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Going through some old files today I came across this promo piece I did for the Vertigo series Egypt.

Sean Phillips

http://surebeatsworking.blogspot.com/
http://ordstersrandomthoughts.blogspot.com/

Ordster's Random Thoughts

I drew this on a single sheet of coquille board, smaller than the standard two DC Comics art boards taped at the middle, because it is easier to scan and touch up without the cut line that exists on a taped together double-spread.
http://www.jimshooter.com/

Jim Shooter

Creative Commons Cory Doctorow opposes technology that limits what one can do with digital content and laws that criminalize people for alleged copyright infringements that he believes are harmless, or even beneficial. I think that’s an accurate assessment.

Krypto-Fascist | Frank Miller Ink

Everybody’s been too damn polite about this nonsense: The “Occupy” movement, whether displaying itself on Wall Street or in the streets of Oakland (which has, with unspeakable cowardice, embraced it) is anything but an exercise of our blessed First Amendment. “Occupy” is nothing but a pack of louts, thieves, and rapists, an unruly mob, fed by Woodstock-era nostalgia and putrid false righteousness. These clowns can do nothing but harm America. http://frankmillerink.com/
I know the exact date I’m going to die: August 4, 2012. And if you’re near Centralia, Washington on that day, you can watch.

Mad Genius Comics - The Comics and Comments of Karl Kesel

http://www.madgeniuscomics.com/
Fantasy so Hard-Boiled its Yolk is Green... I can’t really talk about Justin Peniston and William Orr’s Hunter Black without talking about RPGs, specifically tabletop, or “traditional” RPGs. http://www.ineffableaether.com/

Lady Sabre & The Pirates of the Ineffable Aether -

Originally, INSUFFERABLE was meant to be funnier than it is, but bite me, theater majors — comedy is easy, drama is hard.

Thrillbent

http://www.thrillbent.com/
http://weeklycomicbookreview.com/ The Review: One of the big features of this new season, one I’m not sure I’ll find more enjoyable than irritating, is the weekly efforts to figure out what went down during those five years this show skipped over . On the one hand, it gives us a reason to actively focus on every detail or sidebar the episode gives us in case we get some clues to the past. On the other hand, this bit-by-bit gleaning of information can get a little taxing on your patience.

Weekly Comic Book Review

http://dangermart.blogspot.com/

TOO DANGEROUS FOR A GIRL!

The war between Earth and Apokolips rages. Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman enact a desperate plan to save the world from Steppenwolf's Parademons, but the price is high.
http://www.geeksofdoom.com/ With a jetpack fueled by insomnia and an easily amused mind, It Came From The Interwebs scours and sifts through everything that has ever appeared on the internet (more or less) to find a few things that you should know about every week. These things come from the interwebs, hence the clever name. This week, we return from riding on the back of Falcor to bring you the time lord jedi ninja of web junk columns, featuring: a stabby eagle, fruit rape, board game movie mashups, and another Lazy Sunday .

Geeks of Doom: Your place for all things Geek!

This time we're gonna take a look at Ol' Groove's fave five Groovy Age characters who were true team players--"Groovy Groupies" if you will.

Diversions of the Groovy Kind

The Weekly Crisis - Comic Book Review Blog

It’s hard to believe that it was a decade ago when Wildstorm Comics , part of the massive DC Comics empire, was in its creative zenith. Quick to capitalise on the communities aging fan base, Wildstorm started releasing superhero comics with more adult themes and instantly struck gold with Warren Ellis and Bryan Hitch’s universally acclaimed run of The Authority . They continued the trend with highly regarded books such as Ellis and John Cassaday’s part creator owned Planetary and Ed Brubaker and Sean Phillips Sleeper . Each book had a different approach and different ideas as to what makes a comic ‘adult,’ and on the whole were met with critical praise from all corners.
We told you all about how Joe Keatinge plans to turn “Hell Yeah” into the spiritual successor “Popgun” (to an extent, anyway) by bringing in “Baby Girl” into issue #3…

Multiversity Comics

By Michael D.

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