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Comic Book Historians
United States
Registrace 20. 09. 2015
I’m Alex Grand, author of Understanding Superhero Comic books (published by McFarland & Company) and creator of Comic Book Historians & we’re dedicated to creating a multimedia experience to learning the intricacies of Journalistic Comic Book History, to fit the comic books and strips that we know and love into a visual historical context. Who created what? Why was it created? Where did all these stories and characters come from? What do they tell about our country or world at those points in time? Why does that matter? If these characters weren’t always this way, how did they get created? This is a place where research is presented with facts in an overall picture to get at the truth whether it’s an Interview, Article, Podcast, Interactive Facebook group, Instagram or CZcams Channel. If you enjoy the content here, please consider contributing to the Comic Book Historians patreon at patreon.com/comicbookhistorians .
All videos ©Comic Book Historians LLC
All music - Standard License
All videos ©Comic Book Historians LLC
All music - Standard License
Steranko Discusses Jack Kirby 2018 Dallas Fantasy Fair
My book, Understanding Superhero Comic Books available at a.co/d/8ZSTMh8 & mcfarlandbooks.com/product/understanding-superhero-comic-books/.
Jim Steranko discusses his love for his revered friend and mentor, Jack Kirby at 2018 Dallas Fantasy Fair.
Edited & Produced by Alex Grand, ©2021 Comic Book Historians
Jim Steranko discusses his love for his revered friend and mentor, Jack Kirby at 2018 Dallas Fantasy Fair.
Edited & Produced by Alex Grand, ©2021 Comic Book Historians
zhlédnutí: 4 319
Video
Stan Lee's Secret Marvel Contract || Docuseries-75 by Alex Grand
zhlédnutí 12KPřed měsícem
My book, Understanding Superhero Comic Books available at a.co/d/iIE3fWH . In this episode of Comic Book Historians, Alex Grand delves into a pivotal moment in Marvel history: the 1972 contract signed by Stan Lee that significantly impacted his role and recognition within the company. This contract marked a shift in how Stan Lee's contributions were acknowledged, transitioning him from a collab...
Steranko Discusses Stan Lee at 2018 Dallas Fantasy Fair
zhlédnutí 1,1KPřed měsícem
Jim Steranko discusses a fan contingent that gives Stan Lee hate on the internet at the 2018 Dallas Fantasy Fair. Is he right? ©2021 Comic Book Historians My book, Understanding Superhero Comic Books available at a.co/d/8ZSTMh8 & mcfarlandbooks.com/product/understanding-superhero-comic-books/.
Steve Rude Biographical Interview 2024 by Alex Grand & Bill Field
zhlédnutí 7KPřed 2 měsíci
My book, Understanding Superhero Comic Books available at a.co/d/iIE3fWH . Tune in with Alex Grand and Bill Field as we sit down with Steve Rude, the powerhouse behind the pencil, on this episode of the CBH Podcast. We dig into how Marvel sparked Steve's passion for comics, and the influence of giants like Jack Kirby and Gene Colan on his style. Steve's early attempts to join Marvel, his partne...
Todd McFarlane Comics Origin Interview 2024 by Alex Grand & Mike Alderman
zhlédnutí 6KPřed 4 měsíci
My book, Understanding Superhero Comic Books available at a.co/d/iIE3fWH In this episode of the Comic Book Historians Podcast, Alex Grand and Patriot Comics' Mike Alderman engage with Todd McFarlane, the iconic figure behind the '90s comic action revolution and the creator of Spawn. Growing up in Calgary, McFarlane was late to the comic scene, ignited by an encounter with John Byrne's work on T...
Dave Gibbons Biographical Interview 2024 by Alex Grand & Mike Alderman
zhlédnutí 6KPřed 7 měsíci
My book, Understanding Superhero Comic Books available at a.co/d/iIE3fWH . Comic Book Historians & Patriot Comics' David Gibbons interview by Alex Grand and Mike Alderman, delves into Gibbons' self-taught art career, transition from surveying to comics through 'Fantasy Advertiser,' and early influences from DC Comics. He discusses his beginnings in underground comics, contributions to horror an...
Hollywood & Comics: Origins & Mistakes || Docuseries-74 by Alex Grand
zhlédnutí 5KPřed 8 měsíci
My book, Understanding Superhero Comic Books available at a.co/d/iIE3fWH . Let’s rewind to the early 1900s when American movies and comic books were just getting started. Think about legends like Thomas Edison, the Warner siblings, and comic book pioneers like Malcolm Wheeler-Nicholson and Martin Goodman. These guys were game-changers in their fields. We’ll dive into how Hollywood really took o...
The Overstreet World of Comic Books (1993) remastered & posted with permission by Gary Carter
zhlédnutí 7KPřed 8 měsíci
"The Overstreet World of Comic Books," a 1993 documentary produced by Gary Carter and Tom Barker, offers a unique exploration of the comic book industry. It features insights from legendary figures such as Stan Lee, Jack Kirby, and Will Eisner, delving into their creative processes and impact on the art form. The film examines the vibrant culture surrounding comic books, from fan conventions to...
Steve Ditko Biographical Interview with Pat & Patrick Ditko by Alex Grand
zhlédnutí 30KPřed 9 měsíci
Steve Ditko Biographical Interview with Pat & Patrick Ditko by Alex Grand
Roy Thomas Biographical Interview 2023 by Alex Grand
zhlédnutí 10KPřed 10 měsíci
Roy Thomas Biographical Interview 2023 by Alex Grand
Hashman Graphic Novel Motion Comic Trailer 2023
zhlédnutí 2,3KPřed 11 měsíci
Hashman Graphic Novel Motion Comic Trailer 2023
Roy Crane: Comics Genius || Docuseries-73 by Alex Grand
zhlédnutí 6KPřed 11 měsíci
Roy Crane: Comics Genius || Docuseries-73 by Alex Grand
The MOEBIUS 1997 Shoot Interview by David Armstrong
zhlédnutí 4,5KPřed 11 měsíci
The MOEBIUS 1997 Shoot Interview by David Armstrong
The Jon Berk 2000 Shoot Interview by David Armstrong
zhlédnutí 1,8KPřed 11 měsíci
The Jon Berk 2000 Shoot Interview by David Armstrong
Video Profiles - Golden / Silver Age Creators SDCC 2023 Panel
zhlédnutí 4,2KPřed rokem
Video Profiles - Golden / Silver Age Creators SDCC 2023 Panel
Who was John Romita Sr? || Docuseries-72 by Alex Grand
zhlédnutí 6KPřed rokem
Who was John Romita Sr? || Docuseries-72 by Alex Grand
Chris Claremont's X-Men Further Humanized Superheroes || Docuseries-71 by Alex Grand
zhlédnutí 6KPřed rokem
Chris Claremont's X-Men Further Humanized Superheroes || Docuseries-71 by Alex Grand
Jesse Simon's Joe Simon & SHIELDMASTER interview by Alex Grand
zhlédnutí 3,9KPřed rokem
Jesse Simon's Joe Simon & SHIELDMASTER interview by Alex Grand
Reading Alan Moore's Thunderman || Docuseries-70 by Alex Grand
zhlédnutí 5KPřed rokem
Reading Alan Moore's Thunderman || Docuseries-70 by Alex Grand
José Villarrubia Biographical Interview 2023 by Alex Grand
zhlédnutí 4KPřed rokem
José Villarrubia Biographical Interview 2023 by Alex Grand
Milton Caniff: Comics Pioneer || Docuseries-69 by Alex Grand
zhlédnutí 4,6KPřed rokem
Milton Caniff: Comics Pioneer || Docuseries-69 by Alex Grand
The Lily Renée 2018 Comics interview by David Armstrong
zhlédnutí 2,1KPřed rokem
The Lily Renée 2018 Comics interview by David Armstrong
Dan Brereton Biographical Interview 2023: Illustrator, Painter and Writer by Alex Grand
zhlédnutí 5KPřed rokem
Dan Brereton Biographical Interview 2023: Illustrator, Painter and Writer by Alex Grand
Hashman Graphic Novel Featurette: || Docuseries-68 by Alex Grand & Joshua S. Berman.
zhlédnutí 7KPřed rokem
Hashman Graphic Novel Featurette: || Docuseries-68 by Alex Grand & Joshua S. Berman.
The Nick Cardy 2005 Shoot Interview by David Armstrong
zhlédnutí 3,2KPřed rokem
The Nick Cardy 2005 Shoot Interview by David Armstrong
The Bob Fujitani 2005 Shoot Interview by David Armstrong
zhlédnutí 3KPřed rokem
The Bob Fujitani 2005 Shoot Interview by David Armstrong
The Jerry Robinson 2005 Shoot Interview by David Armstrong
zhlédnutí 3,9KPřed rokem
The Jerry Robinson 2005 Shoot Interview by David Armstrong
Secret Origin of the Black Panther Featurette || Docuseries-67 by Alex Grand and Guy Dorian Sr.
zhlédnutí 5KPřed rokem
Secret Origin of the Black Panther Featurette || Docuseries-67 by Alex Grand and Guy Dorian Sr.
The Lee Ames 2005 Shoot Interview by David Armstrong
zhlédnutí 2,2KPřed rokem
The Lee Ames 2005 Shoot Interview by David Armstrong
Was it Guido Crepax that Groth mentioned at the end of the video? Cause the transcript is horrible.
thanks for watching. still editing those. watch and listen here to zoom in on it.
Like many of my generation, i didnt have the New Gods on my radar reading wise untill AFTER the 1st Star Wars trilogy was seen. But once I did start reading it I found my self smirking and sighing , smirking and sighing. Immediately suspicious. It Does not sit well. Lucas should have been a bit more vocal about this. I dont want to be negative or a bummer but I find this a disturbing (ahem) coincidence.
Has George Lucas ever mentioned too obvious to ignore influences?
The less delusional pioneers that understood it was a job however you felt about it and that business is a reality not an option.
Character is destiny.
Hitting Captions in your settings is a must on this one.
Master
I too scrounged returnable bottles for comic book money, but in the early 1970s
Solid.
NEW YORK RULES. They Knew and they Grew. But the Geeks and the Internet ruined much. Losers. But these were men. Make a buck and take a professional responsibility for quality. The only trade that ever needed to be maintained. In the 90s we started calling the world a gift shop as people were traveling and vacationing more. Now we can call it a mental ward. Complete with rubber shoes and flip flops like in a hospital. "Im so slack Yo." Yah ? Great. Take a look. Tell me Im lying. Lol
The days when making a buck wasn't something you were to be ashamed of but instead proud of. Unlike the stupid loser culture of the internet that whines today. Did I say that?
Love you John. You are missed Sir.
Always a gentleman and careful with controversy when others come up in conversation. Again. A real Gent. A PROFESSIONAL. A different Era before the Rot.
If Pat Robertson was mad about it, you know it was good. God Loves Man Kills was an amazing story.
great
Ifdochadhisownmoviefranchiseseries,itwouldgotoetotoewiththefastandfuriousseries,period.😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Hi, Jess! Thank you for your father's Shieldmaster issues! I recently read your Shielddmaster issues! They transported back to the Prize Comics era of the early silver age! I need to get back to NYC to hangout with you again! A great interview. I'm glad your creating these memories working with your dad! Joe is a legend! I just read an issue of Bullseye and it was so fun!
I mean they aren’t wrong. Writers were very liberal and they do mock Christians and we know that Claremont was a perv who put all sorts of sexual stuff in it.
I met Steranko last month, he was wearing the exact same outfit in this video😂. He was a super nice guy, he charged the most of anyone for his autograph ($50) but he made me feel like someone he knew. After he signed a poster I was about to walk away and he pulled me aside and showed me his personal art book that he’s been experimenting with. Lots of little portraits. He knows how to make you feel welcome.
I tend to believe that one of sterankos biggest influences was Milton glaser. Great vid thx 🙏
Cool! I thought I'd heatd all of the Steranko panel bits on youtube, then here you go with some unheard (by me, anyway) stuff. Big cheers to you and your channel, sir! Here's hoping you have some more in the future!!
I had the privilege of meeting Jim Steranko back in April. He was such a nice guy and very patient with my stupid remark of wanting to shake his hand solely because he punched Bob Kane LOL. I kept my comments about his wig to myself, but he is such a great storyteller and historian.
Yeah my experience with him last month was great as well.
😎 Steranko's description of Jack's method confirms my idea of how story conferences between him and Stan might have gone. Stan made have had the vocal imagery but Jack provided the visual ones that Stan needed to further develop the story. True , Jack didn't write the story and dialogue he only provided the images that created the story and dialogue.
I always loved to hear Steranko talk! Thanks for posting this. Love all your content!
Just wanted to let you know I dig your podcast. Steranko is the best. I love it when people whine about his political affiliations, liberals are the most discriminatory people I know. If you don’t think like them, they hate you.
Facts. They talk about tolerance and how you supposed to be understanding of them and all these groups but if they don’t like you they throw those standards away
First off my guy not all liberals and dont pretend conservatives are perfect because there not because its Republicans taking the rights of other people right now cut the bs out
One of my favorite artists ❤️
KIRBY is king
Lions fans getting hired 1st interview,
Wow! Awesome interview David and sad to say that Festino of Spains comic con translation of 10 years to live actually came true. I believe tge person who got John into comics in 1948 was Nic Zurow?
He's the perfect choice for Peter parker , very comic accurate
You have to keep making motion comics these are simply amazing, way better thsn any Hollywood motion picture😮
Wow, thanks! And please share!
Don't forget Sienkiewicz doing Moon Knight. It really was Marvel's peak era. I really liked Classic X-Men as a title, I never realized it was a desperation move. It was really welcome.
Keep this series going, also i have to ask , how do you make these!
Thank you, I’m glad you like these. After I write the script, I have a colorist restore the images, then I use photoshop to create layers. Then I import the layers into after effects and animate everything on a timeline with sound effects and a music track. I was a film student and editor so I just got more techy and obsessive to make these. I also direct and write the lines for the voiceover actors and animate to that as well. It’s animation, writing direction and production so they take me forever to do, but… that’s entertainment.
Please make more episodes this is amazing
What's with that toothless crackhead sitting next to the interviewer making clown faces all the time? 😂 Also he pisses Neal Adams off every time he opens his mouth. That's hilarious.
Thank God and YOU for putting together this series of interviews with these lost GIANTS of the comics industry. I started reading and collecting in the midst of what they now call The Silver Age and was hooked on comics until 2014 or so. Thanks for shining light on these dedicated men and women writing, drawing and editing and publishing pages and pages of pages of great printed cinema that kept me entertained for decades. I remember Carmine being a great and unique artist who became a counterpart of Stan Lee at Marvel. He was certainly not the self-promoter that Stan was and worked in relative anonymity in comparison. This interview (and the others I've seen) are pure GOLD for time-capturing the life and character of so many of these great talents that worked in so much obscurity. (I really loved the Marie Severin, John Buscema, Joe Sinnot and Tom Palmer interviews and will be re-watching a lot of them.) Kudos and salutes to whomever had the foresight to sit down and conduct these interviews with these creators who created so much of what is now widely consumed and commercially viable. I can't thank and compliment y'all enough for the great interview questions and agenda. Superb! (I love the fact that he said he drew and drew and drew until he got it all out of his system. What a guy!)
Thank you! David Armstrong had the foresight to sit down and interview/record these giants and I sincerely enjoyed editing, upconverting and publishing them for comic book scholarship. Cheers and thanks for watching!
@@ComicBookHistorians Does any intel exist on the most obscure letterers like Arties Simek and Sam Rosen? What a niche and what output by these people.
“Animatic”
Another boring atheist
Satanic false jews who were communists aka liberal. That’s Trina’s family
Legendary artist
Great interview 👍 Savage Sword has always been my fav & it's neat to hear John say it's his too. I love his Silver Surfer, the deepest of all the superheroes. I guess not surprising that it didn't register with the US audience, whereas it did in Europe.
Steranko was NOT there when it all happened. He is not telling the truth here. He joined Marvel in the end of 1966. His first work was penciling and inking "finishes" over Kirby layouts in Strange Tales #151 (Dec. 1966). Steve Ditko left Spider Man and Marvel in spring 1966. And all the universe building in the Fantastic Four was already done by the end of 1966. So Steranko was NOT there, when all the characters were created and all the important stories of the 1960s have been written. That is not to say that Stan Lee did nothing. But it is well documented, that Ditko and Kirby were the main storytellers and inventors. Stan Lee did good work for Marvel at the advertisment front and he held the whole company together. But he delegated the invention and storytelling.
But Steranko was at Marvel when Kirby was
@@edfurnez6134 Yes. But still. Historics mark the end of Jack Kirby's inventive contributions with issue #67 of the Fantastic Four (mid 1967). Stan Lee rewrote the character "Him(later known as Warlock)" in a different way than Jack did in his side notes. That was the "last straw". From then on, no new interesting characters were invented in the Fantasic Four Lee/Kirby run. Kirby started to keep his "new character ideas" to himself and used them during his DC 4th world run. The later Doctor Doom story arc was a remade TV Prisoner episode (#84-87) and the Skrull story line was based on two Star Trek episodes (#90-93). The rest of the issues is almost all mindless android hordes. So Steranko also missed the essence of the Lee/Kirby work relationship.
@@ChimBrouer well then I guess by that logic, so did you. A lot of histrionics coming from you to cover the fact that Steranko and Kirby worked with Stan at the same time.
@@edfurnez6134 Of course, you are right. Steranko's first work at marvel was to finish Kirby layouts in Strange Tales (Nick Fury). So of course they worked together. What I am saying is, that at this point of the Lee/Kirby relationship, Kirby had kind of stopped to contribute new IP (Intellectual Property) to Marvel. So his enemies were either old established foes or mindless robots/androids. Kirby saved his new ideas for a time in the future, where he would be recognised as the creator (which later happened at DC). So, what I am saying is, that the whole creation of new IP (new characters) happend before Steranko arrived. Has Stan Lee by himself created anything of impact (before or after being editor of Marvel)? Has Jack Kirby done this? Of course. Starting with 1940 (he was age 23) with the creation of Captain America. He created a whole lot of characters before Marvel. And he did so after Marvel at DC. Darkseid, the DC badass is his creation, along with a long line of characters and world building. Is Stan Lee the better "writer" (in the sence of writing the captions). Yes, Jack Kirby's captions are a bit stiff. So Stan made Jack Kirby's work better!
I love this interview. I was bit disappointed at the way Jim Thompson attacked him over the artists that left.
Make sure to also check out this one! (Part 2) czcams.com/video/m4VrPRmoCZs/video.htmlsi=LI_9A4HQZxpE3EfL
@@ComicBookHistorians I watched that one too. I understand that there's no hard feelings, but these days, too many people are aggressive over things that are not directed at them. Shooter never hurt Jim Thompson.
His son is an obvious apologist for this evil man, and seems to share some his ego. He doesn’t seem to Mind: The worst is when he won the “Superman drawing contest” and insisted it was not “fixed” because they were the fix. WTF? Weisenger was a mean, backstabbing bully by all employee accounts who loved humiliating and dominating people. Total a-hole. His daughter seems to share this opinion as alluded too in the interview. That’s the one I want to hear.
She wrote about her experience in alter ego magazine. Her name is Joyce Kaffel.
The way Stan Lee's role was portrayed after this contract definitely changed the narrative. It's important to give credit where credit is due
I became a fan of the Bronze Age. Novick was one of the great Batman artists
If Steve Rude was the regular penciller of a Superman title, I would subscribe.
Stan Lee was idea man but a mediocre writer. I seriously doubt he was super descriptive when coming up with a character. The artists contributed quite a lot in the creation of characters.
This is a fascinating look at a complex moment in comics history. It's important to remember the contributions of all the creators, not just Stan Lee
Dang, I always though Dick Giordano was the best inker for Neal Adams. But after reading the Adams - Palmer X-Men run, I am not so sure.