Happy birthday to this fellow activist who is also participating in the #NoDAPL Day of Action today. Thank heaven for inspired strong female leaders @shailenewoodley! Who else is taking Action? #standwithstandingrock
Odette’s rendition of her Poppa Hulk. Sweet.
Lunella Lafayette, a black young woc, is officially the smartest person in the Marvel Universe. Boom.
This is AWESOME!
(via markruffalo)
It is my sincere hope that all the people who lost their shit — who made death threats to real-life living people — over that “Heil Hydra” panel will read this issue, take a long look in the mirror and re-evaluate how they choose to manage misguided outrage over a comic book cliffhanger.
But I’m not holding my breath.
True!
The X-Men Line Ups
some Pencils by Arthur Adams.
My X-Men cabinet! Top shelf is my Kitty Pryde collection. There are several Kitty statues I need to catch up on.
Wooooooow!!!
more comics hereBatman Incorporated #5 variant cover by Yanick Paquette
(via total-comics-fan-blog)
more comics hereX-Men: The First Seven Issues // artwork by Jim Lee, Scott Williams and Joe Rosas (1991)
In the early 90’s the creative team of Chris Claremont and Jim Lee were such heavy hitters and an easy sell in the main Uncanny X-Men book as the on-off team that they were given a solo book for both of them. X-Men #1 was the single best selling comic book for many years selling 3 million copies on release, no comic book has reached that kind of numbers in present day. As good as the book was it had his fair share of troubles: Chris Claremont, the longtime X-Men writer ended his 16 year stint on the characters over creative differences with Jim Lee and Bob Harras with issue #3. His former collaborator John Byrne took over writing duties for four issues, until Fabian Nicieza and Scott Lobdell took over the book full time. Jim Lee himself left the book after issue #11 prompting the editors to take on an array of art clones to handle the book until they settled on Andy Kubert.
(via total-comics-fan-blog)