Radio Blue Heart is on the air!
pulpsandcomics2:
“Chamber of Chills #16 May 1975 cover by Gil Kane
”

pulpsandcomics2:

Chamber of Chills #16   May 1975   cover by Gil Kane

kropotkindersurprise:

September 21, 2020 - Ron Cobb, best known for being the production designer for several major films, has died at 83 years of age. Cobb brought to life several cantina creatures for Star Wars (1977) and came up with weaponry and sets for Conan the Barbarian (1982), the exterior and interior of the Nostromo ship in Alien (1978) and the earth colony complex in Aliens (1986), and the DeLorean time machine in Back to the Future (1985).

More interestingly, to me at least, is that in the 1960s and 70s he was a great radical political cartoonist, and sadly, many cartoons of those days are still just as relevant today. A small selection:

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Rest in Peace, Ron Cobb. Find more of his cartoons here: http://roncobb.net/cartoons.html

omercifulheaves:
“Ron Cobb doing They Live before They Live, 1967
”

omercifulheaves:

Ron Cobb doing They Live before They Live, 1967

trupie:

spongebobssquarepants:

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Oh my God.

The board of directors’ names?

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They’re the names from Fighting Baseball

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I don’t know if that was on purpose or an Easter Egg or what but either way it’s magnificent

fungusamongusblog2:

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Ron Cobb. San Francisco Express Times, 1968.

thefingerfuckingfemalefury:

songsofwaterandnight:

huffylemon:

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damn ok lake superior

Ok yeah that lake is superior

(Soundwave voice) Lake Superior

Tom Fitton Inferior

workingclasshistory:
“On this day, 8 November 1875, pioneering Chinese revolutionary and feminist Qiu Jin was born in Xiamen, Fujian. She had an arranged marriage to a wealthy man; however she grew tired of him and went abroad to study, and at the...

workingclasshistory:

On this day, 8 November 1875, pioneering Chinese revolutionary and feminist Qiu Jin was born in Xiamen, Fujian. She had an arranged marriage to a wealthy man; however she grew tired of him and went abroad to study, and at the same time began wearing men’s clothes. She later started a girls’ school which was actually a training camp for revolutionaries to overthrow the Manchu royal family. After a failed uprising she was beheaded. Today she is remembered as a national hero in China.
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whencyclopedia:
“Empires of Ancient Eurasia: The First Silk Roads Era, 100 BCE – 250 CE In the book’s Introduction, Craig Benjamin writes that, between the 2nd century BCE and the mid-3rd century CE, the Silk Roads linked together many cultures and...

whencyclopedia:

Empires of Ancient Eurasia: The First Silk Roads Era, 100 BCE – 250 CE

In the book’s Introduction, Craig Benjamin writes that, between the 2nd century BCE and the mid-3rd century CE, the Silk Roads linked together many cultures and communities throughout Afro-Eurasia. This is the “First Silk Roads Era,” which, according to Benjamin, “resulted in the most significant transregional commercial and cultural interactions experienced by humans to this point in history.” Benjamin, who is Professor of History at Grand Valley State University and President of the World History Association between 2014 and 2015, is well-qualified to make such an observation.

… Benjamin gives value and meaning to what would otherwise be merely a mass of details.

In addition to the Introduction and Conclusion, Empires of Ancient Eurasia: The First Silk Roads Era, 100 BCE - 250 CE contains nine chapters. In the Introduction, Benjamin outlines his argument and locates the Silk Roads within the broader context of contemporary debates around world history. He points out that, what is commonly referred to as the singular ”Silk Road“ was actually a network of roads. Thus, it is more suitable to call it the “Silk Roads.” In Chapter One, he describes the natural environment along the Silk Roads and explains how pastoralists gradually occupied huge areas of the Eurasian steppe. Chapter Two traces the history of early China from the emergence of the first agrarian community to the appearance of the early dynasties. In Chapter Three, Benjamin picks up the story of the Silk Roads’ origin by following Zhang Qian’s journey from Chang’an, the early Han dynasty’s capital, into Central Asia and back.

Continue reading…