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The Saturday Comics: Pizzazz

29 Jun

June 29, 2013

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I remember this magazine, and especially the comic book ads for this magazine, but I was just a little too young to appreciate it. I saw it on the stands but I am not sure if I ever bought it. A Marvel Comics magazine, it featured articles on comics, Star Wars and Battlestar Galactica, as well as all kinds of pop culture and music. Pizzazz only ran 16 issues, from October 1977 to January 1979, so I was just 7 or 8 when this hit the stands, a few years too young to really be interested. And too bad, since I would have loved the cover featuring Superman, The Movie. (The caption from Superman on the cover reads: “I consider it the greatest honor of my long career to be on the cover of a Marvel magazine.” DC and Marvel are fierce competitors, then and now.)

Stan Lee never looked this good in his life.

Stan Lee never looked this good in his life.

Here is the Wikipedia entry, which is decidedly short on pizazz:

Recurring features included a comic about Amy Carter’s life as the President’s daughter, a serialized Star Wars comic, and a one-page comic by Harvey Kurtzman (typically a “Hey Look!” piece done for the Marvel predecessor Timely Comics in the 1940s) on the last page. Regular columns included the reader dream-analyzing “Dream Dimensions” and the advice column “Dear Wendy.” Once the magazine was established, a regular feature was a full-page illustration of some crowded scene in which the names of readers who had written letters to the magazine were hidden. The covers showed either photos of popular celebrities, or photo-realistic drawings of celebrities and/or Marvel superheroes. Shaun Cassidy was featured on six covers, The Hulk appeared on five covers, Spider-Man on four, and Peter Frampton on three.

Topics mentioned in the magazine included (but weren’t limited to):

  • The original Star Wars movie
  • Grease
  • Meat Loaf
  • The movie Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band
  • Battlestar Galactica
  • Superman: The Movie

The early installments of the serialized Star Wars comic featured in Pizzazz have the distinction of being the first original (i.e., not directly adapted from the films) Star Wars material to appear in print form, preceding the 1978 novel Splinter of the Mind’s Eye by several months, as well as the introduction of original stories in Marvel’s own monthly Star Wars title.

Six Shaun Cassidy covers? SWOON! (And one Meat Loaf. One sweaty bloated Meat Loaf cover.)

I now leave you with a gallery of all sixteen covers of a magazine which, had I been a little older, I would have been all over. Click on the thumbnails to enlarge.

You Bet Your Afterlife

27 Jun

June 27, 2013

Alternate blog title: Six Satanic Degrees of Separation.

My pal Jimbo and I had a brief email discussion of the great Groucho Marx show, You Bet Your Life. Without giving it away, Jimbo has a very cool idea for using the program. Anyway, I’m a big fan of Groucho and Jimbo’s email encouraged me to do a little research into the show. I came across a list of notable folks who appeared on the show as contestants before they became famous. Here are just a few: Phyllis Diller, Ray Bradbury, and Jack LaLanne.

However, my favorite contestant story involved William Peter Blatty. Is it true? I found it on the ‘net so make up your own mind. If it is not true I want it to be true.

Blatty was a young author who had one book under his belt and not a lot of money. He was working as a public relations man in California and to promote his book he became a contestant on Groucho’s show, You Bet Your Life. (Guests on that show were carefully selected and often people were solicited to appear depending on how interesting it was felt Groucho would find them.) He came on the show dressed as an Arab sheik, which seemed to be his hobby at the time- I can’t explain it much better than that- and Groucho saw right through him. However, Blatty went on to win $10,000. The money was enough that he took a leave of absence from his job and wrote full time. And what did he write? Only a little book called… The Exorcist.

Yes, we have Captain Spaulding to thank for The Exorcist.

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