reblog the Don Draper of getting a job he’s unqualified for and you’ll have 10 years of getting jobs you’re unqualified for
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reblog the Don Draper of getting a job he’s unqualified for and you’ll have 10 years of getting jobs you’re unqualified for
In what may go down as one of the all-time-great comic book bromances, Jonathan Hickman and Robert Kirkman are teaming up to executive produce television shows at Amazon based on two comics co-created by Hickman: East of West and Transhuman.
amazon seems to be taking their original streaming content seriously. finally... i hope they’re able to capture some of the visual aesthetics of East of West properly...
Injustice 2 Chapter 53 switches the focus away from Earth as Hal Jordan is brought to trial for his crimes against the Green Lantern Corps. He’s very sorry for what he did, but how can that e…
and now we’re in space with fallen hero and all around jerkface Hal Jordan, just in time for his trial. and a dead hero returns... sorta.
Injustice 2 Chapter 52 resolves several cliffhangers and brings the current narrative arc to a satisfying, if mournful, close. There will be spoilers… OH MY GOD SHE DID IT!!! Remember last re…
a satisfying conclusion to the current Batman arc, albeit with some tragedy...
Injustice 2 Chapter 51 opens with a bit of heart and humor from Harley Quinn and Booster Gold, then drags out the tension from last issue’s cliffhanger, not only refusing to resolve the quest…
i fell behind on updating these, so bear with me as i spam my own blog with three weeks worth of reviews... this one’s another good take from the Injustice 2 team. i’m loving this comic.
It looks just as wacky as you’d expect.
i’m so excited for this movie. the love and passion ryan reynolds has for the character, as well as the similar sense of humor, just shines through in so many scenes...
Injustice 2 Chapter 50 is a bit of a slow issue that gives most characters a chance to pause, catch their breath, and and in Athanasia’s case, reflect on the problems inherent in trusting an …
this is gonna be an ongoing title recap, i think. i dig the weekly frenetic pace combined with more heart than you’d expect, based on the literal video game premise of never-ending superhero conflict.Â
Champions #17 manages to be a lot of fun and incredibly terrifying, all at the same time. There will be spoilers… Champions #17 features two distinctly different yet interconnected stories, b…
here’s another comic book review from yours truly! check it out! Champions is a great comic, with fully fleshed out teen protagonists truly trying to make the world a better place. it’s worth your time.
The Walking Dead #176 continues to increase the anxiety regarding the The Commonwealth, without giving any concrete evidence of wrongdoing on their part. But damn, they are suspicious as hell……
another review. i'm doing regular write-ups of walking dead now, and trying a more relaxed, recap/review/analysis type approach. i find my best voice(s) tend to be somewhat idiosyncratic that way...
Trophies (a short story by cj stephens)
The boy eyed the kitty eagerly through the screen window. Kitty had another trophy. Maybe it was a mouse or an egg. Once it had been a snake. The boy never knew what it might be, and he never ceased to be amazed at the things Kitty managed to find, steal, or kill. Whatever it was, it would soon belong to the boy. Day after day he tiptoed past his father, snoring on the couch, deftly skipping over empty bottles and overfull ashtrays, and slipped outside to confront Kitty. Sometimes Kitty led the boy into and through the woods out back, bouncing from ground to tree to ground, round and round, back and forth, til the boy’s face pulsed red and his heart rattled madly in his chest. Sometimes he ran under the house and the boy tried to follow, crawling through bugs and dirt and insulation and pipes. Sometimes Kitty hid; in the house or outside, in boxes and closets and under beds or in rabbit holes and hollow logs and overhead, lurking in the branches. And sometimes Kitty fought, hissing and spitting and popping, brandishing his razor claws and needle teeth fiercely, unafraid and defiant. When Kitty fought, the boy did too. In the end the boy always won. He kept all the trophies, lined up in a row on the windowsill of his bedroom. His mother probably would have made him throw them away, but his father didn’t care. The only times his father even came in the room were when the boy was in trouble, and he never stuck around after the beating.
Kitty slunk out of view. The boy followed, scurrying out the wide-open front door, pausing on the partially finished porch to scan for Kitty. Spotting Kitty underneath the old car, the boy moved to intercept. Kitty darted out from under the car lightly, but whatever he’d found snagged between the ground and the tire, yanking him backward. Kitty changed directions and raced back at the boy, cutting between his legs just ahead of his chubby hands, dragging his prize behind him. It jingled! Eyes sparkling, the boy gave chase silently.
Kitty headed for the woods, but again his trophy slowed him and the boy cut him off. Kitty sped back toward the house, zigzagging, dust clouds swirling behind him, hopping oddly off balance. The boy pounced, landing whisker lengths behind Kitty, hands straining to hold onto a tail or leg or ear, but instead grasping only fur. Kitty pulled his tail down and his back legs up, spun around, and launched off the boy’s head, sailing through the doorway into the house. The boy wiped dust out of his eyes and scrambled into the house after Kitty, who had veered down the hall toward the boy’s room. Toward the trophies…
Frantically the boy raced down the hall to protect his stolen loot. He grabbed the doorjamb and pulled himself around into his room, rolling quickly to his feet, trapping Kitty in the corner. Kitty feinted left then right and finally went left for real, sliding across the floor, under the bed, and out the door. The boy followed Kitty back down the hall and around the corner. The boy flew into the living room, reaching for the trophy, which looked like some kind of necklace. His fingers stretched and he surged forward as Kitty dropped his prize and the boy crashed into his father, awake and angry, the boy’s fingers clutching the prize guiltily: His father’s dog tags…
Kitty trotted lazily into the boy’s room and jumped up on the windowsill, howls and smacks and crashes cascading almost musically behind him. He picked up the first trophy in his mouth and slunk outside, eyes darting left and right, whiskers twitching, as he quickly hid his recovered property under the house before disappearing back inside, only to reappear moments later with another trophy. His mouth stretched wide around a large acorn, Kitty seemed to grin as the symphony inside reached a crescendo.
Wolfgang (a short story by cj stephens)
You want to know about the spider, don’t you? It’s okay, everyone does. I don’t mind, really. It’s just tough to know where to start, and my memory’s not the greatest these days… I guess it all started with a joint…
I had just dropped out of college, halfway through my fourth year. Apparently attendance is important all the time, and not just on test days. I hadn't smoked weed in months, having distanced myself from it after my second year in college and a painfully obsessive relationship with a crazy hot chica who'd introduced me to it. It would be easy to say that smoking weed was the reason behind my dropping out, but it wouldn’t be entirely true. I was just lazy and unmotivated, and I didn’t really know why I was there. The weed certainly didn’t help my situation, but like I said, I quit long before I dropped out. Besides, I needed a job, and there's no sense in failing the drug test before the interview, if you know what I mean...
I eventually found a job as a waiter at Stone Baked Pizza. The pay wasn't great, but tips were good, especially after home football games. Of course I made sure to wear the school colors on those days, and while I preferred the tables filled with cheerleaders and/or sorority girls, I took care of everyone equally and they seemed to appreciate that.
Once I had a job, I needed a place to live. I’d been kicked out of the dorms when I dropped out of school, and I’d been bumming around with various friends and acquaintances ever since. I hooked up with a couple of friends who were looking for a place, and we rented a house in the cheap part of town.
The place had holes. Holes in the ceiling. Holes in the windows. Holes in the yard. Holes under the sinks. Holes in the walls and doors. And with the holes came the bugs. Flying bugs, crawling bugs, buzzing bugs, stinging and biting and nasty bugs... Nothing stopped them. There were too many places for them to get in, so it didn't matter how many we killed. We were doomed to be overrun. Then one day at work I met Wolfgang…
I had quickly realized that no one at a pizza place cares if you toke up, as long as you do your job. I wasn’t in school anymore, and when you live in a bug infested shithole, weed’s a cheap way to make it a little more livable. As a matter of fact, the pizza place was a good place to score some weed, but that’s beside the point. On this particular day I was cleaning out the storage shed behind the restaurant. So I lit up a joint as I shifted the 50-pound bags of flour, stacked the boxes of super thick soda syrup, and cleaned the floor with a push broom. I was feeling pretty mellow, enjoying the warm heavy atmosphere of the shed in the sun when a huge hairy spider fell on my hand with an audible thump. I’ve always been jumpy about spiders; it's not that I’m afraid they'll hurt me, but they always scare the shit out of me with their quick sticky feet and make me jump before I realize I’m in no danger. I’d just taken a huge hit off the joint, and had been holding it in for a bit, sucking all the savor from the smoke. Burning smoke exploded from my lungs as I yanked my hand away from the spider. He held on though, and as I bent double, coughing and hacking, I involuntarily pulled him close to my mouth. Stinky nasty skunky smoke coated him, and he slowly slid off my hand onto the floor. I staggered away from him, intimidated by the three dimensionality of his legs... Bugs' legs shouldn't have depth, you know?
The coughing fit passed and I drained the half-gallon to go cup of Dr. Pepper I’d brought with me. Curious, I looked for the spider. He was huge, like grapefruit size huge, and sat on the floor where he'd fallen, blinking sleepily. Like a cat, he'd landed on his feet, and just sat there, swaying a little. Smoke still filled the shed, and I could see some stray wisps wafting from his furry body. Suddenly paranoid and nervous, I began waving the broom, fanning the smoke from the shed. The spider continued to impersonate a statue. I still had the shed to clean, and he was right in the middle of it. Staring at the massive shrink-wrapped packages of unfolded pizza boxes behind him, an idea began to blossom.
Smiling the vacant grin of the well and truly baked, I grabbed a large unfolded cardboard pizza box and laid it on the floor next to him, right side up. Then I carefully swept him onto the box. He helped, sort of, by lifting his massive muscular little legs one at a time, although he put forth no other effort. Soon I had him in the center of the box. He sat there, his eight eyes heavily lidded, a small strand of web dangling gently from his backside. Slowly, trying not to jostle him, I folded the box around him, although I didn't close it. I left the lid open at a 45-degree angle, so he would have shade should he need it. Then I set the box on an empty shelf and continued cleaning the shed. He stayed there, regal and silent like a king on a cardboard throne to go.
He hadn't moved by the time I finished up. It was time to go home, and I didn't know what to do with him. As I stood there pondering his fate, a fluttery moth crashed clumsily into my spider friend's roof. Stunned, it fell in front of him. With a speed I found unnerving after such a long period of statuesque stoic-ness, he grabbed and ate the moth. He then looked around, blinking sleepily, and leapt from the box to the floor. He proceeded to cleanse the shed of bugs. Like a crusader he waged war on them, mercilessly pursuing them and casually crushing them, wrapping them in a sticky solution. He then took them back to the box, one at a time, where he carefully secured them to the inside back corner before he began to gorge. My new friend had the munchies...
I closed the box and put it on the back of my bike, informed my manager the shed was clean once more, clocked out, refilled my cup and drove my stoned spider friend home. I decided to name him Wolfgang, since I thought he was a wolf spider and it was all I could think of in my current state. When we reached home I took him inside and set his box on the TV where it would be warm and opened it back up. Cute as a bug in a pizza box, he slept, snoring lightly. I checked his larder. It was empty.
When my roommates arrived I introduced them to Wolfgang. I didn't explain where he came from or why he was there; I just smiled and rolled up a joint. Nodding at Wolfgang, I hit the joint and passed it, then leaned toward the box, exhaling. Laughing, we smoked and passed and shotgunned Wolfgang. He sat there, swaying, leaning slightly into the stream of smoke. Both of my roommates got a kick out of this but I simply smiled and waited expectantly. The best part was still to come…
It took an hour and a half. We grew bored and began to play Nintendo, and soon forgot about Wolfgang, sitting motionless atop the TV like some weird ass flea market knick-knack. But finally he bolted, leaping out of the box onto the Nintendo, racing from there to the kitchen. Mystified and slightly spooked, the roommates looked to me for reassurance. I smiled confidently and nodded at the kitchen. They looked back in time to see Wolfgang bring the first of the centipedes from the kitchen and secure it in the back corner of the pizza box. Racing across walls, leaping from chair to table to shoulder to counter, he hunted them all: Roaches and mosquitoes and june bugs and scorpions and centipedes, silverfish and ants and even a small bat that had apparently been living under our house. He stocked his larder and then he sat down in his spot and began to feed. A stunned silence filled the house as the crickets hid in fear and my roommates began to smile.
Wolfgang quickly became an integral part of the household. He cleansed the house of bugs quickly, and then began covering the holes. He spun webs with crazy tie-dyed looking patterns, and some with black velvet Elvises and panthers and unicorns. He blocked all the major bug entrances, except for the ones under the house. There he built a twisted maze of snares and traps in order to maintain his food supply. And he grew, oh how he grew. He went from fist sized to rat sized to cat sized far too quickly. All we had to do was keep him high. It seemed to be a match made in heaven.
Until his tolerance began to grow as well.
Wolfgang began angrily demanding more and more smoke. We tried to explain that he needed to slow down and enjoy the high. He told us to shut the fuck up and smoke, and since the idea of a talking pothead spider was still funny even if he was a dick, we did.
The days blurred together as we smoked more and more. The pipe shattered from overuse, the walls darkened with smoke stains, and Wolfgang grew bigger and bigger. So did his tolerance. With scratchy throats we begged him to let us stop, but he wouldn't, and we realized that some time in the haze the dynamic of our relationship had shifted. We were the pets now, and he was master of this domain. He only let us smoke blunts now, tearing and ripping our lungs and throats with the massive burning chunks of cigar tobacco and cannabis, and we knew we had to do something or we would surely die...
One of my roommates suggested we fight back. He stood 5 feet 2 inches, the smallest of us, but he wasn't scared. Wolfgang was big, yes, but he was still only a spider and even a spider the size of a dog should be no match for three humans, right? Wrong. We never saw Wolfgang strike, but suddenly the rebellious roommate was headless and slowly falling to the ground. Smug in his power and control, Wolfgang began wrapping the body and sent us for more weed.
Frightened yet angry we picked up another 5 ounces, along with a bag of hydro, which is basically superweed. Then we stopped at the hardware store. We bought the biggest can of industrial strength spider killing spray we could find and soaked the weed. We also bought a can of lighter fluid. We’d kill this motherfucking bug even if it killed us. And then we realized that it most likely would...
We decided there was no reason for both of us to die, as long as Wolfgang met his end. Already he'd moved up from bugs to rodents and other small mammals. Missing pet posters covered the telephone poles in our neighborhood, giving the area an oddly Christmas like cheer with their mix of bright colors and promises of rewards for doing the right thing... Sitting solemnly in the car outside the hardware store, we smoked the dro, which we'd left untainted. We savored the high, knowing we'd never share a toke again. Then I flipped a coin. My roommate called tails, and time slowed as the coin spun, hanging there like a small glittering round thing you exchange for goods. Then it dropped, and rolled, and circled, and finally fell over in between the front seats, dead president solemnly facing up. Obviously. I mean, here I am telling you this story, right? My roommate nodded, and we finished the dro and headed home. Sublime was in the CD player, and a then still living Bradley exhorted us to let the lovin come back to us, because sometimes it's all you've got...
Pulling up to the house, my roommate grabbed the bag and we said goodbye. Telling me to cover the holes under the house, he got out of the car. Solemnly, I grabbed my can of lighter fluid and held my Zippo ready. Without looking back, he marched into the house.
Soon I could smell the poisonous weed wafting from the house. Wolfgang, however, had long since lost any sense of smell he may have had. That much pot smoke will kill anyone's nose, even a monster of a spider. He never knew what hit him. I heard my roommate begin to hack his final bloody hack, and then I heard Wolfgang scream, a high-pitched wail that sounded far too much like that of a child betrayed by its parents. Crashes shook the house, and I pointed the can at the biggest hole under the house, Zippo shakily cocked. But Wolfgang never made it out. I waited for four hours, shifting nervously from foot to foot, scanning the foundation of the house.
Finally I went inside. My roommate's body curled lovingly over the Nintendo, his staring eyes filled with broken blood vessels. Reverently I closed them, and then began to search for Wolfgang. It didn't take long. In the end he'd curled up in his pizza box, seeking the sanctuary he'd once found there. The box was filthy and rotted now, and I left it and him and my roommate and the Nintendo there. I put the can of lighter fluid to good use, and watched the place burn as the sun set. I started to roll a joint, then thought better of it. My mouth twitched on the left once, twice, and my left eye itched and throbbed and began to tear up. My roommate had left his pack of cigarettes in the car, and with a catch in my throat I lit one and drifted off to Marlboro country, closing my eyes. The fire kept me warm as the cigarette soothed my soul, and they found me there with the burned out butt hanging from my lip.
I don't remember much for quite a while after that, but eventually the haze evaporated from my mind and cognizance returned. The doctors sometimes ask me if I’d like to go home someday, but I don't really want to. They keep it quite clean here, and I have yet to see a single bug. I can’t smoke weed here, but I think I’ve had enough weed for one lifetime. Besides, I get all the cigarettes I can smoke, and you’d be amazed at how similar the effects of weed and tobacco are. In the winter they say there's a fire in the big fireplace in the lobby.
And the drugs here, of course, are wonderful...
I wish every superhero comic was this much fun to read. Justice League of America/Doom Patrol #1 is my favorite comic of 2018 (and maybe 2017 too; it’s that good), for a multitude of reasons.…
this comic is fun and smart and pretty. you should go read it right now.
APOPKA, FL—Local man Jeremy Land reportedly voiced his preference Thursday for comic books that don’t insert politics into stories about people forced to undergo body- and mind-altering experiments that transform them into government agents of war. “I’m tired of simply trying to enjoy escapist stories in which people are tortured and experimented upon at black sites run by authoritarian governments, only to have the creators cram political messages down my throat,” said Land, 31, who added that Marvel’s recent additions of female, LGBTQ, and racially diverse characters to long-running story arcs about tyrannical regimes turning social outsiders into powerful killing machines felt like PC propaganda run amok. “Look, I get that politics is some people’s thing, but I just want to read good stories about people whose position outside society makes them easy prey for tests run by amoral government scientists—without a heavy-handed allegory for the Tuskegee Study thrown in. Why can’t comics be like they used to and just present worlds where superheroes and villains, who were clearly avatars for the values of capitalism, communism, or fascism, battle each other in narratives that explicitly mirrored the complex geopolitical dynamics of the Cold War?” At press time, Land was posting on a subreddit that he wished comics didn’t force him to identify with gay or black superheroes when all he wanted was stories about oppressive governments rounding up mutants whose only crime was to be born different.
gone
carol told her to say this
That time when WW murdered GL.
Legion #1 is a fun but basic read, with art that perfectly sets the tone of a story about a mentally ill mutant with reality-warping powers. There will be spoilers… Legion #1 features yet ano…
a good intro issue for new fans from the fx show, but a bit basic if you’ve followed David Haller’s comic book history...
Amazing Spider-Man and Venom: Venom Inc. Omega is ridiculous, in good and bad ways, but doesn’t really stand out. There will be spoilers… I’ve always liked Venom, for a number of …
I really, really, really, really wanted to like this one. And it wasn’t bad. It just wasn’t very good. Very standard, other than dialogue, which was above average. On a somewhat related note, here’s some cool Venom cosplay. Some stuff may be NSFW...  https://www.pinterest.co.uk/COSHUNTER/symbiote-cosplay/?lp=true
The increasing darkness of Superman, Batman, and their brethren are indicators of the American public’s anxiety.
our heroes are us, and they’re anxious and scared...