characters!
I always assumed the Goods & leadbetters were wife-swappers, definitely lots of inter-couple flirting going on
There was definitely a strong sexual undercurrent.
Never would have suspected Margot secretly loathed Jerry. Quite the reverse really, repressed love.
As to fancying Tom, well who wouldn't. Much of my early amd more successful romantic strategising centered on bring as Tom-like as possible.
I hate The Good Life, I hate it.
Felicity 'Treacle' Kendal and Richard 'sugar flavoured snob' Briars. THEY'RE NOTHING BUT A COUPLE OF REACTIONARY STEREOTYPES, CONFIRMING THE MYTH THAT EVERYONE IN BRITAIN IS A LOVABLE MIDDLE CLASS ECCENTRIC, AND I HATE THEM!!
That was a highly articulate outburst, James
. I only hope they're not browsing.
Quote from: JamesC on 09 February, 2018, 01:55:47 PM
I hate The Good Life, I hate it.
Felicity 'Treacle' Kendal and Richard 'sugar flavoured snob' Briars. THEY'RE NOTHING BUT A COUPLE OF REACTIONARY STEREOTYPES, CONFIRMING THE MYTH THAT EVERYONE IN BRITAIN IS A LOVABLE MIDDLE CLASS ECCENTRIC, AND I HATE THEM!!
Hehe - my thoughts exactly - https://youtu.be/bomygz1Ygkk?t=29
Quote from: Pyroxian on 09 February, 2018, 02:06:18 PM
Quote from: JamesC on 09 February, 2018, 01:55:47 PM
I hate The Good Life, I hate it.
Felicity 'Treacle' Kendal and Richard 'sugar flavoured snob' Briars. THEY'RE NOTHING BUT A COUPLE OF REACTIONARY STEREOTYPES, CONFIRMING THE MYTH THAT EVERYONE IN BRITAIN IS A LOVABLE MIDDLE CLASS ECCENTRIC, AND I HATE THEM!!
Hehe - my thoughts exactly - https://youtu.be/bomygz1Ygkk?t=29 (https://youtu.be/bomygz1Ygkk?t=29)
Is it Vyvyan? Is it Vyvyan? Yep!
The character names also have some jokey angles - the blokes are Tom & Jerry (after the cartoon cat and mouse of course) and while one couple is 'Good', the other is (Led)"Better'.
Quote from: sheridan on 09 February, 2018, 08:27:47 PM
Is it Vyvyan? Is it Vyvyan? Yep!
Things that went over your head? The Young Ones' extra flat mate...? (https://www.dailygrail.com/2016/06/the-5th-young-one-pay-no-attention-to-the-girl-behind-the-sofa/) Wait?
What?!
Quote from: Jim_Campbell
link=topic=35063.msg979327#msg979327
date=1518387081
Things that went over your head? The Young
Ones' extra flat mate...? Wait? What?!
That's extraordinary. I resolved to check this out and went to retrieve my
Young Ones dvds from the box under the bed where all my "classic comedy" discs live.
The dvds aren't there...
Can't find those discs anywhere. Been through my entire collection and nada. They must have gone missing during the waveform collapse of my last slide. There's probably a parallel universe out there containing nothing but my Young Ones dvds, a few stray Biros, half a dozen odd socks and several species of fluff.
The DVD release of The Young Ones was annoying because they removed the Subterranean Homesick Blues bit from 'Cash'.
The best way to watch The Young Ones is on an old VHS on a wooden telly.
Found 'em.
OMG - there she is!
Quote from: JamesC on 12 February, 2018, 10:40:03 AM
The DVD release of The Young Ones was annoying because they removed the Subterranean Homesick Blues bit from 'Cash'.
The best way to watch The Young Ones is on an old VHS on a wooden telly.
Why did the edit it out?
Quote from: JamesC on 12 February, 2018, 10:40:03 AM
The DVD release of The Young Ones was annoying because they removed the Subterranean Homesick Blues bit from 'Cash'.
The best way to watch The Young Ones is on an old VHS on a wooden telly.
ooh, have we got a video?
Quote from: sheridan on 12 February, 2018, 12:38:28 PM
Quote from: JamesC on 12 February, 2018, 10:40:03 AM
The DVD release of The Young Ones was annoying because they removed the Subterranean Homesick Blues bit from 'Cash'.
The best way to watch The Young Ones is on an old VHS on a wooden telly.
Why did the edit it out?
Something to do with the rights for the song.
And, yes, we have a video from Harry the Bastard at Rumbelows but so far we can only get it to make toast. :lol:
Sorry to double post - from Wikipedia:
The episode features a performance from Ken Bishop's Nice Twelve, a one-off conglomerate of high-profile rock musicians and theme writers, including Jools Holland, Simon Brint, Stewart Copeland and Chris Difford performing "Subterranean Homesick Blues" by Bob Dylan. For contractual reasons, this was edited out of DVD releases in the past, but was reinstated for the 25th Anniversary edition.
On the original release DVDs, to go with the edit, the scenes of the main cast are cut, all bar the scene where they take Neil to the job centre. The band's name is also edited out of the credits, but rather than simply erase the name, the portion of credits with the group name is cut, with the credits before and after that intersected by a thick orange line, which also shows two sets of footage playing. However, when a total list of all cast members of all 12 episodes of the series are in the credits for "Summer Holiday", the names of the three musicians are not taken out.
Have we mentioned Bradley & Milton? Just had this pointed out to me!
Quote from: glassstanley on 23 March, 2018, 08:38:59 AM
Have we mentioned Bradley & Milton? Just had this pointed out to me!
aw ffs... I nver noticed that!
Quote from: Dash Decent on 14 January, 2012, 11:54:57 PM
Quote from: The Legendary Shark on 14 January, 2012, 02:04:35 PM
Beat Les was their very first drummer.
I love that John Lennon comment when he was asked if Ringo was the best drummer in the world.
"He's not even the best drummer in the Beatles."
Urban myth I'm afraid, the quote was an old gag by the brilliant Jasper Carrott.
Quote from: glassstanley on 23 March, 2018, 08:38:59 AM
Have we mentioned Bradley & Milton? Just had this pointed out to me!
Don't get it
Quote from: Dandontdare on 23 March, 2018, 06:35:29 PM
Quote from: glassstanley on 23 March, 2018, 08:38:59 AM
Have we mentioned Bradley & Milton? Just had this pointed out to me!
Don't get it
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milton_Bradley
Bit of a face palm moment for me. Just reached Prog 478 on the latest prog slog. Reading Dredd: the Art of Kenny Who, I've just realised who he sits drinking with in the Boils Head. Pretty sure we have a cameo from our great John Wagner. Number of times I've read this and never noticed!
Prog 424, Dredd says about Chopper "... He's out. Now heading south on Lusardi!"
Sublime!
I've just been re-reading Dan Dare in early progs and have been scratching my head over a couple of easter eggs in The Doomsday Machine (prog 80-ish).
In the main picture I recognise the USS Enterprise, Biog Mothership, Thunderbird 3, Anastasia, Eagle Transporter, part of an X-Wing fighter, and the Metropolis Machine-Man. And other panels include the Millennium Falcon cockpit, Sandcrawler tracks and Harrier jump jet.
(https://image.ibb.co/hG1pj7/artwork.jpg)
I'm guessing that the obscured hanging object under the "Doomsday" banner is Thunderbird 2, and suspect that the ship next to the Machine-Man hand is Fireball XL5.
However, I'm totally flummoxed over the big ship behind the Enterprise saucer with swept-back wings and "WT..." visible. Can anybody put me out of my misery?
(Also, is the striped vehicle (bottom left of this image) from anything? Kinda looks familiar.)
(https://i.imgur.com/pRPwFlL.png?2)
https://youtu.be/atwfWEKz00U?t=56m11s
Quote from: A.Cow on 20 April, 2018, 11:49:36 PM
I've just been re-reading Dan Dare in early progs and have been scratching my head over a couple of easter eggs in The Doomsday Machine (prog 80-ish).
In the main picture I recognise the USS Enterprise, Biog Mothership, Thunderbird 3, Anastasia, Eagle Transporter, part of an X-Wing fighter, and the Metropolis Machine-Man. And other panels include the Millennium Falcon cockpit, Sandcrawler tracks and Harrier jump jet.
I'm guessing that the obscured hanging object under the "Doomsday" banner is Thunderbird 2, and suspect that the ship next to the Machine-Man hand is Fireball XL5.
However, I'm totally flummoxed over the big ship behind the Enterprise saucer with swept-back wings and "WT..." visible. Can anybody put me out of my misery?
(Also, is the striped vehicle (bottom left of this image) from anything? Kinda looks familiar.)
The striped ship looks very Chris Foss-y to me (long-term Squaxx will remember his triptych of MC1 covers).
(http://www.justpressplay.net/images/stories/chris_foss/chris_foss_banner.jpg)
Looks a bit like the Speedo Ghost.
Quote from: Timothy on 21 April, 2018, 08:29:08 AM
Looks a bit like the Speedo Ghost.
Ace Trucking was a few years off yet at that point.
Quote from: Frank on 21 April, 2018, 12:10:32 AM
(https://i.imgur.com/pRPwFlL.png?2)
https://youtu.be/atwfWEKz00U?t=56m11s
Aha! Thanks, Frank -- you're a superstar.
(I'd never have got that -- last saw that movie something like 35 years ago.)
Quote from: Magnetica on 21 April, 2018, 08:43:50 AM
Quote from: Timothy on 21 April, 2018, 08:29:08 AM
Looks a bit like the Speedo Ghost.
Ace Trucking was a few years off yet at that point.
So a potential candidate for the Swipe thread ;-)
Luther Arkwright was named for the two big engines of violent social upheaval in British history: Protestantism and industrialisation.
That Chevvy Chase wasn't Paul Simon
Quote from: The Enigmatic Dr X on 25 April, 2018, 10:53:11 PM
That Chevvy Chase wasn't Paul Simon
:lol:
Tangentially, I never realised that Carrie Fisher was married to Paul Simon (twice). I always thought it was a SNL gag!
Having read the excellent Megazine floppy about Nemesis, I've just remembered two things that went over my head in Deathbringer the first time round: 1. The type of 'physical pleasure' Torquemada got from violent acts of revenge, and 2. The fact that he needed armour over his old chap to fend off repeated groin attacks.
This is what I love about rereading old progs - suddenly getting the sneaky adult bits I missed as a kid. I also didn't realise that Termight borrowed so much influence from Catholic iconography. I grew up in 80s Ireland, though, so I suppose it's the same as the way a fish doesn't know what water is.
There's one page of Hicklenton's that has an editorial white blob in one corner. That's because he drew an ejaculating penis in that space originally.
Quote from: glassstanley on 01 May, 2018, 07:29:32 PM
There's one page of Hicklenton's that has an editorial white blob in one corner. That's because he drew an ejaculating penis in that space originally.
Indeed. I own the original art for it - you can see it in all its glory here: http://www.comicartfans.com/gallerypiece.asp?piece=1239930 (http://www.comicartfans.com/gallerypiece.asp?piece=1239930)
I love that Hicklenton went ahead and drew that page, presumably knowing it would be spotted and whited-out. Even more I love the feeble attempt to hide it behind the text box!
There's another notorious one, owned by another boarder, which features Purity going down on Nemesis - Hicklenton's 'gobble! gobble!' sound-effect was judiciously edited out.
Quote from: Greg M. on 01 May, 2018, 08:44:17 PM
There's another notorious one, owned by another boarder, which features Purity going down on Nemesis - Hicklenton's 'gobble! gobble!' sound-effect was judiciously edited out.
Prior to all that, Bryan Talbot had included the line "Nemesis does it with Purity" on the back of a Terminator wagon.
Quote from: Greg M. on 01 May, 2018, 08:44:17 PM
There's another notorious one, owned by another boarder, which features Purity going down on Nemesis - Hicklenton's 'gobble! gobble!' sound-effect was judiciously edited out.
Was there really such a panel? Not that there's anything there to go down on...
This is true, given that Nemesis's member is, in fact, his beak. Nonetheless, Purity has a good go here: http://www.comicartfans.com/GalleryPiece.asp?Piece=1032423 (http://www.comicartfans.com/GalleryPiece.asp?Piece=1032423)
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 01 May, 2018, 09:21:16 PM
Quote from: Greg M. on 01 May, 2018, 08:44:17 PM
There's another notorious one, owned by another boarder, which features Purity going down on Nemesis - Hicklenton's 'gobble! gobble!' sound-effect was judiciously edited out.
Was there really such a panel? Not that there's anything there to go down on...
(https://img.buzzfeed.com/buzzfeed-static/static/2018-02/8/14/asset/buzzfeed-prod-fastlane-02/anigif_sub-buzz-11012-1518117480-5.gif?downsize=715:*&output-format=auto&output-quality=auto)
My word. God, I loved John Hicklenton. Less of a shite he could not give.
Dan Abnett's latest 'Ammo Amass' pun from Sinister Dexter finally justifies those 4 years of Latin I had to do at school...
I really guess I gave John Hicklenton more praise when I was younger....god I was a stupid kid hating it :(
Quote from: AlexF on 03 May, 2018, 10:06:45 AM
Dan Abnett's latest 'Ammo Amass' pun from Sinister Dexter finally justifies those 4 years of Latin I had to do at school...
So what's the pun?
The first exercise you had to learn was 'amo, amas, amat, amamus, amatis, amant' 'I love, you love, he she it loves, we love, you love, they love'.
Our head, who taught us Latin, liked to use negative reinforcement to aid memory. One whack of the Jasper for each mark below the pass mark. I suppose it worked after a fashion. I can still remember too much of the Latin together with how much I hate it.
The older I get, the more I regret not learning Latin.
I thought it was pointless at the time to learn a dead language but it has been useful all my life in inferring the meaning of unfamiliar words.
Anyone else do the Cambridge Press Latin course featuring Pompeii citizen Caecilius and his slave Clemens and cook Grumio?
Quote from: Tjm86 on 03 May, 2018, 04:25:43 PM
'I love, you love,
he she it loves,
we love, you love, they love'
https://youtu.be/ZfMrbIzd69Q?t=35s
Quote from: Frank on 03 May, 2018, 05:33:46 PM
Quote from: Tjm86 on 03 May, 2018, 04:25:43 PM
'I love, you love,
he she it loves,
we love, you love, they love'
https://youtu.be/ZfMrbIzd69Q?t=35s
Jeez luweeze, why did so many of the TV people I loved as a little kid turn out to be such truly titanic shits. Thank the good grud for Bernard Cribbins and David Attenborough (fingers crossed).
Quote from: TordelBack on 03 May, 2018, 05:51:54 PM
Quote from: Frank on 03 May, 2018, 05:33:46 PM
Quote from: Tjm86 on 03 May, 2018, 04:25:43 PM
'I love, you love,
he she it loves,
we love, you love, they love'
https://youtu.be/ZfMrbIzd69Q?t=35s
Jeez luweeze, why did so many of the TV people I loved as a little kid turn out to be such truly titanic shits. Thank the good grud for Bernard Cribbins and David Attenborough (fingers crossed).
Tony Hart should be safe as well - anything untoward should have come out by now.
I got the entire Demon by Alan Grant now.And it dawned on me that The Thing-that-could-not-die is pretty much Gronk.There is also a (possible) tribute to The Fist of Dredd moment.And a musical issue.Because ofc there is. :)
Not read any of the Alan Grant Demon issues for years. How does it hold up?
Pretty good actually.Thou it does lose steam after #21.And you get a whole host of guest writers.
No idea if it was intentional but 'The Slavers of Drule' makes sense when you consider homonyms of 'slavers' and 'drule'.
Quote from: norton canes on 04 May, 2018, 09:24:08 AM
No idea if it was intentional but 'The Slavers of Drule' makes sense when you consider homonyms of 'slavers' and 'drule'.
This one's come up a few times already in this thread and more before. It's definitely intentional.
Quote from: SmallBlueThing on 11 January, 2012, 04:10:44 PM
Quote from: Emperor on 11 January, 2012, 04:07:04 PM
Quote from: SmallBlueThing on 09 January, 2012, 11:47:57 AM
We had a thread about this a few years ago, but it's always nice to see if any new ones pop up.
Probably this one, in which Adrian Bamforth asks for an explanation of Slavers of Drule, proof that history is cyclical:
http://forums.2000adonline.com/index.php/topic,22044.0.html
I was thinking of this one.
http://forums.2000adonline.com/index.php/topic,25403.msg437632#msg437632
SBT
Quote from: sheridan on 03 May, 2018, 04:11:55 PM
Quote from: AlexF on 03 May, 2018, 10:06:45 AM
Dan Abnett's latest 'Ammo Amass' pun from Sinister Dexter finally justifies those 4 years of Latin I had to do at school...
So what's the pun?
Sorry, I realise that was rather dickish of me to raise the pun without explaining it!
Thanks to those who chipped in. And, for the sake of completing the loop, I'll point out that 'ammo amass' means 'to put together a large collection of ammunition', an appropriate name for a gun shop. :lol:
(And let's all be grateful Abnett hasn't saddled us with supporting character 'Anus Annie', which would derive from the other 'first bit of Latin Grammar', the declension of the noun 'annus' (year) - annus anne annum anni anno anno anni anni annos annorum annis annis.)
On that note, any Asterix readers might wonder why, when drunk, they all hiccup as 'Hic Haec Hoc' - yup, you've guessed it, that's another bit of Latin grammar listing...
I'm almost embrassed to say: this week's tagline "portal enemies".
(https://i.imgur.com/TcLPamN.png?5)
Better (25 years) late than never: https://www.manchesterpride.com/page-1/
Context, gentle reader; contex (https://i.imgur.com/e3JpBxy.png?1)t
For a very, very unsubtle strip, that went completely over my head too. I liked Big Dave - and really miss the days when racist, misogynistic, sociopathic boors being lauded as national heroes was only an ironic piece of satire in a comic.
Was IPC owned by Robert Maxwell by the time Maxwell Tower was named? Looks like Mirror Group had been split off from IPC main by that point (which explains why that 2000AD Quiz Book was printed by Mirror Group, coz they were both sub-divisions of the same company at the time).
Quote from: sheridan on 27 August, 2018, 08:53:03 PM
Was IPC owned by Robert Maxwell by the time Maxwell Tower was named?
I believe the IPC takeover was a couple of years after
The Thirteenth Floor began.
It's possible the name was just a play on "Maxwell House" (as in coffee).
It's also possible that at least one of the writers of The Thirteenth Floor was familiar with this building in Falkirk (https://www.google.co.uk/maps/place/Maxwell+Tower,+Seaton+Pl,+Falkirk+FK1+1TF/@55.9958082,-3.7713211,3a,75y,184.34h,92.5t/data=!3m6!1e1!3m4!1szeucmDWajEXjAZLkWwWPbA!2e0!7i13312!8i6656!4m5!3m4!1s0x48887a274985c2f5:0xf07a760679088653!8m2!3d55.9955937!4d-3.7713199).
Quote from: M.I.K. on 27 August, 2018, 10:48:06 PM
It's also possible that at least one of the writers of The Thirteenth Floor was familiar with this building in Falkirk (https://www.google.co.uk/maps/place/Maxwell+Tower,+Seaton+Pl,+Falkirk+FK1+1TF/@55.9958082,-3.7713211,3a,75y,184.34h,92.5t/data=!3m6!1e1!3m4!1szeucmDWajEXjAZLkWwWPbA!2e0!7i13312!8i6656!4m5!3m4!1s0x48887a274985c2f5:0xf07a760679088653!8m2!3d55.9955937!4d-3.7713199).
You might be on to something there (had a look at satellite view though, no glass roof).
War Marshal Kazan: a military strategist of such genius he was cloned, so his intellect could outlast his limited time on Earth. Loved a chicken metaphor.
(https://i.imgur.com/g1TIvry.png?4)(https://i.imgur.com/rpxNqbd.png?2)
I originally assumed this was just a quirky bit of characterisation by TB Grover, and it probably is, but then I read that a great deal of twisted Nazi theory on race and genetics was shaped by Heinrich Himmler's past as an unsuccessful chicken farmer (https://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/pa1151284).
Aha! There's the reference; there's the parallel (if any) being drawn, you say. But then I read that one of Mussolini's catchphrases, describing fascism's slow erosion of civil liberties and democratic institutions, was if you pluck the chicken one feather at a time, nobody notices*
Well, there you go, you think, it's late and I really need to get going - BUT WAIT! Here's actual Russian** dictator, Stalin, describing how he sees all humanity as broilers:
Stalin clenched a chicken in one hand and began plucking feathers in handfuls. The bird squawked in agony, but he continued until the chicken was completely unfeathered.
He put the bird down then held out a handful of grain. The chicken staggered weakly back towards him and started to peck the grain right out of the hand that moments ago had inflicted unbearable pain on it.
Stalin said, "People are like this chicken. It doesn't matter how much pain you inflict on them. The moment you offer them what they need, they will still follow you and turn to you for their survival" ***
So there we have it. A reference (that's probably not a reference at all, and just a coincidence) explained in a way that connects all of humanity's worst excesses to chickens.
Pulling up a chair in Pseud's Corner, I speculate that, in past times, the first thing most humans would have killed (some as children) was a chicken, and offer the tenuous suggestion that this first act of sadism - or at least indifference to the suffering of another living being - may have left a lasting impression on the way political violence's greatest and most cynical exponents conceptualised the world and expressed themselves.
* https://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/madeleine-albright-warns-of-a-new-fascism-and-trump
** Okay, Ukranian
*** The story's obviously apocryphal, but it was told about Stalin (https://medium.com/thrive-global/you-are-bigger-than-your-career-the-stalins-chicken-168a93f58132)
The apocalypso bit being based on Cy Grant's regular slot on 'Tonight' - a few years before my time.
https://youtu.be/1ezY-f383Ik?t=44 (https://youtu.be/1ezY-f383Ik?t=44)
Quote from: Frank on 08 November, 2018, 06:03:11 PM
Loved a chicken metaphor.
[...snip...]
Pulling up a chair in Pseud's Corner, I speculate that, in past times, the first thing most humans would have killed (some as children) was a chicken, and offer the tenuous suggestion that this first act of sadism - or at least indifference to the suffering of another living being - may have left a lasting impression on the way political violence's greatest and most cynical exponents conceptualised the world and expressed themselves.
You can add to the list whatever it was Hitler said about defeating the British being like wringing the neck of a chicken. I don't know the exact quote, just Churchill's response: "Some chicken. Some neck."
I believe John Wagner owns/owned some chickens.
Quote from: JOE SOAP on 09 November, 2018, 04:35:41 AM
I believe John Wagner owns/owned some chickens.
From this observation we can draw a direct line to the inspiration behind the Alpacalips War.
Quote from: TordelBack on 09 November, 2018, 06:57:19 AM
Quote from: JOE SOAP on 09 November, 2018, 04:35:41 AM
I believe John Wagner owns/owned some chickens.
From this observation we can draw a direct line to the inspiration behind the Alpacalips War.
Get out.
We're not really lama farmers. We've got a couple, but they're pretty useless. You can't eat them; I suppose you can, but we'd be in trouble if we did. It costs more to get them sheared than the fleece is worth. My partner, Jenny, is now carding, washing, spinning it and making it into a jumper, which I may soon be wearing.
I used to keep 25 hens. I thought I could make a little industry out of this, but I ended up subsidising all the neighbours with the eggs, so I gave that up. The fox helped me - he took away 15 in the space of a few weeks.
https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/2000adthrillcast/episodes/2016-02-09T21_00_00-08_00
'Fox'
Re-reading Ellis and Hitch's Authority at the moment. The scene where Jenny et al visit RAF Rendlesham features a couple of signs that I missed on first reading, particularly the one that reads "squirrel fondlers please report to Lt Dez Skinn." :o
Zenith Phase 3 - I've just learned from tvtropes.com the reason Thunderbolt Jason's magic belt, which only worked for right and justice, wasn't working for him.
I'd thought it was just a plot device to make him vulnerable like all of the previously mighty heroes therein. [spoiler]Not so - it was a huge clue that what the heroes thought was a noble act of saving the multiverse from the Lloigor was actually, unknown to them, a project to hand it straight to the dark gods in question.[/spoiler]
Christ, I love obsessing over Zenith.
Yeah - reading it at the time, I just assumed his belt issues were part of the general mockery of the ineffectiveness of most of the heroes in the face of cosmic horror, but of course Morrison's actually trying to flag up the revelation coming a few episodes later...
Not 2000ad, but what the hell. Like everyone else on Earth, I've never seen the UK A Star Is Born rip-off Breaking Glass (https://youtu.be/O-c99rkQlV0?t=136). Google tells me it predated Disney's Tron by 2 years*
(https://i.imgur.com/He3hKFp.png?1)(https://i.imgur.com/eB3Jtyp.png?2)
* The production designer of Breaking Glass was probably ripping off something they'd seen at an art exhibition or a fashion show, but following the Lipstick Traces (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lipstick_Traces:_A_Secret_History_of_the_20th_Century) of influence is interesting in itself
I've a vague memory of that song from the first time round. Don't think I've heard it since. I love it. I'm going to listen to it now as I clean my boat.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 15 December, 2018, 04:44:34 PM
Quote from: Frank on 15 December, 2018, 04:04:40 PM
I've never seen the UK A Star Is Born rip-off Breaking Glass (https://youtu.be/O-c99rkQlV0?t=136)
I've a vague memory of that song from the first time round. Don't think I've heard it since. I love it. I'm going to listen to it now as I clean my boat.
The most interesting thing my rabbit hole dive turned up was that the US release of the film ends on that scene and the triumphant note it strikes.
The UK version ends with the main character leaving the stage to find the band have broken up, her relationship's over, and her management have conned her into selling out. She suffers a nervous breakdown on the tube and ends the film drooling in a sanitorium!
Two cultures, divided by more than our common language.
I definitely remember that scene with the outfit being used as an off-the-peg music video for the song at the time, so I don't think it was particularly obscure. I also remember really liking the song, even though I was totally aware it was about the end of the world and everybody dying and I was five.
I really need to watch breaking glass - I love Hazel O'Connor. Until I watched that vid (followed by Will you) I'd forgotten about the movie, but what a couple of fantastic songs (though I do remember sneaking a look at one of my big brother's collection of bongo mags that featured her in its 'celebrity nudes' section - an old glamour shoot that had her posing on packing crates in some dusty attic *nostalgic sigh*)
I've just realised that Shaun the Sheep is possibly a pun, which doesn't work in an Irish accent.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 15 December, 2018, 04:44:34 PM
I've a vague memory of that song from the first time round. Don't think I've heard it since. I love it. I'm going to listen to it now as I clean my boat.
I'm hoping that's not a euphemism :-[
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 18 December, 2018, 02:56:19 PM
I've just realised that Shaun the Sheep is possibly a pun,
Only if you say it in a clipped accent.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 18 December, 2018, 02:56:19 PM
I've just realised that Shaun the Sheep is possibly a pun, which doesn't work in an Irish accent.
Which bit doesn't work in an Irish accent? Shaun / Sean or shorn?
Quote from: sheridan on 18 December, 2018, 03:34:40 PM
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 18 December, 2018, 02:56:19 PM
I've just realised that Shaun the Sheep is possibly a pun, which doesn't work in an Irish accent.
Which bit doesn't work in an Irish accent? Shaun / Sean or shorn?
The 'r ' in shorn would always be pronounced here, so they don't sound the same.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 18 December, 2018, 05:09:50 PM
Quote from: sheridan on 18 December, 2018, 03:34:40 PM
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 18 December, 2018, 02:56:19 PM
I've just realised that Shaun the Sheep is possibly a pun, which doesn't work in an Irish accent.
Which bit doesn't work in an Irish accent? Shaun / Sean or shorn?
The 'r ' in shorn would always be pronounced here, so they don't sound the same.
(having asked that, I would pronounce them the same, and it took me a while to realise)
Incidentally when I was living in Beijing, they would play Shaun the Sheep in a loop on screens in subway trains. I saw Chinese people fighting back tears of stifled laughter looking at it. Some things are funny everywhere.
Quote from: Lobo Baggins on 28 June, 2017, 06:43:45 PM
My grud...
Ro-Busters is a pun on 'robust'!
HOW HAVE I NEVER SEEN THAT?!?
"I ain't afraid of no robe..."
The black leather and fishnet-vested German acapella group in Pitch Perfect 2 are called Das Sound Machine (https://youtu.be/VngeoOy-nFs?t=14). DSM: there are lines about the girls having to beatDSM or how they can never beDSM (https://youtu.be/Y2otY8nVEsI).
Possibly the least audience appropriate observation I've made on this forum, and that's including all the ones about Derrida.
Quote from: Dandontdare on 16 December, 2018, 03:14:06 AM
I really need to watch breaking glass - I love Hazel O'Connor. Until I watched that vid (followed by Will you) I'd forgotten about the movie, but what a couple of fantastic songs (though I do remember sneaking a look at one of my big brother's collection of bongo mags that featured her in its 'celebrity nudes' section - an old glamour shoot that had her posing on packing crates in some dusty attic *nostalgic sigh*)
Always had a soft spot for Breaking Glass - it's cheesy and overwrought in equal measure, but I loves it.
Hazel was touring the UK recently, and I caught her at the Engine Shed in Lincoln. Great night - A showing of the film, plus a Q&A afterwards and then she performed songs from the film, and elsewhere, for over an hour.
You certainly get yer moneys worth with Hazel.
"Thread Zero" is Scojo!
Quote from: I, Cosh on 22 January, 2019, 05:13:09 PM
"Thread Zero" is Scojo!
Some of it is... some of it is my other username Bone Machine.
Don't know how that happened - I think I was changing my screen name at the exact moment that Scojo got his final ban. Or something.
In The A.B.C. Warriors, Zippo's head is shaped like... yeah.
Also, having picked up a few back progs in a charity shop last weekend, I've just realized that the bunch of seven 'evil' Volgan robots with a grudge against each A.B.C. Warrior, that featured in last year's stories, were first introduced ten years ago.
Quote from: Lobo Baggins on 22 January, 2019, 05:32:55 PM
Quote from: I, Cosh on 22 January, 2019, 05:13:09 PM
"Thread Zero" is Scojo!
Some of it is... some of it is my other username Bone Machine.
Don't know how that happened - I think I was changing my screen name at the exact moment that Scojo got his final ban. Or something.
That's even weirder, but does make sense of why I've seen your avatar in there before.
COMPU 73E
Is supposed to say ... 'Computee'?
Hmm. Maybe not.
Given that The Boys was post 9/11 and set in an alternative universe, this was either a beautiful coincidence or, more likely, a piece of dialogue / scenery juxtaposing worthy of Alan Moore.
Went way over my head the first time round.
(https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-eUcJvU3zLPE/W353lcXssGI/AAAAAAAAHvM/LBFA2RlD4QsEMGD9hzkCkXcS_cZyXvOxQCHMYCw/s1600/RCO0)
I was born 10 years too late to get this cracking reference from Prog 454:
- TV advert: Cyril Lord carpets -- "This is luxury ... you can afford ... from Cyril Lord!" (http://www.hatads.org.uk/catalogue/record/52900ebb-e26f-4010-8950-1461790e1add)
(https://i.ibb.co/bm0WCFW/prog-454-cyril-lord.jpg)
Followed-up with a flooring-focused double-tap. Quality!
Love it!
Quote from: A.Cow on 30 January, 2019, 05:01:26 AM
Followed-up with a flooring-focused double-tap. Quality!
"You'll be on the carpet for this!" - Love it!
And that the Judge in question is named Wilton (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClf86j8Lne7DvlrStupM-NQ).
Quote from: Dash Decent on 30 January, 2019, 09:35:42 AM
Quote from: A.Cow on 30 January, 2019, 05:01:26 AM
Followed-up with a flooring-focused double-tap. Quality!
"You'll be on the carpet for this!" - Love it!
And that the Judge in question is named Wilton (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClf86j8Lne7DvlrStupM-NQ).
Ah, that's the stuff that makes this thread shine so bright... Love it!
I have just noticed today that Sonic Youth have a track called Skip Tracer. Does 'Skip Tracer' mean something or did Sonic Youth make it up?
Quote from: WhizzBang on 02 February, 2019, 03:22:45 PM
I have just noticed today that Sonic Youth have a track called Skip Tracer. Does 'Skip Tracer' mean something or did Sonic Youth make it up?
Skip tracing is an industry term used to describe the process of locating a fugitive that can't be found at their place of residence or usual hangouts. "Skip" refers to the person being searched for (derived from the term "to skip town") and "tracing" meaning the act of locating the skip.
Thanks. The strip name probably has nothing to do with SY then.
Quote from: WhizzBang on 03 February, 2019, 12:28:37 PM
Thanks. The strip name probably has nothing to do with SY then.
The Brass Sun story "Motor Head" has got to be named after the legendary band though, at least.
Quote from: Frank on 15 December, 2018, 04:55:56 PM
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 15 December, 2018, 04:44:34 PM
Quote from: Frank on 15 December, 2018, 04:04:40 PM
I've never seen the UK A Star Is Born rip-off Breaking Glass (https://youtu.be/O-c99rkQlV0?t=136)
I've a vague memory of that song from the first time round. Don't think I've heard it since. I love it. I'm going to listen to it now as I clean my boat.
The most interesting thing my rabbit hole dive turned up was that the US release of the film ends on that scene and the triumphant note it strikes.
The UK version ends with the main character leaving the stage to find the band have broken up, her relationship's over, and her management have conned her into selling out. She suffers a nervous breakdown on the tube and ends the film drooling in a sanitorium!
Two cultures, divided by more than our common language.
Eh, there are plenty of great US movies that end on a down note. And I don't feel we're particularly divided, as far as cultures go. But every culture has differences.
Plus you're talking about a movie edit from 1980. These days if a downbeat drama gets distributed from overseas, they're a lot less likely to tack on a happy ending. Along with a lot of other reasons why I find that kind of "us vs them" generalizing mentality to not really apply much.
Quote from: PsychoGoatee on 03 February, 2019, 10:21:26 PM
The Brass Sun story "Motor Head" has got to be named after the legendary band though, at least.
Three of the other
Brass Sun story titles seem to be references to highly-regarded sci-fi/fantasy titles:
- The Diamond Age (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Diamond_Age) (Neal Stephenson)
- Floating Worlds (https://www.amazon.co.uk/Floating-Worlds-MASTERWORKS-Cecelia-Holland/dp/0575108231) (Cecelia Holland)
- Engine Summer (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Engine_Summer) (John Crowley)
The first storyline doesn't fit this pattern, although there is a spurious link to fantasy author Neil Gaiman:
- Wheel of Worlds (https://comicvine.gamespot.com/neil-gaimans-wheel-of-worlds/4050-20944/) (Neil Gaiman)
And yet, aside from the band, the only other famous Motor Head seems to be a fella from Frank Zappa's band.
Quote from: A.Cow on 05 February, 2019, 02:40:03 AM
Quote from: PsychoGoatee on 03 February, 2019, 10:21:26 PM
The Brass Sun story "Motor Head" has got to be named after the legendary band though, at least.
And yet, aside from the band, the only other famous Motor Head seems to be a fella from Frank Zappa's band.
Originally Motorhead was a song written by Lemmy while he was in Hawkwind (the subject of which is speed).
Quote from: sheridan on 05 February, 2019, 10:12:37 AM
Quote from: A.Cow on 05 February, 2019, 02:40:03 AM
Quote from: PsychoGoatee on 03 February, 2019, 10:21:26 PM
The Brass Sun story "Motor Head" has got to be named after the legendary band though, at least.
And yet, aside from the band, the only other famous Motor Head seems to be a fella from Frank Zappa's band.
Originally Motorhead was a song written by Lemmy while he was in Hawkwind (the subject of which is speed).
One of my favourites - gotta love a song that manages to rhyme "parallelogram"!
QuoteFROM: https://www.loudersound.com/features/the-story-behind-the-song-motorhead-by-motorhead
...with a song that Hawkwind dismissed as no more than a B-side, he had the template for a new band. Having teamed up with guitarist Larry Wallis and drummer Lucas Fox, Lemmy originally named his new band Bastard. But, as he recalls: "A friend told him: 'You probably won't get a lot of Top Of The Pops action with a name like that.' So I went with Motörhead."
For sure, I enjoyed two Lemmy books over the last year or so, his autobiography and the later biography called Lemmy. I think his band is legendary enough that it'd be quite tough to name something that without it being a nod. Plus Lemmy has even been featured in 2000AD.
And Edgington was only the other day on the 2000ad thrill cast talking about his love of Heavy Metal (and the Iron Maiden comic he has has been involved with?)
Quote from: PsychoGoatee on 05 February, 2019, 04:47:11 PM
For sure, I enjoyed two Lemmy books over the last year or so, his autobiography and the later biography called Lemmy. I think his band is legendary enough that it'd be quite tough to name something that without it being a nod. Plus Lemmy has even been featured in 2000AD.
I seem to recall a photo of him eating a prog.
(https://thevintagetoyadvertiser.files.wordpress.com/2017/03/lemmy-2000-ad-2000-ad-scifispecial-1987-post.jpg)
Quote from: PsychoGoatee on 05 February, 2019, 04:47:11 PM
For sure, I enjoyed two Lemmy books over the last year or so, his autobiography and the later biography called Lemmy. I think his band is legendary enough that it'd be quite tough to name something that without it being a nod. Plus Lemmy has even been featured in 2000AD.
(https://i.pinimg.com/originals/98/ba/8e/98ba8e919977cbcfd1c6f9febfae9c87.jpg)
(https://thevintagetoyadvertiser.files.wordpress.com/2017/03/lemmy-2000-ad-2000-ad-scifispecial-1987-post.jpg)
Quote from: Funt Solo on 09 February, 2019, 12:04:42 AM
(https://thevintagetoyadvertiser.files.wordpress.com/2017/03/lemmy-2000-ad-2000-ad-scifispecial-1987-post.jpg)
Beat me to it!
Hell yeah, that rules. :D
Bryan Talbot's Grandville and The Adventures of Luther Arkwright
...must have been an Open all Hours fan our Bryan...
Did he do anything based on Nurse Gladys Emmanuel I wonder? :)
GIs and Dolls was obviously a reference to Guys And Dolls
Quote from: pert on 05 April, 2019, 01:08:38 PM
GIs and Dolls was obviously a reference to Guys And Dolls
In the same era of Rogue, all the following are titles I wouldn't have recognised at the time, as I hadn't come across the original being referenced:
- All Hell on the Dix-I Front
- Frisco Fog
- From Hell to Eternity
- Gasbah
- M for Murder
- To the Ends of Nu-Earth
...and Judge Dredd around the same time - I'd never heard of High Society before that orbiting luxury condo.
While reading the last couple of episodes of Grey Area it finally popped into my head that BEM probably stands for Bug-Eyed Monster... Or does it?
Quote from: ming on 05 April, 2019, 01:58:39 PM
While reading the last couple of episodes of Grey Area it finally popped into my head that BEM probably stands for Bug-Eyed Monster... Or does it?
That's the usual meaning of the acronym (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bug-eyed_monster).
milliput is a play on Lilliput! Not 2000ad I know, but mind, blown.
The Vestal Virgin 'Mater Clementia' who fought Felix and Aquilla in the fall of Rome...
...and that strange lady on the front cover of the album 'Goats Head Soup' by The Rolling Stones
I think so anyway! :thumbsup:
Btw, just re-reading Aqullia and marvelling at just how good it all was...
The Mater Clementia comes from various creepy-looking statues of veiled Vestal Virgins, but especially the famous 19th century one at Chatsworth House in Derbyshire.
With a bit of vintage Dario Argento thrown in.
Not familiar with the Stones album, but I imagine they were riffing from the same source.
Quote from: Jacqusie on 02 May, 2019, 11:24:28 PM
The Vestal Virgin 'Mater Clementia' who fought Felix and Aquilla in the fall of Rome...
...and that strange lady on the front cover of the album 'Goats Head Soup' by The Rolling Stones
I wasn't familiar with the album cover, so looked it up. That ain't no lady - it's Mick Jagger!
My Wicker Man obsession intensifies at this time of year, and I thought I'd managed to uncover every single reference in it by now. But then I find that the music that accompanies Eddie Woodward being dressed in [spoiler]sacrificial robes and paraded towards his play place of execution[/spoiler] is a real medieval song with lyrics that celebrate summer, just like Summer is Icumen In..
https://youtu.be/7UvesKl8_W8 (https://youtu.be/7UvesKl8_W8)
P.S. this is the first May in years I haven't managed to find an actual wicker man burning ceremony and wear an appropriate costume for it. Next year!
It's not over my head, but I just want to give a nod to "Noam Chimpsky". I like it!
Quote from: Dash Decent on 17 May, 2019, 10:48:51 AM
It's not over my head, but I just want to give a nod to "Noam Chimpsky". I like it!
That one was already a thing, though...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nim_Chimpsky (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nim_Chimpsky)
Thanks Lobo, in that case it was over my head.
I'm familiar with Noam Chomsky, but not Nim (Neam) Chimpsky.
Honestly not sure whether this is something you all need to sit down for or if it's the equivalent of telling someone that Spock's mum was called T'Pau.
(https://i.imgur.com/YqzApda.png?2)(https://i.imgur.com/VZyjghd.png?3)
(https://i.imgur.com/33H01BG.png?2)
My excuse is that I'd never tasted a quince in the eighties, and certainly didn't know they looked a little like mishapen heads. I got the mince connection, obviously, since mince (boiled until it was grey) was the default dinner option for every Scottish mum between WWII and the fall of the Berlin wall.
Should have known; Wagner and Grant were partial to a bit of Quince (https://i.imgur.com/z7LyXw9.png). *
* Wagner, Grant & Ezquerra, Prog 190, less than a year before that panel from The Hotdog Run (233)
Quince must be the plural form of (Banjo) Quint (https://vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/britishcomics/images/f/f6/The_Helltrekkers.jpg/revision/latest?cb=20140604081140)
Man that Nim Chimpsky link is but one of the things I love about this place, cheers.
I wasn't an Eagle reader in the 80s, but I'm enjoying the Where Eagles Dare podcast - I have only just learned from the latest episode where forum veteran The Amstor Computer got his name from.
Quote from: Theblazeuk on 22 May, 2019, 03:51:28 PM
Man that Nim Chimpsky link is but one of the things I love about this place, cheers.
I just hope that they gave him that orange in the end...
Mind the oranges, Nim!
Quote from: Dandontdare on 24 May, 2019, 09:43:30 AM
I wasn't an Eagle reader in the 80s, but I'm enjoying the Where Eagles Dare podcast - I have only just learned from the latest episode where forum veteran The Amstor Computer got his name from.
Yup! Always had a soft spot for the series in the Eagle, and it just stuck :)
Quote from: The Amstor Computer on 25 May, 2019, 05:50:53 PM
Quote from: Dandontdare on 24 May, 2019, 09:43:30 AM
I wasn't an Eagle reader in the 80s, but I'm enjoying the Where Eagles Dare podcast - I have only just learned from the latest episode where forum veteran The Amstor Computer got his name from.
Yup! Always had a soft spot for the series in the Eagle, and it just stuck :)
I remember that era of Eagle fondly, if somewhat vaguely.
Walk or Die always stuck in my head, and prepared me for the horrors of the first grown-up novel I ever read,
Lord of the Flies.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 25 May, 2019, 08:49:03 PM
Quote from: The Amstor Computer on 25 May, 2019, 05:50:53 PM
Quote from: Dandontdare on 24 May, 2019, 09:43:30 AM
I wasn't an Eagle reader in the 80s, but I'm enjoying the Where Eagles Dare podcast - I have only just learned from the latest episode where forum veteran The Amstor Computer got his name from.
Yup! Always had a soft spot for the series in the Eagle, and it just stuck :)
I remember that era of Eagle fondly, if somewhat vaguely. Walk or Die always stuck in my head, and prepared me for the horrors of the first grown-up novel I ever read, Lord of the Flies.
Don't remember Walk or Die - my non-2000AD IPC era was
Scream!,
Battle Action Force,
Billy's Boots and
Martin's Marvellous Mini in
Tiger, photostrip changing to conventional
Doomlord,
Manix,
One-Eyed Jack in
Eagle.
Oh! Fillmore Faro from the Judge Child Quest pronounced his last name as "Pharaoh" and not "Far-oh"!
I see! That explains all the Egyptian stuff...
Quote from: Lobo Baggins on 30 May, 2019, 12:29:27 PM
Oh! Fillmore Faro from the Judge Child Quest pronounced his last name as "Pharaoh" and not "Far-oh"!
I see! That explains all the Egyptian stuff...
Bloody hell. I missed that too
I thought it was also very clever to set it in Memphis (Tennessee as opposed to Egypt)
Well, I got that part of it, at least.
Torchwood, I've just discovered, is an anagram of Doctor Who.
Quote from: The Legendary Shark on 01 June, 2019, 11:00:48 PM
Torchwood, I've just discovered, is an anagram of Doctor Who.
It was also the codename for new who before it was released, so that nobody would know what they were working on - they liked the codename so much they put it in the story.
I didn't know that, either.
Worst. Nerd. Ever. :(
I'm half-proud to say I knew the Torchwood thing. Worked it out myself. (Did I fuck - I saw it on the internet. Never even watched it.)
That said, I've just realised that the Great Beard, the nickname of a writer who is the best in his field, is a play on the Great Bard, the nickname of a writer who is the best in his field.
In other news, after an Auf Wiedersehen Pet YouTube marathon, I've just discovered that Brian Johnson from AC / DC is a Geordie, not an Ozzer.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 08 June, 2019, 07:13:42 PM
That said, I've just realised that the Great Beard, the nickname of a writer who is the best in his field, is a play on the Great Bard, the nickname of a writer who is the best in his field.
Would the Great Beard also be known as 'The Original Author' when his work is adapted for film?
(https://i.imgur.com/yrusjxT.png?2)
https://www.amtrak.com/home
Return To Armageddon - Return, as in single, half-fare, or day saver. Thanks to Morgan Spiceman on the 1977-2000ad Facebook group.
Quote from: sheridan on 09 June, 2019, 01:25:48 PM
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 08 June, 2019, 07:13:42 PM
That said, I've just realised that the Great Beard, the nickname of a writer who is the best in his field, is a play on the Great Bard, the nickname of a writer who is the best in his field.
Would the Great Beard also be known as 'The Original Author' when his work is adapted for film?
Naah. None of his comics have ever been made into films.
Random, I know, but the chipmunks Chip and Dale - Chip 'n' Dale - Chippendale! FFS!
(https://i.imgur.com/eYNgGwy.png?1)(https://i.imgur.com/DVSYw7W.png?4)
Thanks to Bruce Gray and Alan Marshall of the 1977 Group (https://www.facebook.com/groups/4727793513/permalink/10158136896528514/). Few strips have the benefit of the same writer for forty years.
'The Mills'
Quote from: norton canes on 04 July, 2019, 10:43:34 AM
'The Mills'
What part? I just read it as a direct reference to the Dark, Satanic ones from Jerusalem.
The current Absalom chapter. I thought it might be a sly reference to another 'Mills'.
Quote from: norton canes on 04 July, 2019, 02:59:23 PM
The current Absalom chapter. I thought it might be a sly reference to another 'Mills'.
(https://i.imgur.com/c5aEy4D.png?2)
It's not a
great likeness. The Rest Of The Board are probably right, and it's just an on-the-nose Blake reference, but the tenets of reader reception theory say we should
all get a speedboat.
I've only read one previous chapter of
Abslalom, and the same thing did occur to me then, so I think it's probably safe to say you and me are geniuses who can see the code of the Matrix.
Not prog related, but...
"Open sesame". Open, says-a-me.
Never got that. Not until tonight when it was made obvious by an eleven year old actor in a school performance of 'Ali Baba and the Bongo Bandits'. I feel like an idiot.
SBT
Quote from: SmallBlueThing(Reborn) on 09 July, 2019, 10:39:36 PM
Not prog related, but...
"Open sesame". Open, says-a-me.
Never got that. Not until tonight when it was made obvious by an eleven year old actor in a school performance of 'Ali Baba and the Bongo Bandits'. I feel like an idiot.
SBT
Probably helps if you saw Popeye the Sailor Meets Ali Baba's Forty Thieves (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qia-QoAmiVI) when you were eight or so, as I did!
I saw said Popeye cartoon too, (probably at an even earlier age), but a variation of "open sesame" seems to have first cropped up in an 18th Century French version of 1001 Nights, so I think the fact it sounds like "says-a-me" is merely a coinkydink.
Wait... Otto Sump is Donald Trump? I'm just re-reading Get Ugly and he lives in Sump Tower. Whaaaaaat
...which was built in 1980, when that strip was published. :o
Trump Tower was completed in 1983. I doubt anyone in the UK had really heard of just another New York property developer Donald Trump when that story appeared years earlier.
When I lived in NY in 1987, he was definitely becoming A Thing by then, at least in the US. By 1990, he and Trump Tower were well enough known to be majorly lampooned in Gremlins 2
I'm sure I knew of Donald (and Ivana) Trump by the late 80s, and made the connection with Otto Sump around the same time. I definitely first heard of Ivana when she was still married to Donald, so that's pre-1991.
They were certainly both famous enough by the end of the 90s to warrant Ivana appearing as a guest on TFI Friday.
Quote from: M.I.K. on 19 July, 2019, 03:42:54 PM
I'm sure I knew of Donald (and Ivana) Trump by the late 80s, and made the connection with Otto Sump around the same time. I definitely first heard of Ivana when she was still married to Donald, so that's pre-1991
Like this guy, I've been familiar with Donald Trump since at least 1992:
(https://i.imgur.com/5m5ghKE.png?1)
He's always looked and dressed like shit. He's exactly as bald in this image as he is today, although he no longer draws his eyebrows with a sharpie.I first became aware of him as a punchline on
Saturday Night Clive, a year or more earlier, when his affair and impending divorce had US tabloids salivating so much at the prospect of his spouse taking him to the cleaners that the story made it over the Atlantic.
The publicity from that made him and Maples a sort of low rent celebrity couple for a while - the kind that got their pictures in UK tabloids but needed a caption to tell you who they were - but I can't remember reading or knowing much else about him until they divorced.
I heard nothing else about him
* until the
You've Been Trumped (https://youtu.be/fsfLTvnzwI8) documentary about him playing the Scottish Government like Elmer Gantry (https://youtu.be/ZDOI0cq6GZM) and
The Daily Show's coverage of the Birther (https://youtu.be/HHckZCxdRkA?t=160) movement. I had no idea he'd become a game show host until then.
So then I tied an onion to my belt, which was the style at the time.* I remember my brother telling me about the billboards all over Atlantic City - TRUMP: THE BIG NAME IN ATLANTIC CITY and laughing at the tawdriness of it, but I think I assumed that was just an extension of his failed property development empire, rather than the beginning of his failed gambling empire
Quote from: GordonR on 18 July, 2019, 07:56:32 AM
Trump Tower was completed in 1983. I doubt anyone in the UK had really heard of just another New York property developer Donald Trump when that story appeared years earlier.
When I lived in NY in 1987, he was definitely becoming A Thing by then, at least in the US. By 1990, he and Trump Tower were well enough known to be majorly lampooned in Gremlins 2
Likely correct - Sump first appeared in 1979, and none of the early stories featuring him seem to have any connection to Trump beyond the similar-sounding name.
The only counterargument I can think of would be that (if I remember correctly) Wagner and Grant have said in a few interviews that they used to devour newspapers to help come up with ideas for Dredd, so it's possible that by the time "Otto Sump's Ugly Clinic" rolled around the ongoing construction of Trump Tower had been mentioned in at least some of the more international-minded newspapers (or possibly mentioned on TV) and when it came to naming the tower Sump had bought, the Trump/Sump Tower conceit was fun enough for them to run with.
I don't think a few pesky facts should get in the way of a good theory!
See also: flat earth (gaining popularity these days as what were once isolated idiots are connected by the power of the Infobahn), faked moon landings (in which basically every other resident of the planet is in on the conspiracy except for those persecuted few that believe it) and the utterly splendid "right-angled contrails mean we're being drugged by the government" (introduced to me on this very board by a true believer).
It'll be child's play to get this Sump/Trump thing off the ground. (Honestly, I'd believe it's equally likely to be a coincidence or an actual factual homage based on knowing a bit about what's going on in the New York business community circa the late 70s / early 80s.)
Quote from: The Amstor Computer on 19 July, 2019, 06:42:30 PM
Wagner and Grant have said in a few interviews that they used to devour newspapers to help come up with ideas for Dredd, so it's possible that by the time "Otto Sump's Ugly Clinic" rolled around the ongoing construction of Trump Tower had been mentioned in at least some of the more international-minded newspapers (or possibly mentioned on TV)
Wagner's a US citizen. Although he was probably too skint to visit family in 1980 and I'm not sure Trump's NYC minor celebrity status would have meant much in Pennsylvania.
I don't think it's a DJT reference, but I'm not sure the OP does either. Sometimes coincidences are just so interesting you want to share them and it's a shame to pass up any opportunity to take the piss out of Trump for how weird he's always looked:
(https://i.imgur.com/ZUJJ7Ka.png?1)
One strong gust and that wispy fringe is a goner. Note the head-to-shoulder-width ratio - and that's with padding
They used to speak about his 'Robert Redford good looks' back then. Gold-tinted glasses, it would seem.
At least Otto was only ugly on the outside.
The first time I saw a parody of Trump was probably Back to the Future II - and, along with loads of other people in this country, I'd have had no idea who it was a parody of (even though I may have heard of Ivana on the afore-mentioned Clive James show). I'd also have seen Elijah Wood in the same film, but nobody on either side of the Atlantic would have known who he was at the time :-)
(https://vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/bttf/images/4/4c/Wild_Gunman_kids.jpg)
Ah well. I'm happy to accept it as a coincidence and not a reference.
Mayor Jim Grubb, however, was based on a man who had a newsagents shop in a village near Dundee. I know this for a factor because John Wagner told me. :D
Strontium DOG Johnny Alpha(got that one)'s partner WULF Sternhammer
And we slate GFD....
Quote from: Trout on 20 July, 2019, 02:30:30 PMMayor Jim Grubb, however, was based on a man who had a newsagents shop in a village near Dundee. I know this for a factor because John Wagner told me. :D
My old mate from Peebles who I was at Dundee Uni with always drags out the anecdote of how he met "the real Fergee" - ie some guy he met in a pub who claimed that the character had been based on him - I've always been skeptical, but has John ever mentioned the inspiration for the king of the Big Smelly?
(https://i.imgur.com/OTI2wrw.png?2)
BBC Archive have made their Oscar-winning documentary The War Game available on iPlayer (https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p02zy7nt). It wasn't broadcast until 1985, but it'd be interesting to know whether bolshy Trot TB Grover saw it at the pictures:
https://youtu.be/6KQMwpTZStY
Quote from: Frank on 31 July, 2019, 05:44:52 PM
It wasn't broadcast until 1985, but it'd be interesting to know whether bolshy Trot TB Grover saw it at the pictures:
Especially since, IIRC, it was not originally released in cinemas, in fact the BBC chose to restrict access to a highly select audience so for a looooong time its reputation was largely anecdotal. Worth bearing in mind the level of nuclear hysteria that was prevalent around the time of the Apocalypse War, though.
Quote from: Tjm86 on 31 July, 2019, 09:02:19 PM
Quote from: Frank on 31 July, 2019, 05:44:52 PM
It wasn't broadcast until 1985, but it'd be interesting to know whether bolshy Trot TB Grover saw it at the pictures:
Especially since, IIRC, it was not originally released in cinemas
The War Game was given an X-rating by the BBFC (https://bbfc.co.uk/releases/war-game) and released in UK cinemas in November 1965 (https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0059894/releaseinfo?ref_=tt_ql_dt_2).
It sounds like it probably only played on the arthouse and university circuit here, but like I say, it won an Academy Award (https://www.oscars.org/oscars/ceremonies/1967). The director, Peter Watkins, was the same cat who made the Culloden (https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/articles/SJqjSQ243JckRSr7Tpj2XZ/televising-the-revolution-how-peter-watkins-went-to-war) documentary in the style of Vietnam newsreel.
Quote from: Leigh S on 26 July, 2019, 05:30:13 PM
Strontium DOG Johnny Alpha(got that one)'s partner WULF Sternhammer
And we slate GFD....
Don't forget that Wulf is big, making him a 'Great Dane'. Alpha's helmet has a dog-nose appearance to it, and the SD badge looks like the tag on Scooby-Doo's collar!
I won't skate them for puns or dog references. I loved all those bits - "Next prog: Dog-gone!" etc.
Quote from: Frank on 31 July, 2019, 09:32:13 PM
The War Game was given an X-rating by the BBFC (https://bbfc.co.uk/releases/war-game) and released in UK cinemas in November 1965 (https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0059894/releaseinfo?ref_=tt_ql_dt_2).
Thank you for clarifying my ignorance. I'd based my understanding in part on Watkins' own recollections which omitted the subsequent, apparently limited, general release by the BFI. He was slightly more than a little put out by the way in which the BBC handled the matter at the time, it seems.
Quote from: Leigh S on 26 July, 2019, 05:30:13 PM
Strontium DOG Johnny Alpha(got that one)'s partner WULF Sternhammer
Oh FFS.
What can I say, the sternHAMMER misdirection worked - Wagner = master magician!
Quote from: TordelBack on 01 August, 2019, 07:54:43 PM
Quote from: Leigh S on 26 July, 2019, 05:30:13 PM
Strontium DOG Johnny Alpha(got that one)'s partner WULF Sternhammer
Oh FFS.
Shaky Kane. Chaka Khan. Probably unintentional but it just crossed my mind today (and i spent the next hour with an earworm consisting of 'Shaky Kane' sung repeatedly in disco stylee).
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 06 August, 2019, 10:12:12 PM
Shaky Kane. Chaka Khan. Probably unintentional but it just crossed my mind today (and i spent the next hour with an earworm consisting of 'Shaky Kane' sung repeatedly in disco stylee).
Seems a bit of a stretch, but I'm too Scotch to get some English puns.
You know about GBH (dead) though?
ummm .. no?
I kind o' always assumed Shaky Kane was indeed a pun on Chaka Khan, while simultaneously being a (probably self-deprecating) reference to Bob Kane, with added possibility of intention to conjure up a mental image of a stick-brandishing codger.
...and maybe Shakin' Stevens.
Quote from: Dandontdare on 06 August, 2019, 11:42:47 PM
ummm .. no?
If this was a reply to me sorry for the delay. I was hoping Frank would swoop in with an appropriate scan.
GBH (Dead) was an exiled Sha'Ka'Kan warrior.
haha no, that one DID go over my head.
Quote from: I, Cosh on 07 August, 2019, 09:51:53 AM
Quote from: Dandontdare on 06 August, 2019, 11:42:47 PM
ummm .. no?
If this was a reply to me sorry for the delay. I was hoping Frank would swoop in with an appropriate scan.
GBH (Dead) was an exiled Sha'Ka'Kan warrior.
I actually got that one, for once. Just thinking about GBH (Dead) yesterday. What a great character. Hard as nails, crazy-looking, with the voice of an old English aristocrat.
I was going to observe that GBH (Dead) must be one of the most unique comics character designs, but then I realised that could apply to the entire crew of the Speedo Ghost.
T.B. Grover and the Maestro, a neutron star collision of pure creation.
I've just remembered that I'm friends with Shaky on Facebook, or I was last time I checked. I'll ask him about the chaka khan thing.
The unfortunate lab assistant in the DNA man is called Beaker after the muppet.
Quote from: Steve Green on 09 August, 2019, 09:27:25 AM
The unfortunate lab assistant in the DNA man is called Beaker after the muppet.
Anyone would think you'd been listening to the latest Space Spinner 2000 (https://forums.2000ad.com/index.php?topic=44366.msg1010828#msg1010828)!
Always
(https://i.imgur.com/37HBfR8.png?2)(https://i.imgur.com/IDiatJF.png?3)
Who exactly was Moore talking to in the Northampton Arts Lab?
Glass shattered high above Seventh Avenue in Manhattan before dawn on a cold November morning in 1953. Seconds later, a body hit the sidewalk.
The night manager peered up through the darkness at his hulking hotel. After a few moments, he picked out a curtain flapping through an open window. Police officers entered room 1018A with guns drawn. They saw no one. The window was open.
Decades later, spectacular revelations cast the death in a completely new light. The victim was disturbed about his work with the CIA and wanted to quit, leading his comrades to consider him a security risk. This was no light matter for men who believed that the success or failure of project MK-Ultra might determine the fate of the US, and all humanity.The Guardian: How A Deadly Fall Revealed The CIA's Deadliest Secrets (https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2019/sep/06/from-mind-control-to-murder-how-a-deadly-fall-revealed-the-cias-darkest-secrets)
A Netflix series, Wormwood (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b01DL8DTUGM), covers this story from the point of view from Olson's family.
Quote from: Frank on 08 September, 2019, 03:12:41 PMWho exactly was Moore talking to in the Northampton Arts Lab?
A Netflix series, Wormwood (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b01DL8DTUGM), covers this story from the point of view from Olson's family.
The Olson tale first got into the mainstream via the original source book for these stories
Operation Mind Control (https://www.amazon.com/dp/1543022618/ref=pd_lpo_sbs_dp_ss_2?pf_rd_p=aeebc627-7ecf-4129-8c0c-1d437f271eca&pf_rd_s=lpo-top-stripe-1&pf_rd_t=201&pf_rd_i=0440167558&pf_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DER&pf_rd_r=9VAJ9A4EHQ6WWRNAWKA3&pf_rd_r=9VAJ9A4EHQ6WWRNAWKA3&pf_rd_p=aeebc627-7ecf-4129-8c0c-1d437f271eca) (1978) by Walter Bowart. Another referred to in the book was the story of
Candy Jones (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Candy_Jones) who cliamed to be a victim of the same programme – David Fincher was trying to get it made into a film at one point.
Quote from: JOE SOAP on 08 September, 2019, 04:05:11 PM
Quote from: Frank on 08 September, 2019, 03:12:41 PMWho exactly was Moore talking to in the Northampton Arts Lab?
A Netflix series, Wormwood (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b01DL8DTUGM), covers this story from the point of view from Olson's family.
The Olson tale first got into the mainstream via the original source book for these stories Operation Mind Control (https://www.amazon.com/dp/1543022618/ref=pd_lpo_sbs_dp_ss_2?pf_rd_p=aeebc627-7ecf-4129-8c0c-1d437f271eca&pf_rd_s=lpo-top-stripe-1&pf_rd_t=201&pf_rd_i=0440167558&pf_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DER&pf_rd_r=9VAJ9A4EHQ6WWRNAWKA3&pf_rd_r=9VAJ9A4EHQ6WWRNAWKA3&pf_rd_p=aeebc627-7ecf-4129-8c0c-1d437f271eca) (1978) by Walter Bowart. Another referred to in the book was the story of Candy Jones (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Candy_Jones) who cliamed to be a victim of the same programme – David Fincher was trying to get it made into a film at one point.
I haven't read
Operation Mind Control, but the Olson's family's 1975 meeting with Gerald Ford appears to have sold them on the new cover story, that his death was an acid freak-out. It was their meeting with Gottlieb in 1984 that raised suspicions and the autopsy in the nineties revealed the head trauma and lack of toxins.
Quote from: Frank on 08 September, 2019, 03:12:41 PM
How A Deadly Fall Revealed The CIA's Deadliest Secrets ... Wormwood covers this story from the point of view from Olson's family
The CIA made me do that.
Quote from: SmallBlueThing(Reborn) on 09 July, 2019, 10:39:36 PM
Not prog related, but...
"Open sesame". Open, says-a-me.
Never got that. Not until tonight when it was made obvious by an eleven year old actor in a school performance of 'Ali Baba and the Bongo Bandits'. I feel like an idiot.
SBT
Well I just learnt something today. Guess I am a little bit less of an idiot now. :)
As pointed out by Jim Craig of the Megaverse (https://www.facebook.com/groups/2000admegaverse/permalink/2238788902948968/?comment_id=2238876796273512) group, Ezquerra's unusual boot holster design found favour with at least one fan:
(https://i.imgur.com/Iox5d2q.png) (https://i.imgur.com/BA27WXY.png)
1976 1983
Art from Bank Raid, Wagner & Ezquerra's first, unpublished Dredd strip. Image taken from the 1981 Judge Dredd Annual, which printed the story with all the spicy dialogue (https://helpers.seattlereviewofbooks.com/webhook-uploads/1470637628514/Bank-Raid-02.gif) about Dredd being an executioner excised.
Quote from: Frank on 20 September, 2019, 10:02:12 PM
As pointed out by Jim Craig of the Megaverse (https://www.facebook.com/groups/2000admegaverse/permalink/2238788902948968/?comment_id=2238876796273512) group, Ezquerra's unusual boot holster design found favour with at least one fan:
(https://i.imgur.com/Iox5d2q.png) (https://i.imgur.com/BA27WXY.png)
1976 1983
Art from Bank Raid, Wagner & Ezquerra's first, unpublished Dredd strip. Image taken from the 1981 Judge Dredd Annual, which printed the story with all the spicy dialogue (https://helpers.seattlereviewofbooks.com/webhook-uploads/1470637628514/Bank-Raid-02.gif) about Dredd being an executioner excised.
Boot holsters are a bit silly when you're standing up, but make sense when you're on a bike. Or speeder bike.
It's only a week ago, but what went over my head (but was later mentioned in the prog thread) was that it was Dredd's helmet sitting on the [spoiler]dying Hershey's bed, not her own.[/spoiler]
Made the scene all the more poignant for me.
I only just learned that 'Hocus Pocus' is most likely a 17th C mockery of 'Hoc est corpus meum': the 'magic words' of transubstantiation in the latin Mass. Surely Uncle Pat has used that factoid somewhere...?
In other considerably more embarrassing news, my wife recently and rather sternly informed me that the phrase "hooking up" exclusively refers to the sex act. I was under the impression it had the more general meaning of meeting up, or casually getting together socially. So when I've (frequently) told folks I'll try to hook up with them later, I may have been terrifying them. Especially when I was trying to get out of going drinking with junior colleagues...
...your Honour.
Quote from: TordelBack on 29 September, 2019, 01:05:15 PM
I only just learned that 'Hocus Pocus' is most likely a 17th C mockery of 'Hoc est corpus meum': the 'magic words' of transubstantiation in the latin Mass. Surely Uncle Pat has used that factoid somewhere...?
In other considerably more embarrassing news, my wife recently and rather sternly informed me that the phrase "hooking up" exclusively refers to the sex act. I was under the impression it had the more general meaning of meeting up, or casually getting together socially. So when I've (frequently) told folks I'll try to hook up with them later, I may have been terrifying them. Especially when I was trying to get out of going drinking with junior colleagues...
...your Honour.
The first one: Wow! I honestly never knew that. I had aspirations to be a magician as a kid, and learned lots of good tricks, and really wish I hadn't let (in hindsight, jealous) friends put a stop to it.
The second one: Nahhh, I'm not having that. I've heard it used in purely social contexts loads of times. Either that or some of my best male friends want to shag me.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 29 September, 2019, 01:43:16 PM
Quote from: TordelBack on 29 September, 2019, 01:05:15 PM
I only just learned that 'Hocus Pocus' is most likely a 17th C mockery of 'Hoc est corpus meum': the 'magic words' of transubstantiation in the latin Mass. Surely Uncle Pat has used that factoid somewhere...?
In other considerably more embarrassing news, my wife recently and rather sternly informed me that the phrase "hooking up" exclusively refers to the sex act. I was under the impression it had the more general meaning of meeting up, or casually getting together socially. So when I've (frequently) told folks I'll try to hook up with them later, I may have been terrifying them. Especially when I was trying to get out of going drinking with junior colleagues...
...your Honour.
The first one: Wow! I honestly never knew that. I had aspirations to be a magician as a kid, and learned lots of good tricks, and really wish I hadn't let (in hindsight, jealous) friends put a stop to it.
The second one: Nahhh, I'm not having that. I've heard it used in purely social contexts loads of times. Either that or some of my best male friends want to shag me.
The US-centric English-speaking internet suggests it means either 'having sex' or anything along those lines
but having sex. One study found three cohorts, the second of which had a completly non-sexual social definition. Though the Merrion Webster page links to the definition of 'hooker', so you probably don't want to use the phrase around junior colleagues. Or senior colleagues, for that matter.
Wiktionary (https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/hook_up#English) has a more balanced definition (unless it's suggesting Madonna had sex with a French music producer).
I'm very glad that Jayzus, as my Dublin/Kildare contemporary, has heard it in the sense I always intended, but as Sheridan's research suggests, and my missus avers, the younger native-netizen crowd may be hearing something totally different. So as I often find myself in the role of managing a lot of youngsters (anyone under 30, obv) I'm going to be trying to avoid this one.
I doubt all those kids in 80s US sitcoms 'hooking-up' meant they were indulging in horizontal refreshment.
"Hooking up" was a term known in the year 2000 to almost every American child over the age of nine, but to only a relatively small percentage of their parents, who, even if they heard it, thought it was being used in the old sense of "meeting" someone. Among the children, hooking up was always a sexual experience, but the nature and extent of what they did could vary widely. Back in the twentieth century, American girls had used baseball terminology. "First base" referred to embracing and kissing; "second base" referred to groping and fondling and deep, or "French," kissing, commonly known as "heavy petting"; "third base" referred to fellatio, usually known in polite conversation by the ambiguous term "oral sex"; and "home plate" meant conception-mode intercourse, known familiarly as "going all the way." In the year 2000, in the era of hooking up, "first base" meant deep kissing ("tonsil hockey"), groping, and fondling; "second base" meant oral sex; "third base" meant going all the way; and "home plate" meant learning each other's names. – Tom Wolfe, Hooking Up: What Life Was Like at the Turn of the Second Millennium: An American's World
https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/books/first/w/wolfe-hooking.html
Re-reading this I'm minded of the B5 episode in which Ivanova has to have 'sex' with an alien ambassador to seal a treaty. Having conned him royally, the puzzled shrug she gives in response to his "well what happens now" question was superb.
"Old style, you roll over and go to bed. New style, you go out for pizza, I never see you again."
"Next time...my way."
Quote from: TordelBack on 29 September, 2019, 03:21:38 PM
I'm very glad that Jayzus, as my Dublin/Kildare contemporary, has heard it in the sense I always intended, but as Sheridan's research suggests, and my missus avers, the younger native-netizen crowd may be hearing something totally different. So as I often find myself in the role of managing a lot of youngsters (anyone under 30, obv) I'm going to be trying to avoid this one.
I think I'll join you in not using that one again. My students, who struggle at the best of times with phrasal verbs such as this one, will not be introduced to it.
They'll just have to jolly well work it out for themselves.
Phrases I'm uncomfortable using as a teacher but only discovered that by saying them (from nurture) and then backtracking quickly (from nature):
- Rule of thumb - despite it's probably innocent etymology there's a commonly held belief that it has something to do with legal wife beating. I use heuristic, instead, to avoid confusion. Although I have to define it. Without saying anything about thumbs.
- What did your last slave die of? - something my mum used to say to me, that I absolutely mustn't say here in the US, where slavery is rather a contentious issue, given that some people still think it was rather a good idea.
- Off the reservation - a phrase that means "out of control", or "outside the normal bounds" but is rooted rather directly in the forced relocation of indigenous Americans. My in-laws live "on the res": so reservations still exist, and to describe leaving said area as a negative, well...it's just not okay.
All this fuss over interpretation of words (and their etymology) reminds me of an old Dick Emery sketch ...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Gk_2TO8uwM (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Gk_2TO8uwM)
(https://i.imgur.com/Iu673vj.png)
Probe ... nudge nudge ... woof woof!
Quote from: TordelBack on 29 September, 2019, 03:21:38 PM
I'm very glad that Jayzus, as my Dublin/Kildare contemporary, has heard it in the sense I always intended, but as Sheridan's research suggests, and my missus avers, the younger native-netizen crowd may be hearing something totally different. So as I often find myself in the role of managing a lot of youngsters (anyone under 30, obv) I'm going to be trying to avoid this one.
To me (as an equally grizzled Scotchman), "hookup" to mean something more than "casually meet" is an exclusively American usage. However, I understand that in these modern media times such distinctions are less concrete.
Quote from: Funt Solo on 30 September, 2019, 01:00:53 AMRule of thumb - despite it's probably innocent etymology there's a commonly held belief that it has something to do with legal wife beating.
Wow. Your other examples make sense but I've never heard this one.
Rule of thumb has always meant 'rough estimate,' to me, like a carpenter measuring a distance with his thumb when precision isn't important. The wife beating angle does ring a distant bell, though - something about making a fist with the thumb on the inside so that if one punches too hard one breaks it. For serious fighting, thumb on the outside; for wife beating, thumb on the inside. Both condescending and beastly. Yeuch.
What did your last slave die of? Still pretty common in these parts, more employed in semi-jest in the face of an imposition or something. My usual response is, of course, "overwork."
Off the reservation I always took to mean "free," or sometimes "on the run." I always saw it as a positive phrase. I find it quite disheartening to see it also tied to "out of control" in the negative sense.
Quote from: Funt Solo on 30 September, 2019, 01:00:53 AM
Phrases I'm uncomfortable using as a teacher but only discovered that by saying them (from nurture) and then backtracking quickly (from nature):
- Rule of thumb - despite it's probably innocent etymology there's a commonly held belief that it has something to do with legal wife beating. I use heuristic, instead, to avoid confusion. Although I have to define it. Without saying anything about thumbs.
Well, a rule or ruler is something that people use to measure things. A thumb is something that people may use to measure things if a proper rule isn't available. Any other etymology is false (so no 'probably' about it - any guilty association has been made up by those wanting to lord over what other people can and can't say).
Sure, but etymology (always somewhat contested) is sadly less important than a term's current usage or understanding. Now I'm not going to stop using 'rule of thumb' anytime soon, but I have given up on 'niggardly'. It's just not worth the potential grief for all parties.
We have to pick our battles, i suppose*? I lost the war for 'decimation' some time ago but soldier on (with 90% of my initial enthusiasm), and i'm still holding the line on 'retard', despite being assured it's now much the same as 'moron' or 'idiot'. Not in my hearing!
*my concern about 'hooking up' isn't that I'm necessarily wrong, it's that some poor person working for me is going to think I'm hitting on them, which is really don't want, as opposed to offering a deliberately mealy-mouthed intention of seeing them drunk in some godawful loud and expensive dive later that evening. For the same reason I've stopped patting people on the back, or putting my hand on their shoulder. I know I mean to encourage or comfort, what actually matters is what THEY feel.
I guess we're experiencing the evolution of society. Some of it seems to be going okay, I guess, some of it doesn't seem to change much and some of it's a bit worrying. It was ever thus, I suppose, as we struggle to find ways to live together.
I refuse to stop using 'niggardly' altogether but I do tend to limit it, I think. It's weird, I'm all for an evolving and dynamic language (which is one of the things I love about English) but I find some aspects, like my own self-censorship, a bit dodgy. I hate losing words, but on the other hand I love learning new ones. I'd never want to lose the right to use the word that tarnishes the perfectly crumulent 'niggardly,' but assume the responsibility to use it wisely and in context - such as in the voiceover version of Blade Runner.
Quote from: TordelBack on 30 September, 2019, 02:19:55 PM
.... and i'm still holding the line on 'retard', despite being assured it's now much the same as 'moron' or 'idiot'. Not in my hearing!
Nope. It's in the same vein as c****, p*** or n*****. The same with 'mongrol' or 'spastic'. Derogatory terms that refer to individuals with a disability with the same level of contempt as their racist counterparts. I've landed myself in trouble recently for challenging someone on its use. No objection was raised over the use of the 'r' word but within the context of the debate the 'n' word was considered totally inappropriate (and yes I am conscious of the irony in my self-censorship here Personally I believe it is appropriate to name language that should not be used but apparently this is not the case).
Last time I checked though, current legislation doesn't quite see it the same way. Discrimination on disability grounds is fortunately now illegal.
All my language moderation as a high school teacher is based on a single theme: trying not to offend, and especially being careful that I don't unintentionally offend a minority student in my classroom. I need them to know that I'm on side. It's not about me and my freedom to say whatever I want: it's about providing a comfortable learning environment.
So, "rule of thumb" (because of a probably incorrect etymology - and I say probably because the actual etymology is guesswork) is out because of the connotations of domestic violence towards women. Women are a minority in the tech industry. I want to keep the focus on tech, not get suddenly drawn into a discussion about whether a phrase relates to domestic violence: so I avoid it.
"Niggardly" is out because it sounds so much like "nigger". It doesn't matter that the etymologies are separate: I'm just going to sound like a complete Scunthorpe if I use "niggardly", get questioned about it (which I'm sure I would) and then defend it on the grounds that I'm Mr. Logic. Remember Viz: he's an irritating bastard. Why would I push a point and risk offending my black students? They're another minority in tech.
Same for "off the reservation" (potentially offending Indians), "retard" (because it's used as an attack word and 38% of my students have special needs) and any mention of slaves (because this is america (https://youtu.be/VYOjWnS4cMY)).
I'm not a female, black, Indian student with special needs (or any one of those), but I'm on their side. Woke, mofo!
Quote from: Funt Solo on 30 September, 2019, 07:16:32 PMWoke, mofo!
As an insomniac who suffers from an Oedipal complex, I find those words offensive ;)
Quick, somebody plug the national grid into Orwell's grave...
I got caught out a few years back when describing how a Prince Albert is pierced, by commenting the needle goes in under your helmet and comes out your japs eye. My usual self censorship completely missed that one, but was thankfully highlighted by a member (excuse the pun) of my group instantaneously. It's crazy what vocabulary flies under your own radar sometimes!
The correct term non-racist term is 'urethral orifice'. But all the same, be wary of using it around people who are squeamish of needles and body modifications.
Somebody suggested the term "fancy-dan" might not be treating people respectfully the other day. I couldn't find anything about it's use other than overly ostentatious. Turns out his father-in-law uses it in a very derogatory manner.
I'm with Tordels on decimated but I too have given up.
I still correct people on imply/infer and electrocuted/electric shock.
But imma prolly give up on "It's a big ask!".
No, it's a "big thing to ask". The evil that emerges from sports journo desks.
Quote from: Tiplodocus on 02 October, 2019, 09:10:42 AM
I still correct people on ... electrocuted/electric shock.
I bet you're a joy to have around in an emergency :D
I thought the Rule of thumb was about the size of stick that could be used for a beating or servants... no thicker than your thumb.
Quote from: Proudhuff on 02 October, 2019, 10:31:35 AM
I thought the Rule of thumb was about the size of stick that could be used for a beating or servants... no thicker than your thumb.
"The 'rule of thumb' has been said to derive from the belief that English law allowed a man to beat his wife with a stick so long as it is was no thicker than his thumb.
In 1782, Judge Sir Francis Buller is reported as having made this legal ruling and in the following year James Gillray published a satirical cartoon attacking Buller and caricaturing him as 'Judge Thumb'. The cartoon shows a man beating a fleeing woman and Buller carrying two bundles of sticks. The caption reads "thumbsticks - for family correction: warranted lawful!""
https://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/rule-of-thumb.html
Quote from: shaolin_monkey on 02 October, 2019, 10:37:48 AM
Quote from: Proudhuff on 02 October, 2019, 10:31:35 AM
I thought the Rule of thumb was about the size of stick that could be used for a beating or servants... no thicker than your thumb.
"The 'rule of thumb' has been said to derive from the belief that English law allowed a man to beat his wife with a stick so long as it is was no thicker than his thumb.
In 1782, Judge Sir Francis Buller is reported as having made this legal ruling and in the following year James Gillray published a satirical cartoon attacking Buller and caricaturing him as 'Judge Thumb'. The cartoon shows a man beating a fleeing woman and Buller carrying two bundles of sticks. The caption reads "thumbsticks - for family correction: warranted lawful!""
https://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/rule-of-thumb.html
And then after that bit it continues:
Quotethe 'rule of thumb' has never been the law in England.
Even if people mistakenly supposed the law to exist, there's no reason to believe that anyone ever called it the 'rule of thumb'. Despite the phrase being in common use since the 17th century and appearing many thousands of times in print, there are no printed records that associate it with domestic violence until the 1970s, when the notion was castigated by feminists.
The oldest attribution refers to measuring something with a thumb instead of a ruler (as has been pointed out up-thread).
Quote"many profest Christians are like to foolish builders, who build by guess, and by rule of thumb, (as we use to speak) and not by Square and Rule."
Fair enough!
That'll teach me to thoroughly read my own sources. :D
Quote from: sheridan on 02 October, 2019, 11:04:34 AM
The oldest attribution refers to measuring something with a thumb instead of a ruler (as has been pointed out up-thread).
Quote"many profest Christians are like to foolish builders, who build by guess, and by rule of thumb, (as we use to speak) and not by Square and Rule."
oh, where's that quote from sheridan?
"The earliest known use of it in print appears in a sermon given by the English puritan James Durham and printed in Heaven Upon Earth, 1685." (https://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/rule-of-thumb.html)
Nasty vicious bitey-bitey things...
Klegg = Clegg (or, in Norwegian, Klegg).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse-fly
As a kid I heard the feckers called clegs in Ireland too- this would have been in Clare, I think. Also creabhars, in Meath. I just call them shitfuckinbastards.
Quote from: TordelBack on 10 October, 2019, 02:54:41 PM
Also creabhars, in Meath. I just call them shitfuckinbastards.
I never heard that one in Meath, and I was born and bred in the kip. The second one is more familiar, especially as a houseboat dweller (or aquaknacker, as the locals call us).
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 10 October, 2019, 03:57:29 PM
Quote from: TordelBack on 10 October, 2019, 02:54:41 PM
Also creabhars, in Meath. I just call them shitfuckinbastards.
I never heard that one in Meath, and I was born and bred in the kip. The second one is more familiar, especially as a houseboat dweller (or aquaknacker, as the locals call us).
I heard it used in Nobber - which is a place, nay a world, unto itself! - and also Ratoath. I'm only guessing at the spelling, cos I've a vague feeling it's just horsefly as gaeilge, but alas my Irish education ran more towards rote-learning prepared statements on dífhostaíocht and ríomhairí. It was pronounced "Crowhers".
They were called clegs in the Highlands, as well: it says from Old Norse kleggi on the interweb. Feckin' horseflies.
Quote from: Funt Solo on 11 October, 2019, 04:16:47 AM
They were called clegs in the Highlands, as well: it says from Old Norse kleggi on the interweb. Feckin' horseflies.
Yup, always heard them called clegs in Scotland.
Quote from: TordelBack on 10 October, 2019, 04:11:32 PM
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 10 October, 2019, 03:57:29 PM
Quote from: TordelBack on 10 October, 2019, 02:54:41 PM
Also creabhars, in Meath. I just call them shitfuckinbastards.
I never heard that one in Meath, and I was born and bred in the kip. The second one is more familiar, especially as a houseboat dweller (or aquaknacker, as the locals call us).
I heard it used in Nobber - which is a place, nay a world, unto itself! - and also Ratoath. I'm only guessing at the spelling, cos I've a vague feeling it's just horsefly as gaeilge, but alas my Irish education ran more towards rote-learning prepared statements on dífhostaíocht and ríomhairí. It was pronounced "Crowhers".
Nobber! They eat their young out there.
Quote from: TordelBack on 10 October, 2019, 04:11:32 PM
I heard it used in Nobber - which is a place, nay a world, unto itself!
I'd never heard of it, but see that Nobber is just South of the border. No opportunity for double entendres there. And I'm sure it's never been said that the Archdeacon of Nobber is a euphemism.
It gets better than that! IIRC 'Nobber' is an anglicisation of 'an obair' = 'the work', probably referring to the large Anglo-Norman motte-and-bailey earthwork at the edge of the village.
Now it so happens that the Dublinese for girlfriend is 'Mot' (from 'maith an cailín' = 'good girl'). So as a callow lad of 18 working away from home for the first time in that eponymous village, references to 'Nobber motte' regularly had me in stitches.
Quote from: TordelBack on 12 October, 2019, 12:29:55 PM
It gets better than that! IIRC 'Nobber' is an anglicisation of 'an obair' = 'the work', probably referring to the large Anglo-Norman motte-and-bailey earthwork at the edge of the village.
Now it so happens that the Dublinese for girlfriend is 'Mot' (from 'maith an cailín' = 'good girl'). So as a callow lad of 18 working away from home for the first time in that eponymous village, references to 'Nobber motte' regularly had me in stitches.
Thanks for the education - I did try to learn a bit of Gaelic a few years back, but fell at the pronounciation hurdle!
Mind the oranges, Marlon being a deeper reference than I thought...
(https://s.studiobinder.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/How-to-Use-Color-in-Film-Movie-Color-Palettes-Associative-Colors-The-Godfather.jpg)
Quote from: Funt Solo on 20 October, 2019, 05:27:14 PM
Mind the oranges, Marlon being a deeper reference than I thought...
(https://s.studiobinder.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/How-to-Use-Color-in-Film-Movie-Color-Palettes-Associative-Colors-The-Godfather.jpg)
Yep, I copped that lonnng after reading it; or possibly had it explained to me on this forum. I don't quite remember. Who would have thought it was a layered story.
I've only just noticed that the leader of the Parliament gang in Carroll's zarjaz Dredd story 'The Long Game' is called Andrel Markota and bears something of a resemblance to this person:
(https://www.dw.com/image/18498453_303.jpg)
(https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn%3AANd9GcRyuO8s7PH65H2NvtsUjJoZYX-r3kgBaiE9BGn87kgoPcKcZGWi)
Apologies, can't find a larger version of that page, but that's her down the bottom! Squint, damn you!
I only recently realised that 'phizog' is short for physiognomy. I know nothing, Jon Snow.
I realised at the zoo that eiderdown is actual downy feathers from a spieces of duck called the Eider.
Get the feck outta here. I don't think I even realised till now that the 'down' part referred to feathers, never mind the Eider part
Venus on the Frag Shell (Friday-era Venus Bluegenes story) and Venus of the Hard Sell (Song written by John Constantine when he was a punk singer):
Venus on the Half-Shell (sci fi novel inspired by Botticelli's Birth of Venus).
Friday, Top, Eightball ... and LUCKY.
LUCKY ... because he's a BAG! Slaps forehead and kicks self for 30 years spent knowing there was something there but never quite making the (obvious) connection
.....I still don't get it.
I've never heard of it either. According to wikipedia it's some sort of obscure US Navy reference? lucky bag (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucky_Bag)?
Did you not have lucky bags (https://www.google.com/search?q=%22lucky+bag%22+sweets&tbm=isch&ved=2ahUKEwjo8si7osXlAhVHdBoKHcAZDSwQ2-cCegQIABAA&oq=%22lucky+bag%22+sweets&gs_l=img.3..0.31218.32925..34627...0.0..0.182.983.0j6......0....1..gws-wiz-img.......0i30j0i8i30j0i24.BssZGzOE4i0&ei=di66XejfCMfoacCztOAC&bih=598&biw=1216&client=firefox-b-d) as a kid? They were basically proto-lootboxes with mainly sweets, but also stuff like crayons, stickers or small toys.
And, my personal favourite, plastic vampire teeth.
Even in 1988, it was a sort of Baby Boomer reference, but, looking at those reactions, it seems the concept might have lived longer in the imagination the further north you popped into existence.
Lucky bags belong to the same cinematic universe as jawbreakers, paying for a cinema ticket with jam jars, and Ready Steady Go - shit your parents wanged on about when they were drunk.
I was in a family-run chippie last week and they had jars of those mix-up sweets - shoelaces, rhubarb and custard, blackjacks - behind the counter. I realised the nostalgia they provoked in me was the second-hand, Brexity WE DIDN'T FIGHT TWO WORLD WARS, ersatz kind. They reminded me of my childhood in the sense that they reminded me of my mum and dad buying me a mix-up and telling me how much it reminded them of their lives as kids, which I enjoyed. But the rubbish of my own childhood was Wispas, Um Bongo and Space Raiders
Quote from: Dandontdare on 31 October, 2019, 12:49:18 AM
Did you not have lucky bags (https://www.google.com/search?q=%22lucky+bag%22+sweets&tbm=isch&ved=2ahUKEwjo8si7osXlAhVHdBoKHcAZDSwQ2-cCegQIABAA&oq=%22lucky+bag%22+sweets&gs_l=img.3..0.31218.32925..34627...0.0..0.182.983.0j6......0....1..gws-wiz-img.......0i30j0i8i30j0i24.BssZGzOE4i0&ei=di66XejfCMfoacCztOAC&bih=598&biw=1216&client=firefox-b-d) as a kid? They were basically proto-lootboxes with mainly sweets, but also stuff like crayons, stickers or small toys.
You've perfectly described
lucky dips (which came in bags but were called lucky dips where I came from) :P
Quote from: Frank on 31 October, 2019, 07:07:32 AM
Even in 1988, it was a sort of Baby Boomer reference, but, looking at those reactions, it seems the concept might have lived longer in the imagination the further north you popped into existence.
If I might skew the results of your graph a bit; I was born in the mid-80s (so grew up in the 90s) right on the South Coast - and Lucky Bags were very definitely 'a thing.'
Lucky bags a part of my '70s Dublin childhood too: campsite shops and seaside towns appeared to do a particularly strong line in them. The single comic generally included were weird US things like Tweetie Pie & Sylvester or Scrooge McDuck, which I never saw anywhere else, and whose sole value were the ads for 1000 Army Men, Sea Monkeys and the ubiquitous X-Ray Specs. Many a rainy day in a 10ft caravan in Carraroe or Kilmuckridge was spent in contemplation of the boundless possibilities implied.
I concur with Sharky on the vampire teeth, arsom. Also, crappy pencils the lead in which came pre-shattered.
Quote from: sheridan on 31 October, 2019, 08:15:53 AM
Quote from: Dandontdare on 31 October, 2019, 12:49:18 AM
Did you not have lucky bags (https://www.google.com/search?q=%22lucky+bag%22+sweets&tbm=isch&ved=2ahUKEwjo8si7osXlAhVHdBoKHcAZDSwQ2-cCegQIABAA&oq=%22lucky+bag%22+sweets&gs_l=img.3..0.31218.32925..34627...0.0..0.182.983.0j6......0....1..gws-wiz-img.......0i30j0i8i30j0i24.BssZGzOE4i0&ei=di66XejfCMfoacCztOAC&bih=598&biw=1216&client=firefox-b-d) as a kid? They were basically proto-lootboxes with mainly sweets, but also stuff like crayons, stickers or small toys.
You've perfectly described lucky dips (which came in bags but were called lucky dips where I came from) :P
Friday, Eightball, Top and Dip.
Quote from: TordelBack on 31 October, 2019, 08:35:42 AM
Lucky bags a part of my '70s Dublin childhood too: campsite shops and seaside towns appeared to do a particularly strong line in them. The single comic generally included were weird US things like Tweetie Pie & Sylvester or Scrooge McDuck, which I never saw anywhere else, and whose sole value were the ads for 1000 Army Men, Sea Monkeys and the ubiquitous X-Ray Specs.
We can only assume that the same entrepreneur who brought Lucky Bags to our emerald shores was also responsible for flooding every 70's / 80's newsagent with
Put On Stickers.
I'm pretty sure that "Lucky" earned his GI nickname due to a compulsive gambling habit.
That blue skinned cardsharp was spotted with a deck once or twice in the Progs.
Quote from: Link Prime on 31 October, 2019, 02:02:16 PM
I'm pretty sure that "Lucky" earned his GI nickname due to a compulsive gambling habit.
That blue skinned cardsharp was spotted with a deck once or twice in the Progs.
Yeah, but Top was also destined to become a hat and Eightball's aim would come in handy in his new career as a gun.
The names are still improbable and on the nose, just not
in the nose.
Quote from: Frank on 31 October, 2019, 02:18:43 PM
Yeah, but Top was also destined to become a hat and Eightball's aim would come in handy in his new career as a gun.
You missed the subtext regarding Missionary position predilection and clone-pattern baldness.
I'd forgotten all about Lucky Bags. Lucky Dips were something different: two connected bags of vaguely different flavours of sherbet, and an edible Swizzle Stick (tm) to dip in them.
Edit:. No they weren't. https://www.britishcornershop.co.uk/swizzels-matlow-double-dip (https://www.britishcornershop.co.uk/swizzels-matlow-double-dip)
In the dim and distant, at school, I once accidentally induced an erection in one of my best friends by describing a view of Miss Morris, our English teacher, through x-ray specs.
Damn those Lucky Bags - all full of destiny and shit.
Photos or it didn't happen.
The Legendary Fluffer.
Quote from: Frank on 30 October, 2019, 11:09:10 PM
Friday, Top, Eightball ... and LUCKY.
LUCKY ... because he's a BAG! Slaps forehead and kicks self for 30 years spent knowing there was something there but never quite making the (obvious) connection
I honestly don't enjoy pointing this out, but the writer who came up with his name had no idea he was going to become a bag in later stories, nor indeed that there
would be later stories. While I can't quite remember clearly, he may have been a Bagman proxy, though, and given Friday his bag, so maybe there's something in it.
Have to say, the gambling theory works better for me. He was definitely a card player.
That's definitely the actual reason. That, and (IIRC) he's Trooper 13 (Top is 1, Eightball is 8, Friday is 19 (?)). There really is no bag connection at all, other than that he has a good supply of gear (including cards) in his pack that Friday picks up. As you say, the bag thing is an ugly retcon.
OG Bagman bit the bullet in Prog 949 - guess you could say he was Lucky not to have starred in any further Fr1day adventures....amirite????
< Snorts Breaking Bad blue crystal meth from combat knife >
Growing up in Australia, a lucky dip was a blind pick of some very small and cheap toys (like said vampire teeth) usually stuck in a paper bag and stapled up or scrunched closed. They'd all be in an enclosed box with a slot so you could get your hand in. They cost 5 cents or 10 cents or 20 cents to have a go - "pocket money prices". You dipped your hand in, drew out a random bag and looked to see how lucky you were. You'd never get anything as big as a comic in them. They're pretty much the equivalent of all the "blind buy" type toys you get these days, e.g. Lego minifigures.
I'm sure I read the Americans had similar 100+ years ago with toys stuck in a bran tub, so you literally had to worm your way around feeling for a prize to grab.
Something with a comic and rubbish plastic toys sounds more like a show bag, which you buy at the show (county fair). These were originally (many years before I was born) sample bags that used to get given away for free, then were charged for, and now - like the proverbial Quality Street tin now being twice the money for half the weight and full of nasty toffees instead of chocolates - aren't great value for money.
Actually we got lots of US comics at the newsagent so that wasn't strange, but the show bags were the only place my brother & I came across UK Star Wars comics.
Oh, and just to bore you all a tiny bit further, we call cotton floss/cotton candy "fairy floss".
Quote from: TordelBack on 31 October, 2019, 08:35:42 AM
The single comic generally included were weird US things like Tweetie Pie & Sylvester or Scrooge McDuck, which I never saw anywhere else, and whose sole value were the ads for 1000 Army Men, Sea Monkeys and the ubiquitous X-Ray Specs. Many a rainy day in a 10ft caravan in Carraroe or Kilmuckridge was spent in contemplation of the boundless possibilities implied.
I'm with you there, TordelBack. How my brother & I imagined getting those Army Men, or the brilliant-looking sea monkeys, or x-ray glasses, or selling "GRIT" for points to redeem for prizes, or even trying a twinkie or a hostess fruit pie!
There's a great book called
Mail Order Mysteries (https://www.amazon.co.uk/Mail-Order-Mysteries-Delightful-Treasures-Vintage/dp/160887026X) that reproduces the ads then shows you what you would've really got. Imagining the toys was more fun that the world of disappointment that they would have brought with them. Those 100 army soldiers? They're as thin as a credit card! They look okay from the side but not face-on. The army locker they come in? Cardboard!
Quote from: Link Prime on 01 November, 2019, 11:55:33 AM
amirite????
AmaLite!
(Thinks: Better come up with a tenuous connection to the thread topic). I've only just realised that it's not actually Leonardo DiCaprio posting here under an alias. (It's actually some red-faced dude.) I can't be the only one to think that the pilot's uniform was a clue that he was flying under the radar, right? Right???
The Mad Genius Behind Sea Monkeys (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A0xXKCOSZuQ)
Dash's description of the Lucky Dip maps onto the Tenpenny Bag, a simple paper bag closed with a twist that contained a shopkeeper-chosen 'random' assortment of ha'penny sweets, in my experience heavily biased towards the Fruit Salad end of the spectrum. I still.see them around, but I don't know how much they cost in modern money.
Quote from: TordelBack on 01 November, 2019, 11:22:08 AM
That's definitely the actual reason. That, and (IIRC) he's Trooper 13
(Slaps forehead)
Staring me in the fecking face.
Quote from: JOE SOAP on 01 November, 2019, 12:45:35 PM
The Mad Genius Behind Sea Monkeys (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A0xXKCOSZuQ)
Hah, never knew that it was Joe Orlando who drew the sea monkeys! That AND Tales of the Black Freighter!
Quote from: Dash Decent on 01 November, 2019, 12:20:48 PM
it's not actually Leonardo DiCaprio posting here
I've never vaped. Or listened to MGMT on noise-cancelling headphones. Not during sex (https://jezebel.com/leonardo-dicaprios-alleged-sex-technique-takes-off-1835585158), anyway.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 01 November, 2019, 10:39:31 AM
... the writer who came up with his name had no idea he was going to become a bag in later stories ...
Dave Gibbons has been around a bit. I think he knew exactly what would happen after he left.
He'd got rid of the cheesey names (for a while), which is more significant change than most writers get to achieve with reboots of corporate characters.
Hmmm, I've certainly participated in the devil's mambo while wearing headphones, although usually with a splitter involved so both parties were on the same page; i've also incorporated some non-tobacco based inhalation back before I was a law-abiding citizen. I suppose adding the noise cancellation aspect might help with drowning out the kids banging on the door for food and/or credit for the Playstation store.
Quote from: Frank on 01 November, 2019, 12:57:30 PM
Quote from: Dash Decent on 01 November, 2019, 12:20:48 PM
it's not actually Leonardo DiCaprio posting here
I've never vaped. Or listened to MGMT on noise-cancelling headphones. Not during sex (https://jezebel.com/leonardo-dicaprios-alleged-sex-technique-takes-off-1835585158), anyway.
Those rumours of peformance issues ...
Quote from: TordelBack on 01 November, 2019, 11:22:08 AMhe's Trooper 13 (Top is 1, Eightball is 8, Friday is 19 (?)).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hRJFvtvTGEk (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hRJFvtvTGEk)
Quote from: M.I.K. on 02 November, 2019, 04:43:08 PM
Quote from: TordelBack on 01 November, 2019, 11:22:08 AMhe's Trooper 13 (Top is 1, Eightball is 8, Friday is 19 (?)).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hRJFvtvTGEk (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hRJFvtvTGEk)
Genius.
I like it.
Serious receding hairline for a young lad of 19, though.
Quote from: Frank on 30 October, 2019, 11:09:10 PM
Friday, Top, Eightball ... and LUCKY.
LUCKY ... because he's a BAG! Slaps forehead and kicks self for 30 years spent knowing there was something there but never quite making the (obvious) connection
i thought it was because of his number... ( 7 or 13?)
I watched Mad Max 2 when I was about 11. To me then, it was the most amazing thing I'd seen in my life and I rebuilt my Walter Mitty-esque fantasy persona to be exactly like Max. Fortunately I haven't turned out to be a drunken racist nutjob.*
Anyway, up until today, I was under the impression that what we were seeing in MM2 was the aftereffects of a nuclear war. Now I find out that the nuclear war happened between that and MM3, and the previous devastation came about purely because of oil shortages. I find it very hard to imagine that civilisation was still capable of hi-tech international warfare by then. Maybe outside of Australia.
I'm going to have to retcon my childhood imaginary self again.
*Well, not the racist part anyway.
Love MM - probably my favourite fictional anarchist.
Quote from: The Legendary Shark on 08 November, 2019, 06:13:08 PM
Love MM - probably my favourite fictional anarchist.
You do know what his job was before the Pox-Eclipse, don't you?
Yep, tool of the state. But after, he allies with whomever his conscience, and circumstance, allows and then moves on. He could've been a king at the end of Thunder Road but turns his back on it and goes his own way. I feckin' love that.
MM2 in particular seems (to me) to demonstrate anarchy rather well - the choice between a dog-eat-dog society or a cooperative one: he helps one "mini-state"above another but, in the end, chooses neither.
It's probably not what the film makers had in mind but it's an interpretation that works for me :)
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 08 November, 2019, 03:11:19 PM
To me then, it Now I find out that the nuclear war happened between that and MM3, and the previous devastation came about purely because of oil shortages.
I came to this realisation once while trying to work out the chronology of Planet Erf, but decided to ignore it, like so much in this life. On reflection, there is something quite cool about the slow disintegration of humanity from MM1 to MM3 rather than just 'bit of biker gang aggro then boom Poxeclipse'.
In the first episode of Dead Eyes, the officer who identifies Danny Redman has lost the use of his right eye. The type of nasty looking wound that a more vain man might seek to cover up. He's been busted down to Sergeant in this parallel, but I think we can assume it's deliberate.
(https://i.imgur.com/sks7X47.jpg)
Quote from: I, Cosh on 15 November, 2019, 01:51:13 PM
In the first episode of Dead Eyes, the officer who identifies Danny Redman has lost the use of his right eye. The type of nasty looking wound that a more vain man might seek to cover up. He's been busted down to Sergeant in this parallel, but I think we can assume it's deliberate.
(https://i.imgur.com/sks7X47.jpg)
Charming language, I'm sure.
As for me, I only recently twigged that Major Arcana's name comes from Tarot cards.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 15 November, 2019, 02:26:22 PM
As for me, I only recently twigged that Major Arcana's name comes from Tarot cards.
That happened to me some time in the last few days.
(Coincidence? Or Illuminati mind control through chemtrail manipulation of the collective psyche?)
Quote from: I, Cosh on 15 November, 2019, 01:51:13 PM
In the first episode of Dead Eyes, the officer who identifies Danny Redman has lost the use of his right eye. The type of nasty looking wound that a more vain man might seek to cover up. He's been busted down to Sergeant in this parallel, but I think we can assume it's deliberate.
https://i.imgur.com/sks7X47.jpg
This is such a great observation I move that all
Cosh's previous crimes be stricken from the record.
Quote from: Frank on 15 November, 2019, 04:55:33 PM
Quote from: I, Cosh on 15 November, 2019, 01:51:13 PM
In the first episode of Dead Eyes, the officer who identifies Danny Redman has lost the use of his right eye. The type of nasty looking wound that a more vain man might seek to cover up. He's been busted down to Sergeant in this parallel, but I think we can assume it's deliberate.
https://i.imgur.com/sks7X47.jpg
This is such a great observation I move that all Cosh's previous crimes be stricken from the record.
Seconded. Even the... incident.
Is there a thread for when posts on the "Things that went over your head..." topic go over your head?
Thank Grud it's not just me.
All I can think of is Kosh saying, "There is a hole in your mind."
"If you go to Who wants to look at women's underware? [sic] you will die. "
Cosh has identified the one-eyed vet in [spoiler]Indigo Prime stalking horse[/spoiler] Dead Eyes as [spoiler]Major Arcana[/spoiler] of that parish, or possibly this parallel's version thereof.
Proof if further were needed that John Smith is too good for us rabble.
Re-reading progs from the early 900's. Judge Dredd: The Exterminator Episode 6 (Prog 925). The couple Dredd corners at the top of the Empire State Building: Norm and Barbara Fogle. Norm Breyfogle?
Why the zombies in Defoe are called reeks or stenches...
Quote from: I, Cosh on 20 December, 2019, 01:13:28 PM
Why the zombies in Defoe are called reeks or stenches...
Because they reek? Or am I missing something?
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 20 December, 2019, 01:19:49 PM
Quote from: I, Cosh on 20 December, 2019, 01:13:28 PM
Why the zombies in Defoe are called reeks or stenches...
Because they reek? Or am I missing something?
Exactly. Dead bodies smell bad. I never made the connection before. Just thought it was a random nickname.
Ah yeah, I kind of guessed that. Same reason poor old Theon Greyjoy got the name.
EDIT: For my own part, I've just realised that a daystick (or day-stick) was the real name given to a police baton uses for daytime hours. I'd always assumed it was a jokey Wagner / Grant play on the word 'nightstick'.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baton_(law_enforcement (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baton_(law_enforcement))
I reckon you were right in the first place. Day-stick is pretty obscure, and I suspect an independently arrived-at pun.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 20 December, 2019, 04:30:05 PM
Ah yeah, I kind of guessed that. Same reason poor old Theon Greyjoy got the name.
EDIT: For my own part, I've just realised that a daystick (or day-stick) was the real name given to a police baton uses for daytime hours. I'd always assumed it was a jokey Wagner / Grant play on the word 'nightstick'.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baton_(law_enforcement (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baton_(law_enforcement))
Me too!..
... and posting this I saw Tordels comment.
For some reason I thought it had something to do with getting the daylights getting beaten out of you.
My mind goes to a dark place sometimes. Heh.
Nothing to do with 2000AD, but something hit me the other day.
When I was about ten or eleven, car bumper stickers were in fashion. My mum bought one that said "Be alert... your country needs lerts".
I remember there was one that said "Save a tree, eat a beaver". I thought it was hilarious. It's only now occurred to me what it meant.
Quote from: TordelBack on 20 December, 2019, 06:00:10 PM
I reckon you were right in the first place. Day-stick is pretty obscure, and I suspect an independently arrived-at pun.
It did cross my mind. You, and previous me, are probably right.
Quote from: Patrick on 20 December, 2019, 06:37:08 PM
I remember there was one that said "Save a tree, eat a beaver". I thought it was hilarious. It's only now occurred to me what it meant.
And me! I wonder how much innuendo passed me by in more innocent times. The double entendres in old progs stick out like a sore, er, thumb these days.
I've been watching Alan Partridge outtakes. He's pointed out something I'm ashamed to say had never occurred to me. 'The Brothers Gibb. The B.G.s. The Bee Gees!'
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 03 January, 2020, 01:46:37 AM
I've been watching Alan Partridge outtakes. He's pointed out something I'm ashamed to say had never occurred to me. 'The Brothers Gibb. The B.G.s. The Bee Gees!'
Oh my god!!! :o
Now it makes sense!!
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 03 January, 2020, 01:46:37 AM
I've been watching Alan Partridge outtakes. He's pointed out something I'm ashamed to say had never occurred to me. 'The Brothers Gibb. The B.G.s. The Bee Gees!'
I've always known that. Pity it's not actually true.
From wikipedia...
QuoteIn August 1958, the Gibb family, including older sister Lesley and infant brother Andy, emigrated to Redcliffe, just north-east of Brisbane in Queensland, Australia. The young brothers began performing to raise pocket money. They were introduced to Brisbane radio presenter jockey Bill Gates by speedway promoter and driver Bill Goode, who had hired the brothers to entertain the crowd at the Redcliffe Speedway in 1960. The crowd at the speedway would throw money onto the track for the boys, who generally performed during the interval of meetings (usually on the back of a truck that drove around the track) and, in a deal with Goode, any money they collected from the crowd they were allowed to keep. Gates renamed them the BGs (later changed to "Bee Gees") after his, Goode's and Barry Gibb's initials. The name was not specifically a reference to "Brothers Gibb", despite popular belief.
I've just realised Titus Defoe is called "the chairman" because his day job (I'm reading the London Hanged floppy) is a sedan chair carrier, not because he heads up some committee or meeting that I wasn't aware of.
Quote from: MumboJimbo on 03 January, 2020, 04:16:06 PM
I've just realised Titus Defoe is called "the chairman" because his day job (I'm reading the London Hanged floppy) is a sedan chair carrier, not because he heads up some committee or meeting that I wasn't aware of.
Yeah, there's a pub not so far from Parliament Square called The Two Chairmen (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two_Chairmen).
Quote from: M.I.K. on 03 January, 2020, 03:22:37 AM
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 03 January, 2020, 01:46:37 AM
I've been watching Alan Partridge outtakes. He's pointed out something I'm ashamed to say had never occurred to me. 'The Brothers Gibb. The B.G.s. The Bee Gees!'
I've always known that. Pity it's not actually true.
From wikipedia...
QuoteIn August 1958, the Gibb family, including older sister Lesley and infant brother Andy, emigrated to Redcliffe, just north-east of Brisbane in Queensland, Australia. The young brothers began performing to raise pocket money. They were introduced to Brisbane radio presenter jockey Bill Gates by speedway promoter and driver Bill Goode, who had hired the brothers to entertain the crowd at the Redcliffe Speedway in 1960. The crowd at the speedway would throw money onto the track for the boys, who generally performed during the interval of meetings (usually on the back of a truck that drove around the track) and, in a deal with Goode, any money they collected from the crowd they were allowed to keep. Gates renamed them the BGs (later changed to "Bee Gees") after his, Goode's and Barry Gibb's initials. The name was not specifically a reference to "Brothers Gibb", despite popular belief.
I see. You learn and unlearn something new every day.
Owned this phone for several years and used the alarm clock function almost every day - I have only this minute noticed that the little clock icon is actually a clock telling the real time, with a moving second hand and everything.
Quote from: Dandontdare on 24 January, 2020, 06:06:55 PM
Owned this phone for several years and used the alarm clock function almost every day - I have only this minute noticed that the little clock icon is actually a clock telling the real time, with a moving second hand and everything.
:o
Just checked my one - the same.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 24 January, 2020, 10:07:23 PM
Quote from: Dandontdare on 24 January, 2020, 06:06:55 PM
Owned this phone for several years and used the alarm clock function almost every day - I have only this minute noticed that the little clock icon is actually a clock telling the real time, with a moving second hand and everything.
:o
Just checked my one - the same.
Thank fuck it's not just me! :lol:
Wait... 'phones have alarm clocks now?
Quote from: The Legendary Shark on 25 January, 2020, 02:12:33 AM
Wait... 'phones have alarm clocks now?
They'll be putting space invaders, pong and cameras on 'em next, you mark my words!
And I still haven't got my flying car. What the Hell are all those boffins playing at?
Quote from: The Legendary Shark on 25 January, 2020, 02:19:43 AM
And I still haven't got my flying car. What the Hell are all those boffins playing at?
Oh so this. I'm so disappointed by this. It's as if sci-fi is made up, or worse deliberately lying to me, admit.
They're called 'helicopters'. Still not a good idea to have millions of them flitting about during rush hour, though.
Quote from: Dandontdare on 24 January, 2020, 06:06:55 PM
Owned this phone for several years and used the alarm clock function almost every day - I have only this minute noticed that the little clock icon is actually a clock telling the real time, with a moving second hand and everything.
I use a piece of paper with the time written on it.
A really obvious one - re-reading Helter Skelter in JD Case Files 34, the keypad code Dredd gives to Kenzie (p.56) is "...two. six. two. seven. seven" - which is of course the cover date of the very first prog (26/2/77).
Quote from: Dash Decent on 28 January, 2020, 06:07:41 AM
Quote from: Dandontdare on 24 January, 2020, 06:06:55 PM
Owned this phone for several years and used the alarm clock function almost every day - I have only this minute noticed that the little clock icon is actually a clock telling the real time, with a moving second hand and everything.
I use a piece of paper with the time written on it.
Is it eight o' clock?
Mine too. Amazed. However the fancy big digital clock app I downloaded doesn't do the same. It's sat permanently at 12:00. So I guess those developers also missed it.
Quote from: Dash Decent on 28 January, 2020, 06:07:41 AM
Quote from: Dandontdare on 24 January, 2020, 06:06:55 PM
Owned this phone for several years and used the alarm clock function almost every day - I have only this minute noticed that the little clock icon is actually a clock telling the real time, with a moving second hand and everything.
I use a piece of paper with the time written on it.
It shows the correct time. Twice a day...
Quote from: Dash Decent on 28 January, 2020, 06:09:33 AM
A really obvious one - re-reading Helter Skelter in JD Case Files 34, the keypad code Dredd gives to Kenzie (p.56) is "...two. six. two. seven. seven" - which is of course the cover date of the very first prog (26/2/77).
Nice! Not obvious to me at all. I must have been the only person who quite liked Helter Skelter, and I
really hated Garth's earlier Dredd run.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 28 January, 2020, 11:01:51 AM
Quote from: Dash Decent on 28 January, 2020, 06:09:33 AM
A really obvious one - re-reading Helter Skelter in JD Case Files 34, the keypad code Dredd gives to Kenzie (p.56) is "...two. six. two. seven. seven" - which is of course the cover date of the very first prog (26/2/77).
Nice! Not obvious to me at all. I must have been the only person who quite liked Helter Skelter, and I really hated Garth's earlier Dredd run.
Nice catch! No, I liked Helter Skelter too - probably helped by the fact that I was so new to the prog (less than a year)!. It was my first epic, if we're not counting mini-epic Sector House, so I suppose I didn't have any past glories to compare it to.
Quote from: Dark Jimbo on 28 January, 2020, 11:11:59 AM
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 28 January, 2020, 11:01:51 AM
Quote from: Dash Decent on 28 January, 2020, 06:09:33 AM
A really obvious one - re-reading Helter Skelter in JD Case Files 34, the keypad code Dredd gives to Kenzie (p.56) is "...two. six. two. seven. seven" - which is of course the cover date of the very first prog (26/2/77).
Nice! Not obvious to me at all. I must have been the only person who quite liked Helter Skelter, and I really hated Garth's earlier Dredd run.
Nice catch! No, I liked Helter Skelter too - probably helped by the fact that I was so new to the prog (less than a year)!. It was my first epic, if we're not counting mini-epic Sector House, so I suppose I didn't have any past glories to compare it to.
Sector House = The Pit?
Quote from: Dash Decent on 28 January, 2020, 06:09:33 AM
A really obvious one - re-reading Helter Skelter in JD Case Files 34, the keypad code Dredd gives to Kenzie (p.56) is "...two. six. two. seven. seven" - which is of course the cover date of the very first prog (26/2/77).
Curious! A prog in which he didn't exist!!
Quote from: shaolin_monkey on 28 January, 2020, 12:02:50 PM
Quote from: Dash Decent on 28 January, 2020, 06:09:33 AM
A really obvious one - re-reading Helter Skelter in JD Case Files 34, the keypad code Dredd gives to Kenzie (p.56) is "...two. six. two. seven. seven" - which is of course the cover date of the very first prog (26/2/77).
Curious! A prog in which he didn't exist!!
Apart from the 'next week' box at the end (you can just about see him through the hail of lawmaster bullets).
Quote from: Tiplodocus on 28 January, 2020, 08:26:37 AM
Quote from: Dash Decent on 28 January, 2020, 06:07:41 AM
I use a piece of paper with the time written on it.
Is it eight o' clock?
Yes it is, Bluebottle. Have this cardboard gorilla and a photograph of some liquorice.
It occurred to me embarrassingly recently that The Great Beard (the best English-language writer of comics) is a play on The Great Bard (the best English-language writer of other shit).
Also, yesterday I realised that 'Colosseum' must literally just mean 'very big thing' even though I don't speak Latin.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 14 February, 2020, 11:12:31 AM
Also, yesterday I realised that 'Colosseum' must literally just mean 'very big thing' even though I don't speak Latin.
A Latin bore writes:
The Colosseum is named after the giant statue that the Emperor Nero had made of himself - Nero's Colossus -that used to stand nearby. The Romans didn't call the place the Colosseum at all, though. To them, it was the Flavian Amphitheatre.
Quote from: GordonR on 14 February, 2020, 12:15:46 PM
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 14 February, 2020, 11:12:31 AM
Also, yesterday I realised that 'Colosseum' must literally just mean 'very big thing' even though I don't speak Latin.
A Latin bore writes:
The Colosseum is named after the giant statue that the Emperor Nero had made of himself - Nero's Colossus -that used to stand nearby. The Romans didn't call the place the Colosseum at all, though. To them, it was the Flavian Amphitheatre.
Aha! Not at all boring in my book; I love both etymology and ancient history but only have an amateur's knowledge of each.
Aquila clearly had a bit of research behind it!
Rogue Trooper has no nipples. I don't think I'd ever consciously realised that until now.
He wears blue pasties. (No Pete, not the kind from Greggs.)
While we're on the subject, I didn't realise for a long time that the two types of pasty were pronounced differently (the titty ones getting their name from being pasted on, I now see).
It wasn't just Rogue - most shirtless male characters in comics didn't have nipples in the old days. Look at Belardinelli's Sláine - not a nip in sight. (McMahon wasn't squeamish about slapping them on to Sláine's funbags though.)
I remember noticing and wondering about that as a tiny child in the 70s when I read American comics. The Hulk and the Sub-Mariner were always shirtless but didn't have nipples. Never understood it. I mean, they showed Tarzan film serials on children's TV without worrying that his nipples were visible.
Something was itching at the back of my head, so I did a bit of Googling and found it. It was mentioned by Dave Sim in his "Notes from the President (http://www.cerebusfangirl.com/artists/nftp/102.php)" column in Cerebus in 1987:
QuoteThat's why they call them editors, dept: Colleen Doran was showing a finished job to an editor. Spotting a specific panel, the chap in question gave it the old "Mm. We might have trouble with this one". Colleen asked why. "Naked breast." Colleen informed him that the breast in question was a male breast; not a female breast. "But." the fellow argued, "there's a nipple on it."
There was clearly an unwritten rule for decades that men were to be drawn without nipples. Haven't found any explanation for it.
Quote from: Greg M. on 15 February, 2020, 09:21:42 PM
Rogue Trooper has no nipples. I don't think I'd ever consciously realised that until now.
Didn't you notice the hairless chest also? Rogue obviously uses a straight razor to get such a sleek appearance, and all it takes is one wrong move of the hand...
Quote from: Patrick on 17 February, 2020, 12:40:03 PM
There was clearly an unwritten rule for decades that men were to be drawn without nipples. Haven't found any explanation for it.
Not just nipples, and not just comics - various anatomical parts have long been a no-no in various media around the world, with the most ridiculous example being Barbara Eden's navel being hidden on the television series I Dream of Jeannie. The costumers had to ensure that her belly button was never seen, as the network was allegedly squeamish about people complaining. The Japanese still routinely censor comics, films, and television series when certain things are seen - there are likely avid readers looking at their bits wondering why they haven't got a black line down there...
Meanwhile, in Britain, we had Modesty Blaise's "Nailer" move depicted in the Evening Standard. Go figure.
Did Rogue ever get a pair of nips though? Does he have them in, say, the Gordon Rennie era, long past the cruel nip-ban era? Or is it a GI design feature? I don't think he's got 'em in Cinnabar, which is otherwise a cesspool of glorious Smithian perversity.
Hmmm. Well, I've had a look and it seems that while he didn't have any in Cinnabar (Steve Dillon, after all, had been drawing Rogue since the days few men in comics had any), Staz Johnson gave him a pair in the later stuff by Gordon, as did Dylan Teague.
I'm amazed everyone is still asking this question about Rogue and no one has turned it round to Venus Bluegenes.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 18 February, 2020, 03:14:34 AM
Hmmm. Well, I've had a look and it seems that while he didn't have any in Cinnabar (Steve Dillon, after all, had been drawing Rogue since the days few men in comics had any), Staz Johnson gave him a pair in the later stuff by Gordon, as did Dylan Teague.
Well, there we are - cheers for your diligence. I did wonder if it might have been a weird GI thing. I mean, if you designed a perfect killing machine, would you bother giving him a pair?
Quote from: Dash Decent on 18 February, 2020, 10:45:30 AM
I'm amazed everyone is still asking this question about Rogue and no one has turned it round to Venus Bluegenes.
Venus's designers were men. She's got.
Quote from: Dash Decent on 18 February, 2020, 10:45:30 AM
I'm amazed everyone is still asking this question about Rogue and no one has turned it round to Venus Bluegenes.
I certainly had a good long think about it when she appeared in the second episode of
Cinnabar.
(Also, one of her clone sisters has them out in that Alan Craddock-coloured special, if you count the Friday end of things. I was a teenager. I remember.)
Quote from: Greg M. on 18 February, 2020, 07:57:39 PM
I did wonder if it might have been a weird GI thing. I mean, if you designed a perfect killing machine, would you bother giving him a pair?
He's got to hang those two grenades on something.
Quote from: Greg M. on 18 February, 2020, 07:57:39 PM
Venus's designers were men. She's got.
Sounds believable.
From memory one of the Rogue Trooper novels mentions that after the GIs are smoke, the dolls get assigned to, er, comfort duty for the top brass.
https://forums.2000ad.com/index.php?topic=45928.msg1008997#msg1008997 (https://forums.2000ad.com/index.php?topic=45928.msg1008997#msg1008997)
Just been browsing Funt's excellent thread about 2000ad logos, and read the linked Aaln-2 article. And fecking heck, if it isn't the first time I've realised that the classic 'fan' logo we have today was designed to look like Dredd's respirator.
The older I get, the more I realise I've always been a thicko.
Wait - Etrigan is an anagram of "granite"?
Quote from: Trout on 02 May, 2020, 11:58:08 PM
Wait - Etrigan is an anagram of "granite"?
Tangier, you tearing ingrate!
Ooh, well played, sir.
Quote from: I, Cosh on 03 May, 2020, 12:16:53 PM
Quote from: Trout on 02 May, 2020, 11:58:08 PM
Wait - Etrigan is an anagram of "granite"?
Tangier, you tearing ingrate!
Ha! Missed this first time - well played sir, well played.
Ace Trucking Co was the name of a prominent US 1970s improv comedy group.
Courtesy of the WTF podcast interview of Fred Willard
For years I have been wondering what in Absalom 'the Mills' were as we lead up to the final story and why they were named thus, rather fascinated by it all (a truly great story all round)
Ironically I have been storing some of these progs next to the mighty tome of William Blake poetry...
"And was Jerusalem builded here, Among these dark Satanic Mills?" - Jerusalem
Even singing this at the Cricket before the start of play.
The penny has finally dropped... Apologies to Gordon Rennie and of course Mr Blake... :)
Noam Chimpsky - Noam Chomsky.
Actually I had never heard of him and was just listening to a song by one of my favourite bands and they use his name in the lyrics.
There was a famous chimpanzee subject of a study called Noam or Nim Chimpsky. The documentary film Project Nim covers his life. It makes very heavy viewing, as I remember.
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1814836/
The latter also named after the former, of course.
Both Noam and Nim feature in the film of Manufacturing Consent.
https://youtu.be/EuwmWnphqII?t=461
I'm in the middle of Eamonn's latest podcast about Nemesis, featuring Sheridan, and something has just struck me: The Time Wastes. Blindingly obvious to most of you, no doubt, but I've just this minute noticed the Millsian double meaning.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 21 June, 2020, 05:53:35 PM
I'm in the middle of Eamonn's latest podcast about Nemesis, featuring Sheridan, and something has just struck me: The Time Wastes. Blindingly obvious to most of you, no doubt, but I've just this minute noticed the Millsian double meaning.
Good catch!
Not at all "a thing that went over my head", more of a "that's interesting, I'd not noticed that before". But we don't have a thread for that.
'Sunburn'- a Future Shock by Alan Moore and Jesus Rwdondo, from prog 282 (September 1982) has a protagonist named Rorschach- four years before Watchmen.
Are there perhaps any other preferred names used by famous and currently highly-regarded 2000AD writers, in much the same way that tv comedy writer and creator of the daleks Terry Nation couldnt write a shopping list without putting "Tarrant" in there somewhere?
SBT
Quote from: SmallBlueThing(Reborn) on 24 June, 2020, 02:56:12 PM
Not at all "a thing that went over my head", more of a "that's interesting, I'd not noticed that before". But we don't have a thread for that.
'Sunburn'- a Future Shock by Alan Moore and Jesus Rwdondo, from prog 282 (September 1982) has a protagonist named Rorschach- four years before Watchmen.
Are there perhaps any other preferred names used by famous and currently highly-regarded 2000AD writers, in much the same way that tv comedy writer and creator of the daleks Terry Nation couldnt write a shopping list without putting "Tarrant" in there somewhere?
SBT
There was a Judge Custer in an old Garth Ennis Dredd, possibly that grudawful one about the Irish gang who fled to MC1. On a different note, he also had a Judge Gaylord, reflecting the younger Garth's methinks-he-doth-protest-too-much obsession with jokes about homosexuality.
John Smith reuses names too, there's been a couple of Laarsens and even a different kind of Leatherjack in Devlin Waugh. There were two different Lokkk'hs in two different stories.
There was a Lisa Marsh in an old Dave Stone Dredd text story before she became a regular character in Armitage : definitely a different person though; the first one was black.
Dandontdare's Bolland Dredd t-shirt went over his head, but not much further.
Guffaw!
Airplanes go over my head regularly, but it's just been pointed out to me that in the movie Airplane!, there is a constant drone of a propeller engine in the background, despite being set on a jet. I haven't watched the whole movie since learning this half an hour ago, but both the clips I have watched on youtube this morning have it.
Yes I am serious and don't call me Shirley.
Quote from: TordelBack on 24 June, 2020, 05:51:34 PM
Dandontdare's Bolland Dredd t-shirt went over his head, but not much further.
Oi!
Just dredged up a Johnnystress quote from an old thread:
Quotegaze into the face of fear
gaze into the fist of dredd (dread)
wordplay- maybe pun isn't correct
All this time and only now I see the double meaning in the prog's most famous quote.
Just realised that Tharg's sister Marg should be pronounced 'Marge'. Otherwise it's not funny.
?!? sorry, I don't understand.
Tharg ends in the hard 'G' as does Marg-- why is Marge, with the different end sound funny?
I have just discovered that one of my favourite bands, the Manic Street Preachers, used the quote "be pure, be vigilant, behave" in one of their songs (PCP off the The Holy Bible).
My excuse is it's really hard to make out their lyrics.
Oh and disappeared guitarist and lyricist Richey Edwards was a squaxx.
Quote from: Magnetica on 11 August, 2020, 09:07:47 PM
I have just discovered that one of my favourite bands, the Manic Street Preachers, used the quote "be pure, be vigilant, behave" in one of their songs (PCP off the The Holy Bible).
It's also the title of their concert film/DVD isn't it?
I thought Richie Edwards had a picture in the Prog and a quick bit of research later...
http://jetsimian.blogspot.com/2014/07/comic-strip-reachers.html (http://jetsimian.blogspot.com/2014/07/comic-strip-reachers.html)
Quote from: Colin YNWA on 11 August, 2020, 09:34:22 PM
I thought Richie Edwards had a picture in the Prog and a quick bit of research later...
http://jetsimian.blogspot.com/2014/07/comic-strip-reachers.html (http://jetsimian.blogspot.com/2014/07/comic-strip-reachers.html)
Wow! I remember that picture; had no idea it was Richey Edwards.
I remember an interview with them in some pop magazine (Smash Hits possibly) where they had a rant about the Booker Prize, decrying how it ignores great writers like Pat Mills and John Wagner. They were 4Rale about their progs; and must have been delighted to see Domino wearing their t-shirt (not sure if Richey would have enjoyed his Dredd appearance as much though).
I liked them a lot back then; but found them all a bit dull in their later, sports-casual-as-opposed-to-arty-punk personas. I remember all inevitable student rumours too ('Yeah, my mate knows Richey. He's fine, he just wanted to escape from it all for a while.')
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 12 August, 2020, 01:08:31 PM
I liked them a lot back then; but found them all a bit dull in their later, sports-casual-as-opposed-to-arty-punk personas. I remember all inevitable student rumours too ('Yeah, my mate knows Richey. He's fine, he just wanted to escape from it all for a while.')
Everything after The Holy Bible gets increasingly boring. The early Manics would have despised their later work.
I'm not even the biggest fan of Holy Bible - should revisit Generation Terrorists that was always the one I think worked.
I remember another interview where they said that Oasis's Wonderwall changed everything for them. They realised their limitations - they could never write a song as pure as that so all they could do was plod on.
Personally, I never liked Oasis much.
Quote from: Colin YNWA on 12 August, 2020, 04:58:35 PM
I'm not even the biggest fan of Holy Bible - should revisit Generation Terrorists that was always the one I think worked.
One of my enduring memories is the video of Motorcycle Emptiness on MTV while on an off-base to Hannover to send one of the Army regiments out to Canada for Medman. A weird montage of life in Japan but it really took with us all.
Tracked down the CD next time we were in town. Still listen to it every once in a while and would agree that there is a life to it that other Manic albums lack. "Natwest, Barclays, Midlands, Lloyds ..." is a really interesting track from a historical / political perspective. Listening to it now that Midlands has gone as a high street name ...
Not long after, I tracked down the cover version they did of "Suicide Is Painless." An outstanding piece to my mind. As a massive fan of MASH it was the closest I could come at the time to reliving those days.
... and now that we are completely off topic. :o
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 12 August, 2020, 11:33:35 PM
I remember another interview where they said that Oasis's Wonderwall changed everything for them. They realised their limitations - they could never write a song as pure as that so all they could do was plod on.
Personally, I never liked Oasis much.
I haven't seen that interview, but that sounds like them taking the mick.
They are a completely different sort of band to Oasis IMO.
Quote from: Magnetica on 13 August, 2020, 07:37:56 AM
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 12 August, 2020, 11:33:35 PM
I remember another interview where they said that Oasis's Wonderwall changed everything for them. They realised their limitations - they could never write a song as pure as that so all they could do was plod on.
Personally, I never liked Oasis much.
I haven't seen that interview, but that sounds like them taking the mick.
They are a completely different sort of band to Oasis IMO.
Agreed, one is a Beatles tribute act while the other has social and political commentary in their works.
#insert joke here.
Quote from: Tjm86 on 13 August, 2020, 07:25:12 AM
Not long after, I tracked down the cover version they did of "Suicide Is Painless." An outstanding piece to my mind. As a massive fan of MASH it was the closest I could come at the time to reliving those days.
... and now that we are completely off topic. :o
That was part of a charity album wasn't it? Also had somebody cover a Human League song. Can't remember which charity it was though.
I have recently come across a video for a different charity album - Tom Jones and New Model Army covering Gimme Shelter (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CWK1F1b5uRg) for (surprise) Shelter.
Quote from: sheridan on 13 August, 2020, 10:02:35 AM
Quote from: Magnetica on 13 August, 2020, 07:37:56 AM
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 12 August, 2020, 11:33:35 PM
I remember another interview where they said that Oasis's Wonderwall changed everything for them. They realised their limitations - they could never write a song as pure as that so all they could do was plod on.
Personally, I never liked Oasis much.
I haven't seen that interview, but that sounds like them taking the mick.
They are a completely different sort of band to Oasis IMO.
Agreed, one is a Beatles tribute act while the other has social and political commentary in their works.
#insert joke here.
And one was arguably the biggest band in the UK between 1996 and 1998/9 and the other is Oasis. 😉
All you Oasis knockers are missing out on a truely great act. The main problem with them is nothing to do with the music, it is because i) They were HUGE and ii) Liam was always a bit of an idiot.
If they had sold barely any records and had faded into obscurity they would be considered as cool as Big Star or the Velvet Underground.
I'm only joshing, I actually like Oasis (upto Be Here Now anyway), but I love the Manic Street Preachers.
Quote from: Magnetica on 13 August, 2020, 07:37:56 AM
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 12 August, 2020, 11:33:35 PM
I remember another interview where they said that Oasis's Wonderwall changed everything for them. They realised their limitations - they could never write a song as pure as that so all they could do was plod on.
Personally, I never liked Oasis much.
I haven't seen that interview, but that sounds like them taking the mick.
They are a completely different sort of band to Oasis IMO.
They definitely weren't taking the mick... they were very much (sorry, I'm going to do it again) 4RALE. I think they were either supporting Oasis or playing the same festival when they made this realisation, apparently. Personally I'd take
Motorcycle Emptiness over
Wonderwall any day.
With all the madness going on in Belarus, I've just learned that Kolya is a short form of Nikolai (which is the name of Lukashenko's son). All that time reading Dante I thought it was just some kind of generic pet name like 'darling'.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 17 August, 2020, 07:26:24 PM
All that time reading Dante I thought it was just some kind of generic pet name like 'darling'.
Ditto, that's gas.
Also, it isn't too many years since I realised Jacob got the name Sardini because he stuffs things.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 09 September, 2020, 02:44:27 PM
Also, it isn't too many years since I realised Jacob got the name Sardini because he stuffs things.
I don't remember when I realised the surname alluded to "packed like sardines" but it was nowhere near the original publication...
Quote from: sheridan on 09 September, 2020, 04:29:01 PM
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 09 September, 2020, 02:44:27 PM
Also, it isn't too many years since I realised Jacob got the name Sardini because he stuffs things.
I don't remember when I realised the surname alluded to "packed like sardines" but it was nowhere near the original publication...
Think it was only on a second read of the Olympics one - every other nation's taxidermy champion was called something like 'Korperstopfer'.
Look and learn, 90s Garth Ennis. Judges Traktorfaktori and Brylkreem indeed.
Reviewing contributions from Art Droid extraordinaire John Burns I was musing that 'The Art of Geomancy' was his best earliest Dredd work.
Never occurred to me before what the title actually meant; getting a 'stone' to talk.
Forgive this damn fool.
Quote from: Link Prime on 19 November, 2020, 10:17:50 AM
Reviewing contributions from Art Droid extraordinaire John Burns I was musing that 'The Art of Geomancy' was his best earliest Dredd work.
Never occurred to me before what the title actually meant; getting a 'stone' to talk.
Forgive this damn fool.
Thinking about it - it's likely Alan Grant mentions this in the actual script, but I haven't read the damn thing in 29 years.
Enterprise - One to beam up!
Non prog related, but I thought today I'd found a new Irvine Welsh novel called DMT, till I realised it's the French version of Dead Man's Trousers. And given that DMT is the drug of choice in the book, I suddenly realise it's an abbreviation of the title.
This totally evaded the knowledge circuits of pre-teen me..
(http://bp1.blogger.com/_f5CeYHsQgt8/SEQyHHGHhZI/AAAAAAAAAj0/SH6ZEX23oDk/s1600/506.jpg)
As described on the favourite artists threads, I did not know that 20th Century Simon Coleby and 21st Century Simon Coleby are the same art droid. Ok it seems obvious now, but I had no inkling.
This is peculiar because, at the same time I was operating under the assumption that Simon Harrison and Mark Harrison are a single entity. This does not seem obvious at all when I look at it and I'm wondering what happened to me to think this. Did anyone else get suckered by this cunning Thargian ruse of having two different droids with two different names pretend to be the same person (in my head, at least)?
Yes, me. And yes, Simon and Mark Harrison being one and the same.
I think it's because both these guys do lovely art that doesnt look like anything else- and Mark's *might have been* an organic development of Simon's, given the years between.
SBT
Quote from: sixmo on 20 January, 2021, 07:02:47 PM
As described on the favourite artists threads, I did not know that 20th Century Simon Coleby and 21st Century Simon Coleby are the same art droid. Ok it seems obvious now, but I had no inkling.
This is peculiar because, at the same time I was operating under the assumption that Simon Harrison and Mark Harrison are a single entity. This does not seem obvious at all when I look at it and I'm wondering what happened to me to think this. Did anyone else get suckered by this cunning Thargian ruse of having two different droids with two different names pretend to be the same person (in my head, at least)?
Well... Not exactly that, but something similar. Shaun Thomas, who drew
Apocalypse Soon and
Young Middenface in the Megazine (and personally I thought he was brilliant) turned out to be an old artist with a different style and a different name.
Trouble is, I can't remember who his original self was, but I'm leaning towards Tom Carney. If it was Tom Carney, after his straggly bearded, Stallone-helmeted Dredd, well, faking his death and assuming a new identity was pretty much the only option left to him.
This feels like something which is going over my head and it's driving me a little bonkers.
The strip NAKKA of the S.T.A.R.S. in the prog currently - every time I read the title it screams at me that it's a pun on something, but I can never grasp it. Can anyone put me out of my misery?
Isnt it straight from Private Eye's 'Inspector Knacker of the Yard', as a generic referral to the police?
SBT
I don't read Private Eye, but that sounds like the ticket. Thanks SBT.
Speaking of art droids operating under two similar name, I present Steve Bisley and Simon Bisley ;)
Quote from: sheridan on 22 March, 2021, 12:12:09 PM
Speaking of art droids operating under two similar name, I present Steve Bisley and Simon Bisley ;)
I do remember a Steve Bisley glitch - the first episode of the Black Hole possibly? Alan Grant was also got a writing credit for an episode of Zenith too.
Just been re-reading Halo Jones. Halo: 'So what do you have stencilled on your stomach?' Rodice: 'This way up.' It's a very early prog sex joke, isn't it? Or have I got a filthy mind?
Filthy mind. Definitely.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 22 March, 2021, 12:21:44 PM
Quote from: sheridan on 22 March, 2021, 12:12:09 PM
Speaking of art droids operating under two similar name, I present Steve Bisley and Simon Bisley ;)
I do remember a Steve Bisley glitch - the first episode of the Black Hole possibly? Alan Grant was also got a writing credit for an episode of Zenith too.
Just been re-reading Halo Jones. Halo: 'So what do you have stencilled on your stomach?' Rodice: 'This way up.' It's a very early prog sex joke, isn't it? Or have I got a filthy mind?
It's not something that ever occurred to me. You could try asking Mr Moore what his intention was - I'm sure he'd be only too happy to field questions about Halo after all these years :D
Quote from: sheridan on 22 March, 2021, 12:56:16 PM
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 22 March, 2021, 12:21:44 PM
Quote from: sheridan on 22 March, 2021, 12:12:09 PM
Speaking of art droids operating under two similar name, I present Steve Bisley and Simon Bisley ;)
I do remember a Steve Bisley glitch - the first episode of the Black Hole possibly? Alan Grant was also got a writing credit for an episode of Zenith too.
Just been re-reading Halo Jones. Halo: 'So what do you have stencilled on your stomach?' Rodice: 'This way up.' It's a very early prog sex joke, isn't it? Or have I got a filthy mind?
It's not something that ever occurred to me. You could try asking Mr Moore what his intention was - I'm sure he'd be only too happy to field questions about Halo after all these years :D
I'll compliment him on the LXG movie first.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 22 March, 2021, 01:53:56 PM
I'll compliment him on the LXG movie first.
Is that before or after you ask him what he thinks of the latest printing of Watchmen? ::)
"When's Big Numbers 3 coming out?"
I'll definitely mention how much I liked his Watchmen sequels.
"Alan! Alan! Could you sign this? I'll just pass it under the cubicle door!"
Quote from: sheridan on 22 March, 2021, 08:00:07 PM
"Alan! Alan! Could you sign this? I'll just pass it under the cubicle door!"
I can't help picturing Life Sentence's last scene in Halo Jones... :o
Had a bit of lightbulb moment when I realised why Sesame Street's Count Von Count is consumed with a desire to be counting things
Because you see, as well as being a humorous pun on the word "count", in vampiric mythology, a sure-fire way to escape a necking is to throw a handful of seeds on the ground, whereupon Brer Vampire will be unable to resist abandoning his pursuit in order to count the fallen produce, thereby facilitating your escape.
AH AH AHHH!
Quote from: sheridan on 22 March, 2021, 08:00:07 PM
"Alan! Alan! Could you sign this? I'll just pass it under the cubicle door!"
He was actually pretty polite about it.
Just listening to the radio tonight and a certain story based on Romeo and Juliet and another, praised widely as one of the best Batman tales ever told and renderd came to mind.
So firstly the Band was Killing Joke and we all know and love the Graphic Novel which is a glorious episode in comic history. The song?
A Love like Blood which was is a lesser known but pretty good story by Frazer Irvine and John Smith, both of who we miss very much in the prog
https://2000ad.com/news/the-2000-ad-abc-a-love-like-blood/
The lightbulb moment came after hearing this great song many times, putting both the comix references together, which no doubt many of you have done I'm sure by now...
:)
Love Like Blood must be the most played Killing Joke song at goth clubs in all the years I've frequented them, so for me I immeditely connected the name of the 2000AD series with the song. As a matter of interest, there's also a German darkwave band named after the song.
Quote from: SmallBlueThing(Reborn) on 22 March, 2021, 08:28:45 AM
Isnt it straight from Private Eye's 'Inspector Knacker of the Yard', as a generic referral to the police?
SBT
Given the Antipodean connection with the creators I wouldn't be surprised if the title isn't also play on Patricia Wrightson's wonderful 1973 children's novel The Nargun & The Stars (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Nargun_and_the_Stars) which was made into this television miniseries (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PCHGgzV35lE) in 1979.
Quote from: Jacqusie on 20 April, 2021, 06:38:49 PM
A Love like Blood which was is a lesser known but pretty good story by Frazer Irvine and John Smith, both of who we miss very much in the prog
Named for the German goth band who took their name from the song, not the Killing Joke song itself, according to Smiffy himself in a discussion about a million years on the old 2000AD Usenet group.
Quote from: Funt Solo on 23 March, 2021, 11:11:37 PM
Quote from: sheridan on 22 March, 2021, 08:00:07 PM
"Alan! Alan! Could you sign this? I'll just pass it under the cubicle door!"
He was actually pretty polite about it.
Then sacrificing you to his snake god.
Quote from: milstar on 21 April, 2021, 01:06:25 PM
Quote from: Funt Solo on 23 March, 2021, 11:11:37 PM
Quote from: sheridan on 22 March, 2021, 08:00:07 PM
"Alan! Alan! Could you sign this? I'll just pass it under the cubicle door!"
He was actually pretty polite about it.
Then sacrificing you to his snake god.
...which I'm picturing as being very similar to Emu knocking a celebrity off a chair, while Rod Hull feigns shock and pretends to reprimand him.
Something that kind of still goes over my head: Edie and Simon's amazing Dante podcast has just reminded me of something I was never sure about in Dante.
So, is everyone in the story speaking Russian, which has been translated to English as a concession to the reader? Including in the UK and Amerika? Or does the whole world speak English in 2666 onward? I would have said the latter, but shop signs and the like are often in Russian. But sometimes they're in English.
Or am I overthinking this? I still remember Sláine chatting away without a bother with Egyptian invaders as soon as they arrived in Ireland.
I reckon they're speaking Russian in Russia (thus the signs), but English where the signs are in English - and then either Dante speaks a couple of languages or his Crest is auto-translating.
For Slaine - we could use the "Night at the Museum" excuse and just have the Egyptians as highly-educated sorts who went to Cambridge.
Now - I've just read the first Chimpsky story (prog 2131), and it's clear that Noam sees and hears the world a little differently than your average Mega-City primate. The signs and Dredd's speech are translated to what he experiences. But - when Chimpsky speaks, it's in long-sentence English - but what is Dredd hearing? I'm assuming that for Dredd it's just "ooh ooh ooh". Just not sure.
I imagine when Dredd is talking to anyone all he hears is a constant stream of either "I'm a perp I'm a perp I'm a perp" or "I'm not a perp yet but I will be I'm not a perp yet but I will be I'm not a perp yet but I will be".
Quote from: The Corinthian on 01 May, 2021, 06:02:09 PM
I imagine when Dredd is talking to anyone all he hears is a constant stream of either "I'm a perp I'm a perp I'm a perp" or "I'm not a perp yet but I will be I'm not a perp yet but I will be I'm not a perp yet but I will be".
(https://i.imgur.com/xNOG29P.jpg)
Everyone's speaking Plotish.
Quote from: Funt Solo on 01 May, 2021, 03:11:42 PM
I reckon they're speaking Russian in Russia (thus the signs), but English where the signs are in English - and then either Dante speaks a couple of languages or his Crest is auto-translating.
Yeah, I'll take it.
That's why there's that frame, where he's in hospital after losing the crest, and he's leafing through a Ukranian for Dummies phrasebook.
And like a total eejit, I wasn't quite sure if you were joking or not and went looking for that bit in the story.
I know how he feels, though - it's not easy learning a new language at that age...
(https://i.imgur.com/Oxh7oxL.png)
:lol: :lol:
Diavolo, but that Simon can draw.
The 'J Edgar Hoover' nickname for Judge Edgar - did anybody cop the first time round that it was a misprint of 'J Edgar Hover', which makes a lot more sense? Because I most certainly didn't.
Brass & Bland == Brass Band
:o
Designer Bill Blass was the first American designer to print his own name on his designs - the Blass Brand.
Sharky's Pointless Musings Inc.
Another thing - did Guthrie start off as a black guy and then become a white guy after The Pit? Whereas Beenie seemed to have gone the other way.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 10 May, 2021, 08:49:20 PM
Another thing - did Guthrie start off as a black guy and then become a white guy after The Pit? Whereas Beenie seemed to have gone the other way.
Well, Beenie's biological mother* was hispanic, with family from the Puerto Rican Wastes.
* it's complicated - America Jara.
Quote from: sheridan on 11 May, 2021, 12:22:15 AM
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 10 May, 2021, 08:49:20 PM
Another thing - did Guthrie start off as a black guy and then become a white guy after The Pit? Whereas Beenie seemed to have gone the other way.
Well, Beenie's biological mother* was hispanic, with family from the Puerto Rican Wastes.
* it's complicated - America Jara.
Sorry, I missed this. It is a tad complicated, I know, and sometimes just depended on the colourist.
Another thing: Why was Erebus from
The Red Seas called Erebus when he was clearly Cerberus?
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 28 May, 2021, 11:10:28 AM
Another thing: Why was Erebus from The Red Seas called Erebus when he was clearly Cerberus?
I'm just not sure Edginton is too good at his mythology. When they meet the Norse gods in Red Seas there's stuff about Loki being Odin's son and Thor's half-brother - which comes
entirely from Marvel comics.
While all this and much more besides is true, it makes the assumption that Red Seas is about actual 'historical' mythology, rather than evoking a pop cultural, and specifically '50-70s movies, version of same.
I believe Colin (and perhaps the Cosh?) to be our pre-eminent Red Seas scholars - perhaps if YNWA could spare a moment from his endless tabulations he could offer an insight?
For my own thruppence: Erebus is a cool name, in Greek myth the child of Chaos himself and a dark part of Hades' realm, and while it clearly is intended to call Cerberus to mind when used in conjunction with a multi-headed dog who is instrumental in the guarding of the nether/afterworld, it's enough to set this particular urbane clock-punk hound apart from his more animalistic namesake, while suggesting that what we think we know about Cerberus and his role may not apply.
As an aside, one of my beefs with many 'Mythological characters in modern days' stories is that IF they are true to their (contested, polysemous, partial) mythological origins, then their stories are known or done. I point a withering finger of judgement at Percy Jackson (film versions) in this regard, and raise a glass of a moderately priced Malbec to Eddie Campbell for navigating that fine line.
Better in general to present a story that uses the keywords, but writes a new mythology around them without pretending faithfulness.
Quote from: TordelBack on 28 May, 2021, 12:42:34 PM
For my own thruppence: Erebus is a cool name,
I always assumed this. So it was good name, called back Cereberus but wasn't him (two heads, three heads etc) and maybe was the reality behind what became the myth.
There was also a ship in the 1840s that went missing on an Artic expedetion with the suitably named HMS Terror and it might reference that in some way....
...but I never really worked out how so go with my first stab.
Plus spelling changes with the telling and retelling of a myth. Thus Odin, Wotan, Woden and Wodan, all becoming our Odin's Day / Wednesday.
Quote from: TordelBack on 28 May, 2021, 12:42:34 PM
I believe Colin (and perhaps the Cosh?) to be our pre-eminent Red Seas scholars
And remember there are a lot of examples in 2000ad fandom of folks saying a LOT about a subject, but not
really knowing much - I figure calling me a scholar is missing that fact!
Quote from: Colin YNWA on 28 May, 2021, 03:19:12 PM
I figure calling me a scholar is missing that fact!
When it comes to Jack & Co, you are more than a mere dilettante.
(https://i.imgur.com/PN7rNn8.png)
I certainly never noticed this until just now but check out the badge names on those judges in this Fabry Dredd panel... :lol:
Quote from: ming on 02 June, 2021, 08:42:31 AM
(https://i.imgur.com/PN7rNn8.png)
I certainly never noticed this until just now but check out the badge names on those judges in this Fabry Dredd panel... :lol:
BAN THIS SICK FILTH! ;)
I think I mentioned this on the board before. Way over my head the first time round too. I'm guessing it was Glenn's joke rather than John's, though we did have a Judge Lardas (fat) and Judge Peaks (big-boobed) in the Megazine.
Quote from: ming on 02 June, 2021, 08:42:31 AM
(https://i.imgur.com/PN7rNn8.png)
I certainly never noticed this until just now but check out the badge names on those judges in this Fabry Dredd panel... :lol:
Won't somebody think of the children!
Great spot, I never would have seen this.
Is Meltdown Man a play on Piltdown Man..?
Quote from: norton canes on 21 June, 2021, 05:06:33 PM
Is Meltdown Man a play on Piltdown Man..?
Probably not - but it did give me an idea for a forum art comp entry a mere decade ago...
When SAS Sergeant Nick Stone is caught in a nuclear explosion, he finds himself catapulted into a strange stone-age world of human-animal hybrids, ruled over by tyrannical shaman Leeshar.
With the aid of Sabretooth cat-woman Liana, Direwolf-man Gruff and Arsinoitherium Q-Bone, Stone must lead the slave-like Yujees in rebellion and become... Piltdown Man!(https://images-wixmp-ed30a86b8c4ca887773594c2.wixmp.com/f/347a1f81-e647-40bc-b33e-eed65b2c5fea/d77kxj0-4ff9e390-4aa2-40a1-b0df-02be3a2cacd8.jpg/v1/fill/w_1063,h_752,q_70,strp/piltdown_man_by_darkjimbo_d77kxj0-pre.jpg?token=eyJ0eXAiOiJKV1QiLCJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiJ9.eyJzdWIiOiJ1cm46YXBwOjdlMGQxODg5ODIyNjQzNzNhNWYwZDQxNWVhMGQyNmUwIiwiaXNzIjoidXJuOmFwcDo3ZTBkMTg4OTgyMjY0MzczYTVmMGQ0MTVlYTBkMjZlMCIsIm9iaiI6W1t7ImhlaWdodCI6Ijw9MTA2MSIsInBhdGgiOiJcL2ZcLzM0N2ExZjgxLWU2NDctNDBiYy1iMzNlLWVlZDY1YjJjNWZlYVwvZDc3a3hqMC00ZmY5ZTM5MC00YWEyLTQwYTEtYjBkZi0wMmJlM2EyY2FjZDguanBnIiwid2lkdGgiOiI8PTE1MDAifV1dLCJhdWQiOlsidXJuOnNlcnZpY2U6aW1hZ2Uub3BlcmF0aW9ucyJdfQ.y1IZhV5hWibQHxTte4Q5CAIguq6EY9AVDrXXoK5Q_tI)
Nice!
A bit off-topic, but it's kind of something that still goes over my head... I was never quite sure how famous Dante was in his own world. There were those porn-posters of him plastered all over the Empire (i.e. the world), and yet none of the Arbatov sisters recognised him. Teenagers had photos of the young Dante on their walls, but those Sinister Dexter lookalikes had no idea who he was.
Of course, everyone in the world knew his name at the end. Just as his annoyingly cocky younger self predicted. I heard of someone who went on a date with a pre-fame Conor McGregor, who predicted the same thing of himself, but fuck him.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 22 June, 2021, 09:52:46 PM
Of course, everyone in the world knew his name at the end. Just as his annoyingly cocky younger self predicted. I heard of someone who went on a date with a pre-fame Conor McGregor, who predicted the same thing of himself, but fuck him.
If it helps at all, I've never heard of Conor McGregor until you just mentioned them.
Quote from: sheridan on 22 June, 2021, 11:26:01 PM
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 22 June, 2021, 09:52:46 PM
Of course, everyone in the world knew his name at the end. Just as his annoyingly cocky younger self predicted. I heard of someone who went on a date with a pre-fame Conor McGregor, who predicted the same thing of himself, but fuck him.
If it helps at all, I've never heard of Conor McGregor until you just mentioned them.
It does, thanks :D
Quoting another thread here, but..
Quote from: dweezil2 on 06 June, 2021, 07:28:31 PM
Quote from: Sean SD on 06 June, 2021, 12:42:10 PM
Dredd - great story and art by Chris Weston, love the link between Rowdy Yates/Clint Eastwood/Dredd, well done Chris
Yeah, that "..well whoever he was, I owe him my life" punchline was inspired!!!! :)
That punchline went very much over my head the first time round. Hats off to Chris Weston - for a great artist, he's a bloody good writer too.
Fort NEURO.
Yeah, I know.
The Krikkitmen in Life, the Universe & Everything by Douglas Adams are violently xenophobic because the rest of the Universe outside of their home nebula just isn't cricket.
Robettes=Ronettes
Quote from: norton canes on 27 September, 2021, 11:12:19 PM
Fort NEURO.
Yeah, I know.
As with many things in early Rogue Trooper, it takes a metaphorical (military) term and makes it literal: Fortress Europe (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fortress_Europe).
This may be my imagination but the last two syllables of Diaboliks may be a sweary pun. Though maybe it would only sound like one in a dublin accent.
I suppose there's only one board member who knows for sure...?
It was always Dire Bolix to me...
I just noticed that Ace Garp shows up as a giant idol in The Dead:
(https://i.imgur.com/TEb76Rc.png)
Quote from: sheridan on 05 April, 2019, 01:24:06 PM
Quote from: pert on 05 April, 2019, 01:08:38 PM
GIs and Dolls was obviously a reference to Guys And Dolls
In the same era of Rogue, all the following are titles I wouldn't have recognised at the time, as I hadn't come across the original being referenced:
- All Hell on the Dix-I Front
- Frisco Fog
- From Hell to Eternity
- Gasbah
- M for Murder
- To the Ends of Nu-Earth
also Venus Bluegenes
it was a few years after reading Robo Hunter: The Sound Of Music I realised who Sir Oswald Modroid was based on
I found out yesterday that Orlok was the name of the vampire in Nosferatu.
Oh yeah! I hadn't put two and two together there.
Didn't they get sued by Bram Stoker's estate?
Quote from: CalHab on 09 December, 2021, 12:10:49 PM
Oh yeah! I hadn't put two and two together there.
Didn't they get sued by Bram Stoker's estate?
Yes. Stoker's widow won the case and the German courts ordered all prints of the film
be destroyed.
Luckily for film history, enough of them survived.
(https://c.tenor.com/zd6-D3B8Pc0AAAAC/walter-lebowski-i-did-not-know-that.gif)
As blatant plagiarism cases go, it's a slam dunk. They change the names of people and places - Count Dracula = Graf Orlok, Whitby = 'Wisborg' - but it's basically the same story.
"Stop the World, I want to get on!"
TIL that in 1970 the US Govt enacted the RICO act: the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act.
Could this have been an influence in naming a certain clone?
Quote from: Woolly on 19 December, 2021, 09:43:46 AM
TIL that in 1970 the US Govt enacted the RICO act: the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act.
Could this have been an influence in naming a certain clone?
More likely Wagner was influenced by the relationship between Rico and Joe in Little Caesar (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Caesar_(film)) (1931).
Quote from: A.Cow on 22 December, 2021, 12:27:13 AM
Quote from: Woolly on 19 December, 2021, 09:43:46 AM
TIL that in 1970 the US Govt enacted the RICO act: the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act.
Could this have been an influence in naming a certain clone?
More likely Wagner was influenced by the relationship between Rico and Joe in Little Caesar (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Caesar_(film)) (1931).
You're barking up the wrong tree. These are Pat Mills names.
Death Game 1999 - the Rollerball rip-off from the Mills-edited Action comic. The protagonist was called Joe....and his antagonist (a very proto-2000AD unkillable cyborg) was called Rico.
Quote from: GordonR on 22 December, 2021, 12:54:15 AM
Quote from: A.Cow on 22 December, 2021, 12:27:13 AM
Quote from: Woolly on 19 December, 2021, 09:43:46 AM
TIL that in 1970 the US Govt enacted the RICO act: the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act.
Could this have been an influence in naming a certain clone?
More likely Wagner was influenced by the relationship between Rico and Joe in Little Caesar (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Caesar_(film)) (1931).
You're barking up the wrong tree. These are Pat Mills names.
Death Game 1999 - the Rollerball rip-off from the Mills-edited Action comic. The protagonist was called Joe....and his antagonist (a very proto-2000AD unkillable cyborg) was called Rico.
Fair point; well made.
I vaguely remember Pat saying in an interview that he just likes the name Joe, hence Dredd, Pineapples and Marshal Law. Rico apparently just sounded like a good gangster name.
In Be Pure! Be Vigilant! Behave! 2000AD and Judge Dredd: The Secret History, page 112, Pat says he chose the name Joe based on his old school, St Joseph's College, where he had a scary teacher who he based his own Dredd stories on.
I shouldn't be such a cynic at Christmas, but that sounds like a bit of retconning of the facts to me; given that he never mentioned that reason before the book.
Just struck me one of my favorite LPs title could be read in a completely different way: All Mod Cons.
taken me forty years...
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 22 December, 2021, 12:35:08 PM
I shouldn't be such a cynic at Christmas, but that sounds like a bit of retconning of the facts to me; given that he never mentioned that reason before the book.
It's total retconning, to bolster his "I really invented Dredd" gaslighting of today.
Pat's Dredd was the most heroic Dredd we ever got. Knowing what we know about his schooldays, does it sound likely he'd name a hero after his old school?
There's no denying that his contribution to Dredd is huge, but yeah, I'm struggling to think of an early Mills Dredd where Dredd is anything but a good guy. Joe is just a cool name, and British male comics characters back then got tough, no-nonsense hard-man names like Bill Savage and Jack Tallon.
Also - isn't it (John) Wagner who keeps naming their characters John, Johnny, Joe or some variant?
I just realized with the Forum's Favourite Thrill that M.A.C.H Zero spells macho
It's a more entertaining story if you sing the Village People's "Macho Man" in your head while reading it.
QuoteIt's a more entertaining story if you sing the Village People's "Macho Man" in your head while reading it.
Or Sinitta's so macho!
or "Macho Duck from Mickey Mouse Disco
Quote from: sheridan on 23 December, 2021, 01:39:59 PM
Also - isn't it (John) Wagner who keeps naming their characters John, Johnny, Joe or some variant?
The name Joe first appeared in Pat's
The Return of Rico.
But I think GordonR and JBC have hit the nail on the head here. Pat never wrote Dredd as a bad guy in the 70s.
what Harry 20 says at the end of Harry 20 On The High Rock obviously paraphrases a certain 60 cult Tv series
Can't believe it took me this long to pick up that M.A.C.H.0 = "MACHO". Boh! <-- Oops and mentioned on the previous page too. Never mind.
It's just occurred to me that M.A.C.H. 0 is a play on 'MACHO'.
And M.A.C.H.One is a play on 'machine'!
Mind=blown. ;)
To me it was always about the Mach scale, Mach 1 being "hyper"sonic - although technically hypersonic relates to speeds above Mach 5 (I didn't know this when I was 11 years old, though, but the idea kinda' stuck).
Quote from: The Legendary Shark on 21 January, 2022, 08:16:09 PM
To me it was always about the Mach scale, Mach 1 being "hyper"sonic - although technically hypersonic relates to speeds above Mach 5 (I didn't know this when I was 11 years old, though, but the idea kinda' stuck).
Y'know Sharky, I
think you might have just explained the pun.... ;)
'A mud Gideon'
Quote from: norton canes on 27 January, 2022, 04:07:46 PM
'A mud Gideon'
I spotted that on another thread and only got it now too. Mind you, it was years before I realised Amoured Gideon was a play on Armageddon.
Return to Armoured Gideon
Now there's a crossover I'm mildly interested in seeing!
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 29 January, 2022, 12:37:25 PM
Now there's a crossover I'm mildly interested in seeing!
As long as it doesn't end in a
dream roleplaying game!
D'oh! I've only just noticed the obvious Frank Weitz/Clara Weitz connection.
Oh, of course!
Also, giraffes.
This may be me feeding my own ego here, and it probably is... anyway, though it didn't occur to me for a year or two, the chief judge of Murphyville may possibly maybe perhaps be called after ME.
When Mike Carroll was a regular poster I suggested that he might rescue the Emerald Isle from the silliness of Garth Ennis's version, and while I'm sure he would have done it anyway being a Dub, he gave the chief judge my surname.
To be fair, it's about the third most common surname in Ireland, but feck it, I'm going to believe what I choose to believe. My former neighbour Johnny McMonagle (remember our johnnystress?) and his twin made it into a Carroll Dredd as the McMonagle brothers, so... well, I can always dream.
St. Carlos made me Sharkman.
I'm happy.
Aye, that one's kind of indisputable. Fair play
It is kinda' nice to be a minor footnote :-)
I've never read Bryan Talbot's Grandville books, so there's a good chance he actually acknowledges it in them, but I was strolling along the rive gauche the other day when I saw a copy of this:
(https://pictures.abebooks.com/isbn/9782364860254-de.jpg)
Turns out Jean Grandville (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_Ignace_Isidore_G%C3%A9rard_Grandville) is a legend in the world of anthropomorphic animal comics.
(https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/9e/Grandville_-_Fables_de_La_Fontaine_-_07-13_._Les_deux_coqs.jpg)
Oh yes, JJ Grandville was definitely his inspiration:
QuoteThe genesis of Grandville was unusually dynamic. While researching Alice in Sunderland, Talbot explored the influence of 19th-century French caricaturist Jean Ignace Isidore Gérard on John Tenniel, who illustrated Carroll's Alice in Wonderland. Gérard signed his anthropomorphic satires "JJ Grandville". "It suddenly occurred to me that Grandville could actually be the nickname of Paris in an alternative reality where it is the biggest city in a world populated by animals," says Talbot. He sketched out a basic structure in 20 minutes. "Then I started typing and wrote the whole script in six days. It was like taking dictation, it was amazing. I could hear the characters talking, I knew what they were going to say."
from https://www.theguardian.com/books/2015/jan/29/sp-bryan-talbot-grandville-father-of-british-graphic-novel (https://www.theguardian.com/books/2015/jan/29/sp-bryan-talbot-grandville-father-of-british-graphic-novel)
And you should check them out, they're gorgeous books
Others are undoubtedly already aware of it, but I just came across the term "Black Atlantic" outside the world of Dredd for the first time.
https://www.tate.org.uk/art/art-terms/b/black-atlantic (https://www.tate.org.uk/art/art-terms/b/black-atlantic)
Seems that this meaning originates in 1983, 4 years after Wagner's Battle of the Black Atlantic storyline introduced us to the polluted ocean.
Is the historical term influenced by Dredd? Or did Wagner pick up on nascent use and create his own witty play-on-words? Would be interesting to know either way.
Aeroplanes.
Quote from: Dash Decent on 23 April, 2022, 12:59:04 AM
Aeroplanes.
Oh well .... if we're going down that road ....
... clouds ....
Half the universe at night, the other half during the day.
You're all barred.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 23 April, 2022, 10:31:58 AM
You're all barred.
(https://res.cloudinary.com/teepublic/image/private/s--me-JX8Y8--/t_Preview/b_rgb:ffffff,c_limit,f_jpg,h_630,q_90,w_630/v1519707442/production/designs/2399771_0.jpg)
Somehow it has just popped into my head that the leader of the gang who kidnapped Uncle Ump was named Ma Jong...
...as in Mah Jongg, the popular tile-based game.
That John Wagner, eh.
And it's just occurred to me that 'future shock' (the MC1 mental illness, that is) is a play on 'culture shock'. I think. Though I haven't quite worked out why Mega-Citizens consider themselves to be living 'in the future'.
I always had a problem with the term 'future shock' for the same reasons. Until I read this- handily explained by Wikipedia:
Future Shock is a 1970 book by American futurist Alvin Toffler,[1] written together with his spouse Adelaide Farrell,[2][3] in which the authors define the term "future shock" as a certain psychological state of individuals and entire societies. The shortest definition for the term in the book is a personal perception of "too much change in too short a period of time". The book, which became an international bestseller, has sold over 6 million copies and has been widely translated.
SBT
Quote from: SmallBlueThing(Reborn) on 22 July, 2022, 02:48:31 PM
"too much change in too short a period of time"
I suffer Future Shock when someone's conversation segues too rapidly, and with too much frequency (such that my tracking systems start to fail).
Also ... giraffes.
Quote from: SmallBlueThing(Reborn) on 22 July, 2022, 02:48:31 PM
I always had a problem with the term 'future shock' for the same reasons. Until I read this- handily explained by Wikipedia:
Future Shock is a 1970 book by American futurist Alvin Toffler,[1] written together with his spouse Adelaide Farrell,[2][3] in which the authors define the term "future shock" as a certain psychological state of individuals and entire societies. The shortest definition for the term in the book is a personal perception of "too much change in too short a period of time". The book, which became an international bestseller, has sold over 6 million copies and has been widely translated.
SBT
Aha! Thanks for filling me in.
Golgotha - literally 'the place of a skull'. Because the hallucinogenic winds get into your skull? I don't know, just a thought. In any case, I had it drummed into me that Jesus was crucified at Calvary, but the Greek translation, Golgotha, sounds way more metal.
(https://media.forbiddenplanet.com/products/62/68/2876d82bc858a8b962c241baa49ce8029181.jpg)
Scooby-Doo or Strontium Dog?
Yep, and don't forget that Wulf's a Great Dane.
And we woulda got away with it, if it wasn't for you pesky mutie bounty hunters!
I'm watching a YT review of "The Best of 2000AD volume 1". Discussing Halo Jones, the reviewer comments that he likes the zenade - but he pronounces it "zen-a-day" (here (https://youtu.be/H1iBkdGZD_E?t=739)), missing the fact that it's a zen-grenade and therefore pronounced "zen-aid".
That said, he's got a free book and a cool set of stickers and I'm sat here carping on the forum, so I guess we know who came out best in this round!
...and I just noticed there's a jump at about 13 minutes which loses whatever he says about Strontium Dog. Now that I wanted to hear.
Quote from: Dash Decent on 04 September, 2022, 02:05:21 PM
Yep, and don't forget that Wulf's a Great Dane.
(Applause)
With a German accent, but we won't worry about that.
Quote from: Dash Decent on 29 September, 2022, 03:04:04 PMDiscussing Halo Jones, the reviewer comments that he likes the zenade - but he pronounces it "zen-a-day" (here (https://youtu.be/H1iBkdGZD_E?t=739)), missing the fact that it's a zen-grenade and therefore pronounced "zen-aid".
I like Omar, though. He's positive about comics, and keen to cover more than the usual Marvel/DC bubble. 2000 AD is very new to him (he's done a couple of Dredd Case Files videos), but it's good that with the Best Of, he actually read it. That might seem like a low bar, but it's pretty damn obvious most others doing videos haven't (and that's the case for a lot of other stuff they 'review'). It's also notable that one of the most prominent UK-based comics YouTubers never mentions UK comics (bar the odd mention that he "used to" read Judge Dredd).
Anyway, if anyone here watches that YouTube video, give it a like and leave a comment for the algorithm. I'm sure Omar would appreciate it, and it might help to get more 2000 AD on the channel, thereby spreading the word. (Lots of people watching are 2000 AD-curious but have no idea where to start, with Dredd or otherwise.)
Definitely. It was a great review.
Marjory Blackshack. Mary Whitehouse.
Casablanca. White House.
102 pages into this topic, and it might've come up before...
but I only just learned that Blas Gallego is not just the name of the Gronk's homeworld, but also a Spanish fantasy artist in the Frank Frazetta mould!
(https://tse1.mm.bing.net/th?id=OIP.Hf6HwFyUBTsHxe2-ABrVEAHaJ4&pid=Api)
Quote from: AlexF on 14 October, 2022, 09:49:16 AM
102 pages into this topic, and it might've come up before...
but I only just learned that Blas Gallego is not just the name of the Gronk's homeworld, but also a Spanish fantasy artist in the Frank Frazetta mould!
(https://tse1.mm.bing.net/th?id=OIP.Hf6HwFyUBTsHxe2-ABrVEAHaJ4&pid=Api)
I think that was mentioned in the Massimo Belardinelli interview in the 1985 annual, so I knew that one from my very first years of being a squaxx :-)
I always mentally pronounced it 'bloss' (because it's the Irish word for 'taste' and pronounced like that) though I was clearly mistaken.
I was just thinking the other day about how brilliantly planets are named in SD - 'Skybo Tsong' is probably my favourite.
Denis Villeneuve: Dennis Newton
Quote from: sheridan on 13 October, 2022, 07:08:32 PM
Quote from: Dash Decent on 12 October, 2022, 01:42:50 PM
Casablanca. White House.
Casanova. Newcastle.
Much as I'd like it to be Newcastle, wouldn't that be New House? There's a Newcastle down the road from me in the rural outskirts of Dublin, sadly lacking in Geordie accents, which are the best accents in the world in my book.
People from Newcastle are Novacastrians, which suggests it should be 'castra' (or more correctly 'castrum') rather than casa. (Castra = camp; castrum = fortress).
Spanish rather than Latin?
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 22 October, 2022, 03:37:25 PM
... There's a Newcastle down the road from me in the rural outskirts of Dublin...
Yeah, there's a Newcastle down the road from me, too. Could be the same one, but down a different road...!
In Irish the name is "An Caisleán Nua" which mean "The New Castle." One of the easier translations of Irish place-names.
Used to have a girlfriend who was born in Newcastle. In the Transvaal.
Newcastle is in Natal
Quote from: broodblik on 25 October, 2022, 01:53:42 PM
Newcastle is in Natal
Reckon that must be a Labour seat.
Concorde.
(https://i.imgur.com/6t01KVW.jpg)
I was only 11 when Sláine the King came out, and it never occurred to me to wonder why Fomorians only enslaved the prettiest women in Sláine's tribe. :(
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 18 November, 2022, 09:59:35 AM
I was only 11 when Sláine the King came out, and it never occurred to me to wonder why Fomorians only enslaved the prettiest women in Sláine's tribe. :(
I was 16, and not much ever occurred to me at all.
The pretty ladies were very pretty, though.
Quote from: JWare on 18 November, 2022, 10:13:35 AM
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 18 November, 2022, 09:59:35 AM
I was only 11 when Sláine the King came out, and it never occurred to me to wonder why Fomorians only enslaved the prettiest women in Sláine's tribe. :(
I was 16, and not much ever occurred to me at all.
The pretty ladies were very pretty, though.
I don't think I even noticed back then. Bisley's Medb, now, was another matter entirely.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 18 November, 2022, 10:21:03 AM
Bisley's Medb, now, was another matter entirely.
Another matter
entirely.
Whoo boy.
(See also Fabry's Medb, establishing shot, prog 502. Dearie me.)
Quote from: JWare on 18 November, 2022, 10:26:44 AMSee also Fabry's Medb, establishing shot, prog 502. Dearie me.
Well, absolutely, though even that scene with its blatant eroticism was wasted on 11-year-old me at the time. Even Belardinelli had her skinny-dipping after her 'rescue' from the Wicker Man. The brief for artists seems to be 'don't worry about how anyone else drew her, just make teenage lads feel a bit funny'.
Belardinelli also gave us the catwoman in Meltdown Man eating her own clothes.
I remember giving that one a lot of consideration when I was small and thinking that this 2000AD that the older boys were reading wasn't like other comics.
These are all good things.
Quote from: JWare on 20 November, 2022, 05:55:45 PM
Belardinelli also gave us the catwoman in Meltdown Man eating her own clothes.
It's a whole other level to two tramps eating shoe leather.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 19 November, 2022, 12:12:03 AM
Quote from: JWare on 18 November, 2022, 10:26:44 AMSee also Fabry's Medb, establishing shot, prog 502. Dearie me.
Well, absolutely, though even that scene with its blatant eroticism was wasted on 11-year-old me at the time. Even Belardinelli had her skinny-dipping after her 'rescue' from the Wicker Man. The brief for artists seems to be 'don't worry about how anyone else drew her, just make teenage lads feel a bit funny'.
Unless, and until, someone posts up actual pictorial evidence, of such filth and smut appearing in the Galaxy's Greatest comic, then I can not believe that it actually happened.
(That this would save me hours of having to scour through all my back progs, is neither here nor there. :D
Here is the establishing shot in question.
(https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/aHhDZvvq0Piq5GybOZLyltjqrU4jlYXIqbFVbqb7oBrfPbRKzW4TJPyPIh8xxsr9TkE4iAaFF4_0asMwb9iyvGIbnDhYD5OCppSaipabdXP2K1U4-ge2VslU14DNnFcholq_PBKfZJ64AXss8K4FftNKZMENKRw6YpxLo7vZs8hWvATl_DyOa5GH8KkQh5rm22wHTKQzEZ8lwUJsBT5uoAd8R2-mpg1HaHXBSXnTuhzwHCJQgJ9PlKXQp6Z4egAs00RC8BPoiQukG0uHXGgsu6jKzxEKn-r5AJCHUPZxrsAfmptDiSzdewJ4teHdBU0VJPfxeKlqVrlWh9OJLQRVlcNKUh-n1_ZxI5-luwksVfQG_ALB5ru4ur8PpeNgV6cbNQS0I6w30K6mnKbKYXro3Q1ts8FhR35NGkozO2CHTlGz0mM62QNMvK1M8ig2l97VdISMgtYFxtprXtRaUFVTuc-i4by7QDV2TYnmIT3l4a6z9O8WKqYLM2Q-hpzAI0GHEVOJTlKwQgAjtBgRvVSCAlDcW_zXNSXq0HckN5tetOlUZywLeptkReZkVXawvi2fup1vOXgRDs1CegH6fInj9wT7p_VyHvTiU7jdMpsPG_m9oIb_2nVKum5wIQqdktd_WYg3f1UIw5Ihz2QgZTyaZdJuYCVVMDi3Wmdgy5cnXsGFIG9MfFgcMobbBxqbUKZsFQJieMqzxCrAvcydMW9Juvz4Xddl530m-V4495Z5qADMfxdTdS5u0hOhNMVKhg2p33jAGiOLOgprKsGADEGcPFUhm4xrxURfhwXbVXz19g1nGQavnCzBCeNA_ue_tHbPxY2nQ6QvoCJeLQeLxdF4t7aGq1H5zYiTBMHBd56Hlkqnn0qtWVsrDoo1IFh6LnMOFfnr8GY0XLgHPgn2zWdaKEkvNsSh3dfCtrgx5Jlzwr1cXGdS=w990-h934-no?authuser=0)
And here is Medb in the wickerman, getting more shameless by the artist.
(https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/GBnSGVZU2djqorB5CyEYOaFxtxgCLXx41ftVjPcizHfeI2ZFranUYoqYHt9DYKdRbXGEV6uT4mIRSa7qSGMObuKBXn6VY15CIblRQtjgwN4gR8pwcWDgJKhRFqoYw80w-elvFRxftOjbpqXg42ynnbrTdWUMogdG9HOZpJIu5qHGilJLzwcPArb2dA1ujImggiZ0JADzdqdHoXhDQiKt_WRXLWgMC-KAVWeIrzv0wQqlF-KSG0DDDrxGPotrDBUoKcqCOgoImrYnuZ73n3MMesv-erMjINbgD1k1ux4BugXGwvccqYRdULY51iSEg5va9qkIgW_4zWTbLfJFmANWHpvl_xmow3mEZSHf5XN2iX9EgmstI5bObF4sE96debtcIVIFUI72RcG7Ak9phEAzOwioSrsrWIGvTI5pW5-e1OOsVJl4tG27S44oWVXefFcLD1T9O_sHW3X-1i4L2ksOEyncWZHbkXdDltQ3xcImu03im7L8N1hc911dBoHX14MhmzdijEBq2daQ0pW9bgtaj8dBqknYh8WXX1pyqH2TliI4j8JF5yb6665cLgy7LTAdHXbBdwDw4eHVpPsDBism8Cs85EfT5dOG1f9dvJ1ziE_B96Y30hyzyx3JOReDWTUgN6VWJo8yDuvHayhruz3AUGGwvFF7_4NATE3nKioSr4KHNLjJmnDEvTc-Di4WecdnkhEUZzLmuD4yJfV5vKMxj1MED4cLWPhvwVjV09_GilCcM5utplsPgntEo9r3ia78AszlHDdNXEkiG4TlLyQxhQMjBiNsYMfElHJ8QOmfHt56G87q25lUjmMw-bmbLrq7WiaFPQuoVOTNgDg7nOY2HnFYBCCZtO89iQyo1lwprwr6Yy0BtDKiLUEYn8Ldb_5UUNvxX8OaACOaX4i0T1KeHSJWTllu0N9tptqi_hMBAHzy3ckd=w985-h518-no?authuser=0)
2000AD in the eighties - a stranger to decency.
Not showing up for me, I'm afraid.
When The Horned God came along, of course, we weren't even doing the 'conveniently-placed shadows and scenery' thing to preserve her modesty any more. Which was great news for all readers (or at least for 14-year-olds in a country where even shredded hedge-porn was a rarity).
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 23 November, 2022, 04:42:55 PM
Not showing up for me, I'm afraid.
Damn. I'm new to this posting pictures business. Have the pictures in any of my recent posts been visible?
As for the relevant Sláine shots, you will find them in a pamphlet I will be distributing next Saturday, inveighing against depraved entertainments such as comics, strong drink, and dancing outside of holy wedlock.
They were showing up earlier. Now they're not.
But Paddykafka was depending on me for naughty pictures!
Quote from: JWare on 23 November, 2022, 07:39:13 PM
But Paddykafka was depending on me for naughty pictures!
Only to appease my inner Mary Whitehouse, that Tooth really was as decadent as it's being made out. :)
Well that's an ignominious end to my smut-peddling career anyway.
Quote from: M.I.K. on 23 November, 2022, 07:25:05 PM
They were showing up earlier. Now they're not.
News just in from Qatar; some panels / pages from 2000AD have been censored on.....The 2000AD Forum.
One more try.
This is purely for the benefit of Paddykafka's – ahem – research, and to see if I've got the hang of this image posting.
So here is Fabry's Medb.
(https://hosting.photobucket.com/images/i/jsware2002/Medb_1.jpg)
And here is the same young hussy getting more disgraceful with every artist that portrays her.
(https://hosting.photobucket.com/images/i/jsware2002/Medb.jpg)
Can you see her now?
Then go and have a brisk run round the playing fields.
Now we're talking. Never noticed Robym the friendzoned dwarf in that Fabry one of nudie Medb - he's not the first thing that catches one's eye, in fairness.
I seem to remember the Bisley one was on the same page as a fairly clear shot of Feg's non-functioning bits.
Now I'll be shunning the filth on this thread for a few minutes.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 25 November, 2022, 12:34:12 PM
I seem to remember the Bisley one was on the same page as a fairly clear shot of Feg's non-functioning bits.
There was a lot of swinging dick in
The Horned God.
From the moment they showed us M.A.C.H. 1's bare arse on Prog 1, it was inevitable that we should end up here.
I blame fluoridated water, or the end of compulsory church-going or something.
Quote from: JWare on 25 November, 2022, 09:21:39 AM
Then go and have a brisk run round the playing fields.
In the late Frank McCourt's memoir
"Angela's Ashes" - which detailed his childhood experience of growing up, in the seemingly perpetually rainy, county of Limerick, here in the Emerald Isle - if one felt the need to - how shall I delicately phrase this? - unburden oneself of such, err...feelings?...was colloquially referred to as
"Having The Excitement". :D
Thanks and appreciation for posting that, anyway's, JWare.
To be honest - if my, admittedly faulty, recollection is anything to go by I didn't see much that there that would cause even twelve-year old me to blush. But perhaps I was a lost cause even back then, lol?
I remember the coronation in
Sláine the King causing a bit of a stir.
It would have been a much bigger sensation if Mills hadn't bowdlerised his source.
(https://hosting.photobucket.com/images/i/jsware2002/Sl_ine_coronation.jpg)
QuoteHe who is to be inaugurated, not as a chief, but as a beast, not as a king, but as an outlaw, has bestial intercourse with her before all, professing himself to be a beast also.
—Gerald of Wales, The History and Topography of Ireland
A bit of nudity might or might not have caused blushes, but outright horse-fucking would never have passed unnoticed.
Now that's a horse of a different colour, to be sure! I really must give these early story's a re-read. For Bellardinelli's fabulous art, if nothing else.
Wow. Like I said, I was 11. The telly was showing the Real Ghostbusters to my age group, while Tharg was providing a naked man drinking his own bath broth shortly after shagging a goddess in front of a crowd, and ripping someone's heart out through his throat.
Here's a sort-of prog-related thing I've just remembered that I used to assume when I was younger...
"Charley's War". Is the title a kind-of pun on "Carrie's War", the 1973 children's book that had a live action adaptation on BBC1 in 1974 and which I seem to remember being repeated around the time the comics were being published?
Charlie's War made its debut in 1979, so could be...
Which reminds me, I really need to take a photo of a pub near where I live called Charlie's Bar - I alwways think of the strip when I see the sign!
I wouldn't be surprised on this either although I never made the connection: I just assumed Charley was picked as a common name to further highlight the focus of the strip on a common man.
Pat Mills is writing about Charley's War on his Substack at the moment and it's interesting stuff.
Quote from: Barrington Boots on 22 March, 2023, 11:16:09 AMI wouldn't be surprised on this either although I never made the connection: I just assumed Charley was picked as a common name to further highlight the focus of the strip on a common man.
Going off on a bit of a tangent, but someone might find it interesting - many names in
Charley's War come from Frederick Manning's
Her Privates We - the main character is Private Bourne (same surname as Charley), the Sergeant is called Tozer (same as Old Bill) and there's even a Weeper, too. I've never known Pat acknowledge this, or even that he's read
HPW, but it surely can't be coincedence. I've always assumed he read it as part of his mountains of research and unconsciously lifted some of the names.
Wow. That couldn't possibly be a coincidence, could it? To be fair to Pat, for all his self-aggrandising, he usually acknowledged his sources. Very odd that he neglected them here.
Of course, this doesn't take away from the fact that Charley's War was a brilliant piece of work.
I've no problem with Mills taking names or even whole characters from wherever he finds them. (In the case of Her Privates We I think it's just names. It's been yonks since I read that book.)
The bit about Ginger being buried in a sandbag is from somebody's memoirs – I can't recall whose. Blue's story is Alistair Horne's The Price of Glory with a large dollop of Beau Geste added. Even the waterlogged pigeon at Passchendaele is from Lyn MacDonald.
Our boy Pat certainly did his homework.
Originality ain't all it's cracked up to be.
After all, Halo Jones Book 3 is Michael Herr's Dispatches judiciously mixed with Haldeman's The Forever War.
I'm glad I didn't know that when I read Halo, but I wasn't at all bothered when I finally did come across the source material.
Quote from: JWare on 24 March, 2023, 11:56:45 AMAfter all, Halo Jones Book 3 is Michael Herr's Dispatches judiciously mixed with Haldeman's The Forever War.
I'm glad I didn't know that when I read Halo, but I wasn't at all bothered when I finally did come across the source material.
I remember a work colleague telling me years ago that Halo Book 3 had been heavily inspired by some piece of sci-fi or other, but couldn't for the life of me remember what it was. So thanks for that.
To be fair, pretty much everyone in Sláine is some version of a person from Celtic mythology, and some lines are lifted word-for-word from The Táin. So fair enough.
Haldeman's book is great. So is Herr's for that matter (it provided material not just for Halo Jones but for Full Metal Jacket and Apocalypse Now too). Alan Moore saw quality that was worth the swiping, same as Pat Mills.
But Mills isn't the only lad doing his homework. Lookee me.
(https://i.pinimg.com/736x/5c/f6/8d/5cf68d0669145a34940025fda7900238--comic-strips-art-is.jpg)
In the Avenue, which is the main communication trench, we pass a rifleman carrying a sandbag full of something. I become suspicious. Thefts of rations and minor stores and comforts from the line are increasing. 'What have you got in the bag? I ask. 'Rifleman Grundy,' comes the unexpected answer.
—Brigadier Francis P. Crozier, A Brass Hat In No Man's Land
Also...
(https://hosting.photobucket.com/images/i/jsware2002/swan_children.jpg)
'Your father is dead.'
'That has seized me,' said he.
'Your mother is also dead,' said the young man.
'Now all pity for me is at an end,' said he.
'Dead is your brother,' said Loingseachan.
'Gaping is my side on that account,' said Suibhne.
'Dead is your daughter,' said Loingseachan.
'The heart's needle is an only daughter,' said Suibhne.
'Dead is your son who used to call you "daddy",'said Loingseachan.
'True,' said he, 'that is the drop which brings a man to the ground.'
—Buile Suibhne (The Frenzy of Sweeney)
Pat has said several times that he does lots of research before writing a story, to the point where he asked Rebellion to pay him in advance to do six weeks' research before putting pen to paper. (They said no.)
It's an incredible scene, that 'my mate Ginger' one, and totally brings to life the account that inspired it.
I hadn't heard of Buile Suibhne, but Sláine's first reaction - 'that grieves me' - always struck me as a bit understated for a man who has just lost a child.
Obviously you, JWare, will already know that the Children of Sláine is identical to the Irish myth called The Children of Lir (who, I believe, is the same King Lear that someone or other wrote a play about).
Pat was brilliant in his day, though I'm not sure research necessarily leads to a quality story and the need for extra pay.
I've probably mentioned this before, but it took me about 30 years to get the 'Time Wastes' in Nemesis.
Don't feel too bad about it, JayzusB. I'm still not sure if there's anything to get, and I'm supposed to be one of them intellectshul college-edumicated types.
Quote from: JWare on 25 November, 2022, 01:35:56 PMI remember the coronation in Sláine the King causing a bit of a stir.
It would have been a much bigger sensation if Mills hadn't bowdlerised his source.
It would never have been published if Mills hadn't bowdlerised his source. Slaine always felt a little more adult that other 2000AD strips of the same period, but there are limits.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 24 May, 2023, 09:57:27 PMI've probably mentioned this before, but it took me about 30 years to get the 'Time Wastes' in Nemesis.
:D :D
Feck me pink, I'd forgotten that song existed. I remember liking it when I was about 11 or 12.
I remember wondering how one mills pebbles. "Very strong millstones," my Dad told me.
Starting to learn Welsh and never really realised the name of England in Welsh is Lloegr. Which is also the name of the big-bad in Zenith. Intentional or coincidental?
Something to do with many Angles, perhaps?
Pretty sure Lloiger is also some techno-gubbins in Lovecraft lore.
100% whatever it's context in said lore, 'ol Howard probably used it in a derogatory manner.
Quote from: JohnW on 01 October, 2023, 05:50:38 PMSomething to do with many Angles, perhaps?
Now that was a good one - fair absolute play. I spotted a town in Wales called Llantrisant. 100 points to whoever can say where in the prog a lantrisant can be found.
Don't know where in the prog but it's the site of the hospital our youngest was born in. Just up the road (okay, over the hill on the other side of town ...) from us.
Lloiger is an August Derleth thing connected to Lovecraft.
Lloegr is supposed to mean 'Lost Land' although I think that's disputed. My brother did some research on it for a music project so I've heard a lot about it!
Llantrisant is near my in-laws! Wales FTW.
I better say it, as it's a bit obscure - it was from Firekind. Memory is a bit hazy but I think a lantrisant (pronounced differently, I know) was some kind of symbiotic life-form that helped the dragons produce hexacrin.
Following on from Threadjacking, the most off-topic of the Off-Topic threads, I've just realised that the 'Let's knife!' catchphrase that Friday Rogue Trooper developed when things got very silly was a reference to an album by Shonen Knife, that Japanese pop-punk band beloved of Kurt Cobain and many more with-it 90s musicians.
Pretty sure I at least had a listen or two to that album back then, and should have made the connection. Good band, awful catchphrase. There was absolutely nothing about the character in Gibbons and Simpson's successful reboot strip that needed a fun soundbite, or indeed any follow-up stories at all for that matter. Especially not those follow-up stories.
That's one I'd never have spotted.
But speaking of musical references in nineties progs, wasn't there an allusion or two to the Pogues in something that Garth Ennis wrote?
I shouldn't mock. Ennis was in good company. It would have gone over my own head at the time, but there's a stretch of Moore's Swamp Thing that's larded with Tom Waits quotes.
(And thus we return to where this started in Threadjacking! Now if we could only find Johnny Logan songs in, say, an early Mark Millar story, then the circle of posts would be complete.)
Quote from: JohnW on 15 October, 2023, 01:09:54 PMThat's one I'd never have spotted.
But speaking of musical references in nineties progs, wasn't there an allusion or two to the Pogues in something that Garth Ennis wrote?
An astute reader may also have noticed very subtle nods towards Unforgiven, the Northern Ireland troubles, drinking and buggery.
I genuinley can't believe how many episodes of 'Azimuth' I lettered before the "Suzi Nine Millimetre" penny dropped. :o
Quote from: Jim_Campbell on 15 October, 2023, 06:47:05 PMI genuinley can't believe how many episodes of 'Azimuth' I lettered before the "Suzi Nine Millimetre" penny dropped. :o
Suzi should give up her wild ways and settle down with someone sensible – like that nice Mr. Lee Enfield from number 303.
(I didn't get it either until you posted, but then I'm the type who dumbly feeds pennies into the slot, with no notion of what's supposed to happen next.)
Quote from: Jim_Campbell on 15 October, 2023, 06:47:05 PMI genuinley can't believe how many episodes of 'Azimuth' I lettered before the "Suzi Nine Millimetre" penny dropped. :o
I only
just got it myself (and I had to rack my brains for a while). It probably helps if you say it in Ah-nuld's voice.
Grud bless you all, my fellow clueless idiots. I feel much better about the whole thing now... :D
Quote from: Jim_Campbell on 15 October, 2023, 11:02:07 PMGrud bless you all, my fellow clueless idiots. I feel much better about the whole thing now... :D
If you hadn't mentioned it I'd still be in blissful ignorance. Even after you
did mention it, it took me a while.
Well, I'm finding this particular collective un-cottoning-on utterly bizarre.
Quote from: JohnW on 15 October, 2023, 01:09:54 PMBut speaking of musical references in nineties progs, wasn't there an allusion or two to the Pogues in something that Garth Ennis wrote?
All those episodes of Pogue Trooper for a start.
Pun, Sodomy & the Lash
It didn't exactly go over my head, but I wasn't sure if I was right: Were the Ennis Dredd story Muzak Killer and its sequel based around s fundamental misunderstanding of what the term 'muzak' means?
(Correct me if I'm wrong, but it means 'light music anonymously produced to be played in shops, lifts, factories etc' rather than 'bad chart music').
Just catching up on this thread. I didn't get Suzi Nine Millimetre either.
In hindsight it's a massive clue that Azimuth is part of SinDex.
But of course I was blissfully unaware of that until it was explicitly revealed.
You got to wonder if DAbnett is sitting there going "I put all this effort into laying out all these clues and they were just wasted on you lot"?
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 25 November, 2023, 07:51:15 AMIt didn't exactly go over my head, but I wasn't sure if I was right: Were the Ennis Dredd story Muzak Killer and its sequel based around s fundamental misunderstanding of what the term 'muzak' means?
(Correct me if I'm wrong, but it means 'light music anonymously produced to be played in shops, lifts, factories etc' rather than 'bad chart music').
I haven't read it in years but I remember it as a combination of what you've already said - Future pop music had become little more than 'lift music' in the ears of Zpok, hence his ire.
Cheers
Well, that does make sense - in fairness I missed the first Zpok story the time and started with the sequel. Could well have been referenced, I just can't remember.
I wasn't mad about it - at the time I was just really unhappy that the young and inexperienced Garth was doing ALL the Dredds - but it was fun to see all the faces from the music papers I obsessed over at the time.
Now there's a story that couldn't be recreated now - I for one wouldn't recognise any of the pop parodies.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 25 November, 2023, 06:30:28 PMI for one wouldn't recognise any of the pop parodies.
For myself, I am perversely proud of having never (knowingly) heard a Taylor Swift song.
It can't last, but I'll boast of it while I still can.
(9,994, Jayzus. Not long to wait now! I hear the moderators are stockpiling cocktail sausages and tranquillisers for the big party.)
Someone should draw a pic of Jayzus in a loin cloth and holding Brain-Biter, with the tag-line of "10,000 posts! He did not think them too many."
It really isn't too many, considering I've been a forum member for 21 years :o
5 to go, and what an absolute extravaganza of anticlimactic shite it promises to be!
Quote from: Magnetica on 25 November, 2023, 09:11:25 AMIn hindsight it's a massive clue that Azimuth is part of SinDex.
And the tattoos. (I didn't figure it out, either.)
Q. Twerk == Cute Work.
Just got that now.
Quote from: Funt Solo [R] on 12 December, 2023, 04:13:16 AMQ. Twerk == Cute Work.
Just got that now.
Me too. Except I didn't finally get it, I had it explained to me by Pete Wells.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 26 November, 2022, 12:02:39 AMWow. Like I said, I was 11. The telly was showing the Real Ghostbusters to my age group, while Tharg was providing a naked man drinking his own bath broth shortly after shagging a goddess in front of a crowd, and ripping someone's heart out through his throat.
I only found out last month that Winston in the Real Ghostbusters was played by Arsenio Hall* (best known to British audiences from the role in Coming to America).
* series one to three only.
I really wasn't a fan of Ennis's A Clockwork Pineapple, or any of his early Dredds, but I've just realised that story fixed what I thought was a bit of Wagner / Grant dodgy Dredd continuity.
Namely, why did the Apocalypse War establish that there was a Sov language, but Dredd could somehow understand and respond to the Sov Judges when they spoke to each other? Garth was on the case - all MC1 judges are taught Sov, for defence reasons!
(There may have been something in the war story that contradicts that but I'm filtering it out. Also the fact that Garth's Sovs are called Markimarkov, Brylkreem and Traktorfaktori.)
30-plus years on, those Sov Judge names continue to be Total Cringe.
But thank goodness he fixed a minor story logic glitch absolutely nobody cared about.
Well Mr. Ennis obviously cared about it enough to address it and Jayzus noticed, so that's two folk.
Quote from: GordonR on 11 January, 2024, 11:04:11 PM30-plus years on, those Sov Judge names continue to be Total Cringe.
Well, I'm not arguing with that, they were awful. Trying to write someone called Traktorfaktori into a later story about a cool, supposedly sinister assassin just made the whole thing farcical.
With about two or three exceptions, I didn't like any of Ennis's Dredds back then, and resented the fact that all those years of intricately crafted continuity were cast aside for a clearly inferior and inexperienced writer (albeit one who has since become one of the best in the business, fair play to him).
I totally failed to realise the Uplift deputy from Lawless shares his name with the tallest mountain in Africa.
Guess I must have been concentrating so much on his first name, and its murderous implications.
Quote from: GoGilesGo on 12 January, 2024, 08:08:54 AMI totally failed to realise the Uplift deputy from Lawless shares his name with the tallest mountain in Africa.
Guess I must have been concentrating so much on his first name, and its murderous implications.
That's what Dan Abnett does best. I suspect I've missed about half the punning names in SinDex over the years.
Cleverest one ever for me was the eatery called The Hot Pot 'n' News on the Square.
It's the 'on the Square' that real makes it.
I'm clearly in the minority but I think Josef Traktorfaktori is a brilliant name for a Sov.
I think you might well be in a minority there alright, me old squaxx! The daft names are all well and good in a short, knockabout comedy Dredd tale, but imagine the Apocalypse War had been orchestrated by Supreme Judge Skodamekanik and War Marshal Teskotroli.
I thought Al Ewing did a better job of comedy Sov names in the Mars Attacks crossover, which iirc occurred in a slightly different continuity. Judge Brianklov was my favourite.
Yes, I think Rogue Trooper is great and Souther should rhyme with mother. I'm definitely, definitely in the minority! And now I want a story with Judge Skodamekanik in it.
Brianklov = Brian Clough?
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 12 January, 2024, 10:07:24 AMWar Marshal Teskotroli.
The fact I found this unreasonably funny is probably quite telling.
Judge Dredd - no problem - he's something to dread.
Judge Goodman - no problem - he was too good for his own ... wellness.
Rogue - no problem - he has gone rogue.
Nick Stone - no problem - he's rugged!
Maeve the Many-Armed - check!
Judge Traktorfactori - fuck off - he's not a factory, he doesn't shit tractors!
Sorry - just had to think that through.
Quote from: Dash Decent on 12 January, 2024, 02:54:46 PMYes, I think Rogue Trooper is great and Souther should rhyme with mother. I'm definitely, definitely in the minority! And now I want a story with Judge Skodamekanik in it.
Brianklov = Brian Clough?
Whilst I haven't a clue about football, yep, that's the one.
I always said Souther like mother too, but then heard that a souther is a kind of wind and is pronounced like Leslie Crowther, which I think is how I said it on Eamonn's podcast.
Quote from: Funt Solo [R] on 12 January, 2024, 03:28:22 PMhe's not a factory
Yeah, but what says Communist era five year gosplans, prison gulags, razor shortages, concrete slum blocks, salt mines and farming targets for the great and glorious good of the motherland better than 'tractor factory'? It's unmistakenly Sov. Which is why, as brilliant as Teskotroli is, the equally brilliant Skodamekanik gets over the line first.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 12 January, 2024, 04:06:58 PMI always said Souther like mother too
That's because of your natural sense of how English pronunciation works. Southerly, Southern, Souther. It's what makes us all say "the little green pot" and never "the green little pot".
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 12 January, 2024, 04:06:58 PMbut then heard that a souther is a kind of wind and is pronounced like Leslie Crowther, which I think is how I said it on Eamonn's podcast.
I'd argue that just because there's a pre-existing word that's pronounced one way, it doesn't follow that if we use the same word for something else that it must also be said the same way. I could equally argue there are southerly winds, so why shouldn't that inform our pronunciation?
I know I won't convince anyone, but 'South-er' is a car-crash in the mouth. It's like pronouncing 'superlative' as 'super-lative' instead of 'sue-pearl-ative'. You can hear the thrashing sounds as you crash through the gears.
But, they put it that way in the game so I guess it's official. Just as Dredd was only ever Joe, until the 1995 movie called him Joseph, and it fed back into the source and it's been woven throughout since.
Quote from: Dash Decent on 16 January, 2024, 11:07:17 AMI know I won't convince anyone, but 'South-er' is a car-crash in the mouth. It's like pronouncing 'superlative' as 'super-lative' instead of 'sue-pearl-ative'. You can hear the thrashing sounds as you crash through the gears.
It's weird, because I was—what?—twelve when Rogue debuted, and it literally never occurred to me that you would say the word any other way than "south-er".
If you want a verbal car crash... in Slaine, the Drune Lords slough their skins, so their title should logically be pronounced "Sluff" (and not as in the town in Berkshire)... but try saying "Slough Feg" pronouncing it correctly... "Slough Throt" isn't much better.
QuoteJust as Dredd was only ever Joe, until the 1995 movie called him Joseph, and it fed back into the source and it's been woven throughout since.
I have
never understand the vexation that this caused. Dredd's name has always been Joseph, but we never heard anyone call him anything but Joe.
My name is James, but only a handful of people in the last fifty-odd years have ever used it — basically bank managers, a couple of superiors in a couple of jobs, basically people who (for whatever reason) did not want to appear over-familiar. Oh, and my mum when I was in trouble, obviously.
My name appears in print as Jim, (almost) everyone calls me Jim, the only place it appears as James is on my passport, birth certificate and bank card.
I have similar experience. The nickname "Pops" stuck so thoroughly when I was younger, there are people in my home town that don't know my real name. Even now, my colleagues don't use my full name. I'm known as Big Dan. I'm not strikingly large or anything, just bigger than Wee Dan.
I'm not sure even Pat Mills wrote 'Slough' to be pronounced anything other than like the town where David Brent used to work. It's always going to be 'Slow' for me either way up.
I've always pronounced 'Slaine' the Irish language way, not because I'm any expert at the tongue but because my dad, a graduate of an Irish-language school, saw the cover of Sláine's debut prog and read the word out. So that's what I, my brother and my friends said from then on.
Now I know prog-readers outside our little bubble, I feel a bit of a gobshite not pronouncing it 'Slane', as if I'm trying to make some kind of point. Like the foodie type my brother knows who insists on saying 'spaghetti bolloNYAYZEH'.
But I'm not breaking the habit of a lifetime, no matter how many times I hear Pat or others say 'Slane'. On the other hand, we used to also say Slough FAYG, as if it was an Irish word spelled 'Fég', which it clearly isn't. And it was only two years ago when I learned that Rudraige is the same name as Rory, and pronounced like it.
Sorry, I've just realised I've dragged this thread into the most done-to-death topic among Squaxxdom.
Now, Torquemada - three syllables or four? I waver from three to four and back every few years.
Whatever way you first pronounced things in your head when you were a kid then that's always going to be the right way to pronounce it, no matter what the general consensus might be.
I'm Irish but I pronounce Slaine as "Slane".
Torquemada has always been four syllables for me.
Quote from: Vector14 on 16 January, 2024, 04:45:59 PMWhatever way you first pronounced things in your head when you were a kid then that's always going to be the right way to pronounce it, no matter what the general consensus might be.
I'm Irish but I pronounce Slaine as "Slane".
Torquemada has always been four syllables for me.
I'm from near the hill and town of Slane, which is pronounced how it looks in English. However, in Irish it's Sláine, named after the real* King Sláine, who is buried there**. So I think it's fair to pronounce it either way - one's just a translation of the other.
We used to get simplified versions of the old legends in our primary school books, complete with bad illustrations of lame-looking warrior types with skirts and Michael Bolton hairstyles.
When I began to realise that Sláine and his tribe were based on these characters, I began to picture them as Fabry types in Mad Max 2 leather and studs and they became much, much more interesting. Medb was a regular feature in the schoolbooks too, and was pictured on the pound note back then, but Fabry's lithe seductress was the real Medb for me.
Even Crom Cruach was mentioned at school, iirc to establish how great St Patrick was for banishing him and his like, and I was just wishing that everyone else could see him as I did in my head. St Paddy wouldn't have stood a chance..
Oh, and I found out about three years ago that Tlachtga is a hill within a few minutes' drive from my childhood home, as well as a disfigured Atlantean princess. And I still don't know how to pronounce it.
*Possibly.
**Ditto.
My youngling brain always processed it as slain - as in, that's how his enemies ended up.
JBC, apropos of nothing, I don't know if you are interested in alternative archaeological theories but, in case you are, you might find the following as entertaining as I did. Of course, I have no idea if it's genius or madness but it's a damned good yarn in any case.
Alan Wilson and Baram Blackett have developed their own methods of finding new historical truths. Rather than refer to other historians books, they work more like detectives looking at ancient maps, place names, church records etc. In 1990 they discovered what they believe to be the burial place of King Arthur. Their find is made convincing due to the elctrum cross (79% silver) which they discovered there with the inscription "Spirit of Arthur".
Their findings do not end there. They believe they have pin pointed the exact location of the Ark Of the Covenant, the most important religious object in the world. (https://www.richplanet.net/richp_genre.php?ref=2&part=1&gen=99)
(Spoiler - that location is in Wales...)
It's always been SLUFF Feg, surely? I've never imagined it any other way.
Torquemada will always be "Talk Amanda" to me after a very chatty girl I knew in the 90's
I'm assuming everyone else pronounces Nort with a silent 't', as in "That were a terrible nor-wester, bain't it, Alfie?"
Rico Dredd is "R-eye-co", naturally. (Or, L-eye-co if you're Puerto Rican.)
Absalom - silent "ab", then "shalom"! (If Paranoia taught me anything, it's how to pronounce chutzpah.)
Synnamon is pronounced exactly like the spice, as you'd expect - so "canella".
I've no idea how to pronounce Tales of Telguuth, but I imagine that was the aim.
---
I read somewhere that "love" and "prove" used to rhyme, and the evidence is that Shakespeare rhymed them. Whether it was "luv" and "pruv", or "loove" and "proove", nobody knows. But - what if Shakespeare was just fucking with us?
Quote from: Southstreeter on 16 January, 2024, 10:26:07 PMIt's always been SLUFF Feg, surely? I've never imagined it any other way.
Have you tried saying that out loud...? It doesn't exactly roll off the tongue.
Quote from: Dash Decent on 16 January, 2024, 11:07:17 AMQuote from: JayzusB.Christ on 12 January, 2024, 04:06:58 PMI always said Souther like mother too
That's because of your natural sense of how English pronunciation works. Southerly, Southern, Souther. It's what makes us all say "the little green pot" and never "the green little pot".
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 12 January, 2024, 04:06:58 PMbut then heard that a souther is a kind of wind and is pronounced like Leslie Crowther, which I think is how I said it on Eamonn's podcast.
'Suther' always sounded wrong because it just evoked Sutherland, but as a proud Nort(hener), we knew all about that there SOUTH. And these were sci-fi words, not supposed to be familiar so on day one I went for South-er, and that's the hill I'll die on.
Quote from: Dash Decent on 16 January, 2024, 11:07:17 AMQuote from: JayzusB.Christ on 12 January, 2024, 04:06:58 PMI always said Souther like mother too
That's because of your natural sense of how English pronunciation works. Southerly, Southern, Souther. It's what makes us all say "the little green pot" and never "the green little pot".
That'll be the order of adjectives.
- quantity or number
- quality or opinion
- size
- age
- shape
- colour
- proper adjective (i.e. nationality, place of origin or material)
- purpose or qualifier
If there is more than one adjective from the same adjective group then you need to add 'and'. So you can have a "big, green sign" or a "red and white sign"*, but not a "big and green sign" or a "red, white sign".
* like a barber's shop.
p.s. 'really' would be from the second group, so you can have 'really big' item.
Quote from: sheridan on 17 January, 2024, 09:43:52 AMIf there is more than one adjective from the same adjective group then you need to add 'and'. So you can have a "big, green sign" or a "red and white sign"*, but not a "big and green sign" or a "red, white sign".
* like a barber's shop.
Well feck me, I've been teaching English as a second language for nearly 20 years, and never knew the rule about the 'and' or the comma with adjectives.
If I may be a pendant for a second, though, I'd say that 'really' was an adverb, not an adjective, and qualifies the adjective after it rather than the noun - you can have a 'nice car', a 'really nice car' but not a 'really car', as 'really' describes the niceness rather than the car.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 17 January, 2024, 10:37:54 AMQuote from: sheridan on 17 January, 2024, 09:43:52 AMIf there is more than one adjective from the same adjective group then you need to add 'and'. So you can have a "big, green sign" or a "red and white sign"*, but not a "big and green sign" or a "red, white sign".
* like a barber's shop.
Well feck me, I've been teaching English as a second language for nearly 20 years, and never knew the rule about the 'and' or the comma with adjectives.
If I may be a pendant for a second, though, I'd say that 'really' was an adverb, not an adjective, and qualifies the adjective after it rather than the noun - you can have a 'nice car', a 'really nice car' but not a 'really car', as 'really' describes the niceness rather than the car.
My defence is that it was close to the end of my break and I had to get back to work!
p.s. can't really make a post about grammar and complain about pedantry!
p.p.s. I'd consider you could say "big and green" but that it changes the emphasis of the sentence.
English can be benderised to accommodate.
"The Hulk, a big and green sign of impending destruction, bounded towards the unsuspecting suburb..."
"Mesmeric and rotating, a red, white, red, white sign drew hairy people into the shop like itchy moths..."
As an writist, I is able to forceify bad English into mundane English in order to create something new - pompous English.
Quote from: Jim_Campbell on 16 January, 2024, 11:35:44 AMDredd's name has always been Joseph, but we never heard anyone call him anything but Joe.
My objection is entirely for the highly scientific reason that I don't like the sound of it. "Joe Dredd" is a very cool name. "Joseph Dredd" is not. They might as well have changed his name to Bernard. It's like suddenly announcing that the very cool sounding Johnny Alpha has Fanshaw as his middle name.
There's no reason that Dredd has to be a Joseph. Just because someone is called Max, it doesn't follow that their name is Maxwell or Maximilian. Likewise Joe could have been christened/named Joe rather than Joseph. If Frank Zappa can name his daughter Moon Unit, then simply naming a child Joe can't be an impossibility. No way is my GI Joe man from childhood GI Joseph. He couldn't be an action hero anymore. He'd have to be the unit padre.
And, it's a fudge. For about 18 years Joe was Joe, without a hint of Joseph anywhere. If the stories had everyone calling him Joe but somewhere it showed Joseph - the name on a file, the identification on a vid link - then that would have been it. But this is patently the movie changing something for the worse. It could have been ignored but the fact it was then adopted into the comic is what I don't like. Imagine if Stallone being helmetless meant we started seeing Dredd's face after the movie. "Well, he's always had a face. We just didn't see it for 18 years." (Not to belittle Jim's argument, but to say, think how terrible a decision that would have been.)
So, yes, Joe is now, and must always have been, Joseph. But it's disappointing and a wrong avenue they didn't have to go down. (IMHO.)
PS If anyone named Bernard Fanshaw is reading this, you have my apologies. (And you can take that either way.)
Quote from: The Legendary Shark on 17 January, 2024, 05:05:31 PMAs an writist, I is able to forceify bad English
This is why the Shark is legendary.
Quote from: Dash Decent on 18 January, 2024, 12:43:36 PMIt's like suddenly announcing that the very cool sounding Johnny Alpha has Fanshaw as his middle name.
It is
so not like that. It would be
exactly like revealing that a character called Jonny Alpha's full name was Jonathan Alpha. (Note: I am not denying that Joe is cooler than Joseph, and Jonny is cooler than Jonathan.)
Jonathan Alpha sounds like a sexy Edwardian vampire killer and body builder or something.
Quote from: Hawkmumbler on 18 January, 2024, 02:40:31 PMJonathan Alpha sounds like a sexy Edwardian vampire killer and body builder or something.
Jonathan Alpha sounds like a name Laurence Fox would give to himself.
It cannot be denied, though, that Johnathan Fanshaw Alpha is a cracking moniker.
Quote from: The Legendary Shark on 18 January, 2024, 03:31:55 PMIt cannot be denied, though, that Johnathan Fanshaw Alpha is a cracking moniker.
For a Torie youth maybe.
I quite like Joseph Dredd - it adds gravitas. (I mean, one could argue it's a bit biblical, but the character isn't.) Joe's fine, as well - but it has the associated phrase "ordinary Joe" to contend with, which isn't very heroic.
Jonathan Alpha does sound shit - but it would be a good name for a no-nonsense librarian. Missing book in the stacks? That's no problem for my ... ALPHA EYES!
Not forgetting his sidekick, Deweyface Decimalhammer.
Quote from: Hawkmumbler on 18 January, 2024, 03:42:16 PMQuote from: The Legendary Shark on 18 January, 2024, 03:31:55 PMIt cannot be denied, though, that Johnathan Fanshaw Alpha is a cracking moniker.
For a Torie youth maybe.
If only he'd followed in his dad's footsteps. And not been a mutie. Makes you think... Sir John Kreelman, MP, Minister for Genetic Purity 😬
Dredd will always be Joe to me - I realise his full name is Joseph but before the Stallone film changed things I had this idea that in the future you could just be Joe without it being short for Joseph. Rico and Dolman don't even have first names. Or is it surnames they don't have?
Let's not forget Joseph Pineapples.
:D
Let's try hard to forget Susan Bananas.
We should have all known Pat was a strange one when he named a foul mouthed wheelie bin Roger Jaws.
I've long wondered if Dredd's first name is another Clint Eastwood reference. The undertaker calls his character "Joe" in A Fistful of Dollars of course, but then there's the 1972 film,
Joe Kidd, (full name Joseph, incidentally), and look where he's sitting at the end of this trailer...
Quote from: M.I.K. on 19 January, 2024, 06:11:41 PMI've long wondered if Dredd's first name is another Clint Eastwood reference.
According to Pat
"Yeah, I really created Judge Dredd, too" Mills, his first name is a reference to one of the priests from his upbringing. Because, obviously, when you're coming up with the flagship character for your new comic, the first thing you think of is:
"I know, I'll name him for an abusive priest who blighted my childhood."
Yep... That's the Pat Mills who wrote Dredd as a more heroic character than any other writer. Mmm-hmm.
I was just thinking of that particular origin story. We'll never know for sure of course, but my overwhelming feeling is that it's absolute bollix of the first order.
Uhm ... I thought we'd agreed that Tuesday was Mills-Bashing Day? :-\
There's also the fact, (which I've just remembered was previously pointed out on this thread a couple o' years ago), that Joe and Rico are names of characters in Little Caesar (1931).
Quote from: Funt Solo [R] on 19 January, 2024, 06:49:52 PMUhm ... I thought we'd agreed that Tuesday was Mills-Bashing Day? :-\
Sorry! Please forget what I said, and remember it in 4 days. ;)
Quote from: M.I.K. on 19 January, 2024, 06:51:37 PMThere's also the fact, (which I've just remembered was previously pointed out on this thread a couple o' years ago), that Joe and Rico are names of characters in Little Caesar (1931).
Sounds the most likely source. Both names were introduced at the same time in the Galaxy's Greatest, in
Return of Rico. A quick skim through progs confirms that Dredd was surname-only before that story.
Quote from: Jim_Campbell on 19 January, 2024, 06:20:45 PMQuote from: M.I.K. on 19 January, 2024, 06:11:41 PMI've long wondered if Dredd's first name is another Clint Eastwood reference.
According to Pat "Yeah, I really created Judge Dredd, too" Mills, his first name is a reference to one of the priests from his upbringing. Because, obviously, when you're coming up with the flagship character for your new comic, the first thing you think of is: "I know, I'll name him for an abusive priest who blighted my childhood."
Just looking at that again - my memory of it is that he named Dredd after his school, St Joseph's, but was inspired by a priest who worked there.
Why it took him 3 or 4 decades to mention it, or why the brave good guy that saved MC2 was like that priest, eludes me.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 19 January, 2024, 05:40:38 PM:D
Let's try hard to forget Susan Bananas.
Oh lord, I already had!
Quote from: Jim_Campbell on 18 January, 2024, 02:09:18 PMIt is so not like that. It would be exactly like revealing that a character called Jonny Alpha's full name was Jonathan Alpha.
Ha! Jim, you are absolutely correct. I have to say my example was lousy and you are spot-on.
Quote from: Jim_Campbell on 19 January, 2024, 06:20:45 PMAccording to Pat "Yeah, I really created Judge Dredd, too" Mills, his first name is a reference to one of the priests from his upbringing.
Now this gets to the real meat and potatoes of the issue. My problem with 'Joseph' is that for 18 years, did Wagner or Grant (or Mills) ever think of the character as anything but Joe? I would argue not... until reading this post of Jim's. If Dredd is based on a priest, then surely the bloke's name was Joseph. So, if we can take Mill's account as true, then that would 'win' the argument and convince me Dredd was a Joseph from day one. Otherwise, it is Joe for the win.
...and I note, with hope, the doubt that Jim has cast on PM's version of events.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 19 January, 2024, 05:40:38 PMLet's try hard to forget Susan Bananas.
My favourite thing about this is that it implies all hit-droids are named after fruit and there could be robots out there called stuff like Henry Nectarines.
On the Joe / Joseph debate I've no issue with it, although I've always found it odd that Joe has an 'everyman' name and Rico has an 'exotic tough guy' name when they're clone twins. Unless Rico is short for Richard?
Quote from: Barrington Boots on 22 January, 2024, 09:35:21 AMUnless Rico is short for Richard?
Short for Enrico... a nod to the Dredd family's hispanic heritage.
(Runs for cover.)
I'm sure this is just a coincidence but in the US Rico stands for the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act of 1970 but it does seem apt
Quote from: Jim_Campbell on 22 January, 2024, 12:06:50 PMQuote from: Barrington Boots on 22 January, 2024, 09:35:21 AMUnless Rico is short for Richard?
Short for Enrico... a nod to the Dredd family's hispanic heritage. (Runs for cover.)
Well, one of Dredd's real dads was from Barcelona.
Joe and Rico are the hero and villain characters in the Action strip Death Game 1999. Pat Mills just recycled the names.
Succinctly cleared up! I had no idea about that.
It certainly took a few months before Wagner used the name "Joe" in his stories. After Return of Rico (prog 30), the next instance of "Joe" appears to be The Oxygen Desert (prog 49).
In between, he's just known as "Judge Dredd" ... including a tombstone and a Christmas present "from D." to Walter, which are both ideal opportunities to show a full name. My guess is that the names were created by Pat for the Rico story, not before, and that John then went along with this later.
Quote from: GordonR on 22 January, 2024, 02:55:08 PMJoe and Rico are the hero and villain characters in the Action strip Death Game 1999. Pat Mills just recycled the names.
Good spot! Full marks, that chap.
The name Rico has always (well, often) made me think of Captain Ric, the gun-toting spaceman mascot of the breakfast cereal Ricicles. You're welcome for this insightful post.
Quote from: Blue Cactus on 22 January, 2024, 06:09:52 PMThe name Rico has always (well, often) made me think of Captain Ric, the gun-toting spaceman mascot of the breakfast cereal Ricicles. You're welcome for this insightful post.
Helmet, visor, big boots, gauntlets. It can't be a coincidence.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 22 January, 2024, 07:57:03 PMQuote from: Blue Cactus on 22 January, 2024, 06:09:52 PMThe name Rico has always (well, often) made me think of Captain Ric, the gun-toting spaceman mascot of the breakfast cereal Ricicles. You're welcome for this insightful post.
Helmet, visor, big boots, gauntlets. It can't be a coincidence.
We need a crossover!
Careful what you wish for...
(https://i.imgur.com/Pz2QxLs.png)
Dredd and Milk.
"Any sugar in that crud, Creep?"
"Er..."
"Ten years. Take him away."
End of crossover.
Quote from: Funt Solo [R] on 23 January, 2024, 06:42:31 PMCareful what you wish for...
(https://i.imgur.com/Pz2QxLs.png)
[/quoteQuote from: Funt Solo [R] on 23 January, 2024, 06:42:31 PMCareful what you wish for...
(https://i.imgur.com/Pz2QxLs.png)
Good point.
Quote from: Barrington Boots on 22 January, 2024, 09:35:21 AM...I've always found it odd that Joe has an 'everyman' name and Rico has an 'exotic tough guy' name when they're clone twins. Unless Rico is short for Richard?
Just like those other famous crime-fighting brothers Charlie and Emilio.
Quote from: I, Cosh on 24 January, 2024, 10:39:35 PMQuote from: Barrington Boots on 22 January, 2024, 09:35:21 AM...I've always found it odd that Joe has an 'everyman' name and Rico has an 'exotic tough guy' name when they're clone twins. Unless Rico is short for Richard?
Just like those other famous crime-fighting brothers Charlie and Emilio.
Charlie's real name is Carlos. Carlos and Emilio's father's real name isn't Martin, but Ramon.
Would you be shocked to hear the real family name is Etevez, not Sheen?
Quote from: GordonR on 24 January, 2024, 11:24:54 PMWould you be shocked to hear the real family name is Etevez, not Sheen?
No.
I'll see your Estevez and raise you a Frank Beard.
(https://pi.tedcdn.com/r/ted-conferences-speaker-photos-production.s3.amazonaws.com/ynvcjjwvjgxx5lrq3as6rxw3f7p3?w=255)
So is this guy really called Miguel Estevez?
That bit in Halo Jones where Rodice says that if she were to get a tattoo on her stomach, it would say 'this way up'... That's a shagging joke, isn't it? Possibly the prog's first one ever. I didn't get it - I was nine.
Depressing to know even in the far flung future, the most imaginative most people can seemingly be is missionary.
If it was pointing up, then it wouldn't be missionary.
I always thought it was either a drinking too much reference and/or a helpful hint for alien medics.
Quote from: Funt Solo [R] on 30 January, 2024, 07:18:53 PMIf it was pointing up, then it wouldn't be missionary.
You'se right! Had to check my copy of HJ when I got home, remembered the design wrong.
There may be some hope after all.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 30 January, 2024, 06:33:17 PMThat's a shagging joke, isn't it? Possibly the prog's first one ever.
I'd argue that honour possibly goes to the first episode of Robo-Hunter, where a beautiful woman asks Sam Slade if there's anything she can do to thank him, and Sam replies "careful honey, I might tell you". Though aged 10 or 11, I probably would have interpreted that as meaning kissing or whatever.
Quote from: Funt Solo [R] on 30 January, 2024, 07:18:53 PMIf it was pointing up, then it wouldn't be missionary.
Hang on. I'm confused now. Do 'this way up' stencils usually go on the tops of boxes or on the sides? I can't remember now.
Of course, Tharg's Head Revisited, possibly mentioned earlier in this thread, went all in with the innuendo, and even made a joke about the c-word.
Here, I shall demonstrate! :-[
Moving on...
(https://2kstages.github.io/AtoZ/Gunderson/Gunderson.png)
(Also: Missionary Man! Eh? Eh? A nod's as good as a wink to a blind bat!)
Not proud, but I may have found the earliest nether-reference:
(https://i.imgur.com/tZUsLjv.png)
[I await my Squaxx dek Finbarr.]
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 12 January, 2024, 04:06:58 PMI always said Souther like mother too
Man, JBC, this Rogue Trooper movie news is the best news ever! But if they run around saying "South-er" all the time, I think I'm going to be gritting my teeth a lot. :lol:
I hadn't thought of that! Maybe they'll adopt the Friday model and forget to call them Norts and Southers till the 4th movie in the series.
Krill tro Saunders awarded to Funt for his fine efforts.
I've just realised that the 'slay-stack' in Sláine (The Wickerman) is probably a play on 'haystack'.
Also I learned on QI that the ancient Greeks had a type of comedian or jester called a 'parasitas' or something, which translated into 'parasite'. And I thought Pat Mills invented the job title for Ukko to reflect his general unpleasantness.
I was just reading the other day that Ukko was a Indo-European God of the Sky, Thunder, Lightning & Harvest in the same vain as Thor in Norse Mythology
Ukko is also held as the most significant god of Finnish mythology & is Finnish for 'male grandparent', 'grandfather'& 'old man"
Not quite the Ukko we all know and love
Quote from: rogue69 on 27 February, 2024, 11:25:42 PMI was just reading the other day that Ukko was a Indo-European God of the Sky, Thunder, Lightning & Harvest in the same vain as Thor in Norse Mythology
Ukko is also held as the most significant god of Finnish mythology & is Finnish for 'male grandparent', 'grandfather'& 'old man"
Not quite the Ukko we all know and love
In Finland there is a town called Raahe. Raahe has a museum. In the museum is what is thought to be the world's oldest surviving diving suit, (18th century). The diving suit is known as "Wanha Herra" or "
The Old Gentleman", is made of leather and has feet resembling traditional Finnish footwear.
This is what the suit looks like...
(https://pbs.twimg.com/media/E5h-zaPWYAQLr2q?format=jpg&name=900x900)
...which may seem somewhat familiar...
(https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiM3zwBTKzKXsLVaPrNu_dfDZ22fQPc324sjudlTQ80P32R_9_pfJAVh5a0EytnF81E3Gk8mTF7CSWgTBe_gPc2rRD9oSfLOBZkSWNBzCAdXiA6fXYsDV7ewGGT7EaGF8XWOe54dFI19xTKh3gXw5fs2MNTUl0j_M7844HwJINVBhlm5dyKzUgWwqr7rv0/s16000/Ukko.jpg)
Well I never. I recognised the suit immediately, before even seeing the following Horned God screenshots or reading that your post was specifically about Ukko.
As for Ukko being named after the thunder god, it was covered in a relatively recent Sláine one-off I was raving incoherently about in another thread and whose name someone else had to remind me of. And I've forgotten again - the Bogomil? Probably not but something like that.
Edit- the Bogatyr - cheers, Barney.
Satellites.
Quote from: JayzusB.Christ on 28 February, 2024, 06:57:25 PMthe Bogatyr
When you get to know him, he lets you call him Humphrey.
Strontium Dog: Tales From the Doghouse: Maeve the Many-Armed: Niall of the Nine Sausages (progs 636-638)
1. That's clearly not got enough sub-titles.
2. It's obliquely referencing Niall of the Nine Hostages (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niall_of_the_Nine_Hostages), who I first heard of today*.
* Because one of his descendant's castles is fa'in doon (https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c84ye08kypeo).
Quote from: Funt Solo on 16 March, 2024, 04:21:11 AMStrontium Dog: Tales From the Doghouse: Maeve the Many-Armed: Niall of the Nine Sausages (progs 636-638)
1. That's clearly not got enough sub-titles.
2. It's obliquely referencing Niall of the Nine Hostages (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niall_of_the_Nine_Hostages), who I first heard of today*.
* Because one of his descendant's castles is fa'in doon (https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c84ye08kypeo).
Because Niall was the guy who brought Dt Patrick to Ireland, his name was drilled into us throughout primary school. The 'Nine Sausages' thing is an old one - I first heard it from my dad who heard it in his own primary school, and spotted Niall of the Nine Sausages in a Wanderly Wagom (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wanderly_Wagon) annual long before he appeared in the prog. (Balor was in the same annual, looking more like a giant cyclops than a baboonm'n.)
So get this - turns out Sydney Sweeney and Mia Goth are actually two different people.
Quote from: Link Prime on 26 March, 2024, 03:44:23 PMSo get this - turns out Sydney Sweeney and Mia Goth are actually two different people.
(https://i.imgur.com/0zQ2fax.png)
The first time I watched The Department, over half the film had run by the time I realised Matt Damon and Leonardo diCaprio were two different people.
Just realised how Scottish Bonnie and Clyde sound!!! :o
Wait - is "Armoured Gideon" a pun on "Armageddon"?
The cover of prog 672 seems to think it's a pun on "Apocalypse", but yes it is, and a sort-of reference to a biblical warrior who also goes by the name Jerubbaal.
Quote from: Funt Solo on 02 April, 2024, 04:48:16 AMWait - is "Armoured Gideon" a pun on "Armageddon"?
By way of Joe
Scummer Strummer.
'Armageddon' derives from the Hebrew, 'Har Megiddo'. Given that Megiddo is a place, we may be able to shoehorn a 'Meg" reference into all this as well.
But don't worry if you don't know what 'Armageddon' means. It's not like it spells the end of the world or anything.
Quote from: Dash Decent on 03 April, 2024, 06:09:43 AM'Armageddon' derives from the Hebrew, 'Har Megiddo'. Given that Megiddo is a place, we may be able to shoehorn a 'Meg" reference into all this as well.
Megiddo also being the settlement in Israel in which the ancient picture of Damien appears in The Omen II.