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A lot of people think that Lockjaw is just the Forever People's dog, but in fact he is one of the Forever People himself. His current form is just how he reacted to his exposure to Compound V.
--wyld
When our story opens, the Question is investigating an impossible locked-room murder mystery involving a midget and a 6'6"-tall call girl into heavy bondage. Don't worry, I'll explain later. It's all vitally relevant.
--Alan Moore, Twilight
I know only part of the answer. And besides, why complain when you only just asked the question today?
Oh, I'm not complaining! I'm just surprised. Sometimes you toss out a question that you expect to stump the world, and Custom offhandedly nails it four minutes later. This is the reverse, I guess. I really expected it to be super-easy.
--wyld
When our story opens, the Question is investigating an impossible locked-room murder mystery involving a midget and a 6'6"-tall call girl into heavy bondage. Don't worry, I'll explain later. It's all vitally relevant.
--Alan Moore, Twilight
Oh, I'm not complaining! I'm just surprised. Sometimes you toss out a question that you expect to stump the world, and Custom offhandedly nails it four minutes later. This is the reverse, I guess. I really expected it to be super-easy.
--wyld
Oh, ok. Sorry, I misinterpreted some of what you'd said.
And that happens to all of us.
But yes, some questions are like Pam Anderson in that they are so easy, they're hard.
I'm not sure about the spelling of some of these names, but I'll try.
Serifan (or Serifin?), Big Bear, Mark (or Mike?) Moonrider, Vykin (or Viking) and Beautiful Dreamer (I know the song).
I want to add Infinity Man, but if I remember, he was something like their ally and not really one of the group.
Correct, JTR. The Infinity Man was a powerful dude they could summon by teleporting him to their location and teleporting to his. They rode in the Super-Cycle.
Your question.
--wyld
ps: Most Excellent Superbat, Big Atomic Lantern Boy, Shiny Happy Aquazon, Well-Spoken Sonic Lightning Flash, and Crazy Shy Lolita Canary. Yeah, boy.
When our story opens, the Question is investigating an impossible locked-room murder mystery involving a midget and a 6'6"-tall call girl into heavy bondage. Don't worry, I'll explain later. It's all vitally relevant.
--Alan Moore, Twilight
Correct, JTR. The Infinity Man was a powerful dude they could summon by teleporting him to their location and teleporting to his. They rode in the Super-Cycle.
Your question.
--wyld.
I'm going to pass it to IgMo, since he gave me the three I couldn't remember, and I really only had two, not counting Infinity Man, whom, if I recall, was actually the older brother to Uxas.
What narrative feature was (I think) unique to Flash comics of the sixties and seventies?
That would be the "Writer is stoned out of his gourd" narrative. Where the hippie writer would stare blankly at the pretty colors and then write something down. Next thing you know, you've got a reverse flash, a yellow lantern, a bizarro superman, and Inverse Wonder Woman. Not to mention a chipmunk with a ring. Face it, they had to of been stoned out of their gourd most, if not all, of the time.
It's a tactic used today by such luminaries as Grant Morrison and Rob Liefield.
First person narration? Nah, that couldn't have been unique to one book.
Breaking the fourth wall?
--wyld
When our story opens, the Question is investigating an impossible locked-room murder mystery involving a midget and a 6'6"-tall call girl into heavy bondage. Don't worry, I'll explain later. It's all vitally relevant.
--Alan Moore, Twilight