I'm on the lookout for folks you remember these 80s comics and are willing to talk to me about them!
Showing posts with label newspaper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label newspaper. Show all posts
Tuesday, October 19, 2021
Tuesday, June 13, 2017
Check Your Local Listings
Years ago, when people actually watched television shows on their television, it was necessary to know what was coming on when. And the primary way to do that was to check your local listings. That meant actual newspapers.
It was the 80's and without DVRs, the internet or program guides, the shows on the handful of available channels were difficult to keep up with. So on an evening in a year like 1982, here's what your viewing options might look like in the DFW metroplex:
This was back when networks would show actual movies. It used to be a thing. You could have also seen actual TV shows like Square Pegs, M*A*S*H and Cagney & Lacey. This was also the heyday of independent local channels. In the 80's they were your go-to channel for for programming like Abbott and Costello movies, Godzilla films and a ton of arbitrary older content that you just don't find that much any more.
The programming of stations like these also consisted of a ton of classic TV reruns. You'll notice that KXTX was airing the original Star Trek at 10:30. In addition to shows like Hogan's Heroes and Little House on the Prairie (which were both also airing that night), Star Trek was a mainstay on Channel 39 for years and I spent a lot of my childhood staring at the space opera on that very channel.
That childhood was also spent watching quite a bit of Saturday morning cartoons. So here's a look at what a Dallas area youngster had to choose from in 1982:
Again, this is the kind of thing that just isn't done anymore. While we have entire networks devoted to showing cartoons 24/7 today, it wasn't always like that. There was a time when cartoons were relegated to weekday afternoons and Saturday mornings.
In addition to a mega-block of the Smurfs, you also had old friends like Popeye, Spider-Man and Bugs Bunny. If you want to see Bugs today you have to go to Six Flags. That guy has practically disappeared. At the time there was also a trend for live action shows to have animated counterparts. That's why you had cartoon versions of The Dukes of Hazzard, Lavern & Shirley and Gilligan's Island in the form of Gilligan's Planet.
Saturday mornings were the best but cartoons were around the rest of the week too. Let's turn over to Channel 21:
It's easy to forget how popular the Jetsons used to be. It looks like the show was on 7 days a week. KTXA also showed old favorites like The Little Rascals, a.k.a."Our Gang," He-Man and Inspector Gadget. That's more than enough to prevent healthy, able bodied kids from going outside and playing.
I would be remiss if I didn't acknowledge that there was TV before the 80's so as a bonus here's an ad for American's most trusted newsman, Walter Cronkite, in the 1960's on Channel 4 back when it was known as KRLD (it's now KDFW):
And that's the way it was...
It was the 80's and without DVRs, the internet or program guides, the shows on the handful of available channels were difficult to keep up with. So on an evening in a year like 1982, here's what your viewing options might look like in the DFW metroplex:
This was back when networks would show actual movies. It used to be a thing. You could have also seen actual TV shows like Square Pegs, M*A*S*H and Cagney & Lacey. This was also the heyday of independent local channels. In the 80's they were your go-to channel for for programming like Abbott and Costello movies, Godzilla films and a ton of arbitrary older content that you just don't find that much any more.
The programming of stations like these also consisted of a ton of classic TV reruns. You'll notice that KXTX was airing the original Star Trek at 10:30. In addition to shows like Hogan's Heroes and Little House on the Prairie (which were both also airing that night), Star Trek was a mainstay on Channel 39 for years and I spent a lot of my childhood staring at the space opera on that very channel.
That childhood was also spent watching quite a bit of Saturday morning cartoons. So here's a look at what a Dallas area youngster had to choose from in 1982:
Again, this is the kind of thing that just isn't done anymore. While we have entire networks devoted to showing cartoons 24/7 today, it wasn't always like that. There was a time when cartoons were relegated to weekday afternoons and Saturday mornings.
In addition to a mega-block of the Smurfs, you also had old friends like Popeye, Spider-Man and Bugs Bunny. If you want to see Bugs today you have to go to Six Flags. That guy has practically disappeared. At the time there was also a trend for live action shows to have animated counterparts. That's why you had cartoon versions of The Dukes of Hazzard, Lavern & Shirley and Gilligan's Island in the form of Gilligan's Planet.
Saturday mornings were the best but cartoons were around the rest of the week too. Let's turn over to Channel 21:
It's easy to forget how popular the Jetsons used to be. It looks like the show was on 7 days a week. KTXA also showed old favorites like The Little Rascals, a.k.a."Our Gang," He-Man and Inspector Gadget. That's more than enough to prevent healthy, able bodied kids from going outside and playing.
I would be remiss if I didn't acknowledge that there was TV before the 80's so as a bonus here's an ad for American's most trusted newsman, Walter Cronkite, in the 1960's on Channel 4 back when it was known as KRLD (it's now KDFW):
And that's the way it was...
Labels:
80's,
cartoons,
dallas,
KRLD,
KTXA,
KXTX,
listings,
local programming,
newspaper,
retro,
Star Trek,
television,
TV
Sunday, March 26, 2017
Houston Heroes
Previously:
We've seen Marvel Comics superheroes come to Texas before but so far they've been confined to Dallas. Sure, it's an adventurous city but when out-of-towners want the "Everything's Bigger in Texas" experience they almost inevitably want to visit the biggest city in Texas. And so it was only a matter of time before Spider-Man and the Hulk showed up in Houston:
What we have here is another newspaper freebie from Marvel Comics in the 80's. It was given away in the Houston Chronicle and sponsored by Foley's Department Stores (and believe me, you'll get the hint throughout the story).
So what brings our heroes to town? An emergency at NASA? Nope, just the further frustrations of Daily Bugle publisher J. Jonah Jameson:
After lamenting the lack of good NYC based news stories, JJJ is tipped off by Peter Parker about a Houston Chronicle article about rodeo superstar Rex Ryder and Jameson is immediately smitten. So there's nothing left to do but hop on the first plane for the Lone Star State:
One of the disappointments of the comic is that other than the setting, there are just about no Houston area name-checks. They head to the rodeo but don't actually say it's the Houston Livestock Show & Rodeo. We don't even get a decent shot of the city skyline.
So we must be content with generic cowboys and cowboy accoutrements at the parade and the stockyards. And there are a few distinctly non-Houstonian elements at the festivities. Peter's Spidey Sense kicks in almost immediately as he spots members of the criminal ne'er-do-well gang known as the Enforcers:
So now that Peter Parker is a "Spider-Man with a mission," we turn our attention to the nearby stables, and if you weren't satisfied with the amount of Marvel characters that inexplicably decided to converge on Houston this day, then you're in a for treat!
Yep, the Hulk's alter ego Bruce Banner is still trying to Bill Bixby his way across the country and picked Houston as a place to stop. Apparently he pulled on his best pair of purple dungarees and got a job at the rodeo. And it doesn't take long for him to also realize that there's troubling brewing.
So apparently the Enforcers have kidnapped Rex's best girl Annie and decided to use her for leverage to make him throw his Bull Riding event. And if that wasn't enough, they let him know (for some reason) that they're also going to rob the box office. That's a pretty ambitious scam for a rodeo caper.
Meanwhile, as Bruce Banner investigates, he makes an additional discovery. If the triple decker coincidence sandwich that is this story hasn't satisfied you so far then get ready for the fourth heat!
Yep, the manure hits the fan as two different sets of heroes and villains converge at the rodeo and the results include the Rhino punching a bull...
...Spider-Man "lasso-webbing" the kidnappers...
...the Hulk beating up the Rhino, which inadvertently leads to a van (which was unfortunately left in neutral) being pushed by the two warring brutes down a hill, straight for the runaway wagon that held the kidnapped Annie...
...leading to a daring "double rescue" and solidifying the notion that super heroes cause as many problems as they solve.
So when all was said and done there was nothing left to do but have a celebratory shopping spree...at Foley's, of course:
And with that, our action packed adventure in the Gulf has concluded. Sure, there's a lot of unanswered questions and a lot of murky motivations but thanks to our heroes, the rodeo funds were saved and Rex and Annie get to ride off into the sunset.
If experience has told us anything it's that it won't be long before the Lone Star state ends up in the comics pages once again...
...to be continued?!?
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