Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Wild West Wednesdays: Gold Raiders (1951)

 The Three Stooges (Moe & Shemp Howard and Larry Fine) join forces with veteran action star George O'Brien in 1951's Western farce, "Gold Raiders". The Stooges are traveling salesmen out west, and O'Brien, a former lawman, has transitioned to being an insurance agent.

Co-author Ellwood Ullman & director Edward Bernds were no strangers to the Stooges, having worked on several shorts. The film clocks in at a speedy 56 minutes, which would be good enough to fit into a syndicated package of Westerns in the 70's & 80's if it was needed.

The Stooges, with Joe DeRita succeeding Shemp, would cowboy up again 14 years later in "The Outlaws is Coming", with Adam West. We'll try to locate that one for another day. 

An amazing resemblance. Steven Cheung actually looks like a supervillain

 White House communications flack Steven Cheung is one of the most miserable men on earth, just like his boss.


Welp, on Tuesday, Cheung lashed out at Brett Bruen, a former National Security Council official under President Obama after president Trump had left for China. According to Bruen, however, Trump, as usual, didn't bother bringing anyone with any experience in foreign affairs, thinking that his pitbull mentality as a negotiator would carry the day for him (as if).

Bruen called out Trump, stating that the immature president should've had an expert on China and/or an experienced NSC or State Dept. official on hand for briefings. Cheung, covering for his dimwitted boss, complained that Bruen was, in his eyes, a moron.

The more I read about Cheung, the more I get the feeling I've seen someone like him before somewhere. Then, it hit me. Cheung, a California native, bears some resemblance to a comic book villain.


Presenting Elihas Starr, aka Egghead, a Marvel Comics villain dating back to 1962. Not to be confused with the made-for-TV Egghead, memorably played by Vincent Price on Batman between 1966-8.

Unlike Starr, Cheung has not been held accountable for his lying and false accusations. It kinda fits, doesn't it?


Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Another case based on lies. Pete Hegseth wants to investigate Senator Mark Kelly again. He will fail again

 Secretary without Defense Pete Hegseth is putting both feet in his mouth again.

Just days after an appellate court ruled an earlier attempt to "punish" Senator Mark Kelly of Arizona for advising current soldiers not to obey illegal orders, the former Fox No News personality is going after Kelly again after Kelly appeared Sunday on  Face The Nation, and told moderator Margaret Brennan that Hegseth had told him that it would actually take years to replenish certain stockpiles in a conversation a few days prior.


This moron may be on his way out.

Hegseth, of course, is pandering to president Trump and his base of marks, but, as was the case before, this will fail. Kelly, on Nation, recalled telling Hegseth that the conflict with Iran is proving costly to the American people, and Trump & Hegseth haven't shared with the country what their goal is. 

This latest attempt follows the report that the US Court of Appeals, per MSN, seems likely to confirm that Hegseth's attempt at disciplinary action against Kelly will fail. Hegseth has intentionally misinterpreted Kelly's remarks to suit the administration's misguided agenda.

There's a better chance that the egg brained Hegseth will wind up falling on his virtual sword, the next cabinet member dumped by Trump.

Stay tuned.

Monday, May 11, 2026

YouTube Theatre: Johnny Shiloh (1963)

 Welcome back to Wartime Mondays. This time, we're going all the way to the Civil War, and a 2-part installment of Disney's Wonderful World of Color, presented in its feature film form. Kevin Corcoran has the lead in "Johnny Shiloh", about a 10 year old drummer working with the Union Army in the Civil War. Our cast is loaded with familiar names, including Skip Homeier, Regis Toomey (Burke's Law), Darryl Hickman, Edward Platt (2 years before Get Smart), Brian Keith, Buck Taylor (later of Gunsmoke), and Hayden Rorke (2 years before I Dream of Jeannie). Enjoy the show.


In two weeks: We celebrate Memorial Day with Combat!.

On The Shelf: More Free Comic Book Day stuff

 Continuing with the Free Comic Book Day reviews:

Mad Cave decided to release black & white specials of Terrorbytes & Flash Gordon. Why did they even bother?

In Flash's case, writer Jeremy Adams just had to remind us of how Dale Arden was brainwashed into becoming the new, evil empress of Mongo at the start of the series. No sale. Seems Adams is in no hurry to repair that mistake. And that's a mistake in and of itself.

Mark Russell has been entrusted with Terrorbytes, but I'd rather see this in full color glory.

Ratings for both: C.


Over at Marvel, the House of Missing Ideas decided three features are better than two in two of their offerings.

For example, you get Amazing Spider-Man, plus Venom, and a preview of Queen in Black, which, we already know, is Hela, from Thor. More than 35 years after the debut of Venom, the symbiote concept has jumped the shark. Venom itself is now bonded to Mary Jane Watson, who's more than likely destined to return to Spider-Man's side, after her most recent beau was killed. This after some genius decided to give the Black Widow a symbiote. Right about now, Stan Lee is turning over in his grave.

Rating: None. Not worth it.

Meanwhile, the 20th Century Studios imprint offers a trifecta featuring Aliens, Predator, & Planet of The Apes, with a small tease of what we talked about last time involving the latter pair.

Rating: A-.

Dark Horse reportedly plans on a Masters of The Universe ongoing, timed to precede the remake of the 1987 live-action film. The backup feature is Dungeons & Dragons, because that franchise is still around, more than 45 years later. Take yer pick, effendi.

Rating: B.

DC's Next Level sampler offers teases of the first wave of titles, some of which are already out, including Fury of Firestorm (previously reviewed). The Jeff Lemire-penned series has been expanded from 6 to 9 issues, meaning it'll wrap in time for Christmas.

Batwoman returns, but we are not thrilled with Dani's artistic rendering of Kate Kane. At least enough time passed after the CW series ended in a debacle a few years ago. You have to be reading Batman to have an understanding why Barbara Gordon has gone to prison in Matt Fraction's current storyline. Her spinoff series won't mean anything otherwise, and we're closing in on the 60th anniversary of her debut as Batgirl. No sale.

Lobo is back as well, just in time for his big screen debut this summer in "Supergirl". The "Last Czarnian" is as rowdy & nasty as ever.

Ratings:

Batwoman: C.

Lobo: B.

Barbara Gordon: No rating.

Meanwhile, Mad Cave has launched a new Gatchaman spinoff series, Red Impulse, whose titular hero has ties to the team. That's all I can say about Steve Orlando's plot. We've seen variations on this plot before, as it's an oft-used trope.

Rating: Incomplete.

As Dynamite's ThunderCats-Silverhawks event continues, Mumm-Ra, the 'Cats' arch-nemesis, gets his own miniseries. We dig the Golden Age style aesthetic, as the villain's origins are revealed. We're less enthused about ThunderHawks, in which some characters from ThunderCats Lost don Silverhawk armor. Without being bonded. Hmmmmmm. Curious. And Silverhawks marks its 40th anniversary this year. Oy!

Ratings for both: B.

Sunday, May 10, 2026

Videos of Summer: Let Your Love Flow (1976)

 50 years ago this month, the Bellamy Brothers hit #1 on the Hot 100, #21 on the country chart (WHAT?), and #2 on the Adult Contemporary chart with "Let Your Love Flow". Since Memorial Day, the unofficial start of summer, is two weeks away, let's start our Videos of Summer....

A message from some famous moms

 Remember when the dairy association had those milk mustache ads?

Well, for Mother's Day, here's a vintage print ad with Shirley Jones (The Partridge Family), Marion Ross (Happy Days), & Florence Henderson (The Brady Bunch).


Speaks for itself, doesn't it?