Tuesday, November 30, 2010
When Capitalism Meets Altruism
Tony "G-Man" Guerrero has posted an article, "Off My Mind: Should Superheroes Get Corporate Sponsors?", on comicvine.com discussing the tricky relationship between the corporate world and the super hero. The article naturally spotlights Superman and Booster Gold. In fact, it was the very question of corporate sponsorships that inspired Dan Jurgens to create Booster in the first place. It can be no coincidence linking Booster Gold's endurance to the fact that the question of morally questionable corporate sponsorships is as relevant today as it was 25 years ago.
Comments (0) | Add a Comment | Tags: comicvine.com g-man tony guerrero
Monday, November 29, 2010
Cyber Monday Greetings from Thailand
In the spirit of Cyber Monday, I present this Booster-centric t-shirt found on eBay.com under the auction title "Mens T-shirt Super hero Skate Board dc man short W87 #M." (I found it while scouring eBay for "DC Heroes" for the DC Heroes RPG.) The seller, tamegems, is based in Bangkok, Thailand, and the item is very likely unlicensed. Booster would be pretty cheesed off to learn that someone somewhere was making money off his famous face without his permission.
The art for this t-shirt is pulled almost entirely from a one-panel splash introduction for "The Origin of Booster Gold" by Dan Jurgens, Andy Lanning, and Alex Sinclair as originally published in 52 Week 24 and hosted on DC's website, dccomics.com. Note the terrible lettering of the word "Superhero" cribbed from the "Superman" logo and the relocation of many of the buildings from the original to fill the extra space. I have no idea where those cars come from, but I think they make a nice touch for scale.
Despite that, I would have snapped up that sucker in an instant, but as is typical of international eBay auctions, the shipping was equal to the price of the shirt! Though the auction ended over the weekend, you may browse other wares offered by tamegems here.
Comments (7) | Add a Comment | Tags: apparel counterfeit ebay.com t-shirts tamegems
Friday, November 26, 2010
Generation Lost Volume 1 TPB on the Horizon
According to the latest DC solicitations at dccomics.com, the first collection of Justice League: Generation Lost will be released in February. The collected hardback will reportedly collect the first 12 issues, an usual number given that DC originally scheduled the series for 26 issues. Has the series plan been shortened to 24 issues?
The collection is advertised at 320 pages, and the first 12 issues have only 24 pages each, counting both covers for each issue. That leaves 32 pages of mystery bonus content if the book is really only collecting 12 issues or is actually 320 pages long. Most likely, the initial solicitation is wrong or incomplete. I guess we'll see what the real story is in February.
Comments (4) | Add a Comment | Tags: collection justice league
Thursday, November 25, 2010
Happy Thanksgiving
Ted Kord, Michael Jon Carter, and Scott Free enjoy a gridiron contest in Justice League International #14, 1988.
Enjoy your Turkey Day the Booster Gold way: with friends and a side of football! (Alien invasion optional.)
Comments (3) | Add a Comment | Tags: holidays justice league
Wednesday, November 24, 2010
New Release: Generation Lost #14
Justice League: Generation Lost #14 is scheduled to hit stands today. Buy it and give Skeets a Happy Thanksgiving.
UPDATE: Buying Justice League: Generation Lost #14 will not make Skeets happy, as Booster Gold is nowhere to be seen in the pages of this issue. It's a pretty enjoyable read and does give a strong hint about Maxwell Lord's plans for the future of the series. However, it's got no Booster Gold. Skeets will have to find something else (the sublime J.H. Williams III on Batwoman #0, perhaps?) to be thankful for this Thanksgiving.
Comments (2) | Add a Comment | Tags: justice league new releases
SITE SEARCH
SPOILER WARNING: The content at Boosterrific.com may contain story spoilers for DC Comics publications.
Booster Gold, Skeets, and all related titles, characters, images, slogans, logos are trademark ™ and copyright © DC Comics unless otherwise noted and are used without expressed permission. This site is a reference to published information and is intended as a tribute to the artists and storytellers employed by DC Comics, both past and present. (We love you, DC.) Contents of this page and all text herein not reserved as intellectual property of DC Comics is copyright © 2007-2024 BOOSTERRIFIC.com. This page, analysis, commentary, and accompanying statistical data is designed for the private use of individuals and may not be duplicated or reproduced for profit without consent.