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In one episode of The Simpsons, when Homer attends Krusty's Klown Kollege", Krusty is shown lighting cigarettes off various expensive items. That is, he sets the items alight, then lights a cig off of them. Of all of these items, one is a DC comic. Which DC comic was it? (Name and issue number, please).
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
Well, if the Simpsons episode came out after Infinite Crisis, it might be DC Comics Presents #87. (And to think that I gave that one away, considering it not worth the trouble of trying to sell on eBay....)
I honestly expected you to say something like "Detective Comics #27" first, but, you got the obvious answer. Yes, AC #1 was what he set alight and then his cig, which he put out a few seconds later and then lit a strand of pearls on fire and lit his cig on that.
I'm thinking of a 1970s cartoon show, which did not feature any DC Comics characters in it; but two of the characters were voiced by actors who had previously voiced DC Comics super-heroes in other cartoons. What show am I thinking of?
I'm thinking of a 1970s cartoon show, which did not feature any DC Comics characters in it; but two of the characters were voiced by actors who had previously voiced DC Comics super-heroes in other cartoons. What show am I thinking of?
Every relationship is fundamentally a power struggle, and the individual in power is whoever likes the other person less.
-Chuck Klosterman, "Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs"
Even if I am not right, I am tempted to highjack the thread... I have a questions that I don't have the answer to, but I don't want to wreck the flow.
If anyone is interested in helping out, I will put the question in a spoiler box and if you know the answer, can you send me a pm? It would be greatly appreciated.
Spoiler (Click in box to read)
Does anyone know a JLA/JSA hero (or villain) that would have a commercial driver's license?
Every relationship is fundamentally a power struggle, and the individual in power is whoever likes the other person less.
-Chuck Klosterman, "Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs"
No; but I've often suspected that Captain Caveman was the biological father of Bamm-Bamm Rubble. (Remember, baby Bamm-Bamm was left on the Rubbles' doorstep; and it would explain the prodigious strength.)