However, some people who want to start reading and collecting comics may not be into superheroes, so Watts recommends starting their collection based on what regular books they like to read or television shows the watch.

I truly enjoyed your comics and the story behind them! While reading it I was wondering how you grew to be comfortable with telling other people that you stuttered? Was this something that you overcame yourself or was there a specific clinician or therapy technique that helped you get to this point? I know someone who stutters but prefers to avoid the topic or not let others know of the stutter. I was hoping you might have advice on how to help them become more comfortable with sharing their stutter? Thank you in advance!


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Dani,

I love your comics so much! Those experiences are so relatable too. I agree that getting out there an letting our stutters be heard is hard but so important. Thanks for all the work you do and thanks for sharing all those success stories.

Elizabeth

I not only enjoyed your comic, but what you detailed under it as well. I am a current first year graduate student at Illinois State University. Through my stuttering course, I have found how important it is to serve as an ally to PWS. I appreciate your Franky Banky comics, as they help those who do not stutter become more aware of the experiences that PWS go through. Though, I could never know how it feels to stutter, becoming more aware of what PWS go through makes me want to be an ally more than ever.

Great post! Your comics are a unique and creative way that bring awareness to fluent speakers. It opened my eyes to different scenarios I had never imagined before. Thank you for sharing.

-Michelle

I am a graduate student studying speech-language pathology. I loved your comic. I look forward to listening to your podcasts and reading more of your Franky Banky comics. I am excited to share your comics with clients in therapy one day. I can see how they help children and teens to relate to Franky Banky. Each of the comics you shared help me to understand what someone who stutters is going through during everyday situations.

Banky and Holden self-published and printed the book (in black and white) and sold it through Comic Toast, a comic book retailer in the Eden Prairie Mall featured in Smith's second movie Mallrats and ran by Steve-Dave Pulasti and Walt "the Fanboy" Grover, two characters usually depicted as hostile towards the main characters of Kevin Smith's movies and comics (Such as Jay, Silent Bob, Brodie Bruce or Randal Graves). Steve-Dave would reluctantly admit, when interviewed by the Asbury Park Press, that the book sold very well even though he'd "try to tell people to save their money and spend it on a real comic book". (In the fictional Well-endowed Mail letters page included in the Bluntman and Chronic comic book published by Image Comics in 2001, a letter signed by Steve-Dave and Walt refers to Banky and Holden as "sellout fucks").

Manoj Gupta (born December 23, 1967) is an Indian publisher, editor, and the President and Co-founder of Raja Pocket Books and its subsidiary Raj comics. He established the most popular and longest running comic book company Raj Comics together with his brother Sanjay Gupta.He co-created the characters Nagraj,[1]Bankelal Doga, Bhokal, Yoddha etc.[2]He introduced digital-colouring in Raj Comics back in the 1990s, making it one of the first Indian brands to use the technique. Some consumers partially credit their wildly explosive success to this technological increment.

In the early days of its inception, Raj Comics published mythological, mystery and adventure comics. In 1985, Manoj Gupta came up with the idea of creating a superhero centered around snakes as he believed snakes held a religious and mythological significance in India.[3] Later, the team started working on the concept and finally created the Nagraj that we know today.

After publishing mythological, mystery and adventure comics, Gupta's quest for creating a superhero resulted in Nagraj in 1985 - and India got an action hero centered around snakes. This success led to the creation of more characters.[4] Immediately after its launch, Nagraj became a widespread success and the issues started selling more than a million copies. The debut issue of Nagraj was written by Parshuram Sharma and illustrated by Pratap Mullick. After that Sanjay Ashtpure, Pratap Mullick, Chandu, Milind Misal and Vitthal Kamble alternately illustrated the character for 44 issues, ending in 1995 with Visarpi Ki Shadi. Since 1995, with Shakoora Ka Chakravyooh the illustration work of Nagraj has been taken over by artist and writer Anupam Sinha. "Nagraj was all the rage and we had to come up with a new issue every two weeks. Sanjay and I would isolate ourselves in a room every Sunday and when we came out, we always had a new script.", said Manoj Gupta in an interview in 2013. The brothers duo Manoj Gupta and Sanjay Gupta co-authored over 20 issues under the names of Raja and Sanjay Gupta in the golden age of Nagraj. These comics focused on defining Nagraj as a character and establishing his rogues gallery.

Assistant Professor of Instruction, Department of Communication Studies, Moody College of Communication

brendon.bankey@austin.utexas.edu


Expertise: The role of Clint Eastwood and his films in the Nixon administration's re-election efforts and the New Right conservative movement

Associate Professor of Instruction, Department of Radio-Television-Film, Moody College of Communication

benjamin.bays@austin.utexas.edu


Expertise: Animation, comics, cartoons, video games, visual effects, digital media

Silent Bob : Oh, but I think it is. We had a deal with you on the comics, remember? For likeness rights? And as we're not only the artistic basis, but also obviously the character basis for your intellectual property, "Bluntman and Chronic," when said property was optioned by Miramax Films, you were legally obliged to secure our permission to transfer the concept to another medium. As you failed to do that, Banky, you are in breach of the original contract. Ergo, you find yourself in a VERY actionable position.

Warning! This post contains SPOILERS for Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse.Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse has a massive amount of Easter eggs and a literal army of different Spider-Men from multiple realities. As Miles Morales (Shameik Moore) enters the vast Spider-Verse for the first time, he meets several different Spider-People seen in the original comics, games, and more. Likewise, there are so many amazing and spectacular references Spider-Man fans of all ages will absolutely love.

During Miles' narration introducing himself and what he's been up to since Into the Spider-Verse, he imagines a scenario where he tells his parents that he's Spider-Man, believing that in some other universe they might be okay with his Webslinging. While Miles' parents do know he's Spider-Man in the comics, it wasn't a walk in the park and led to some pretty significant family struggles. Likewise, Miles' mom in the Insomniac game universe knows his secret as well.

Unlike the MCU's Ned Leeds, the Ganke from the comics, or the Ganke from the Insomniac games, Across the Spider-Verses's Ganke Lee has zero interest in being Miles Morales' "guy in the chair". He wants no part in Miles' antics as Spider-Man, believing that even one act of helping Miles would be a slippery slope that would lead to him becoming "The Guy".

A core motivation for The Spot is that he wants to be taken seriously as a true nemesis. However, he's frequently referred to as a "Villain of the Week". This is a common comic term referring to foes who aren't very memorable and rarely show up beyond a handful of appearances. While this is largely accurate for The Spot in Marvel comics, it looks as though the villain is determined to fight back against this flippant label, seeking to become more dangerous than ever before.

While Project 42 was simply a reference to the Alchemax project that created the spider that bit Miles in the comics, Project 42 is far more significant as revealed in Across the Spider-Verse. Brought from another universe by The Spot when he was still a scientist working at Alchemax, it's revealed that this spider was meant to bite and create a different Spider-Man, making Miles Morales a major multiversal anomaly which explains why he wasn't invited to the Spider Society. 0852c4b9a8

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