Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Ring Out The Old, Ring In The New



A Great New Years Song
And Video From 
George Harrison!




Jocular Tales Of Anthropomorphism : Koko and Kola


Okay, while it’s true that it’s Superhero comics that I adore the most, I love the medium in almost all it’s genres and have a soft spot in my heart for Funny Animal strips. So I’ll be posting of and on about some of the delights to be found in that milieu.

This opening one is based on a fairly obscure strip but one that still looms large in my memory. When I was very young, my mom would occasionally stop at a convenience store in Opa-Locka, Florida called U-Totem. When she did, I’d immediately toddle over to the spinner rack. In one instance I spied a comic called TOM TOM THE JUNGLE BOY and begged mom to buy it for me. 

 
This book was one of the earliest that I ever owned and I’m very nostalgic about it. I enjoyed all the strips that were in it, which included Tom Tom, Judy and the Magic Chalk, The Pixies and Goofus the Gopher. But the one I adored most concerned two small koala bears named Koko and Kola. Here is the story I saw





 
Although I wished to find more issues, I never saw another. What I couldn’t know or understand was that I was looking at a reprint of a series that existed long before I was even born. The comic I’d gotten was published by the notorious Israel Waldman, a man who bought a trove of engravers plates from a printer that had produced comics for numerous publishers during the Golden Age. Reusing the plates, Waldman then issued the old material packaged with new covers. He got into some legal trouble by issuing one using Will Eisner’s “The Spirit” and another with EC stories. But for the most part the old publishers he was pirating were now out of business and could have cared less.

I later found that “Koko and Kola” were properties done by the publisher Novelty Press. Here are a couple more stories from KOKO AND KOLA #4.













 
I found (and still find) the artwork to be lovely and distinctive. The stories were fairly juvenile but are imbued with a sweetness that I still find attractive. Although I’ve researched the matter the identity to the cartoonist is still a mystery for me.

Pat

Monday, December 30, 2013

Adolescent Behavior : Meet Merton


In 1953 and 54 the small outfit called Toby Publishing took their stab at the Riverdale sweepstakes by introducing Merton Muddle in the pages of MEET MERTON. 

  
Mert lived a familiar teenaged lifestyle vexed by a rival named Chris Cross and enjoying the company of a best pal called Calories Casey. However most of Merton’s troubles came from through his relationship with two girls, the strawberry blonde Marcia and the brunette coiffed Joann. Take for example “What Goes Up!”







 
Merton is a tad different from Archie in that he is nowhere near a girl crazy as the ol’ carrot top. Witness the exchange with his dad on page two of “Love And Let Love”






 
The cartoonist for the strip was Dave Berg, the guy who would later be responsible for the “Lighter Side” strips in Mad Magazine. His cartooning is pretty loose in Merton, no where near as tight as his Mad stuff. But I’m convinced that Merton’’s dad was the prototype to his character ‘Roger Kuputnik”.

I’ll end things with “Anything For A Laugh”.

Pat









Sunday, December 29, 2013

It's Barbara Steele's Birthday!

One Of The All Time Great
Actresses In The Horror Genre.
The Ultimate Femme Fatale!
Here Are Some Classic Images 
From Her Movies


 
 

It's The Queen Of Horror's
Birthday So Enjoy One Of Her
Classic Chillers "The Ghost"