Transcript
Evil Inc by Brad Guigar
Jan. 28, 2025
Panel 1:
(Setting: An office at the Fairmount City branch of Evil Inc. Catnip, a blonde woman in a tight blue catsuit and visor, storms into the room angrily. Iron Dragon, a man in a purple and black villain costume, sits at a desk looking confused.)
Catnip: "MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE?! Since when do we have a MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE?!"
Iron Dragon: "What are you talking about?"
Panel 2:
(Catnip gestures as she explains.)
Catnip: "You know that Evil Mime that Captain Heroic thwarted downtown last week? He was my client."
Panel 3:
Catnip: "He says our branch now offers your money back if our products or services fail!"
Panel 4:
Catnip: "If he gets his money back, I lose my commission!"
Iron Dragon: "That's… that’s infuriating!"
Panel 5:
(Iron Dragon, now angrier, leans toward Catnip.)
Iron Dragon: "You're SALARIED! Howcome YOU get a commission?!?"
Wonder Woman turns 65!
The
Philadelphia Daily News has an excellent package on Wonder Woman today. It talks about how her mythos has lasted sixty-five years and previews the new WW book as well. It also features an illustration by Yours Truly, so if you’re in the circulation area, pick up a copy. 🙂 Click on the thumb on the right for a better look.
[PHILADELPHIA DAILY NEWS]
“She is the first female superhero that has crossed generations and is important to everyone as a role model,” said comic writer Jimmy Palmiotti (“Painkiller Jane”). “And that costume… woo-ha!”
“She is empowering to women and irresistible to men,” opined comic and TV writer Christos Gage (“Law and Order: SVU”). “She embodies female strength, beauty and character.” Read more. Unfortunately, the story doesn’t spend any time with the most fascinating aspects of Wonder Woman — like the fact that she was created by psychologist
William Moulton Marston, to appeal to young girls. The psychologist fell in love with his creation, writing the comics for six years. But perhaps the most intriguing aspect of the Wonder Woman mythos is the predominant themes of
bondage.