Posts Tagged ‘ doctor

The Doctor is In: A Jock’s Guide to Comics

On alternating Tuesdays, Allan “Doc” Dorison operates on a specific part of popular culture.

Growing up in suburban New Jersey during the last decades of the 20th Century, there were big class distinctions between Nerds and Jocks. Not exactly like Revenge of the Nerds. No, the “Jocks” were the jocks, but the “Nerds” were actually the head bangers – metal heads who used to read comics, play D&D, and draw pentagrams on any and all available surfaces.  We head bangers were not physically picked on, since we were a relatively big group and there was safety in numbers.  However, we were mercilessly ridiculed.  It’s all kind of funny looking back at things, in light of the recent success of many comic book movies.  Now these jocks are spending their hard-earned cash on comics, so they can catch up on what they made fun of me for.  I love it.  Like the Nerds from those movies, I feel like I have my revenge.

But deep down, I always wish I could have sat down with a Jock and talked – carry on an actual conversation.  School them in the Ways of the Comic Book.  Although it’s a few years later, now may be that time to reach out and bring Jock and Nerd together under the banner of education.  Yes, the Doctor is in, and below is the Jocks Guide to Comic Books.  Read up; you will be tested.

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The Doctor is In: I Want to Be a Superhero

On alternating Tuesdays, Allan “Doc” Dorison operates on a specific part of popular culture.

by Allan Dorison

When I was a wee lad, of about five or six years old, I wanted to be a superhero. My parents used to take me to Quick Check and pick me up comic books. Every Friday night they used to plop me in front of the TV and we watched The Incredible Hulk with Bill Bixby and Lou Ferrigno. I loved that green guy — breaking s#!t up and saving people. If fact, I wrote my first letter to Mr. Rogers when the Hulk appeared on his show. A few weeks later, I received an autographed picture from Mr. Rogers and my hero, Lou Ferrigno. Later on that summer, I was at a Jamesway and ripped my shirt off pretending to be the Hulk.

As I got older, around seven or eight, my love for comics and becoming a hero progressed. My mom got a job working for the North Bergen Police Department as a violations clerk. It was awesome!!! I got to meet all these cops. It was a dream come true. It was like meeting real-life superheroes. They wore uniforms just like Batman and Spider-Man. They stopped bad guys just like the Hulk and they carried guns like… um, like guys who were bad a$$. This was a good thing and a bad thing. I used to stand in the middle of the street pretending to direct traffic. I got yelled at quite a bit by both of my parents. It was also pretty funny that I used to ask random people if they were crooks. Most of the time they would say “yes”.

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The Doctor Is In: Bring on the Bad Guys

On alternating Tuesdays, Allan “Doc” Dorison operates on a specific part of popular culture.

by Allan Dorison

Webster’s has four definitions for the word villain.

Definition 1: an uncouth person. Definition 2: a deliberate scoundrel or criminal. Definition 3: a character in a story or play who opposes the hero. Definition 4: one blamed for a particular evil or difficulty.

For this instance I’m going to focus on definition 3… with which I disagree.   I think, in the best cases at least, it’s the hero who opposes the villain. That’s what drives the plot.

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The Doctor is In: Webcomics Not the Future

On alternating Tuesdays, Allan “Doc” Dorison operates on a specific part of popular culture.

by Allan Dorison

Considering the title of this essay, I feel like I have to defend myself before I can even begin.

First off, I’m a huge technology nerd. My first computer was an Amiga. I remember being the first person on my block to have Prodigy (a precursor to AOL). While hanging out at Rutgers I used to spend all night on the boards – way before chat rooms were a common way of life. Technology is a huge part of my day-to-day existence. As an audio/visual manager for an investment bank, I’ve seen the best and worst of what tech has to offer. In my apartment, I have almost totally done away with hard media. For movies, I watch streaming video. For music, iTunes. But, I still buy and fill my shelves with printed comic books. If I’m such a techie then why do I feel such an aversion to webcomics?

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