Friday 31 May 2019

We interrupt your regular AMOC enjoyment to briefly remind you that the exclusive Cerebus In Hell? T-Shirt, "Approval Is An Authoritarian Construct" remains available in the US and UK.  Efforts are underway to establish a more permanent online store where this and other CIH? items will be available worldwide in the very near future.  Thank you, we now return to your regularly scheduled AMOC.

Big Auction, and the Spermbirds Challenge (Dave's Weekly Update #289)

Hi, Everybody!

Heeeeeere's Dave: 


Problems viewing this video? Watch directly on YouTube...


As Dave said,  Jeff Seiler is still winning with $1300 (US)! If you want in on this action, just comment on this post, or e-mail momentofcerebus@gmail.com, the auction ends tonight at Midnight (CDT). To prevent douchebaggery, I'm limiting the bidding to WHOLE US Dollars, in FIFTY-FIVE DOLLAR INCREMENTS (happy now Jeff?). So if you wanna make Seiler lose his faith in humanity, you gotta come up with at least thirteen hundred and FIFTY-FIVE bucks (US.). After the deadline, I'll contact the winner and figure out how we're getting Dave his money. Good luck and stuff.

Spermbirds. Spermbirds merch (where Margaret got the ticket and shirt.). According to their facebook page, the contact e-mail is: roger@spermbirds.com (Be nice.)

The remastered Volume 1 is available digitally for $9.99.

If you got a couple of extra bucks and want to do a fellow Cerebus fan a solid, frequent commentator Mike Battaglia has a go fund me here.

Friend to the Blog, and scruffy looking Yeoman: Steve Peters has another Kickstarter going. (I have a joke in one panel.)


Next Time: Somebody else recorded a conversation with Dave...

Thursday 30 May 2019

Cerebus Has Something Else To Do

MARGARET LISS: 
A few years ago I scanned all of Dave Sim's notebooks. He had filled 36 notebooks during the years he created the monthly Cerebus series, covering issues #20 to 300, plus the other side items -- like the Epic stories, posters and prints, convention speeches etc. A total of 3,281 notebook pages detailing his creative process. I never really got the time to study the notebooks when I had them. Just did a quick look, scanned them in and sent them back to Dave as soon as possible. So this regular column is a chance for me to look through those scans and highlight some of the more interesting pages.

In February of 2018 in Astoria! GO AWAY! we saw a page from Dave Sim's tenth Cerebus notebook. It covers Cerebus #87 through 95 with 115 page scanned.

On page 55 there is a thumbnail and dialogue for page 4 of Cerebus #92 and dialogue for pages 6 and 7 of that same issue.

Notebook #10, page 55
The thumbnail for page 4 is pretty close to the final one. Though instead of Cerebus running away from us through doors, the finished page has him running pass the mounds of bags of gold coins.

Cerebus #92, page 4
The other dialogue is from the Bill Mox character talking about what Seth could do for Cerebus' portrait. Apparently it was enough to give pause to Cerebus' thoughts of conquest.

Wednesday 29 May 2019

Cerebus Woman...ON SALE THREE WEEKS AGO!


Benjamin Hobbs:

The Postcard From Hell Kickstarter ended with $1,900 (US) and 90 backers!  A big THANKS to everyone who supported the campaign. The surveys were sent out yesterday!



It's the last Wednesday of the month! But CEREBUS WOMAN shipped THREE WEEKS EARLY! So there's not a new CIH? #1 today.  However, if you haven't rushed out to buy CEREBUS WOMAN #1, you should consider doing so.  Your LCS will thank you.


Now available to order from Diamond...TALES OF SOPHISTICATION #1!

Promo strip courtesy of David Birdsong. 

Next Week: An ALL NEW, ALL DIFFERENT CIH? update!

Tuesday 28 May 2019

Cerebus in Hell?: The T-Shirt

Hi, Everybody!

The Postcard Kickstarter was funded on Saturday. Dave and the guys made $1900 (US) from 90 backers. #Winning!

Jeff Seiler is winning the Green Dante/Green Virgil Cover for $1300 (US)! If you want in on this action, just comment on this post, or e-mail momentofcerebus@gmail.com As Dave said, the auction ends on Friday at Midnight (CDT). To prevent douchebaggery, I'm limiting the bidding to WHOLE US Dollars, in FIVE DOLLAR INCREMENTS. So if you wanna make Seiler lose his faith in humanity, you gotta come up with at least thirteen hundred and FIVE bucks (US). After the deadline, I'll contact the winner and figure out how we're getting Dave his money. (Seiler suggested that the increase should be in FIFTY dollar increments, and as much as I wanna get Dave mo' money, I was trying to eliminate the one penny douches...)

The remastered Volume 1 is available digitally for $9.99.

If you got a couple of extra bucks and want to do a fellow Cerebus fan a solid, frequent commentator Mike Battaglia has a go fund me here.

Friend to the Blog, and the Cardashian Kardasian Cassian Cassidy: Steve Peters has another Kickstarter going. (I have a joke in one panel.)
______________________________________________________


The Cerebus in Hell? World Domination continues:


Click to make it "YUGE"

 Seriously, it comes in three flavors:
"Grape":
Um, or ya know, Black

"Orange":
AKA: White

And "Cherry":
What? Cherries are red...
You can pick one up here.

Impress your friends!

Annoy your enemies!

Freak out strangers!

Get the CiH? Team money!

also available for UK Cerebus fans!

HERE

My birthday IS next month, just sayin'...

I think I found your next tattoo...


Next Time: Ben Hobbs guides you through the ins and outs of giving the Cerebus in Hell? team money...

Monday 27 May 2019

Memorial Day 2019

Hi, Everybody!

The Postcard Kickstarter was funded on Saturday. Dave and the guys made $1900 (US) from 90 backers. GO TEAM!

Jeff Seiler is winning the Green Dante/Green Virgil Cover for $1300 (US)! If you want in on this action, just comment on this post, or e-mail momentofcerebus@gmail.com As Dave said, the auction ends on Friday at Midnight (CDT). To prevent douchebaggery, I'm limiting the bidding to WHOLE US Dollars, in FIVE DOLLAR INCREMENTS. So if you wanna make Seiler lose his faith in humanity, you gotta come up with at least thirteen hundred and FIVE bucks (You Ess.). After the deadline, I'll contact the winner and figure out how we're getting Dave his money. (Seiler suggested that the increase should be in FIFTY dollar increments, and as much as I wanna get Dave mo' money, I was trying to eliminate the one penny douches...)

The remastered Volume 1 is available digitally for $9.99.

If you got a couple of extra bucks and want to do a fellow Cerebus fan a solid, frequent commentator Mike Battaglia has a go fund me here.

Friend to the Blog, and the guy who can go point five past light speed in the shuttle-craft Galileo: Steve Peters has another Kickstarter going. (I have a joke in one panel.)
______________________________________________________

It's Memorial Day here in the USA.

Latter Days page 173

Latter Days 174

Latter Days 175
Next Time: "Merchandisingmerchandising, where the real money from the movie is made."

Sunday 26 May 2019

TL:DR: The Genesis Question part fifty-five

Hi, Everybody!

So, two things:

1, the bizness:
Jeff Seiler is winning the Green Dante/Green Virgil Cover for $1300 (US)! If you want in on this action, just comment on this post, or e-mail momentofcerebus@gmail.com As Dave said, the auction ends on Friday at Midnight (CDT). To prevent douchebaggery, I'm limiting the bidding to WHOLE US Dollars, in FIVE DOLLAR INCREMENTS. So if you wanna make Seiler lose his faith in humanity, you gotta come up with at least thirteen hundred and FIVE bucks (You Ess.). After the deadline, I'll contact the winner and figure out how we're getting Dave his money. (Seiler suggested that the increase should be in FIFTY dollar increments, and as much as I wanna get Dave mo' money, I was trying to eliminate the one penny douches...)

The remastered Volume 1 is available digitally for $9.99.

If you got a couple of extra bucks and want to do a fellow Cerebus fan a solid, frequent commentator Mike Battaglia has a go fund me here.

Friend to the Blog, and the guy who sets his phasers to the Light Side: Steve Peters has another Kickstarter going. (I have a joke in one panel.)
2, I ran out of pages from issue 289/290 to run in front of Dave's Genesis Question commentaries. Dave suggested I use Jewish, Christian or Muslim religious images. But then, Superman's Frenemy: David Birdsong sent in a bunch of (so far) unused Cerebus in Hell? images and now I'ma gonna run them. So:
____________________________________________________________________________
image by Doré, Sim & Birdsong
15 February 15

Hi Troy and Mia!

Okay. Ecclesiastes 3:11.  This is really getting far afield from what I consider formal Scripture, but let's persevere.  For the sake of meeting Mr. Ross' thesis on its own terms, I'll start with the supposition that Ecclesiastes is scriptural, the word of God.

3:11 reads

He hath made everything beautiful in his time: also he hath set the world in their heart, so that no man can find out the work that God maketh from the beginning to the end.

In HIS time.  The fact that the "his" is lower case would suggest that it refers to the "everything" rather than to God.  Which would imply a strictly masculine nature to "everything". Not an uninteresting theory (if true): that the masculine "everything" was made by God and everything feminine or neuter wasn't actually made by God but, rather, occurred as implications of the masculine "everything".  I can't think of an analogous assertion in scripture.

If the lower case is a typographical error and does refer to God, it would seem an awkward construction to me:  Can an omnipresent being be said, accurately, to have a "time"?  ALL time is GOD's time, presumably.

"He hath set the world in their heart so that no man can find out the work that God maketh from the beginning to the end."  Again, not an uninteresting theory, if by "the world" we're technically talking about the YHWH.  There is, at least, an arguable internal logic to the verse, first drawing a distinction between the "everything beautiful" being masculine (compelling the inference that the feminine and the neuter came into existence by some other means than being "made" by God) and then suggesting that the feminine and the neuter -- as expressed by the incarnation of the YHWH -- are, by nature, impediments.  Not only external to God's creation, but designed to inhibit and prevent understanding of that creation. 

It also seems a strange -- and specific -- citation for Mr. Ross to use, suggesting as it does that "no man can find out the work that God maketh" when that's exactly what Mr. Ross is endeavouring to do:  to find out, identify and document what he sees as the irrefutable science behind Genesis. 

Of course this is also the chapter that begins with what became, slightly modified, in my boyhood, the lyrics to "Turn, Turn, Turn".  The Byrds?  I forget. I think it was The Byrds, though.  "To every thing [interpolated: there is] a season and a time to every purpose under the heaven."  Followed by a lengthy list of dichotomous "things".  "A time to [Hebrew: bear KJV: to be born…

[I'm making an exception here in citing the Hebrew AND KJV versions.  It seems to me a "bridge too far" to be commenting on non-scripture AND citing the KJV translators improvisations:  so for the rest of Ecclesiastes 3, I'll stick strictly to the original Hebrew terminology]

... and a time to die; a time to plant and a time to pluck up that which is planted".  Interesting dichotomies:  "kill/heal"; "break down/build up"; "weep/laugh"; "mourn/dance" (!); "cast away stones/gather stones together"; "embrace/be far from embracing"; "get (or seek)/lose"; "keep/cast away"; "rent/sow"; "keep silence/speak"; "love/hate"; "war/peace". 

A time to love and a time to hate?  It's hard for me to imagine any good time to "hate".   Even harder for me to see such an assertion as scriptural. 

"What profit hath he that worketh, in that wherein he laboureth?"

I think I understand the question (assuming it isn't purely rhetorical: hardly a safe assumption given the tone of the rest of the chapter).  I guess my answer would be that work itself provides the profit from that work.  It's always easy to slip into the (as I see it) self-deluding idea that we're working towards something in our worldly works.  Work itself tends to be "goal oriented" in the sense that we want to accomplish smaller tasks and larger tasks and still larger tasks and that eventually we will "Get There" and we have a vague or specific mental image of what "There" is or will be.  In my own, personal, experience there isn't really a "There" apart from getting something done.  In my case a 26-year, 6,000 page graphic novel.  My mental image, while I was producing it, was of something that would be celebrated and materially successful.  Which it is, but on a very, very, very small scale.  Having made something exactly as I thought it needed to be made, I've ended up with a very small audience with a work that is almost completely unknown and far more widely reviled than admired. 

But, it is what it is. 

In retrospect I think I can see more clearly what I was actually doing and that it was inevitable that it would end up the way it ended up.  And I can also see that its inherent value was AS hard work.  Period.  My intention for it -- at least judging by the eleven years since it was finished -- proved meaningless -- less than meaningless -- but the hard work I put into it proved, it seems to me, to be the sum total of its value.  Which is why I continue to work hard -- even harder than I did then -- because it seems to me that that's how you find favour in the sight of God:  by keeping strictly to worship of God and religious observance, being 100% or as close to 100% reliable as you can get, and in between worship of God and religious observance by working as hard as you can work at whatever you're working at. 

I could make a persuasive argument that there is greater value to different kinds of work -- that trying to document Comic Art Metaphysics as accurately as I can in excruciating visual detail is valuable work: valuable in the sight of God -- but I have also become aware that most perceptions attached to work amount to self-mythologizing:  magnifying potential importance in order to maintain motivation.  In my heart of hearts and my mind of minds, though, I'm fully aware that as long as I was -- and am -- putting in thirteen hours a day six days a week, I could probably be as fruitfully shovelling manure.  Perhaps even more so since the capacity for self-mythologizing is less possible in the latter instance, so the work becomes a purer form of itself. 

As with everything else, I think it comes down to innermost motivation.  Choosing work instead of sloth seems to me a good choice, both as a general life choice and as the best minute-to-minute, second-to-second decision.  Don't slack off.  Work.  And I see inherent value in that as a straight-line-cradle-to-the-grave policy. I hope I can maintain it, although my body does, at least, seem to be falling apart.

So, to me, "IN THAT wherein he laboureth" is the pertinent element of the question.  Work AS work has merit.  Work with the idea that it is getting you somewhere I think doesn't have merit and is, in fact, a vice.  Ultimately, everything that is work is physically incarnated and everything physically incarnated is ultimately dust. Dust to dust.  Ashes to ashes.

I have seen the travail which God hath given to the sons of men, to be exercised by it. 

Of course, there are two different interpretations of "travail" -- one is "work" and the other is "trouble" -- as there are two different interpretations of "exercised" -- one is "physical work-out" and the other is "self-troubling". 

Mr. Ross' selected verse follows with these observations following it:

I know that no good in them, but for to rejoice, and to do good in his life.  And also that every man should eat and drink and enjoy the good of all his labour:  it  the gift of God. 

I agree that a man needs to do good in his life, as best he can conceive of that in terms of being charitable and agreeable and helpful, personally.  "Rejoice", I have a certain amount of trouble with.  Isn't it better that I use any time that I might allocate for "rejoicing" for doing more work and doing more good?  I'm not a great one for "victory laps".  Sometimes I think I've gotten pretty close to Right in what I'm doing but I think it's a safe assumption that I'm probably wrong and that I'm only going to make my situation worse by celebrating being "Right" instead of just ploughing right back into doing everything wrong but with right intent. 

Eat and drink? At a minimum for sustenance.  I can see that but not much beyond that.  "Enjoy" is just not in my nature.  Satisfying moments delivered by God.  I'm deeply appreciative of those because they're always unexpected and I always assume that each one is the last one I'm getting.  It seems a much healthier way to live:  I'm basically shovelling manure from now until I fall over and die so that's really all I'm anticipating.  Something happens every few weeks or every few months that isn't that? Well, hey, Bonus!  And then, immediately, back to shovelling manure.

I know that whatsoever God doeth, it shall be forever: nothing can be put to it, nor anything taken from it: and God doth it, that men should fear before Him.

I think only God could definitively make those statements.  From a man, they're just interesting opinions. 

That which hath been, is now: and that which is to be, hath already been, and  God requireth that which is driven away

The first half of the verse, in light of our modern scientific understanding of the fourth dimension, time, seems more like the kind of citation that Mr. Ross should be looking for.  I find it, personally, critically important to be aware that everything that will happen has already happened in a fourth-dimensional sense. My life of shovelling manure non-stop between here and the grave has already taken place.  Either I managed to do that, or I didn't.  MY job, as I see it, is to cleave as strictly as possible to my intended path: to make it match my intention and not to slack off or backslide or allow myself to be corrupted.  "God requireth that which is driven away".  I think that presents the problem for men (and women) of being careful of what they drive away.  Not throwing out the baby with the bathwater requires being able to discern which is which:  what in your life is the baby and what in your life is the bathwater.  No easy task, I don't think.

And moreover, I saw under the sun the place of judgement, wickedness  there; and the place of righteousness, iniquity there. 

If the author of Ecclesiastes is a prophet then I assume that we could take these as scriptural gospel.  If not, a great deal would depend on who the author is, what he saw, the circumstances under which he saw it and whether he has drawn the correct inferences.  In Ezekiel or John's Apocalypse, there is usually an angel or other incarnated being who says, "Behold, under the sun, the place of judgement, wickedness there and the place of righteousness, iniquity there."  Ezekiel and John both infer, as well, personally, elsewhere in their books, but you can usually tell human inference from Revelation in that way:  if its infallible doctrine, an angel will be the one who imparts it or it will be directly attributed to God.

This, to me, reads as pure human inference:

I said in my heart, God shall judge the righteous and the wicked: for a time there, for every purpose and for every work.  I said in my heart, concerning the estate of the sons of men that they might clear God and see that they themselves are beasts. For that which befalleth the sons of men, befalleth beasts, even one thing befalleth them: as the one dieth, so dieth the other: yea, they have all one breath, so that a man hath no prominence above a beast; for all is vanity.  All go unto one place, all are of the dust, and all turn to dust again.

I definitely try not to get above my place -- as I understand it these days -- but even in my own severely limited self-perception I have to say that I've never yet seen any beast shovel manure.  I think that animals basically "enact" with very little in the way of free will.  Yes, like beasts, we die, but while we're alive we have a much wider spectrum of free will choices to pick from, assessments that we need to make, choices we need to choose or not choose and consequences we have to live with.  To me, that separates us, dramatically, from the beasts.  The odds are probably pretty good that "all is vanity" -- that is, all is "in vain" -- but that's up to us.  At the end of the day, none of us will be able to say that we didn't have choices and that we didn't make those choices ourselves.  If you consciously choose vanity and vanities then you won't have much to complain of when you are made to suffer the consequences of that.  "You knew that that thing that you worked to be able to buy was dust, so why didn't you put your time and energies elsewhere? Why actively choose vanity when there's a wide spectrum of non-vain choices? Or, at least, choices that you yourself deem to be non-vain or less vain?" 

We do all return to the dust, but only physically.  There's something there, in man and in beast, a light that goes out at the point of death.  And then we can see only what that man or that beast WASN'T: the inert, "physically left-over" mass.  If that was what they were, they would still be it.

Who knoweth the spirit of the sons of man that is ascending, and the spirit of the beast that goeth downward to the earth?  Wherefore I perceive that there is nothing better, than that a man should rejoice in his own works: for that is his portion; for who shall bring him to see what shall be after him?

Ecclesiastes is traditionally attributed to Solomon and this certainly reads like a rationale for creating an ostentatious abattoir of a temple with your name on it.  

My question would be:  how do YOU know that the spirit of the sons of man IS ascending OR that the spirit of the beast "goeth downward to the earth"?  In answer to the question: Who shall bring him to see what shall be after him?, as a monotheist, I think John's Apocalypse is the definitive answer to that question.  This is what the End Times of this epoch are going to be like.  I, as a man, have a very limited ability to understand what is being described there, but it does, for me, keep everything in perspective.  All I can do is what I think is right and not do what I think is wrong in the hopes that my life and my spirit and all of my actions find themselves on the right side of the ledger:  not in support of the Beast or Satan or the Harlot but in support of God.

That, I see as my job, my works. 

Next week, God willing:  Habakkuk 3:3!

Best,

Dave
____________________________________________________________________________
Next Time: Girls! Girls! Girls!-Past Matt

Saturday 25 May 2019

Dave Sim LIVE! on Kickstarter, plus ideas for what to do with YOUR @#$%ing Flimsy Postcards...




This is just a quick reminder that Dave Sim will be live on Kickstarter for the last two hours of THE @#$%ING FLIMSY POSTCARD FROM HELL? NO. 2 Kickstarter:  That's 2PM to 4PM Eastern Time, 1PM to 3PM Central Time, 12PM to 2PM Mountain Time and 11AM to 1PM Pacific Time.  All other times zones should consider the madness of Daylight Savings Time being observed in some places and not others and just go ahead and post your questions for Dave early.

https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1349357665/cerebus-postcard-from-hell-no-2/description

___________________________________________________
Hey hey!

Somebody momented for me!

Score one for the Home Team!

Anyway...

Hi, Everybody!

This stuff:
Jeff Seiler is winning the Green Dante/Green Virgil Cover for $1300 (US)! If you want in on this action, just comment on this post, or e-mail momentofcerebus@gmail.com As Dave said, the auction ends next week Friday at Midnight (CDT). To prevent douchebaggery, I'm limiting the bidding to WHOLE US Dollars, in FIVE DOLLAR INCREMENTS. So if you wanna make Seiler lose his faith in humanity, you gotta come up with at least thirteen hundred and FIVE bucks (You Ess.). After the deadline, I'll contact the winner and figure out how we're getting Dave his money. (Seiler suggested that the increase should be in FIFTY dollar increments, and as much as I wanna get Dave mo' money, I was trying to eliminate the one penny douches...)

The remastered Volume 1 is available digitally for $9.99.

If you got a couple of extra bucks and want to do a fellow Cerebus fan a solid, frequent commentator Mike Battaglia has a go fund me here.

Friend to the Blog, and the guy who sets his phasers to the Light Side: Steve Peters has another Kickstarter going. (I have a joke in one panel.)
 ___________________________________________________

Speaking of the Latest Kickstarter,

Heir to the throne: Eddie Khanna sent in a funny lil' strip about the FIRST Postcard From Hell?:

Click for bigger(?)


And then I made a couple of strips:



And:


Where did the little Cerebus and Batvark come from, you ask?

Ben Hobb's nightmares, Ben Hobb's nightmares...
Next Time: Only three "Genesis Question posts left...

UPDATE: It's over. $1900 (US) from 90 backers.
I faxed Dave, and he replied:

Friday 24 May 2019

Final inking / Big Auction News! (Dave's Weekly Update #288)

Hi, Everybody!

Heeeeeere's Dave: 


Problems viewing this video? Watch directly on YouTube...


Dave must have filmed this before Jeff Seiler upped the bidding to $1300 (US)! If you want in on this action, just comment on this post, or e-mail momentofcerebus@gmail.com As Dave says, the auction ends next week Friday at Midnight (CDT). To prevent douchebaggery, I'm limiting the bidding to WHOLE US Dollars, in FIVE DOLLAR INCREMENTS. So if you wanna make Seiler lose his faith in humanity, you gotta come up with at least thirteen hundred and FIVE bucks (You Ess.). After the deadline, I'll contact the winner and figure out how we're getting Dave his money. As you contemplate bidding, remember, what the late Harry Anderson observed: "A fool and his money were lucky to get together in the first place..."

The second Postcard From Hell Kickstarter will end at 3pm (CDT) tomorrow.

The remastered Volume 1 is available digitally for $9.99.

If you got a couple of extra bucks and want to do a fellow Cerebus fan a solid, frequent commentator Mike Battaglia has a go fund me here.

Friend to the Blog, and the guy who finds it "Fascinating." that, "that's NO moon": Steve Peters has another Kickstarter going. (I have a joke in one panel.)


Next Time: Postcards from Hell? in Crisis?

Thursday 23 May 2019

Suenteus Po Versus Astoria

We last saw Dave Sim's fifth Cerebus notebook in April of 2018 in Travel to the T'capmin Kingdom. The notebook covers Cerebus #45 through 49 and had 79 of the 80 pages in the notebook scanned. Last week we saw some Suenteus Po  bits in the second Cerebus notebook. I found some more mentions of him in this notebook.

Notebook #5, page 46
Looks like some dialogue between Astoria and Po? The thumbnail sketch is of page 433 of High Society (aka page one of you guessed it, Cerebus #47).  And yes, it matches pretty well to the finished page. The text isn't as close to the original. For one, Po's name isn't mentioned at all. . .If Dave did decide to leave the character as Po.

Notebook #5, page 47
The character sketch on the page is similar, but a bit different, but he is the Po likeness. The two thumbnails appear to be a first rough of page 2 and then a closer approximation of page 2.

Wednesday 22 May 2019

The Postcard From Hell...ONLY THREE MORE DAYS!


Benjamin Hobbs:

There's only THREE MORE DAYS to back the POSTCARD FROM HELL Kickstarter! If you were planning on backing this campaign, but haven't done so, you should head over there NOW!

A big thanks to everyone who's already backed the campaign!


https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1349357665/cerebus-postcard-from-hell-no-2


On Kickstarter, Dave Sim has been posting daily comments (and special limited time offers), along with teasers for upcoming issues of CIH?


Recently, he's been discussing his progress on THE AMICABLE SPIDER-VARK #1!

The original rough cover.  The final will surely be different. 

In the comments of the Kickstarter he says: "More progress last night and today on THE AMICABLE SPIDER-VARK. Unrepentant womanizer. His credo? "With Great Power Comes: SCORING HEAVY WITH THE BABES!!"

You can find more about THE AMICABLE SPIDER-VARK in the comments of the Kickstarter!

Next Week: The promo strip for the next issue of CIH? debuts!

Tuesday 21 May 2019

The Ol' AMOC Mailbag? Again?!? Yeah, from DAVE SIM!!!

Hi, Everybody!

The Green Dante/Green Virgil cover auction is still at $1300.00 US Dollars from: Jeff Seiler! If you want in on this action, just comment on this post, or e-mail momentofcerebus@gmail.com

The second Postcard From Hell Kickstarter is up. Three days left.

The remastered Volume 1 is available digitally for $9.99.

If you got a couple of extra bucks and want to do a fellow Cerebus fan a solid, frequent commentator Mike Battaglia has a go fund me here.

Friend to the Blog, and the guy who thinks Kirk VS Solo would be a WAY less interesting fight than McCoy VS Lando: Steve Peters has another Kickstarter going. (I have a joke in one panel.)
_______________________________________________________________

As I sit trying to proofread Special Friend of the Day: Jesse Lee Herndon's last few Please Hold For Dave Sim transcripts (I'm working on it I'm WORKING on it!!!), and needing to "moment", I turn to the Ol' AMOC Mailbag, and a message from Dave Sim:


http://www.wetalkpodcasts.com/

Here's an interview with Neal Adams.

You know, 

Neal Adams!
Next Time: I'm off until Friday, so I don't give a shi