Friday, July 28, 2023

Young Love PRIVATE DIARY OF MARY ROBIN, R.N. "Don't Let It Stop!"

Welcome back to the amorous adventures of our favorite neurotic nurse...
...but be warned, there's a shocking ending to this tale!
WTF???
A happy ending?
What could it mean?
This torrid tale from DC's Young Love #52 (1965) by writer Robert Kanigher and artist John Romita Sr was (despite the blurb at the end) the final Mary Robin story!
In addition, artist John Romita Sr left DC and moved to Marvel, where he immediately jumped head-first into Silver Age superhero sagas!
Within a year he was the artist on Daredevil, then Spider-Man!
By 1970, he was the Art Director of the entire company, while still penciling and/or inking numerous covers and occasional stories, until his retirement.

Please Support Medical Comics and Stories
Visit Amazon and Order...
...which reprints the complete first part of the comic's run from 39 to 56, including the entire Private Diary of Mary Robin R.N. strip (not in color, as we're doing, but in black-and-white)!

Friday, July 14, 2023

BARBIE & KEN "Nurse Barbie (and Doctor Ken)"

Did you know Barbie was, among many other things, a Registered Nurse?
(Barbie from 1961...with the original packaging!)
Well, read this never reprinted story from Dell's Barbie and Ken #1 (1962) to find out about it!
You may have noticed that artist Norman Nodel deliberately drew Barbie (and to a lesser extent, Ken) to look like the actual doll, instead of a more "realistic" human.
The concept of the comic is that we're sitting in on a meeting of a Barbie Fan Club, where little girls talk about...you guessed it...Barbie!
In particular, her clothing and accessories, and how the girls imagine they'd interact with their plastic idol if she was a real person!
In this issue, four girls relate how they "met" Barbie...
As a stewardess (with Ken as the plane's pilot!)
As a ballerina (with Ken as the company's lead dancer)
As a nurse (with Ken as...well, you know already)
And finally, as a bride (with Ken as the groom)
Of course, Mattel already had playsets for each of these occupations on the store shelves...
Note: while Barbie is the star of the comic, Ken is the surgeon, and she's a nurse.
To be fair, in 1962, most little girls were culturally-conditioned to be nurses, not doctors.
Today, Barbie as an MD is an accepted concept...and quite a popular seller as well!
Get Tickets
HERE
to See Barbie: the Movie


PICTURE STORIES FROM SCIENCE "Fighting Germs with Germs: the Story of Vaccination and Innoculation"

This comic tale from the 1940s explains the benefits of vaccination  in such a simple, graphic way... ...that even a regressive Reich-wing a...