Friday, June 26, 2020

CoronaVirus Comics SUE AND SALLY SMITH: FLYING NURSES "No Serum for Greed"

Though the title characters usually worked together...
...both Sue and Sally also had solo globe-trotting adventures!
The twin Smith sisters worked for "Emergency Corps", a Doctors Without Borders-type organization that sent medical personnel to hot spots all over the world.
From forest fires to typhus outbreaks, the Flying Nurses could handle it all, as this never-reprinted story by writer Joe Gill, penciler Joe Sinnott and inker Vince Colletta from Charlton's Sue and Sally Smith: Flying Nurses #48 (1962) proves!
Notes: #48 was the duo's first issue!
Before that, the comic was My Secret Life, but after the duo debuted in #47...
...the book was renamed for them!
No mention of a psychic link the two shared in this debut was ever made again — which is a shame, because it really would have come in handy for them in later stories...at least until the book was cancelled with #54!
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Wednesday, June 17, 2020

CoronaVirus Comics STAR TREK SPECIAL "Flesh and Stone" Conclusion

Who's the greatest doctor in TV history?
House?
Grey?
Welby?
Kildare?
Nope!
"Bones" McCoy!
Yeah, the "I'm a doctor not a (insert occupation here)!" and "He/She's Dead, Jim!" guy!
Even the Canadian Medical Association Journal has proclaimed him "TV's only true physician"!
Before you scream "NO WAY!", let's show why...
As we showed HERE, in the time of Star Trek the Next Generation/Voyager/Deep Space Nine, a strange disease, which turns organic to mineral affects all the attendees of a StarFleet medical convention.
A group of doctors running late for the get-together receive a distress call from the locale, and divert to a nearby world where a retired StarFleet doctor might hold a clue as to the nature of the epidemic!
They meet Dr Leonard McCoy, who tells them about a similar situation he encountered during his tour of duty aboard the Enterprise decades earlier...
The late DeForest Kelly often talked about how people would come up to him at Star Trek conventions and mention his portrayal of Dr Leonard McCoy inspired them to take up careers in medicine!
Trivia notes: Dr M'Benga appeared in the original series episodes "A Private Little War" and "That Which Survives", showing "Bones" wasn't the only doctor on the Enterprise (despite TV budget restrictions)!
The hazmat suits the landing party wears were shown in the episode "The Naked Time" and were fabricated by the costume designers...using shower curtain material!
The Trek production team sure knew how to stretch the budget in a show where almost everything had to be fabricated from scratch!
You may wonder why a one-shot comic like IDW's Star Trek Special (2014) about the various medicos of the Star Trek universe was even produced!
And, did you notice there's no price or UPC (Universal Price Code) shown on the cover?
There's a fascinating story behind it, which you'll see tomorrow at our "brother" RetroBlog, Atomic Kommie Comics!
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Wednesday, June 10, 2020

CoronaVirus Comics REAL HEROES "Plague Vanquished"

Not all comic book heroes wear capes...
..as this tale of Edward Jenner, the doctor who saved us from smallpox, proves!
Who says comics ain't educational?
Not me, kiddo!
This never-reprinted story from Parent Magazines' Real Heroes #15 (1946) was one of several graphic dramatizations of Dr Jenner's achievement which has saved countless lives since its' introduction!
Depending on how long the Covid-19 lockdown continues, we may have time to run all of them!
Sadly, both writer and illustrator(s) are unknown!
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Rabbit and Cat's CoronaVirus Jokes for Such a Time as This
Volume One

Thursday, June 4, 2020

CoronaVirus Comics CYNTHIA DOYLE: NURSE IN LOVE "Smash-Up"

We've presented both female and male doctors...
..now here's a typical 1950s-1970s nurse strip, starring, of course, a woman as the nurse! 
(The target audience for this strip was 'tween and teen girls!)
Without further adieu,  let's get to today's story about someone suffering from a debilitating disease...or is he?
This never-reprinted tale from Charlton's Cynthia Doyle: Nurse in Love #69 (1963) plays up the "...In Love" aspect of the title while providing some rather iffy medical concepts!
Remember, this is a soap opera in comic book form!
It's not meant to be even a semi-serious feature about a female medical professional, like Dr Pat!
This is, as most 1950s-1970s strips starring nurses were, a three-Kleenex romance comic!
Heck, before the book became Cynthia Doyle: Nurse in Love as of #66, it was Sweetheart Diaries, a romance anthology!
Cynthia appeared in a single story in the final issue, then the entire book was turned over to her!
Why?
As we pointed out in our previous entry about City Surgeonin the early 1960s, one of the most-popular genres in pop culture was "medical drama"!
Spearheaded on TV by hunky prime-time physicians Dr Kildare and Ben Casey along with the related series The Nurses as well as daytime soap operas with hospital settings and paperback romance novels with covers featuring "studs in scrubs" with swooning nurses, comics hopped on the medical bandwagon!
Charlton , which couldn't afford the rights to comics based on any of the TV shows, launched numerous series featuring doctors and nurses including Dr Tom Brent: Young InternNurse Betsy CraneYoung InternsSue & Sally Smith: Flying Nurses and, of course, this book!
(Oddly, there were never any cross-over stories between the various books!)
Written by Joe Gill, penciled by Dick Giordano and inked by Vince Colletta, this story came about halfway through the book's run.
BTW: the series ended with Nurse Doyle and Doctor Benson's love unconsummated!
Surprised?
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Night Nurse