Homer

Link Ink: ‘Magnificent Kaaboom,’ The Other ‘Dredd’ On Blu-ray And An Awesome Aang Painting
Link Ink: ‘Magnificent Kaaboom,’ The Other ‘Dredd’ On Blu-ray And An Awesome Aang Painting
Link Ink: ‘Magnificent Kaaboom,’ The Other ‘Dredd’ On Blu-ray And An Awesome Aang Painting
Crowdfunding: You haven't seen a Kickstarter until you've seen the incredibly surreal Magnificent Kaaboom campaign. Legal: NECA/WizKids has obtained a Consent Permanent Injunction against Tree House Kids, which prohibits the use of their "Heroics" minifigure brand...
Link Ink: Labor Day, Salt And Pepper Spidey And F2P ‘Gotham City Impostors’
Link Ink: Labor Day, Salt And Pepper Spidey And F2P ‘Gotham City Impostors’
Link Ink: Labor Day, Salt And Pepper Spidey And F2P ‘Gotham City Impostors’
Labor Day: It's Labor Day today in America, which means it's a good time to take it easy and pout about the end of summer. Or maybe clean off your desk? Gaming: It looks like Gotham City Impostors will soon be free-to-play on Steam. Conventions: New York Comic Con has released its first official poster for this year's October 11-14 show...
‘The Simpsons’ Shred On Stylish Santa Cruz Skateboards
‘The Simpsons’ Shred On Stylish Santa Cruz Skateboards
‘The Simpsons’ Shred On Stylish Santa Cruz Skateboards
Bart Simpson was a pretty edgy cat when The Simpsons debuted in 1989, what with his skateboarding, slingshotting and his "Eat my shorts!" yelling. Bart's boarding may not afford him as much "bad boy" cred in a 2011 where your grandparents know who guys like Tony Hawk and Shaun White are, but it's still pretty thrilling to see Santa Cruz Skateboards fully replicate Bart's board
‘The Handi-Cats': A Marvel Comics Homage about Disabled Superhero Cats Fighting the Oil Spill [WTF]
‘The Handi-Cats': A Marvel Comics Homage about Disabled Superhero Cats Fighting the Oil Spill [WTF]
‘The Handi-Cats': A Marvel Comics Homage about Disabled Superhero Cats Fighting the Oil Spill [WTF]
As someone who runs a comic book website, I get a lot of press releases, and I consider myself pretty battle-hardened to the incredibly bizarre things that come out of the world of comics on a daily basis. But even I was not prepared for "The Handicats," an online comic based on a New York Times best-selling memoir by Gwen Cooper about adopting a blind cat named Homer and learning about