Comics Corner: The Amazing Spider-Man 29



Title: The Amazing Spider-Man
Issue Number: 29
Release Date: October 1965

Highlights
  • Scorpion breaks out of prison
  • Ned Leeds returns from Europe
Low Points
  • Aunt May shows signs of getting ill...Again
Oddities
  • I don't get why Peter Parker is so obsessed with Betty Brant
  • Spider-Man can talk under water?
Rating (based on a 1 through 5 Stans grading system)






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Comics Corner: The Amazing Spider-Man Annual 2



Title: The Amazing Spider-Man
Issue Number: Annual 2
Release Date: October 1965

Highlights
  • Spider-Man meets Doctor Strange
  • Good story, though a rather generic battle with random thugs, for the most part 
  • Fun rogue's gallery, which includes the issue they were featured / introduced in
Low Points
  • None to really mention
Oddities
  • None to really mention
Rating (based on a 1 through 5 Stans grading system)






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Comics Corner: The Amazing Spider-Man 28



Title: The Amazing Spider-Man
Issue Number: 28
Release Date: September 1965

Highlights
  • First appearance of Molten Man
  • The return of Spencer Smythe
  • Peter Parker gets his original costume back
  • Spider-Man gets a beat down by Molten Man
  • Peter Parker graduates high school
  • Peter Parker receives a science scholarship for having the highest scholastic average in the school's history , and Flash Thompson receives one for his athletic abilities
  • As of this writing, issue 28 is the earliest issue I physically own
Low Points
  • None to really mention - Wow, two issues in a row!
Oddities
  • Who names their child Raxton? His name is actually Mark Raxton, but he's only referred to by his last name
Rating (based on a 1 through 5 Stans grading system)






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Retro Spins: Ghostbusters



I may be walking into a fire on this one, but I actually like Ghostbusters II, both the film and soundtrack, more than I like the original.

When ghosts go on a rampage, only three men can save the world. It's GHOSTBUSTERS, starring Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd and Harold Ramis as a manical band of parapsychologists specializing in psychic phenomena - and super natural hilarity! Fired from university research jobs, Drs. Venkman (Marruay), Stantz (Aykroyd) and Spengler (Ramis) set up shop as "Ghostbusters" ridding Manhattan of bizarre apparitions. But even the spirit exterminators are severely tested when beautiful Dana Barrett (Sigourney Weaver) and her nerdy neighbor (Rick Moranis) become possessed by demons living in their building. Soon every spook in the city is loose and our heroes face their supreme challenge at a roof-top demonic shrine. If you want your spirits raised, who you gonna call? GHOSTBUSTERS! - The back cover of the original VHS

Okay, stop. First and foremost, I have to address the back cover to the original VHS. Am I the only one insulted here? Where is any mention of Ernie Hudson? I can understand, but won't dismiss, not finding a place to mention Annie Potts. Seriously though? Ernie, the fourth Ghostbuster, Hudson isn't mentioned once? The back cover could have easily said;

When ghosts go on a rampage, only four men can save the world. It's GHOSTBUSTERS, starring Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd, Harold Ramis and Ernie Hudson as a band specializing in psychic phenomena - and super natural hilarity! Fired from university research jobs, Drs. Venkman (Marruay), Stantz (Aykroyd) and Spengler (Ramis) set up shop as "Ghostbusters" ridding Manhattan of bizarre apparitions with the aid of their new hires Winston Zeddemore (Hudson) and loyal but underappreciated receptionist Janine Melnitze (Annie Potts). But even the spirit exterminators are severely tested when beautiful Dana Barrett (Sigourney Weaver) and her nerdy neighbor (Rick Moranis) become possessed by demons living in their building. Soon every spook in the city is loose and our heroes face their supreme challenge at a roof-top demonic shrine. If you want your spirits raised, who you gonna call? GHOSTBUSTERS! - Updated better version from The Toy Box

Right, with that put to bed, let me focus on the actual soundtrack.

It's actually really good. I honestly liked the majority of the tracks. Of course, you can't go wrong with Ray Parker, Jr.'s theme song. You also get great tracks from Air Supply, Thompson Twins, The Bus Boys, Mick Smiley and Laura Branigan.

Probably my least favorite section of the soundtrack are the score from Elmer Bernstein. They're just not for me. I can also do without the instrumental version of Ray Parker, Jr.'s Ghostbusters. It's kind of unnecessary.

Overall, not a bad album. In fact, it's pretty solid. I mean, I essentially like the first seven tracks of ten songs, and even threw them all into my iTunes and iPod rotations. I honestly didn't expect to like this as much as I did.

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Xenozoic Tales / Cadillacs And Dinosaurs (Kitchen Sink Comix / Game Designers' Workshop / Tyco)



Xenozoic Tales
Kitchen Sink Comix
1987 - 1996

Cadillacs and Dinosaurs is an interesting tale of pop culture history. Unlike numerous toy lines out there which began as a result of a cartoon, C&D has a little more depth to it than your average story. While it would eventually lead to the animated series, which would in turn segue into the toy line, the birth of the "franchise" started in black and white form in the pages of Kitchen Sink Comix Xenozoic Tales.


The series ran sporadically for fourteen issues between 1987 and 1996 before ending mid-story arc. This was not only disappointing to fans back in 1996, but remains one to this day as the story has yet to be finished.


It's interesting to note that its cancellation wasn't due to the books being poorly received. In fact, this was quite the opposite. Xenozoic Tales won a total of four Harvey Awards during the 90's. Unfortunately, issues just got further and further apart in publication, and then seemingly ceased overnight.


No reason has ever been given as to why the series ended abruptly. In fact, Flesk Publications had a deal in the works with series creator Mark Schultz for an additional 80-page treatment which would have concluded the current story arc. Sadly, the last mention of this was back in 2013 when Flesk released the massive 352 page trade paperback, Xenozoic.


Between 1990 and 1991, Marvel Comics picked up the license to the series, and under their Epic banner released reprints of the series. With all new covers, color printing and the title changed to Cadillacs and Dinosaurs, it was the hope of many that the series would find a strong foothold and be the new home for the books. Unfortunately, only the first six issues ever came to fruition.


Topps Comics began publishing a second volume of books in 1994, but sadly this too proved futile. Rather than continue the current story, Shultz used the Topps banner to produce stories which filled in the gaps which were left after issue ten. However, after three story arcs and nine issues, the series went on hiatus just before the printing of Xenozoic Tales number 13.

Cadillacs And Dinosaurs
Game Designers' Workshop
1990

In 1990, Cadillacs and Dinosaurs was converted into a pen and paper roleplaying game by Game Designers' Workshop. The core of the game was designed around the popular Twilight: 2000 rules, which first began publication in 1984.

The publication of the book / game must have sold enough that a second edition was considered and even advertised in 1993. However, much like the comic book series, it's unknown as to what happened with its release. Overnight, it too vanished into obscurity, and with that, nothing was ever heard from the roleplaying world again about the game.

Cadillacs And Dinosaurs
Tyco
1993

With the comic book still, somewhat, in publication, this leads the story of Cadillacs and Dinosaurs to 1993 where CBS Kids airs the cartoon. If you hadn't seen this coming, the television series didn't last very long either. It ran for a mere thirteen episodes between 1993 and 1994.

To coincide with the series, Tyco procured the rights to produce a series of action figures, dinosaurs and vehicles. For a company which typically specializes in toy cars, they surprisingly did a pretty good job with the line.


The six figures produced each featured five points of articulation and a slew of launching projectile accessories. 


To add a little extra "oomph" to the line, each card back was also individually designed to feature artwork of the character inside. Though it certainly adds to the production costs of any line, I have to admit, this little added "love" shown by toy manufacturers really adds that something extra to the line.


Tyco produced two types of dinosaurs. These smaller carded versions were definitely more wallet friendly than the larger ones, but couldn't hold a candle in the cool factor to them.


The Kentrosaurus and Triceratops were beast! Not only for the dinosaurs they were, but their plastic sizes.



Tyco also produced three vehicles for the line. Of course, you can't have Cadillacs and Dinosaurs without producing Jack Tenrec's cadillac. It's as iconic to the series as he himself is.





The animated series wasn't limited to the action figure line for promotions. There were also a handful of video games, which included the arcade cabinet, a Sega CD game and a handful of PC ones. Believe it or not, the video games are actually much more scarce than the toy line, and command some pretty high prices. Especially the arcade cabinet - Not that those are cheap to begin with.

Cadillacs and Dinosaurs is definitely a series which holds a lot of interesting history to it. It's not one of those fly by night cartoons of the 80 / 90's where the toy line came first, then the cartoon to promote it and so on. With its great storytelling in the pages of comic books, and an already established fan base, it seemed like it would have been destined to succeed. Too bad everything related to the "franchise" seemed to be abandoned over time.

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Comics Corner: The Amazing Spider-Man 27



Formerly Reading Spider-Man, now officially changed to Comics Corner to allow for all the more titles in the vast world of Comic Books.

Title: The Amazing Spider-Man
Issue Number: 27
Release Date: August 1965

Highlights
  • Second part story featuring Crime-Master and Green Goblin
  • Peter Parker sells photographs to the competitive newspaper, The Daily Globe
  • The informant Patch is really Frederick Foswell in disguise
Low Points
  • Not perfect, but no low points to mention
Oddities
  • Store bought Spider-Man costumes begin to instantly shrink the moment they get wet
Rating (based on a 1 through 5 Stans grading system)






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Comics Corner: Watchmen



Title: Watchmen
Issue Number: 1
Release Date: September 1986

Highlights
  • First appearance of several key characters; Rorschach, Nite-Owl (both Dan Drieberg and Hollis Mason), Dr. Manhattan, Laurie Juspeczyk (Silk Spectre), Adrian Veidt (Ozymandias) and The Comedian
  • Rorschach is brutal! Has zero mercy as he snaps a mans fingers one by one
  • Fantastic introduction to a disbanded team - Leaves you wanting to learn more about these characters and how they came to be where they are at this point in time
Low Points
  • Laurie doesn't come off as likeable when we first meet her
Oddities
  • Never going to get used to seeing Dr. Manhattan's large blue butt
Rating (based on a 1 through 5 bat symbols grading system)


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Comics Corner: The Amazing Spider-Man 26



Title: The Amazing Spider-Man
Issue Number: 26
Release Date: July 1965

Highlights
  • First appearance of Crime-Master
  • Green Goblin returns 
  • Peter Parker attacks not only Flash, but all of his friends - AT THE SAME TIME!
  • Peter buys a second hand Spider-Man costume because he doesn't have a suit - wardrobe malfunctions follow
  • First appearance of Patch
  • Though the comic series has had continuous continuity since the first issue, this is the first actual cliffhanger ending
Low Points
  • Story tries to set it up so that Frederick Foswell is the Crime-Master, but it's painfully obvious he's not - Though by the end of the issue we still don't know who is
Oddities
  • Silenced weapons go, "Thwok!" in Marvel Comics
Rating (based on a 1 through 5 Stans grading system)






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Comics Corner: The Long Halloween 5



Title: Batman: The Long Halloween
Issue Number: 5
Release Date: April 1997

Highlights
  • Made me want to get back to reading Spider-Man comics
Low Points
  • I'm officially bored with this story - It's the same cookie cutter plot and pace for each issue
  • Feel like I've read the same book five times, just with a different coat of paint
  • Story is not advancing
Oddities
  • People consider this one of the greatest Batman stories ever told
Rating (based on a 1 through 5 Bat Symbols grading system)


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Comics Corner: The Long Halloween 4



Title: Batman: The Long Halloween
Issue Number: 4
Release Date: March 1997

Highlights
  • Joker returns, crazier than ever
Low Points
  • Story is getting very repetitive, and not advancing quickly enough
  • Starting to lose interest
Oddities
  • Artwork feels like it's getting worse
  • Joker steals a plane, and it just so happens to have a Joker style smiley face on the front?
Rating (based on a 1 through 5 Bat Symbols grading system)


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Retro Spins: The Karate Kid



Much like pretty much every child of the 80's, The Karate Kid made me want to take karate so badly. I never did though. Still, that didn't stop me from mimicking everything I saw from the film. Daniel was my idol. So much so that I was the only kid I knew who actually had the toys from Remco.

Then I grew up. Watching the film from a mature perspective, I saw it for what it was. A film about a bully named Daniel, who moves to a new state, a new home, and starts a new life. There, young Daniel immediately starts harassing a local boy, terrorizing him as he stalks a young girl, who also happens to be said boy's ex-girlfriend. He consistently picks fights, which he loses, and then goes for the ultimate humiliation, challenging the boy to a fight in front of the entire town at the All Valley Tournament. Here, he goes for the ultimate dishonorable victory, as he wins the tournament with an illegal kick to his opponent's face.

Perspective is everything.

A fatherless teenager faces his moment of truth in "The Karate Kid." Daniel (Ralph Macchio) arrives in Los Angeles from the East coast and faces the difficult task of making new friends. However, he becomes the object of bullying by the Cobras, a menacing gang of karate students, when he strikes up a relationship with Ali (Elizabeth Shue), the Cobra leader's ex-girlfriend. Eager to fight back and impress his new girlfriend, but afraid to confront the dangerous gang, Daniel asks his handyman Miyagi (Noriyuki "Pat" Morita), whom he learns is a master of the martial arts, to teach him karate. Miyagi teaches Daniel that karate is a mastery over the self - mind and body - and that fighting is always the last answer to a problem. Under Miyagi's guidance, Daniel develops not only physical skills but also the faith and self-confidence to compete despite tremendous odds as he encounters the fight of his life in the exciting finale to this entertaining film. - The back cover of the original VHS

You're not going to find to forty hits on this soundtrack, but if you're a fan of the film, you're going to hear some tunes which will place you in the exact moment and time of the film's two hour seven minute running time. It also gives you the opportunity to hear these tracks in their entirety, without shifting them off to background noise. In doing so, you can actually find some which are pretty good.

Survivor doesn't bring their "A" game, but they deliver a decent track in the album opener, The Moment of Truth. (Bop Bop) At The Beach may be a little silly, but it's also decent enough to tap your foot to. No Shelter from Broken Edge drops you right into the scene where Daniel is running from the Cobra Kai's after humiliating Johnny at the school Halloween dance.

There are three tracks glaringly omitted from the soundtrack these are; The Ride, from Matches, which is the song played as Johnny and the gang arrive on the scene at the beach. Bananarama's Cruel Summer, as heard in the film when Daniel is on the soccer field at school. The last, Please Answer Me by Broken Edge, which is heard during the Halloween dance.

On the bright side, tracking down The Ride and Please Answer Me on Youtube to at least hear them didn't yield very good songs. Bananarama's Cruel Summer can easily be found on the trio's second and self titled album, as well as numerous greatest hits and 80's compilations. So, it's no real big loss in the long run.

Overall, The Karate Kid album serves a purpose of putting you in the place and time of the movie, but doesn't necessarily yield very memorable tracks beyond that. It's good, but it's not the best (around). Ha!

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New Coke And Coke II (The Coca-Cola Company)



New Coke and Coke II
The Coca-Cola Company
1985 and 1992

Over one hundred years ago, Dr. John S. Pemberton of Atlanta unknowingly created a moment in history that would forever change the world of soft drinks. With his newly developed syrup, he made his way to soda fountains. With the aid of soda water, and a deeming of "excellent" by those who sampled it, Coca-Cola the drink, though not yet in name, was born. The year was 1886.

Pemberton would pass away in 1888, but not before selling off portions of his business. This included the formula for his soda, which was purchased by Asa G. Candler. Candler improved on the formula, a decision which purportedly made the drink taste better, and then expanded the "franchise" by distributing it to soda fountains beyond Atlanta. With demand for the drink growing rapidly, fountain shop owner, Joseph Biedenharn of Mississippi, installed bottling machinery behind his store. In doing so, he became the first person to put the drink in a bottle.

In 1899, entrepreneurs Benjamin Thomas, Joseph Whitehead and John Lupton, purchased bottling rights from Candler for a mere dollar. They developed what would become the Coca-Cola worldwide bottling system. With knock off versions of the soda taking a piece of the Coca-Cola pie, it was agreed upon that a distinctive bottle was needed to distinguish the drink from all the rest. The official design was approved and manufactured in 1916, and was eventually trademarked in 1977.

In 1919, Candler sold the company to a group of investors led by Ernest Woodruff. As collateral, Woodruff placed the original formula for Coca-Cola in a vault of the bank which loaned the money for the purchase of the company. When the loan was paid off in 1925, the formula was transferred to another bank. It wouldn't be until 2011 that the formula would be transferred to the actual grounds of the World of Coca-Cola in Atlanta. It's now on public display.

Like most soft drinks, Coca-Cola was marketed for medicinal purposes, claiming it alleviated headaches and acted as a "brain tonic". Its use of coca leaves, which contained a small amount of cocaine, and caffeine from kola nuts eluded to its medicinal benefits. In 1903, the cocaine portion was removed, leaving just the caffeine as the only stimulant. However, coca leaf extract, with the cocaine removed, remained as part of the formula.

Though it was initially limited to signs, coupons and newspaper advertisements, Coca-Cola eventually reaped the rewards of the age of radio and eventually television. Its adds, in and of themselves, have become as iconic as the drink itself. Its first television commercial broadcast in 1955. The add sold it as an energy lifting drink, great for after a long day of ice skating. It also put the count of drinks sold per day at fifty million.

As the sixties rolled in, Coca-Cola continued its sports themed advertisements. Baseball, golf, swimming, racing and bowling all got worked into the commercials. However, it wouldn't be until the 70's that one of the most memorable commercials would air. The jingle ingrained itself into your head as it starts with a young girl singing, "I'd like to buy the world a Coke..." The camera then pans out to show a multitude of people who all begin to sing the song atop a grassy hillside. The commercial was revisited in 1990 when Coke found every last person who was in that commercial, along with their children, and brought them back to film a remake. The nostalgia of the commercial impacted hard among Americans who remembered the original iconic ad.

However, before 1990, Coke had a little rough patch wedged in there. The year was 1985. The world was changing in the wake of pop culture and new wave, and Coke wanted to show the world it could be just as rad as all those crazy teenagers out there. Thus the concept of New Coke was born.

On April 23, 1985, Coca-Cola released the drink. To really drive home the point that the soda had changed, the company discontinued its "original" formula, removing it from markets. There was only one problem. The public consensus was that New Coke was terrible.

Mass hysteria ensued as diehard enthusiasts for the original drink ran to stores across the country to buy out every last bottle and can of the now discontinued soda. Some reportedly spent upwards of one thousand dollars on stockpiling it. That's about $2,300.00 in today's standards (based on an inflation calculator).

Was New Coke really all that bad though? Truthfully, not really. It wasn't as horrible as people want to remember it. In all actuality, it tasted like Pepsi. Still, purists of Coke hated it, and they weren't about to go quietly into the night.

Letters and phone calls bombarded the Coca-Cola Company, most of which weren't for the intentions of singing New Coke's praises. The company realized all too quickly it had made one of the biggest mistakes in marketing history. They took a beloved iconic drink, and essentially threw it away in lieu of trying to show Coke was hip. Some bottlers / distributors outside the USA weren't even interested in the new drink, and refused to bottle it. Whether this was a result of the home front backlash or not is unknown.

By June, Coca-Cola was back peddling on the drink, making a public announcement that the original Coke would be coming back in the newly branded Classic Coke can. Meanwhile, New Coke was quietly shuffled under a rug to be forgotten...For a little while anyway.

Despite the original backlash, the company wasn't ready to throw the towel in on New Coke just yet. Instead, they rebranded it in 1992 as Coke II. It wasn't the overnight train wreck that New Coke had become, but it still wasn't a very popular drink - Let alone one with any longevity behind it. By 1998, Coke II was sparsely available, and then discontinued.

Coke would announce in 2002 that the word "Classic" would no longer be prominent in their label, and by 2009, removed the word completely from labels. It seemed the world had finally seen the end of the New Coke / Coke II era for good. Closure, if you will. 

While you could call New Coke and Coke II a PR nightmare, and possibly the worst decision ever made by a major corporation, I try to look at it another way. Coca-Cola learned a valuable lesson from their rebranding and new formula. They learned that the original Coca-Cola wasn't just a soft drink to the world. It was something bigger. Something important and dear to the people. When the company brought back the original drink, it not only gained the trust back from loyal patrons who felt shunned, but also brought with it a resurgence in the drink's popularity.

Why?

Because not only did Coca-Cola learn a valuable lesson, but so too did the people who drank it. If you take it for granted, thinking it may be there forever, think again. It may not. Coca-Cola isn't just your average run of the mill soda. It's the soft drink of choice that many American's fought for vocally and won.

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Comics Corner: The Long Halloween 3



Title: Batman: The Long Halloween
Issue Number: 3
Release Date: February 1997

Highlights
  • Joker's massive pistol - You have to see it to believe it, and it's funny
  • Joker adds another interesting layer to the story
Low Points
  • Probably the worst drawings of Joker I've ever seen in a Batman comic - Looks awful
Oddities
  • Joker defeats Harvey Dent in a fight by kicking him in the privates
Rating (based on a 1 through 5 Bat Symbols grading system)




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