During one of my mom's frequent top-to-bottom housecleaning adventures, she came across a nostalgic keepsake from my childhood, tucked away for years on a bookshelf or in the back of a closet somewhere or maybe in the attic or basement. It didn't matter to me where she found it, I was just thrilled when she presented it to me one morning this week when I brought my daughter over for her to kindly babysit -- it was a copy of Super Hero Comics Digest Magazine #2, which I read from cover to cover countless times as a kid. Although I favored the more mainstream DC Comics and Marvel Comics, the digest was published by Archie Comics.
Looking at it now, dog-eared after many page-turning days and nights from my youth, but still in good condition, it brought back fond memories. Archie Comics were known to me as "the funnies," not the more serious adventures of good vs. evil in the DC and Marvel universes. (Yes, for a nine-year-old kid, those stories were very serious indeed.) Still, this digest was a collection of different heroes -- the Black Hood (who resembled Lee Majors a bit during his Six Million Dollar Man heyday), the patriotic Shield (who seemed to be a total rip-off of Captain America, but I later discovered was first published more than a year earlier than Marvel's supersoldier), and the mysterious Fox.
Later in life I learned that these heroes were actually created during the Golden Age of comics under the banner of MLJ Magazines, which preceded Archie Comics. Eventually, the characters would fall under the ownership of DC, part of its complex "infinite planets" continuity. Steel Sterling, the Fly, the Web -- to my juvenile eyes and imagination, these were terrific heroes.
The digest had a mix of genres from the gothic horror story "The Ultimate Power" to the vampire science fiction tale "Time Twist" to the mythic parable "The Beast in the Forest," but the superhero tales were my favorites, such as Hangman and the Jaguar.
Even the typically silly folks at Riverdale High became superheroic in the pages of this digest -- Archie was Pureheart the Powerful, Betty was Superteen, Jughead was Captain Hero, Reggie was Evilheart, Veronica was Miss Vanity, and Moose was Mighty Moose.
Even though some of my other comics were lost forever, I'm glad some of them still survived, if for nothing else than the joyful memories they uncover all these years later of those childhood moments spent escaping into the imaginary world of superheroes.
Looking at it now, dog-eared after many page-turning days and nights from my youth, but still in good condition, it brought back fond memories. Archie Comics were known to me as "the funnies," not the more serious adventures of good vs. evil in the DC and Marvel universes. (Yes, for a nine-year-old kid, those stories were very serious indeed.) Still, this digest was a collection of different heroes -- the Black Hood (who resembled Lee Majors a bit during his Six Million Dollar Man heyday), the patriotic Shield (who seemed to be a total rip-off of Captain America, but I later discovered was first published more than a year earlier than Marvel's supersoldier), and the mysterious Fox.
Later in life I learned that these heroes were actually created during the Golden Age of comics under the banner of MLJ Magazines, which preceded Archie Comics. Eventually, the characters would fall under the ownership of DC, part of its complex "infinite planets" continuity. Steel Sterling, the Fly, the Web -- to my juvenile eyes and imagination, these were terrific heroes.
The digest had a mix of genres from the gothic horror story "The Ultimate Power" to the vampire science fiction tale "Time Twist" to the mythic parable "The Beast in the Forest," but the superhero tales were my favorites, such as Hangman and the Jaguar.
Even the typically silly folks at Riverdale High became superheroic in the pages of this digest -- Archie was Pureheart the Powerful, Betty was Superteen, Jughead was Captain Hero, Reggie was Evilheart, Veronica was Miss Vanity, and Moose was Mighty Moose.
Even though some of my other comics were lost forever, I'm glad some of them still survived, if for nothing else than the joyful memories they uncover all these years later of those childhood moments spent escaping into the imaginary world of superheroes.





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♥║╔═╗║║║║║║╔══╣╔══╣╔╗╔╗║♥
♥║╚══╣║║║║║╚══╣╚══╬╝║║╚╝♥
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♥╚═══╝╚╝╚╝╚═══╩═══╝─╚ Because we are so in need of those Superheros today...
John Goldwater, Archie's creator, was always a right-wing propagandist. His coverage of youth culture was always far behind the times. He only brought out Sabrina the Teenage Witch after the Bewitched series was successful on TV. Worst of all, when the Moral Majority reached its peak, he created a group of Archie comics pushing that Christian philosophy.
Remember that Goldwater was also the driving force behind the Comics Code Authority, which censored comics for decades and which choked creative content. According to comic historian Gerard Jones, he was incensed when Mad, at the time a comic book, printed a parody of his creation called "Starchie" which showed Starchie Standrews as a juvenile delinquent with drugs, fast cars and booze. Mad was forced to become a "magazine" instead of a "comic book" because of Goldwater's conservative-supported purge.
It's only since Goldwater died in 1999 that Archie Comics got to loosen up. They even did a crossover with Marvel Comics, in which the amoral vigilante The Punisher hunted down Archie, mistaking him for a nearly-identical Mafia thug. Recently they even included a gay teen as a subsidiary character. Now, if only they were real comic books again, instead of these teeny little books squeezed in between the National Enquirer and diet books on the checkout line...
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