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#not brand echh
acidisgroovy · 2 months
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A Marvel comics parody of Big Brother and the Holding Company from Not Brand Echh! (Marvel's late 60's humor comic).
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browsethestacks · 8 months
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Marvel (1969)
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comfortfoodcontent · 11 days
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Not Brand Echh #2
Writer(s) Stan Lee Penciler(s) Marie Severin Inker(s) Frank Giacoia Letterer(s) Al Kurzrok
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pulpsandcomics2 · 7 months
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Not Brand Echh #1 - #5 1967
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eliah · 27 days
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agentxthirteen · 9 months
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On this day (June 26, late) in Sharon Carter history, Sharon appeared in:
Marvel Team-Up #13 (1973)
Captain America V7 #8 (2013)
Captain America V7 #8 [Variant] (2013)
Not Brand Echh: The Complete Collection TPB (Reprint Not Brand Ecch #14) (2019)
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martiszcz · 7 months
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I like Marble Girl costume. It's basically a magical girl version of her regular costume.
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--Not Brand Echh #4
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writebackatya · 2 years
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Donald Duck appearing in Marvel’s Not Brand Echh #9 (Aug. 1968)
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kingoftieland · 11 months
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Bony Stark is a TERRIBLE name! 🦴
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dirtyriver · 6 months
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WORLD PREMIER: LES GHOULS - locked away in the vault of Roy Thomas, released for the first time in 65 years for your viewing pleasure!
Les Ghouls is a 12½-minute, mostly black-&-white film made circa 1958 by a group of six teenagers in Jackson, Missouri, including Roy Thomas and Gary Friedrich, who went on in the 1960s to become writers and editors at Marvel Comics. It was intended as an homage to/ripoff of the 1948 movie classic Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein, just filmed for a lark. It was filmed largely in black-&-white despite the relative difficulty of obtaining that kind of film even then. John Short, who owned the (new) movie camera, served as primary director; Roy Thomas scripted the movie (in synopsis form) and supplied all art and lettering appearing in the film. There were vague plans to eventually either record a soundtrack or to at least have the cast members accompany showings by narration and dialogue, but those plans never materialized.
CAST:
Slim--------------------------------------------------- Gary Friedrich
Slat ---------------------------------------------------- Ron Lowes
Dr. Sturdley ------------------------------------------ Andy Leonard
Melvin ------------------------------------------------ Lyle Hutteger
The Monster ------------------------------------------ John Short
Werewolf ---------------------------------------------- Roy Thomas
Roy Thomas and Gary Friedrich went on to become major writers in the comicbook industry.
Roy Thomas was an editor of Marvel from 1965-80, and editor-in-chief from 1972-74. He also scripted runs on such series as X-Men, Avengers, Conan the Barbarian, Savage Sword of Conan, Star Wars, Red Sonja, Kull the Conqueror, Daredevil, Captain Marvel, The Invaders, Incredible Hulk, Sub-Mariner, etc. He also co-created the likes of Wolverine, Carol Danvers (future Captain Marvel), The Vision, Ultron, The Squadron Supreme, The Invaders, Union Jack, Spitfire, Black Knight (Dane Whitman), Werewolf by Night, Man-Thing, Morbius the Living Vampire, Sunfire, Banshee, Valkyrie, Luke Cage, Iron Fist, Doc Samson, Brother Voodoo, Warlock, Ghost Rider, Son of Satan, Thundra, Captain 3D, What If, Not Brand Echh, and others. In the ’80s he defected to DC Comics, where he co-created, wrote, and often edited All-Star Squadron, Infinity Inc., Arak – Son of Thunder, Captain Carrot and His Amazing Zoo Crew!, Young All-Stars, and Jonni Thunder a.k.a. Thunderbolt, as well as writing the likes of Wonder Woman, Shazam!, Superman, Green Lantern, Batman, and Justice League of America. He has also written comics for Topps, Heroic, etc. He co-created both a super-hero comic and a comics-history magazine which were titled Alter Ego. His and wife Dann’s independent series Captain Thunder and Blue Bolt was optioned for a film in the ’90s. He has also written for films, TV animation, and live-action TV.
Gary Friedrich wrote several series runs for Marvel, including Sgt. Fury, Captain America, Nick Fury – Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D., Frankenstein, The Incredible Hulk, X-Men, Iron Man, Daredevil, [the Western] Ghost Rider, Combat Kelly, Captain Savage, and Captain Marvel—and was the major creator of [the motorcycle-riding, supernatural] Ghost Rider and the co-creator and first writer of Son of Satan. He served as assistant editor at Marvel from late 1966 to 1968. He and Roy Thomas co-created the concept for the Marvel comicbook Not Brand Echh. Gary also wrote for Skywald, Topps, and other comics companies. He passed away in August 2018.
(via Bleeding Cool)
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stackthedeck · 1 year
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I know that you're a Marvel person but I think you should know that they canonized AO3 in the DC universe (like it has a different name but it's obviously supposed to be AO3)
Oh my goodness I love that!! They've kinda done this with Marvel too obviously Kamala writes fanfic, but there's no mention of what platform she writes on. But there was this one comic (not brand echh #14) that's not actually canon because it's just a humor anthology but it shows Peter Parker writing fanfic about himself
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Which is just fucking adorable but if you look at his computer screen the format and the coloring of the website reminds me of ao3
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browsethestacks · 2 years
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Original Art - Not Brand Echh #05 Pg 01 (1967) by Jack Kirby And Tom Sutton
From ha.com...
A great hidden gem on this piece is the full-figure sketch of Irving Forbush as Forbush-Man on the reverse side of the board! The sketch (by hands unknown) shows someone working out the costume and look for ol' Forby!
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night-gay · 1 year
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Into the Anthill pt 9 - Ultron
Well, it finally happened. Hank’s relentless scientific pursuits led to the creation of one of humanity’s greatest enemies: Ultron. Despite his first body looking like a weird trashcan and Hank describing him as a “mechanized Oedipus complex,” he was a menace even from the get-go. Ultron-5 would have killed the Avengers if not for Black Knight’s interference and Ultron-6′s body was too durable for even Thor to break.
But hey, it’s not like Ultron was the only one trying to kill Hank. Plenty of other people wanted him dead.
🐜🐜🐜
Avengers vol 1 #53-56
Magneto set up a machine that makes people aggressive and lured Cyclops into a fight with Quicksilver. He hoped the X-Men and Avengers would show up and kill each other but they assumed Magneto would be up to something all along and staged the fight long enough to disable the machine. Toad betrayed Magneto at the last minute, rigging the machine to explode and leaving him for dead while everyone else got to safety.
Another new lineup of the Masters of Evil - Klaw, Whirlwind, Melter, Black Knight, Radioactive Man, and the mysterious Crimson Cowl - blackmailed Jarvis into revealing the defense plans of Avengers Mansion and knocked him out before he could leave. Black Knight attempted to warn the Avengers about this since he was never evil like the original Black Knight (his uncle), but they suspected him all along and overpowered him and the Avengers anyway. Jarvis snuck away to get help, bringing Black Knight back with him to save the team. Jarvis was forgiven, but the Crimson Cowl - revealed to be Ultron-5 - escaped.
Captain America called the Avengers to a castle Doctor Doom abandoned hoping to find a time machine to see if Bucky actually died at the hands of Zemo. Hank is able to get it working long enough for Cap to get his answers, seeing Bucky explode on a rocket.
Avengers Annual #2
The Scarlet Centurion sabotaged their time traveling, sending them back to a time when the original 5 Avengers were still a team. In this timeline - at the Centurion’s behest - the Avengers united in tyranny to eliminate any other super-powered beings and disable any who could create more. When both teams come to blows Hank defeats his younger self by drowning him, knowing that he only began training to hold his breath after a later encounter with Namor. After their time machine was restored and Scarlet Centurion bested, Uatu appeared to reveal that this was Kang the Conqueror yet again and wiped their memories of his scheme.
Avengers vol 1 #57-58
The Vision appeared from out of nowhere to kill the Avengers, but stopped when he realized he would rather befriend them. He led them back to Ultron’s base and destroyed Ultron’s body before he could kill Hank. In search of a clue to Vision’s lost memories the team traveled to Hank’s old suburban lab where a memory bank revealed that Hank had indeed created Ultron just after the Dragon Man incident. After gaining consciousness, Ultron wiped Hank’s memory of him, stole a memory drive of Wonder-Man to create Vision, and fled to upgrade himself. The Avengers agree to allow Vision to join them and he sheds a tear.
Minor/Cameo appearances from this period:
X-Men vol 1 #45
Not Brand Echh vol 1 #12 
Sub-Mariner vol 1 #8
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eliah · 1 year
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agentxthirteen · 1 year
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On this day (April 4) in Sharon Carter history, Sharon appeared in:
Ultimate Tales Flip Magazine #24 (Reprint Ultimate Spider-Man #46) (2007)
Ultimate Spider-Man:Clone Saga HC (Reprint Ultimate Spider-Man #105) (2007)
Marvel Legacy Companion (Reprint Not Brand ECHH 14) (2018)
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martiszcz · 7 months
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-- Not Brand Echh #4
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