THE TOP 100 COMIC BOOK HEROES OF ALL TIME

Posted on December 5th, 2011 by ekko

IGN published a top 100 comic book heroes that made me crazy, both in its predictability (Hey! Superman and Bats are #s 1 and 2!), overinclusiveness (every single Robin except Damian Wayne (who is the most interesting one by far), as well as Superboy and Supergirl?  Really?) and its attempts to be esoteric without providing sufficient justification (Groo makes the list, but they don’t really say what makes him so essential; James Gordon makes the list, but Aunt May and Uncle Ben don’t–nor does Jarvis; and Nova makes the list, but nobody really gives a shit about Nova).  Maybe it was the list’s sketchy criteria for placement: “Picked by their cultural impact, character development, social relevance, general cool factor, and importance of storylines, these are the best of the best.

It made me so nuts, I made my own list.  Yes, there’s a lot of overlap.  But mine is better.  Because I said so.

Note: If you’re just looking for a list without supporting arguments, you can jump to the last page of this post.  But you can’t tell me I was wrong to put Thor at #33 unless you go and read why.  So, read every page and then tell me why I’m full of $#!+.

Enjoy!

Read the rest of this entry »

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BEST RE-MAKE OF A COMIC CHARACTER: THE ALSO RANS

Posted on July 1st, 2010 by ekko

Continuing from yesterday’s megapost, today we have the not-quites…..

First, the ones who were bubbling under.  It took 19 votes out of the 200 to make the top 10, and these just didn’t make the cut—but I was surprised they didn’t get more attention:

Ed Brubaker/Matt Fraction/David Aja’s Iron Fist (2 votes)
JMS’s Thor (3 votes)
John Byrne’s Superman: 15 votes (oooh!  So close!)
Grant Morrison’s Batman: 4 votes (a shocker, by the way—I thought it’d be a lot more)
Barr/Boland’s King Arthur (Camelot 3000): 2 votes

And now, my personal top 10. I tried to pick the runs that most engaged me with characters who previously I found boring, or who I’d never bother to read about before, in addition to being transformative for the titular hero.  It was hard to limit myself to 10.  Like, I took Garth Ennis’ Punisher off my list because although the run is one of my favorite runs ever, it didn’t really change my understanding of the character.  Ennis just told great stories about him.
Here’s my list: I only wrote a blurb if the run didn’t make it on the list of the “real” winners.

10.  Joss Whedon and John Cassaday’s X-Men (2004-2007) (6 votes)
Astonishing X-Men 1-24

I’d given up on the X-Men right about the time Claremont brought the Morlocks in.  It was just too much—the stories were frayed, there were a million characters to know about, and then this book came along.  I’d give this props based solely on their portrayal of the Danger Room, using the computer to tell the best evolution story in the history of science fiction.  After reading the “Danger” story arc, I finally understood how a computer could become self-aware.  And talk about reinvention—Whedon made a room into a character!  The characterizations of Kitty Pryde (and her relationship with the resurrected Collossus) and The Beast were tremendously powerful—as three-dimensional and touching as Whedon’s Buffy The Vampire Slayer series.  The entire run has recently been collected in a beautiful hardcover.  Oh, and John Cassaday’s artwork.  There, I mentioned it.  It’s . . . astonishing.

9.  Bob Layton and David Michelinie’s Iron Man (1978-1989) (zero votes)
Iron Man #114-157, 215-250

Really?  Not a single vote for the man most responsible for the Tony Stark in the Iron Man movie?  The first run is better than the second, but I think I like them both better than even Matt Fraction’s terrific, current work.  Why?  Four words: Demon in a bottle.  Why else?  James Rhodes, Justin Hammer,  Stealth Armor, Ant Man, Iron Man versus Hulk, Doctor Doom, the Mandroids, War Machine, Machine Man . . . That’s enough, innit?

8.  Keith Giffen and J.M. DeMatteis’s Justice League (1986-89) (1 vote)
Justice League #1-6, Justice League International #7-25, Justice League of America #26-60.

Keith Giffen and J.M. DeMatteis took a bunch of lame characters (Black Canary , Blue Beetle, Booster Gold, Mister Miracle, etc.) who either didn’t have their own books or whose books were on the edge of cancellation and made them a team.  A good team.  And, usually, a hilarious team.  In the first issue of their run, they set the tone with Batman punching Guy Gardner in the nose.  Possibly the most famous punch in comic book history?  Not only did they reinvent the hero-team dynamic, but they managed to give personalities to folks who had previously been little more than concept-heavy ciphers (like Martian Manhunter and Captain “Shazam” Marvel).  It’s a crime that this book never got an omnibus.

7.  Doug Moench and Bill Sienkiewicz’s Moon Knight (1980-84) (2 votes)
Moon Knight 1-38

Of course, it was Sienkiewicz who was the reason I loved this book.  As it progresses, we see his art transform from “standard” styles clearly influenced by Gene Colan into the more abstract, conceptual work he would perfect on works like his Elektra miniseries with Frank Miller.  The Moon Knight book never sold well, and for a while it was a direct-market exclusive, but there was never a book I looked forward to more as a kid.  Previous appearances of MK were as a novelty act in Werewolf By Night and Marvel Spotlight.  In his own book, he got a much more elaborate backstory and went from being the poor-man’s Batman to a full-fledged, fully functional schizophrenic.

6.  Walt Simonson’s Thor (1983-1986) (12 votes)
Thor #337—382

What made Walt Simonson’s Thor so great?  Well, he started by bringing in Beta Ray Bill, which was an invention and not a reinvention, but the character served as the perfect foil for the usually-better-than-everyone-else Thor.  It injected new life into an extremely stale series, and also gave Simonson the opportunity to explore Thor’s relationship with his father and other Asgardians.  For the first time ever, Thor was a fully realized character, not just a big hippie with a hammer who could beat up anybody else on the planet.  Plus, Thor into a frog.  And if that ain’t reinvention, I don’t know what is.

5.  John Byrne’s She Hulk/Fantastic Four (1983-1986) (6 votes)
Fantastic Four #232-293

Ejecting Thing was a bold step.  But even bolder was introducing cheesecake pin-up gal She Hulk as a feminist who wasn’t afraid to sunbathe topless on the Baxter Building.  She Hulk actually became interesting under Byrne’s run.  It’s possible that without it, she would have disappeared from the Marvel Universe forever.  Like Teen Hulk.  But Byrne also got votes for his work with the F4 in general, turning Sue into a woman (she changed her name from Invisible Girl to Invisible Woman); forcing Reed to come to terms with the indirect consequences of his interdimensional meddling by bringing him to court in an alien world; having Johnny date a future herald of Galacus; and making Superman-with-a-mohawk rip-off Gladiator, of the Shi’ar Empire, the foe in issue #250.  Perhaps the greatest fight sequence ever to grace The World’s Greatest Comic Magazine.

4.  Marv Wolfman and George Perez’s Dick Grayson. (#10 on the “real” list)

(This run was the inspiration for this entire idea for this post, actually.)

3.  Alan Moore’s Swamp Thing (1983-1987) (#2 on the “real list)

2.  Roger Stern and John Romita Jr.’s Amazing Spider-Man (1983-1984) (3 votes)
Amazing Spider-Man #224-252

I suspect this didn’t get more votes because it has NEVER BEEN REPRINTED IN COLOR.  Shame on you, Marvel.  This run includes the greatest Spider story ever told (Nothing Can Stop The Juggernaut); introduces The Hobgoblin and the Black Costume; and included the “Kid Who Collects Spider-Man.”  Stern also tended to focus on side-characters and villains, adding a depth to the Spider books that I hadn’t experienced before.  It was a like an entire world was created—one that existed even when Spider-Man wasn’t on screen.  A run of pure genius that transformed Peter Parker into a three dimensional, sensitive 1970s man.

1.  Frank Miller, with Klaus Janson and David Mazzucchelli, on Daredevil (#3 on the “real” list)

THE TOP 10 REDEFINING CHARACTER RUNS (MARVEL/DC)

Posted on June 30th, 2010 by ekko

Call it a retcon.  Call it a reboot.  Call it a revamp.  Just don’t call it a comeback.  I asked for your votes a few weeks ago on the writer and/or artist who most “redefined” a character.  The main criterion was that the character had to be someone else’s creation, not their own.  Between e-mail and blog comments I got about forty responses, with a total of about 200 votes for various characters.  Of course, many books got just a few (or even a single) vote.  Some were worthy of more (which I’ll discuss tomorrow in my also-rans/runners up post).  Others . . . Not so much.  (Did “Deadpool: Merc With A Mouth” really reinvent that character?  And Jeph Loeb’s General Ross/Red Hulk?  Really?!?)

To paraphrase Jeff Probst: I’ve tallied the votes.  The votes have been announced, the decision is final.  But feel free to drop a comment about who is missing . . . But you might want to wait.  Tomorrow, I’ll run an also-rans post.  Please come back!  Read!  Stumble!  Digg!

Here’s the TOP 10 CHARACTER REBOOTS!

10.  Marv Wolfman and George Perez’s Dick Grayson (1980-1986). 
Votes: 19 (all votes for Wolfman/Perez Teen Titans were counted here)
Run: The New Teen Titans 1-50; New Teen Titans (oversized, glossy book) 1-5.

It always confused me back when I was a lad that a guy named “Marv” worked for D.C.  But I’m glad he did.  The Teen Titans of the Silver Age were a group of obvious spin-offs and sidekicks, led by their poster-child, Robin.  The reboot included a few original characters (Raven, Starfire, Cyborg), it also took on some of the most cliché characters of the DCU.  It was intended to be D.C.’s response to Claremont’s Uncanny X-Men reboot (and the rumor is that Claremont was offered the project in 1986, right about the time Wolfman was fired from D.C.).

Throughout the course of the book, Wolfman and Perez added depth to these characters—Wally West struggled with becoming a man, and eventually became Kid Flash.  Wonder Girl didn’t struggle against her role as a hero and junior Goddess, but she did struggle with having powers and loving a “normal” guy.  Changeling/Beast Boy rebelled against his own dark past and Doom Patrol roots, which, like his teammate Raven, kept coming back to haunt him.  But nobody grew and changed more than Robin.  Over the course of the series, we saw Dick Grayson go from boy to man, eventually turning into Nightwing.  More importantly, we see how the process of maturing as part of a team makes him a better leader than his mentor, Batman, which has had a clear effect on his relationship with the new Robin in Grant Morrison’s current title.  You won’t go wrong scooping up reprints of these books—I treasure my original, single issues, and have read (and re-read) them
with my kids over and over.  The book is also the inspiration for Teen Titans Go!, one of the best supercartoon series of all time.

9.  Ed Brubaker’s Captain America (2005-Present).
Votes: 22 (for either Cap, Bucky, or Winter Soldier)
Run: Captain America 1-50, Captain America 600-Present.

Whether it is with Steve Epting, Luke Ross, or even Butch Guice, Brubaker’s vision of the flag-waving hero represents the first cynical version of Marvel’s most hopeful hero.  Talk about change: In the first story arc, Brubaker killed off Cap’s greatest foe, the Red Skull, leaving Cap a little rudderless.  Then, of course, he killed Steve Rogers and replaced him with Bucky Barnes, after reinventing the “dead” character as an anti-American agent (Winter Soldier).  So clearly this was a complete reinvention of the hero, down to the molecular level!  Not only has Brubaker’s run redefined the “look” of the series from a star-spangled herofest into a dark, noir-y spy book, but Brubaker’s intricate plotting is evident from issue one.  Careful re-readers, with the benefit of hindsight, can already tell what the future will hold for Steve Rogers.  This was an absolutely brilliant reinvention of a character who wasn’t dark enough for Marvel’s pseudo-realistic universe of the 2000s.

8.  J. Michael Straczynski’s Spider-Man (2007)
Votes: 26
Run: Amazing Spider-Man 544-545, Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man 24, Sensational Spider-Man 41.

During his 6-year run, JMS restored The Amazing Spider-Man to its rightful place as one of Marvel’s tentpole comic books.  He started with “The Spider-Totem,” which provided magic as an alternative to radioactivity as the basis for Spidey’s powers, but after that he got good.  Aunt May discovered that her nephew was really a superhero, Mary Jane married him, he got a new suit of armor and was unmasked.  Although I do agree with one voter, who signed his e-mail “Goat Boy,” that JMS’ run wasn’t really reinventive until the final, One More Day story arc, because all the invention that came before it was basically erased.  I have to agree, and described it thusly, above.  I think this got votes because people liked the run, not because it constituted a reinvention of the character.

7.  Garth Ennis’ Punisher (2001-2008)
30 votes
Run: Just get the Punisher Omnibus volumes.  There’s three different series and several one-shots all told.

Let’s get one thing straight: Other than the two-issue Frank Miller “Angel Dust” story in the pages of Daredevil, I never liked Punisher.  He was basically a really pissed off Batman who used guns and wasn’t nearly as smart.  Enter Garth Ennis’s relaunch with (one of my least favorite artists) Steve Dillon on a brilliant maxi-series called “Welcome Back, Frank,” that attempted to explain why there had been no Punisher comics for so long.  The team went on to the darkly comical Marvel Knights series, which was solid as well, during which Dillon left the book.  At was at that time that Ennis moved the book to Punisher MAX, and the true redefinition began.  He took a gritty, dark, cinematic approach to the character, which focused more on the evil-doers than the vigilante himself.  Each story arc got worse, too, moving from drugs to prostitution to terrorism to desecration of Frank Castles’ family gravesite, and each villain grew increasingly evil.  We thus gained an understanding of Punisher’s motivation, and a sympathy for his hopeless, antisocial, violent world view.  These MAX books have been collected in a series of oversized volumes, and even though they’re a little more pricey than the paperbacks, I highly recommend them.  The artwork, by folks like Leandro Fernandez, Howard Chaykin, Richard Corben, and Goran Parlov, is brilliantly reproduced, and the larger size gives the book an even greater sense of drama.  This is probably one of my favorite series of all time.

6.  Geoff Johns’ Green Lantern (2004-present)
31 votes
Run:  Green Lantern: Rebirth #1-6, Green Lantern #1-present

Other than Frank Miller’s portrayal of GL as a patsy in All Star Batman, I have never liked—or even made it all the way through—a Green Lantern story.  This run made me care about him for the first time.  It also wove-in existing legend without leaving new readers (like me) in the dark.  A very good example of renewing old history for the benefit of comic-nerds by creating a story that is full of lore and arcane facts, but still new-user-friendly.

5.  Brian Michael Bendis and Alex Maleev’s Daredevil (2001-2006)
36 votes
Run: Daredevil #26-81

A no-brainer.  If you haven’t read, or re-read, this run in a while, it’s time to do it again.  I think they’re re-collecting it again this year, so it’s a perfect time to get it.  Even knowing what will happen to our hero at the end won’t spoil the tale.  And not only did they transform Daredevil by focusing more on Matt than the suit, but they transformed a whole bunch of B-listers like White Tiger and Foggy Nelson and Iron Fist and Power Man and . . . The list goes on.  A run that is arguably as good as Frank Miller’s (but not as action-packed), and that was head-and-shoulders above any other long-form story of its decade.  Incidentally, Ed Brubaker’s run got only two votes, and I agree. I loved that run, but all it really did was continue the downward slide that Bendis started.  Brubaker was a worthy successor, but he didn’t change the direction of the character.

4.  Chris Claremont’s Uncanny X-Men/Wolverine (1975-1985)
44 votes
Run:  Giant-sized X-Men #1, Uncanny X-Men 94-192; Wolverine 1-4 (with Frank Miller)

There were many votes for Claremont’s revisions of particular members of the team.  The most common vote was Wolverine, but Cyclops got two votes for turning him from milksop to strategist, and Jean Grey got 5 votes for, well, dying and all.  Quite a few people mentioned runs with specific artists (Byrne/Cockrum/Romita, Jr.).  But I’m collapsing it all together into this one category.  X-Men was perhaps the defining comic book of the early 1980s, and in it Claremont reinvented tired old characters like Cyclops and Xavier; turned Wolverine from a kinda silly character into a samurai/ninja/Marvel-money-making-machine; and turned Jean Grey into Phoenix, one of the most transformative reinventions in comic book history.  And then he killed her.  If you’re going to make a list of iconic recreations of classic characters, this has to be number one.  Period.  Claremont has recently returned to the book with X-Men Forever, which is actually pretty good, but his style (words over pictures, tell don’t show) is harder to translate in the modern, slicker medium.  The art from has grown, but Claremont hasn’t.  Too bad.
3.  Frank Miller, with Klaus Janson and David Mazzucchelli,-Daredevil (1979-1983; 1985-86)
51 votes.
Run: Daredevil 163-191, 227-233.  (Frank Miller did three issues solely as penciler before taking over the writing duties.  I’m not counting those issues, as they do not reflect Miller’s vision.)

Miller’s run begins with a new “look”—something bridged the gap between the sketchy work of Gene Colan (the previous artist), whose characters often seem squat or low to the ground, but with more shadow and movement.  Miller’s pencils are like dances, with the character’s movement from panel-to-panel sketched with ballet-like detail.  Klaus Janson, a brilliant artist on his own, played Dave Grohl to Miller’s Kurt Cobain, allowing Miller to define the look of the book but punctuating the sketches with powerful, bold inks.  Like most iconic runs, Miller’s Daredevil was marked as much by the supporting cast as by the titular star.  Elektra.  The Hand.  Stick and Stone.  The use of Foggy as the perfect foil for Matt Murdock: A man afraid of everything, but highly competent behind a desk.  The repurposing of Bullseye from a pretty standard, one-note enemy to a driven psychopath determined to rise up the hierarchy of the underworld.  And, of course, the complete hijack of Kingpin from a big fat strong guy who could fight Spider-Man to a coldly calculating underworld leader with eyes everywhere.  Oh, and Turk, of course.  Turk, the thug who gets beat up in just about every issue, bounced (literally) off of Daredevil’s hard-boiled, no-nonsense attitude to bring a sense of humor to the darkest comic of its time, but also to show DD’s human side.  DD clearly sympathizes with the minor tough on some level: Turk is an underdog, just as Murdock is really a minor player in Marvel’s “big” New York superhero universe.  Miller also added some depth to Murdock in the classic “Guts” story, in which DD watches over an adventure starring Foggy Nelson, letting his best friend feel powerful while protecting him from the shadows.  It was stories like this that made us feel like we knew Matt Murdock—he wasn’t just some cipher who had to put on a costume to be interesting. Then, after his history-making run, Miller returned to completely break Daredevil down into nothing, dissolving his secret identity and reducing the character into a bit player in his own book.  The second Miller run plants the seeds for Brian Michael Bendis’ run, in which the lines between hero and secret identity break down completely.

Frank Miller’s Daredevil transformed the comic book world, and after it, nothing was the same.  There’s a good reason he’s got two titles in this top 10 list: He may be a pain the ass, but he’s a genius.

2.  Alan Moore’s Swamp Thing (1983-1987)
53 votes.
Run: Swamp Thing 20-58, 60-61, 63-64.

I recently did a long piece about Moore’s reimagining of this classic Len Wein/Bernie Wrightson character.  The work wasn’t just good for Swamp Thing—it was good for comics in general.  Moore and a series of artists including Veitch, Bissette and Totleben revolutionized horror comics by taking them away from shock/TnA and revolutionized the anti-hero by making a plant . . . Human.  Through this series, Moore retold the origin (but this time, instead of a human becoming a plant, we saw a plant becoming a human), and took fringe characters like Phantom Stranger, Deadman, and Demon and made them relevant—and, more than that, gave them unique personalities and depth.  He also forced us to reconsider established heroes like the JLA and Batman (who is portrayed as a vicious bully when positioned against the sympathetic, heart-broken, but raging Swamp Thing).  Yeah, this entry is to give credit to Moore’s vision of Swamp Thing himself, but as everyone from Jerry Seinfeld to Kermit the Frog knows, a star is only as good as his supporting cast.

1.  Frank Miller’s Batman (1986-87)
76 votes.
Run: The Dark Knight Returns (inks by Klaus Janson); Batman 404-407 (“Year One”) (with art by David Mazzucchelli); Batman: The Dark Knight Strikes Again.

It won’t be clear for a long time—perhaps ever—if the Batman of Miller’s Dark Knight is the Batman of the DCU, but it does seem apparent that Batman: Year One is in the “regular” continuity, so Miller’s Batman qualifies for this list.  Moreover, his vision and revision of the hero received a staggering amount of votes—nearly everyone gave credit where credit is due—to the man made the Batman’s peculiar form of psychosis make sense.  These three stories have been collected and recollected at least a dozen times over.  If you don’t own them, you should be able to get  them pretty cheap on Amazon.  All-Star Batman is pretty damn good, too, but it does not appear to be part of the regular DCU so, like Marvel’s “Ultimate” universe, it’s disqualified under my kind of random rules.

Tomorrow: The Also Rans!!!

MORE SUPERNEWS PLEASE!

Posted on December 16th, 2009 by ekko

1.  Oh, God, please . . . No (Part One). There’s actual development on a Hancock 2.  As if you didn’t get enough sleep during Hancock 1.

2.  Blackest Night #5. Just a mention: Finally, something happens!  This is the first time that I’ve read a BN story—and I’ve read ‘em all so far—where, when I was done, I couldn’t wait to see what happens next.

3.  D.C.’s Ultimate Universe. I’m not enough of a comic-book nerd to know who came up with the idea of alternate superhero universes first, DC or Marvel, but I suspect it was DC.  Alternate universes, in my opinion, have always been kind of stupid and lame—at least when they merge.  Sure, sometimes they can produce cool stories, most recently when the JLA met their evil counterparts (one of the last few good JLA storylines, in my view), but usually alternate universes are the only thing that aggravate me more than time travel.  As good as the art in DC’s various universe crises has been, the stories have been confusing gonzo gang bangs that come off as excuses to move units.  They aren’t art.  Marvel did a good alternate-reality job with the “What If?” series because they didn’t try to merge it with our own universe.  When that happens, it’s a suckfest.  Jeph Loeb even ruined the Ultimates with some kind of alternate universe crap that I couldn’t make any sense out of at all.  I was happy when Marvel launched Ultimates not as an alternate universe, but as a reimagining of Marvel stories.  There was no need for Uatu or other means to crowbar it into the bigger Marvel U.

Well, DC recently unveiled its plan to publish a new series of “Earth One” graphic novels that will basically reboot its two major characters (which is a good thing, because Bats is dead and Supes is in exile, so fans of these heroes really have nowhere to go these days).  The publishing schedule seems to be 2 of each title per year.  If DC devotes quality talent (and it looks like they are) and doesn’t try to mix this in with their “regular” universe, then this idea could have potential.  Maybe even lead to a new line of regular books—not just graphic novels.  Superman: Earth One will be by J. Michael Straczynski (who did a great job rebooting Spider-Man and Thor) with art by Shane Davis and Batman: Earth One will be by Geoff “I can do every DC comic in the universe because I don’t need sleep and Grant Morrison sucks anyway” Johns, with Gary “I’m Geoff’s muse” Frank. The bad news is, they’re starting with origin tales.  How many more Superman origins really need to be told?  And isn’t Geoff Johns already doing on of these?  Oh, well.  I’m still hopeful.

4.  Oh, God, please . . . No (Part Two). There’s buzz that Smallville will get another season.  Although a pack of wolverines with axes in their teeth pooping out poisonous snakes couldn’t keep me away from the January 20th Geoff Johns penned 2 hour Justice Society special, this season has been remarkably dull.  Especially in light of how the show really bounced back last season.  It’s like they’ve run out of things to say.  Which they have, really, and D.C.’s fault.  Let him wear the suit already!  It’s not going to damage the vitality of your movie franchise (which, let’s be real, is anemic as it is)!

5.  There’s probably nobody working at Marvel whose work I enjoy reading more than Mark Millar, and both of his collaborations with Steve McNiven (Civil War and Old Man Logan) have been genius.  Now, they’re back together . . . On an indie project!  You’ll remember that after Millar worked with (my favorite artist) John Romita, Jr., on the best Wolverine story ever (“Enemy of the State”), they teamed up on the creator-owned project, “Kick Ass,” which will be a household name next year when the movie comes out.  Based on that track record, Nemesis should be awesome.  It will be published by Marvel, like Kick Ass, but it’s fully independent.  The basic idea is billed as a filthy rich anarchist who tries to take down the government.  Kind of V for Vendetta meets Batman.  Based on what I’ve read, it appears that there will be no superpowers involved, just raw guns-and-fists, and tech.

6.  Ronin. Sylvain White, the director of the movie adaptation of DC/Vertigo’s, The Losers, is developing a movie version of Frank Miller’s brilliant and prescient 1983 miniseries.  Can’t wait.  This is one of those books I always thought needed to be made into a moving picture.  Which gives me an idea for a post about comics that should be movies/TV shows.  I think I’ll write that post!  Watch this space for details!

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