I need a name for a comic based on video games. I was using video game sprites for the character models, and it was named accordingly, but I was "caught" for copyright infringement, even though I had permission to use the sprites. So I need a name for a comic whose main characters are Mario, Luigi, Sonic, Peach, Mega Man, Snake, Master Chief, Bowser, Samus, Link, etc, keeping in mind that the comic is drawn this time, or at the very least vector drawn in photoshop.
Video Game All-Stars
Video Game Legends
The New Adventures of Arcade ( Legends, Heroes, All-stars)
I would play around with these types of names til you find one that works. This is safe and still tells the read what they are going to see in the book.
How to Draw and color a cartoon in Adobe Illustrator by Ian David Marsden
JOHN JACKSON MILLER (W), SCOTT HEPBURN (P), MICHAEL ATIYEH (C), and DUSTIN WEAVER (Cover) An ancient evil gains long-coveted power in the third part of 2008's biggest Star Wars event! Something terrible is spreading among the Mandalorians, threatening to bring their conquest of the galaxy to a previously unthinkable new level! Unfortunately, fugitive Padawan Zayne Carrick and the con artist Gryph don't even know how they're going to survive their current predicament, let alone stop this horrifying threat! Lucky for the galaxy, their companion Jedi Celeste Morne has a few ideas about what to do...
The second part of the biggest Star Wars story of 2008 begins with Mandalorians galore and ends with the arrival of a seemingly unstoppable threat! Fugitive Padawan Zayne Carrick and his con-artist companion Gryph have fallen into a situation even more dangerous than the one they escaped on wartorn Taris -- surrounded by enemies and trapped in close-quarters with a deadly agent of the group who framed Zayne for killing his fellow Jedi-in-training!
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Vector is an epic story with repercussions for every era and every hero in the Star Wars galaxy. This is the concluding volume. Luke Skywalker and Princess Leia have to deal with Vector as it crosses their paths and changes the galaxy! On the dark surface of a desolate moon, Luke meets his first Jedi since Obi-Wan Kenobi, only to realize too late that Celeste Morne is far different than his fallen friend - twisted by a Sith Talisman and enraged by Darth Vader! Then, over 135 years later, Cade Skywalker's plan to assassinate Emperor Darth Krayt is aided by a "secret weapon" in the form of Celeste Morne - the Jedi Knight of the Old Republic who is in possession of, and possibly possessed by, the powerful Muur Talisman...
A yearlong event with repercussions for every era and every hero in the Star Wars galaxy begins here! When a terrible vision reaching more than four thousand years into the future alerts the secret Jedi Covenant to the importance of Taris, they activate an operative already on this planet overrun by Mandalorians...
The first phase of the most important Star Wars story of 2008 ends with devastation on an awe-inspiring scale in part four of "Vector"!
Nearly overwhelmed by an ancient evil run rampant, fugitive Padawan Zayne Carrick, the con-artist Gryph, and the Jedi Celeste Morne have made a choice of cosmic significance, its consequences reshaping not only the course of their lives, but the fate of the entire galaxy! Surrounded by Mandalorians, they face a crossroads where every path demands sacrifice, and no matter what is saved, something else will be lost!
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In Chapter 1: Knights of the Old Republic Volume 5, a terrible vision reaching far into the future alerts the secret Jedi Covenant to the importance of Taris, and they activate operative Celeste Morne...
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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles NOW Comics was a comic book publisher founded in late 1985 by Tony C. Caputo as a soleproprietorship. During the four years after its founding, NOW grew from a oneman operation to operating in 12 countries, and published almost 1,000 comics books. Most NOW titles were the results of licensing arrangements with such companies as Columbia (Sony) Pictures, Broadway Video, ELP Communications, CBS Entertainment, Inc., Speed Racer Enterprises, and Leisure Concepts, resulting in titles like Vector, Mr. T The Force, Speed Racer, The Original Astro Boy, Alias, Terminator: The Burning Earth, The Real Ghostbusters and Ghostbusters II, Fright Night, Married... with Children, and The Green Hornet. Author: Surhone, Lambert M./ Tennoe, Mariam T./ Henssonow, Susan F. Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 124 Publication Date: 2010/09/05 Language: English Dimensions: 9.02 x 5.98 x 0.29 inches
Never one to pass up a good cinematic curmudgeon, maybe I was predisposed to enjoy Universal's Despicable Me. I mean, when it comes to off-brand animated entertainment, ass-kicking Pandas and pet Dragons only take me so far — tt wasn't until Russian supervillian Gru (Steve Carell) put his adopted children to bed in the hollowed-out casings of "probably" inactive bombshells that I finally felt like the target audience.
Ever since studios began better emulating Pixar's secret sauce, they've met with varying degrees of success in combining raw, gooey emotion with their signature lighthearted recipes. Despicable Me grapples with it, and though it may be one of the most consistent examples yet, it's still about as nuanced a dish as macaroni and cheese — which, fortunately for me, I've never outgrown.
No surprise, a lot of upper-echelon voice talent is involved, and I remember being impressed months ago at the wall of names that played after the teaser trailer. Admittedly, I haven't been the biggest fan of Carell's work since he left The Daily Show back in 2005, but he doesn't distract as Gru. He plays well off of a cast eerily similar to that of Forgetting Sarah Marshall: Jason Segel as his nemesis, Vector (who is, interestingly, another supervillian — Despicable Me doesn't have a hero); Russell Brand as an elderly inventor by the name of Dr. Nefario; Kristen Wiig as the proprietor of the orphanage from which Gru adopts three young girls in a ploy to infiltrate Vector's fortress.
But perhaps most interestingly, Despicable Me has some of the most easily-missed cameos in the history of the medium. Danny McBride plays Gru's neighbor with a line and a half of dialogue, and Jemaine Clement from HBO's Flight of the Conchords (apparently) voices one of the minions. Other than stacking the deck as an advertising vehicle, it seems pointless to pay such funny people for such inconsequential roles.
But I think their presence signifies, if nothing else, that Despicable Me is a project worth being attached to. It may fall back on certain cyclical annoying tendencies, catering occasionally to lowest-common-denominator comedy (the avoidance of which even the best emulation of Pixar hasn't managed), but the world of the film is comically rich, and no amount of disposable, annoying minions can wreck that — though not from lack of trying. The heart of the story, Gru coming to begrudgingly love his adopted daughters, may not win any prizes for revolutionary storytelling, but it's well executed and ‘cute' in a legitimate way.
or do some write it and then have an illustrator draw what there idea was?, reason i ask is because i like to write and latley ive come up with some ideas for like a manga or comic kind of series but i am no good at drawing or at least not good enough for that much drawing
Not all writers are also illustrators. It is very common for a writer-artist team to produce a popular manga. For example, Death Note was illustrated by Takeshi Obata and written by Tsugumu Ohba. The same team actually went on to write Bakuman, which is about another writer/artist duo trying to make it big in the world of manga.
Feel free to try and find someone who can draw your dreams!
DRAWING GIRLS #1 draw comics tutorial how to with me sexy women style art comic
At last–the first guide to drawing comics digitally! Artists! Gain incredible superpowers...with the help of your computer! The DC Comics Guide to Digitally Drawing Comics shows how to give up pencil, pen, and paper and start drawing dynamic, exciting comics art entirely with computer tools...
Drawing the Head and Figure (Perigee) List Price:$12.95 Sale Price: $7.32 You save: $5.63 (43%) Eligible for free shipping! Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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A how-to handbook that makes drawing easy. Offers simplified techniques and scores of brand-new hints and helps. Step by step procedures. Hundreds of illustrations.
This clever book teaches artists the unique skill of drawing perspective for spectacular landscapes, fantastic interiors, and other wildly animated backgrounds to fit comic-strip panels.
Supercharge your drawings with the power of photo reference!Almost every professional comic artist uses photo reference. Finding really good photo reference is crucial to capturing accurate lighting, foreshortening and body language in your drawings...
Here in a single volume is a practical, comprehensive training course for budding illustrators working to master comic book art, graphic novels, fantasy posters, sci-fi book covers and illustrations, and computer games...
All artists are tired of persuading their nearest and dearest to look sad…look glad…look mad…madder…no, even madder…okay, hold it. For those artists (and their long-suffering friends), here is the best book ever...
So, You Wanna Be a Comic Book Artist? is a hip how-to book that helps aspiring young comic book artists realize their dreams. Using a lively, informative style, Phil Amara shows kids how to create their own superheroes, write storylines, get their comics published, and possibly become famous...
In this book, you will learn how to draw quickly, and with more efficiency.There are step by step examples of how to be more efficient. This book also lists the proper tools you will need along the way of your artistic journey.
From the pages of great literature to Hollywood movies, zombies are appearing everywhere. Now aspiring artists can bring them to life, so to speak, by learning to render them with pencil, paint, and digital image-editing software...
How to Draw Noir Comics: The Art and Technique of Visual Storytelling is an instructional book based on the cinematic, high contrast noir style of acclaimed comic book and graphic novel illustrator, Shawn Martinbrough.Martinbrough’s work has been published by DC Comics, Vertigo and Marvel Comics, illustrating stories ranging from Batman to the X-Men. This is his first book, released through Watson-Guptill Publications and The Nielsen Company.In How to Draw Noir Comics, Martinbrough shows how the expert use of the color black is critical for drawing noir comics. He demonstrates how to set a mood, design characters and locations, stage action and enhance drama, and discusses important topics like page layout, panel design, and cover design.How to Draw Noir Comics includes The Truce, an original graphic novel written and illustrated by Martinbrough which incorporates the many lessons addressed throughout the book, and has an introduction by critically-acclaimed novelist Greg Rucka, author of the graphic novel Whiteout, currently in production as a major motion picture.
"How to Draw Noir Comics: The Art and Technique of Visual Storytelling" is an instructional book based on the cinematic, high contrast noir style of acclaimed comic book and graphic novel illustrator, Shawn Martinbrough. Martinbrough's work has been published by DC Comics, Vertigo and Marvel Comics, illustrating stories ranging from Batman to the X-Men. This is his first book, released through Watson-Guptill Publications and The Nielsen Company. In "How to Draw Noir Comics," Martinbrough shows how the expert use of the color black is critical for drawing noir comics. He demonstrates how to set a mood, design characters and locations, stage action and enhance drama, and discusses important topics like page layout, panel design, and cover design. "How to Draw Noir Comics" includes "The Truce," an original graphic novel written and illustrated by Martinbrough which incorporates the many lessons addressed throughout the book, and has an introduction by critically-acclaimed novelist Greg Rucka, author of the graphic novel "Whiteout," currently in production as a major motion picture.
How to Draw Noir Comics: The Art and Technique of Visual Storytelling is an instructional book based on the cinematic, high contrast noir style of acclaimed comic book and graphic novel ...
Artists will discover how to create great comics and make a career out of doing so with this completely revised and updated classic.
How To Grade A Cartoon Illustrator - Info
Cartoon illustrators are the experts who are certified in the field of drawing caricature or cartoon characters for any sort or writings articles or short stories for comic books, journals, magazines, brochures etc. They make the potential element for writings especially for children's books and magazines. Depending on the quality of the cartoon created by the cartoon illustrators or cartoonists, it can have both positive and negative effects in the minds of people. The basic elements of creating emotions in a person lie in the hands of a cartoon illustrator. Since it can sometimes hurt a person or can succeed in creating a pleasing environment, cartoon illustrators have to be vigilant and educated in creating giving face to the characters for any sort of writings. They should have talent as well as should perform profound analysis on what they are creating.
Grading an experienced cartoon illustrator is easy if you can evaluate their works efficiently. In order to grade their talent, you can browse through the style galleries that they provide online. Almost all websites that provide professional cartoon illustrators offer you with the opportunity to browse their galleries so that you can view their previous work record. If you have a need for outsourcing your works to a cartoon illustrator, then finding the right person that suit your budget and business objective is easy today with so many sources that can help you to find them.
You can find a collection of cartoonists online while sitting at the comfort of your home itself. If you wish to approach famous cartoonists to get your work done, then you will need to contact their agents or editors to reach them. With the development of digital technology, traditional drawings have been enhanced using 2D and 3D digital drawings. It is much easier now to transform the funny characters and images provided into more detailed actions and emotions, thus converting fantasy to reality. You can now choose the right character required to give face to your writings. You can also choose the right faces suited for your website.
It is always assured that a talented animator or cartoonist can create magic on the papers or web pages. They are also equipped with the best tools required for adding life to your writings.
i am looking for a web site with some comic book pics especially image comics (youngblood) characters such as chapel,glory,superpatriot and others. does anyone know where i can get the pics
Try google.com and then Images at the top of the screen. Google images always has tons of stuff like that.. good luck on your quest!
IMAGE COMICS WEEK OF REVIEWS EPISODE 2: MECHA AND TECHNO SPAWN ACTION FIGURES
Youngblood (1995 series) #1 Sale Price: $2.00 Eligible for free shipping! Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Youngblood Volume 1 (Youngblood) List Price:$34.99 Sale Price: $24.59 You save: $10.40 (30%) Eligible for free shipping! Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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The original Youngblood miniseries - re-mastered in full color and re-scripted by Joe Casey! You thought it would never happen! Rob Liefeld returns to Image Comics and he's bringing Youngblood with him...
The brand-new Youngblood library continues with this latest collection! As Shaft and Co. go deep underground, the Televillain makes his move on a nation glued to the tube! And who is this all-new, all-different Youngblood team that's taken over the show? Are their Q-ratings high enough to take on the evil of Mayhem, Inc? All this, and the secret of the mysterious Scion! Collects Youngblood #5-8.
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Great work and pencils all the way in a creativity mood
Youngblood Volume 1: Focus Tested List Price:$9.99 Sale Price: $1.98 You save: $8.01 (80%) Eligible for free shipping! Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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At long last, the Blood is back! A new team jam-packed with old friends! Old enemies returning in a whole new way! You've never seen celebrity superheroes like this! You've seen the imitators - now check out the original! The all-new Youngblood library begins here!
Image Comics is an American comic book publisher. It was founded in 1992 by seven highprofile illustrators as a venue where creators could publish their material without giving up the copyrights to the characters they created, as creatorowned properties. Along with DC, Marvel and Dark Horse, Image Comics is one of the four largest comic book publishers in America. Its bestknown series include Spawn, Pitt, The Savage Dragon, Shadowhawk, Youngblood, Supreme, WildC.A.T.s, Gen, Wetworks, Cyberforce, Witchblade, The Darkness, Invincible, the third volume of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, and The Walking Dead. Author: Miller, Frederic P./ Vandome, Agnes F./ McBrewster, John Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 212 Publication Date: 2010/04/21 Language: English Dimensions: 5.98 x 9.01 x 0.48 inches
The original Youngblood miniseries - re-mastered in full color and re-scripted by Joe Casey! You thought it would never happen! Rob Liefeld returns to Image Comics and he''''s bringing Youngblood ...
The original Youngblood miniseries - re-mastered in full color and re-scripted by Joe Casey You thought it would never happen Rob Liefeld returns to Image Comics and he's bringing Youngblood with him. This re-mastered, re-scripted, re-imagined hardcover finally collects the first historic issues of the very first, million-selling Image Comic. Just in time for the new monthly series debuting January 2008. Includes an all-new ending by Liefeld and Casey
High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles Vogue is a fictional comic book superhero from Image Comics. Created by Rob Liefeld, she first appeared in Youngblood #1 April 1992 Nikola Voganova was forced to leave a pampered life in Russia at the age of 13 when she witnessed her father being killed by Alexander Stroika of the KGB. She was already at that time a worldclass gymnast. At age 18 she was accepted into the Bloodpool program and shortly before her twentieth birthday she became a member of Youngblood. Some time after having established herself in Youngblood, Vogue started an international cosmetics corporation, Vogue Cosmetics, using her fame to spearhead the launch. Author: Surhone, Lambert M./ Timpledon, Miriam T./ Marseken, Susan F. Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 108 Publication Date: 2010/07/03 Language: English Dimensions: 5.98 x 9.01 x 0.25 inches
At last! After years of waiting, the much-anticipated IMAGE COMICS HC is here! The four remaining Image founders return to the characters that made them sensations for a celebration of the ...
In 1992, seven artists shook the comic book industry when they left their top-selling Marvel Comic titles to jointly form a new company named Image Comics...
In 1992, seven artists shook the comic book industry when they left their top-selling Marvel Comic titles to jointly form a new company named Image Comics. Out of the gate, millions of readers flocked to the energetic adventures by these creators, as together they ushered in the Image Age, where comics would sell in the millions, and a comic book artist could become a mass media celebrity. Image Comics: The Road to Independence is an unprecedented look at the history of this important comic book company, featuring interviews and art from popular Image founders Erik Larsen, Jim Lee, Todd McFarlane, Whilce Portacio, Marc Silvestri and Jim Valentino. Also featured are many of finest creators who over the last 15 years have been a part of the Image family, offering behind-the-scenes details of the company's successes and failures. There's plenty of rare and unseen art, helping make this the most honest exploration ever taken of the controversial company whose success, influence and high production values changed the landscape of comics forever.
Spirit Archives, Volume 7 List Price:$49.95 Sale Price: $20.97 You save: $28.98 (58%) Eligible for free shipping! Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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As the seventh hardcover edition in the impressive Spirit Archives collection, this masterpiece features the work of some of the pioneers of the comic world. With the war in Europe still waging, the Sunday strips from July 4 - December 26, 1943 had the Spirit focusing his attention to homegrown homefront problems...
The Near Complete Essential Hembeck Archives Omnibus is a massive collection covering cartoonist Fred Hembeck's past three decades of work. All seven of his early eighties collections - Bah, Hembeck, The Hembeck Files, et al - are included, as well as rarely seen strips, personal commissions, online pieces, holiday cards, assorted oddities, and over a dozen stories ranging up to ten pages in length! A massive collection featuring the superhero industry's most revered humorist! Foreword by industry legend and creator of Spider-Man and The Fantastic Four, Stan Lee!
Collecting four issues of the fan-favorite Star Trek comic books released by DC Comics in the 1990s, written by Howard Weinstein and Michael Jan Friedman, IDW's Star Trek: Archives, Volume 3: The Gary Seven Collection explores the continued adventures of alien-agent-on-Earth Gary Seven...
Introduction by Bill Maher. When U.S. bombs started raining on the Taliban, Rall jumped on a plane straight to the war zone to get the real story for himself. Featuring his Village Voice articles and a graphic novel.
For the legions that collect the immensely popular DC Comics action figures, we have good news: the official visual compendium of more than 1,400 characters has finally arrived. "The DC Comics Action Figure Archive" is the definitive reference for the serious enthusiast. Assembled by lead collector Scott Beatty and the experts at DC Comics, this sturdy hardcover features more than 600 full-color photographs and an easily navigable A-to-Z structure. Here, too, are previously impossible-to-find release dates, variants and 'redecoes, ' as well as detailed information on action figure scales and articulation points. From Ace the Bat-Hound to Zauriel, with lots of Batman and Superman in-between, this collector's must-have guide doesn't miss a beat.
In the modern era, the archive official or personal has become the most significant means by which historical knowledge and memory are collected, stored, and recovered...
Stone Rabbit is a bored little bunny who lives a humdrum existence in the sleepy town of Happy Glades. But all that changes when he discovers a time portal of doom--right under his bathroom rug Suddenly, Stone Rabbit finds himself on a Jurassic journey in a prehistoric world, facing off against vicious velociraptors, terrifying T. rexes, and a nefarious Neanderthal bent on world conquest. Will our hero be able to save the past and return to the present--or will he become extinct? "BC Mambo "is the first book in a full-color series of riotous, rip-roaring graphic novels that chronicles the zany of adventures of a quick-tempered and quick-witted young rabbit. Erik Craddock grew up during the '80s and '90s on a steady diet of comics, video games, and pop culture. It was during his time as a student at New York City's School of Visual Arts that Stone Rabbit was born. He lives in Babylon, New York.
The second Archive collecting adventures from WORLD'S FINEST COMICS is here, with stories from issues #17-32 (1945-1948) Don't miss The Man of Tomorrow's unforgettable battles with The Toyman, Lex Luthor and others
Berlin, city in northeastern Germany, capital of a united Germany from 1871 to 1945 and again since 1990. It lies on the flatlands of the North German Plain at the confluence of several rivers and amid many lakes. The city's slight elevation made it a site for human settlement even in prehistoric times. Berlin has a population of about 3,454,200 (1992 estimate) and an area of approximately 889 sq km (343 sq mi).
After World War II (1939-1945) Berlin, badly damaged during the war, was situated within the German Democratic Republic (GDR; also known as East Germany). The city was subsequently partitioned into East Berlin and West Berlin. The divided city not only symbolized the collapse of the German Empire, of which it was the capital, but also became a focus of Cold War tensions between the Communist nations led by the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) and the group of Western nations led by the United States. The Berlin Wall, a barrier separating East and West Berlin built by the East Germans in 1961, blocked free access in both directions until November 1989; during the time it stood, at least 80 people died attempting to cross from East to West Berlin. By the time Germany was unified in October 1990, much of the wall had been torn down. A few small segments remain as memorials.
Economy
Following the division of the city of Berlin in 1949, the economies of the two halves of the city were integrated into the economies of the two newly separated republics of Germany.
The economy of East Berlin was totally integrated with that of East Germany and also benefited from a steady stream of visitors from West Berlin and West Germany. East Berlin was the hub of East Germany's commercial, financial, and transportation systems, and, although it comprised less than one-half of the former unified city, it was also a huge manufacturing center. Among its principal manufactures were steel and rubber goods, electrical and transportation equipment, chemicals, and processed food. The Spree River, which is connected by waterways with the Baltic Sea, widened in East Berlin to form a major inland harbor. An airport at Schönefeld, just south of the city, served both East and West Berlin.
Much of West Berlin's industrial capacity was destroyed in World War II, and its economy suffered again during 1948 and 1949, when the USSR blockaded the area in an attempt to drive out the Western powers. Beginning in the 1950s, however, West Berlin's economy was revitalized with a great deal of assistance from West Germany and from the United States, which provided support under the European Recovery Program (Marshall Plan). The city soon became an important manufacturing center, producing electrical and electronic equipment and substantial quantities of machinery, metal, textiles, clothing, chemicals, printed materials, and processed food. The city also developed as a center for international finance, for research and science, and for the important West German film industry. It was linked to West Germany by highways, canal systems, a railroad, and airplane services, which used Tegel, Tempelhof, and Gatow airports in West Berlin and Schönefeld airport in nearby East Germany.
With the destruction of the Berlin Wall in 1989 the two halves of the city were once again physically integrated. Their economic integration became official in July 1990. East Berlin underwent a greater economic upheaval, with many formerly state-owned businesses succumbing to privatization.
While reunification (Die Wende, or “the change”) allowed many families and friends long separated by the Berlin Wall to reunite, it also brought with it numerous economic and social problems. Berlin has been forced to deal with housing shortages, strikes and demonstrations, unemployment, and increases in crime and right-wing violence against foreigners. Unification costs in Germany have led to increased taxes, reduced government subsidies, and cuts in social services.
Points of Interest
The imposing Brandenburg Gate (1788-1791), inspired by the Propylaea of the Acropolis in Athens, Greece, is located at the western end of Unter den Linden, a famous boulevard in Berlin that extends east to Museum Island, in the Spree River; the Brandenburg Gate was closed to free access until December 1989. On or near the boulevard are the classical-style State Opera House (1743); the State Library (1774-1780); the baroque Arsenal building (1695-1706; designed by Andreas Schlüter), now housing a historical museum; Saint Hedwig's Cathedral (1747-1773); the Gothic Church of Saint Nicholas (late 14th-early 15th century); the French Cathedral of the Platz der Akademie area, the heart of the French quarter in the 17th century; and the University of Berlin (1810), whose faculty has included 27 Nobel Prize winners and philosopher G. W. F. Hegel. Well-known streets crossing Unter den Linden are the Friedrichstrasse and the Wilhelmstrasse, on which once stood the Reichschancery of Adolf Hitler.
Berlin's most famous boulevard is the Kurfürstendamm, which is lined with fashionable hotels, restaurants, shops, and movie theaters. At the boulevard's eastern end is a ruined tower, all that remains of the Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church (1891-1895; destroyed during World War II), maintained as a reminder of the destructiveness of war. Adjacent to the ruins are a polygonal church and its separate campanile (1959-1961). Branching from the Kurfürstendamm is the Tauentzienstrasse, a major shopping street and the site of the Europa Center (1963-1965): a 22-story complex of restaurants, shops, offices, cinemas, a planetarium, and an ice-skating rink. To the northeast is the Tiergarten park, largest of Berlin's nearly 50 parks, which extends about 3 km (about 2 mi) to the Brandenburg Gate. In the Tiergarten are the large, modern Congress Hall (1957); the Reichstag building (1884-1894), once the seat of the German parliament, which was gutted by fire in 1933 and again damaged at the end of World War II, but which has since been largely restored; the Berlin Zoological Garden, the largest and one of the oldest in the world; and an aquarium. Near the Tiergarten is the Kulturform complex, including the Museum of Applied Arts; the Bauhaus Archives and Museum, commemorating the Bauhaus school of architecture and design (1919-1933); the Musical Instrument Museum; the National Library; the New National Gallery (1968), designed by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, housing a collection of 20th-century art; and the striking Philharmonie Concert Hall (1963), an asymmetrical structure that serves as the home of the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra.
Southeast of the Tiergarten is Oranienburger Strasse and environs, the heart of prewar Berlin's Jewish district. Revitalization of the area has included restoration of the New Synagogue (1866), which was badly damaged on Kristallnacht (see Holocaust) and by bombing. The synagogue is now a center for the study and preservation of Jewish culture. The area is also known for its art galleries, cafés, bars, and artists' studios. Berlin's oldest Jewish cemetery is nearby.
Museum Island, in eastern Berlin, is the site of the Pergamon Museum (1930), with a fine collection of Greco-Roman and Asian art; the Bode Museum, with displays of ancient Egyptian and Byzantine art; and the National Gallery (1866-1876), with exhibitions of 19th-century painting.
On the eastern bank of the Spree is Alexanderplatz, a large square with restaurants and stores; nearby are the Television Tower (365 m/1197 ft) and Red Town Hall. A statue facing the eastern entrance to the town hall commemorates the Trummerfrauen (Rubble Women), thousands of women of all ages who cleared up vast quantities of rubble left in Berlin after World War II.
Forests and farmland cover nearly one-third of Berlin. In the southwestern part of the city is the vast Grunewald forest, which contains a great deal of woodland and the large Wannsee, formed by the Havel River, as well as a Renaissance-style hunting lodge (principally mid-16th century, with 18th-century additions), the large Olympic Stadium (built for the 1936 Olympic Games), and a broadcasting tower (1924-1926) measuring 138 m (453 ft) high. Other points of interest include Charlottenburg Palace (begun 1695), which houses the Museum of Decorative Arts, and the neoclassical Humboldt.
In the Dahlem district of western Berlin, near the Grunewald, are a group of famous institutions, which include the Painting Gallery, with displays of European painting from the 13th to the 16th century; the Ethnological Museum; the Sculpture Gallery; museums of Indian, Islamic, and East Asian art; and the German Folklore Museum. North of the Dahlem district is the Bridge Museum, displaying 20th-century German Expressionist art by Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Karl Schmidt-Rottluff, and others. Other museums in the city include a museum of Greek and Roman antiquities; the Bröhan Museum, with Art Deco and Jugendstil collections displayed in period settings; and the Egyptian Museum, which contains a world-famous bust of Nefertiti, queen of Egypt in the 14th century BC.
Besides the University of Berlin, institutions of higher education include the Bruno Leuschner College of Economics (1950); the Hanns Eisler College of Music (1950); the Free University of Berlin (1948), founded mainly by professors and students dissatisfied with conditions at the University of Berlin in East Berlin; and the Technical University of Berlin (1879). Additional cultural facilities include museums of Berlin and German history, the Comic Opera, and the Theater am Schiffbauerdamm, home of the Berliner Ensemble, noted for productions of plays by German dramatist Bertolt Brecht, its founder. Also located in Berlin are the German Film and Television Academy (1966) and the College of the Arts (1975). Additional performing-arts facilities include the German Opera and the Hebbel Theater. The city is the site of an annual film festival and numerous other festivals. Berlin hosts the annual Grüne Woche, Germany's largest agricultural fair.
In Berlin's northern suburb of Sachsenhausen is the site of one of the first concentration camps in Germany, built in 1936; the site is now a memorial. After the war Soviet secret police used the camp to house war criminals, former Nazis and military officers, and opponents of the occupying regime. The camp was closed in March 1950. In 1992 arsonists set fire to the camp museum during a wave of attacks against foreign asylum-seekers.
Berlin has an efficient integrated system of subways, elevated train lines, buses (including all-night service), and trams.
European Metropolis
In 1871 Berlin became the capital of the unified German Empire. During the following decades the city grew into a major industrial center, specializing in machinery, electrical goods, and textiles. Culturally, Berlin won worldwide fame for its excellent theaters, concerts, and exhibitions; commercially, it benefited from a wide network of railroads converging at the city. Extensive construction of factories and commercial buildings attracted thousands of workers, most of whom were housed in large tracts of shoddy tenements.
After World War I (1914-1918) Berlin's adjacent communities were incorporated into the city, increasing its population to 3,850,000. Berlin suffered economic setbacks during the troubled Weimar Republic (1919-1933), but the wealth of its theatrical, musical, and other cultural offerings remained unrivaled.
During the restrictive Nazi years (see National Socialism), Berlin's cultural life lost much of its prestige. An ambitious building program, by which German dictator Adolf Hitler aimed to make the city the world's foremost capital, was architecturally uninspired and never completed. In 1936 the city was host to the Olympic Games. During World War II large parts of Berlin were destroyed by air raids and, toward the end of the war, by artillery fire and street fighting. By 1945, about 50,000 prewar buildings had been destroyed, many were in ruins, and the city contained some 75 million cu m (101,250,000 cu yd) of rubble. Berlin's population was 2,800,000, down from its prewar 4,400,000.
When Germany reunified in October 1990, a reunited Berlin once again became the national capital. The seat of the federal government was scheduled to shift from Bonn to Berlin by the year 2000, although the Bundesrat (federal council) and eight federal ministries will remain in Bonn. Renovation of the Reichstag building is under way to accommodate the Bundestag (lower house of parliament); the surrounding area will house federal government offices. South of the Reichstag, Potsdamerplatz is scheduled for major development, including a $2-billion office complex to open in 1998. In September 1994 French, British, and U.S. troops formally left Berlin. Following the departure of Russian troops the month before, the event marked the end of an occupation that had lasted for nearly 50 years.
After the unification of Germany in 1990, subsidies once provided by the German government ended, forcing the Berlin government to make extensive cuts in its budget in the mid-1990s. Public service jobs were trimmed, and costs for social services increased. Angry postal and construction workers went on strike, and children and teachers protested the cuts in education and services. In addition, expenditures by the government increased as it helped rebuild East Berlin to bring it up to the standards of West Berlin
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Does anyone have any ideas for funny caveman comics? Please Help?
My teacher is making us write a news paper to go with the book we are reading in Language Arts.I chose the comics.The problem is that it has to be a Stone Age Newspaper! It can not have anything modern in it. No computers or anything. I need HELP!!!!!!
B.C. already is a comic strip. Check your library!
Stay witth basic human needs (food, shlter, sleep, water, etc.) and environment, weather, animals, social interaction, plants, etc.
Has the Scientific Community been lying to us all this time?Karen is a grad student on a dig in Africa with her professor looking for fossils to fill in the evolutionary chart. But when she discovers something that shouldn’t exist, she finds herself buried in a decades old conspiracy...
Has the Scientific Community been lying to us all this time?Karen is a grad student on a dig in Africa with her professor looking for fossils to fill in the evolutionary chart. But when she discovers something that shouldn’t exist, she finds herself buried in a decades old conspiracy...
Karen is missing, and René suspects foul play!Karen is a grad student on a dig in Africa with her professor looking for fossils to fill in the evolutionary chart. But when she discovers something that shouldn’t exist, she finds herself buried in a decades old conspiracy...
CAVEMAN (#4) Sale Price: $6.00 Eligible for free shipping! Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Description
32 Pages / Black + White / Oversized (8 1/2" x 11") Comic Book. "Ozkan lets the picture tell a thousand words! The work is lively, curvy, and inviting, questioning the direction of evolution!"
32 Pages / Black + White / Oversized (8 1/2" x 11") Comic Book. "Ozkan lets the picture tell a thousand words! The work is lively, curvy, and inviting, questioning the direction of evolution!"
CAVEMAN (#2) Sale Price: $6.00 Eligible for free shipping! Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Description
32 Pages / Black + White / Oversized (8 1/2" x 11") Comic Book.
"Ozkan lets the picture tell a thousand words! The work is lively, curvy, and inviting, questioning the direction of evolution!"
CAVEMAN (#3) Sale Price: $6.00 Eligible for free shipping! Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Description
32 Pages / Black + White / Oversized (8 1/2" x 11") Comic Book. "Ozkan lets the picture tell a thousand words! The work is lively, curvy, and inviting, questioning the direction of evolution!"
Since at least 1939, when daily-strip caveman Alley Oop time-traveled to the Trojan War, comics have been drawing (on) material from Greek and Roman myth, literature and history...
The first two series were broadcast on the CBBC Channel in 2002/3, with each programme lasting three hours (9am to 12pm, and repeated later the same day, 1pm to 4pm).
Basement set used in series 3 & 4.
Series 3
Recommissioned for 2003/4, the show was cut to two hours on both days. Series 3, beginning on 20 September 2003, gained a much bigger audience when it became BBC One's flagship Saturday children's show, replacing The Saturday Show for six months of the year. However, the Sunday show remained only on the CBBC Channel.
The new series saw many new characters being introduced, some of which became regulars to the show. At the start of the series they tried a number of ways of bringing in the prizes before using the Prize Idiot. A number of other short-term characters, used mainly for just one game were played by both Dick and Dom. The basement set was used as an alternative place for some of the games, as well as containing a celebrity 'locked up' in the cage.
Series 4
Series 4, broadcast 2004/2005, retained the same format as the previous series. Notable additions to this series was the addition of an attic to the bungalow, which was mainly used for the 'Drop Your Guts' game (see games section). During this series the Sunday edition became pre-recorded, where previously it was broadcast live. Prior to Sunday's editions being recorded one notable event was a fire alarm which went off during a cartoon, resulting in an extra cartoon having to be played out by CBBC before they could return to the bungalow to finish the show.
Comic Relief in da Bungalow
- During the week leading up to Red Nose Day 2005, Dick and Dom allowed six celebrities each day into their bungalow to raise money for Comic Relief.
The programme was broadcast live from Monday 7 March to Thursday 11 March 2005 at 4:30pm on BBC One and at 6:00pm on BBC Two. On Friday there was a highlights show, only broadcast on the CBBC Channel.
Garden used in series 5
Series 5
Series 5 started broadcasting on 10 September 2005, and saw many noticeable changes. The Saturday edition remained two hours long on both BBC One and the CBBC Channel; however, the Sunday edition was cut to one hour on the CBBC Channel. Most of the games were changed, and some features were removed.
Other significant changes to this series saw the bungalow getting a garden, which replaced the basement set. Additionally, Series 5 saw the replacement of the sixth child Bungalow Head with an adult replacement. On Saturday the final Bungalow Head was a celebrity, and on Sunday it tended to be someone who the other Bungalow Heads knew (eg. relative, teacher, etc). This drew some controversy as Dick and Dom previously mentioned that one of the main "rules of The Bungalow" was that no celebrities were allowed in. This rule was seemingly forgotten after Series 4.
Group pic from the final episode
From the beginning of 2006, the Saturday show was moved to BBC Two while the BBC experimented with their Saturday morning lineup. BBC Two shows were moved to BBC One in return. The last episode was broadcast on BBC Two on Saturday 11 March 2006. From the end of the previous Sunday and throughout the final episode they built up to the big finale, which involved all the cast members singing a song and getting covered in "creamy muck muck". Then, for the first time ever, viewers were shown the outside of the bungalow, which subsequently collapsed under creamy muck muck. A final post-credits scene shows the "Big BBC Boss" (Alan Yentob) waking up in bed and saying to the camera, "Oh, what a terrible dream!" Dick and Dom then sit up either side of him and end the show with a theatrical cackle.
Highlights shows of Dick and Dom were shown the next day and on the following weekend.
The following day on Sunday 12 March, there was a special Behind Da Bungalow programme broadcast on the CBBC Channel between 9 & 10am which featured an interviewer asking questions to Dick & Dom, The Prize Idiot, The Next Door Neighbour's Cat, DI Harry Batt, Mr Choosey, Melvin Odoom and other past characters on the show.
The following weekend on Saturday 17 & Sunday 18 March the team broadcast the highlights show of Da Bungalow which saw Dick & Dom when they were older, sitting in two separate chairs in a posh house while telling their grandchildren what they did every week on Da Bungalow when they were younger.
Show format
For Series 5 the programme was adjusted slightly. Whereas in Series 1-4, the points total at the end of Saturday - with an extra prize for the winner on Saturday - was carried over to the Sunday show, and prizes were awarded at the end of that show, they now awarded 1st, 2nd and 3rd prizes on the basis of Saturday's scores only.
The first and second prizes were usually desirable items such as a TV or games console, but the third prize was always a 'booby prize' like a hubcap, a cake made of carpet, a hairy cheese, bottled water from the River Hull or a chocolate tea pot. At the very end the Bungalow Head with the least points was gunged, sitting on the toilet - though for the last series this practice was largely dropped, possibly because the contestants were already covered in "creamy muck muck" and the finale was becoming more and more chaotic!
Points were earned through success in Bungalow games, although points could be awarded or taken away at any time by Dick or Dom. Although they threatened to do this, for example, when a particular child was being troublesome, this was mostly never carried out. Occasionally, at the end of the show, a phone call was taken from The Almighty Kid. The Almighty Kid's identity was unknown, but changed each time he/she called. The Almighty Kid could award or take away points from one Bungalow Head for no reason at all.
The show's games were broken up by random features, and cartoons.
The picture frame
Each week Dick and Dom had a famous celebrity's picture on a picture frame with a moving mouth. One week, for example, the picture in the frame was of Tony Blair. Usually the person in the frame said something silly, for example when Noel Edmonds was in the frame and started singing "I'm Roly, I'm Poly...", or Terry Wogan said 'Wiggity wiggity wah!'.
Season 5 saw the picture frame being used less than in previous seasons and in addition, there were attempts to implement numerous tricks with the picture frame, including firing gunge and pushing out small objects like bouquets of flowers. e.g. when Huw Edwards was in the picture frame he said "News just in, this just out" before the person operating the mouth hosed gunge out of his mouth.
Bungalow games
In accordance with UK children's television tradition many games involved the participants being gunged. This was particularly true of the final game of every show, Creamy Muck Muck. Some of da bungalows games were Yum Yum Yack, Musical Splatues, Nae Body Move, Baby Race, Toddler Tug of War, Er Yum Yum
Creamy Muck Muck
Creamy Muck Muck was always played just before the end of every Saturday show. Throughout the series the precise theme varied. The games were sometimes presented by the other members of the crew, Dave, Ian and Melvin. If not, then they were featured somewhere in the background, often chucking "creamy muck muck" (custard) at whoever was currently answering a question. Bungalow Heads were also equipped with their own buckets of muck muck, which they could flick at each other.
Towards the end the words "Go! Go! Go!" were shouted (Usually by Dick) and a gunge-fest began, accompanied by the song "Ace of Spades" by Motrhead. There followed a minute's frenetic creamy muck muck throwing, as a lead in to the end of the show. By the end of the process, it was extremely rare to see anything or anyone on the set not completely covered in "muck muck". On rare occasions Creamy Muck Muck was temporarily replaced with Custard Pies
During Series 1 to 4 there was no precise nature or specific theme to Creamy Muck Muck, except for its ending. It has seen simple pie throwing in earlier series, various sport based themes, a murder mystery, and many where they have pretended that they were not going to be throwing muck muck. For the end of Series 3 there was a surprise This Is Your Muck Muck a spoof of This Is Your Life, which involved many of Dick and Dom's family and friends, as well as featuring Pat Sharp.
For Series 5 the theme was normally a parody of a traditional game show, most of which aired many years earlier, long enough for the contestants not to be old enough to know them. In whatever format the game took, the current 1st, 2nd and 3rd placed Bungalow Heads - The Prize Winners - competed against the 4th, 5th and 6th placed Bungalow Heads - The Prize Losers. If the Prize Winners won, then they would keep their current positions, and win the three prizes on offer. If the Prize Losers won, then they became the new 1st, 2nd and 3rd, and take the prizes off the previous Prize Winners. Past spoofs have included Name That Tune, The Crystal Maze, Call My Bluff and Deal or no Deal (with the names changed to something like "Muck or no Muck").
Forfeit Auction
The Forfeit Auction
The Forfeit Auction only ever featured on the Sunday editions of Dick and Dom in da Bungalow. Dick and Dom had "traditional" culinary objects to throw at the Bungalow Heads. Dick dressed up as 'Tomdickunharry', a Cockney geezer, and auctioned forfeits "for hard earned bungalow points, to stitch up your bungalow mates". His catchphrase was "Alright me darlin's?" He often also said "Bourbon Biscuit? Lovely Bourbon biscuit? Can I sell you a lovely Bourbon biscuit? No? Well wrap up warm!"
Usually, these forfeits included a Bungalow Head being covered in different foods, known as 'the usual', including Creamy Muck-Muck and 'Dirty Norris' (originally a Marmite-like substance, later replaced by chocolate custard), chopped tomatoes and mushy peas.
The forfeits were of two types: The first that was auctioned was usually a task for a Bungalow Head that lasted the whole show, for example 'The Clockwork Kid', or 'The Caveman Kid'. The second involved a Bungalow Head dressing up and being covered in the items explained above. For example, in one instance where a Bungalow Head was transported back to Victorian London, he had to ask for more from characters like "Jack The Let One Ripper", "Florence Nightingale", "Victorian Barry Manilow" and "Queen Victoria" (who made him king).
For the fifth series, due to the reduction in broadcast time, the forfeit auction was changed. Only one auction remained, which unsurprisingly was the messy one. Also 'blind bidding' was introduced where the Bungalow Heads would write their bids down, this was done to help save time. At the end of the final Sunday episode (5 March 2006), Tomdickunharry revealed himself to have been Dick all along on-screen.
Baby Race
The Baby Race started in series 4 and continued through to series 5. In the game, six babies and their parents were brought in to the studio. Each parent sat at one end of a mat and the first baby to get from one parent to the other was the winner. Usually the parent on the far side held an object or toy that the baby liked, or found interesting. The race was treated much like a horse race (to get points the Bungalow Heads had to bet on which baby they thought would win) up to and including the humorous commentary where other 'race tracks' are referred to as if baby racing was a popular sport. In one episode in the fifth series a baby stopped crawling and took their first steps live on TV. "It was a touching moment," said Dick and Dom afterwards.
Dick and Dom's Top Ten All Time Favourite Games
On the final ten Saturday shows Dick and Dom replayed their favourite games on the bungalow ever. These were:
Make Dick Sick (or Make Dom Vom)
Musical Splatues
Do Not Laugh Or You Will Lose
Heads Shoulders Knees and Toast
Don't Go Daddy
Fairly Hairy Fizzogs
The Mucky Puddle Power Shower Game
Sweet Face
The Bungalow Small Change Hunt
What A Sweaty Flap
List of other games
Some other games featured include:
Baby Race
Balloon Bang-a-Bang
Bangers and Dash
Barky Cluckinson's Alfresco Pie Challenge
Blind Man's Buff Man
Bogey Cars
Brum Brum Ding Ding Sing Sing
Bungalow Battle Bots (including many variations of this game)
Bungalow Boffin (where they played a game invented by a viewer)
Bungalow Bingo
Bungalow Head Bungalow Heads
Bungalow Head Household Appliances
Bungalow Rodeo
Cat Mad Do
Caution! Wet Wildlife
Celebrity Two Word Tango (later appeared as a feature on The Chris Moyles Show on BBC Radio 1)
Cereal Race
DC Harry Batt's Interrogation Game
Do I Know You Or Snot?
Do Not Laugh or You Will Lose
Don't Drop Your Guts / Don't Drop The Sausage
Don't Go Daddy
Euugghhhh... Yum Yum
Eeenymeanymackerrackerraridominackashickapoppadickywhopperrompomstick [Series 5 It was called Eeenymeanymackerrackerraridominackashickapoppadickapoppaompomstick]
Fat On Your Back
Ferrity Trousers
Get Out Of That!
Grasping Rasping Wrinklies
Harry Batt's Interrogation Game
Make Dick Sick (or Make Dom Vom)
Melvin Odoom's Gurn Baby Gurn
Mince Pie Mouthfuls
Muck or No Muck?
Musical Splatues
My Gang
Nae Body Move
Painty Painty Paint Paint Painty Paint Paint
Pop My Saggy Bags
Pumpy Rumpy
Push Plop Protein
Raymond Farmer's Farmyard Races
Repetition Competition
Run Prize Idiot Run
Santa's Sack Race
Shave and Vac
Short Change Hunt
Sloppy Feet
Snot Danglies
Splat and Scatter
That's the Stuff
The All Electric Granny Snog Quiz
The Big Bad Blooming Bungalow Bonus Bonanza Banging Booty Break
The Crying Game
The Dubbing Game
The Mucky Puddle Power Shower Game
There's a Face in My Bucket
There's a Famous Face in My Bucket (with the end face tending to represent Rachel Stevens )
Toddler Tug of War
Translation Game
Tricky Training
Two Word Tango
Wappy Feet (Variations include hoppy and sloppy feet)
What a Sweaty Flap
What's In The Box
Watch Out, Yeti's about
Yes I Have Trifle* Trousers (* or mini-meringue, or pies, or jelly and ice cream-birthday cake etc.)
You'll Never Do That With a Carcass On Your Hands
Yum Yum Yack
Bungalow (regular) features
Bungalow Features normally took place outside the Bungalow, and were shown in short film segments during the show. They were mostly for entertainment purposes and had no bearing on the points totals of the Bungalow Heads. These included Dick and Dom's Dirty Day in which the two competed to get as messy as possible with help from the general public, Public Transport in which Dick and Dom had to be transported somewhere via the public, for example via piggy backs or being carried.
Bogies
The most infamous part of Dick and Dom in da Bungalow was a game called Bogies. In this game Dick and Dom situated themselves in a quiet public place such as a museum or restaurant and took turns to shout "bogies" at gradually increasing volumes, until one of them didn't shout as loud as the other (judged by the Bogeyometer, or Snotometer, which appears on screen to rank the bogey), or quit due to embarrassment. Variants of this game, such as Pro-Celebrity Bogies - involving a challenge from a minor celebrity to Dick or Dom - were seen in Series 5. Series 4 also included Premier League Bogies, which involved playing the game in extremely intense circumstances, such as a during a performance of a play in a theatre, and during a session of yoga. Euro Bogies saw the game being played in prominent places throughout continental Europe, often resulting in Dick and Dom being ejected from the premises involved. The term used for "bogies" in French was "crotte de nez" (literally "nose droppings"), and in Italian "moccio" (Italian for "snot").
The memorable commentary for bogies was done by the show's producer, Steve Ryde, who invented it.
Diddy Dick and Diddy Dom
When Dick and Dom opened the cupboard during the final episode.
Inside the Bungalow was a large purple cupboard, and once or twice during each show, away from the attention of Dick, Dom and the Bungalow Heads, the cupboard doors would open to show the adventures of Diddy Dick and Dom. These were short sketches, no more than a minute in length, with Dick and Dom donning black clothes and attaching a small puppet's body around their necks. Both Diddy Dick and Diddy Dom spoke with very squeaky voices, edited in post production.
The sketches involving Diddy Dick and Diddy Dom tended to be either slapstick humour, puns or, more often than not, toilet humour. Eamonn Holmes was a guest inside the cupboard on two occasions, both times appearing as a head inside Diddy Dick and Dom's TV. According to the final episode, Diddy Dick and Dom left the cupboard to go to Hollywood. Also in the final episode Dick and Dom venture to look inside the cupboard to find the "mice" that have been there ever since the show began. Instead, they find Diddy Dick and Diddy Dom. Diddy Dick and Diddy Dom now have a 5 minute show on CBBC called Diddy Dick and Dom on CBBC, where some of the classic sketeches are shown.
This oddly named game took place in the streets of a random town. It involved Dick and Dom placing stickers of their own faces of increasing size on the backs, or other places, of unsuspecting members of the public. The game was over when a member of the public discovered that they had been a victim, and the loser was the one who placed that sticker. Classic strategies of ensuring a successful "lay" (sticker placement) involved asking members of the public for the time, and as they turned giving them a tap on the small of their back, thus delivering the sticker. Hoods of coats were also a common target.
Commentary was provided by "Alan Sanchez" (Ian Kirkby) in a very convincing Northern Irish accent, who often became excited about any attempts at a "lay-on-lay" - where Dick or Dom placed a sticker on top of an existing sticker placed by their opponent.
The game returned for Series 5 (with the name misspelled as Eeny Meeny Macka Racka Rari Dominacka Shickapappa Dickapoppo Om Pom Stick) and it saw some remarkable "lays", including a very large sticker on a pregnant woman's stomach, and a large sticker on a businessman's tie.
Cat's Britain
The next door neighbour's cat
Until Series 5 of 'Da Bungalow', each week a short five minute feature would be shown of the travels of 'next door's cat', who would visit the Bungalow to recount the tales of his adventures. The Cat has never been named. It was puppeteered and voiced by Dave Chapman, with a gruff West Yorkshire accent.
The film was normally a short segment about a town, full of irreverent comments about the people and the monuments that the Cat came across. Such towns included Uckfield, Ely, Goring, Sandwich, Wetwang, Letchworth and Stoke-on-Trent, a song about which was one of the highlights of the third series.
Cat's Britain was also referred to as 'The Pussycat's Travels' in the fourth series of the show. This feature was repeated on Sundays in the fifth series, with the Cat claiming he visited the same places again, met the same people and made exactly the same films.
Prize Idiot On The Job
The prize idiot
This feature followed Dick and Dom's neighbour, The Prize Idiot (played by Lee Barnett), in his attempts to get a job. He tried several professionsncluding being a farmer, a librarian, a baker, a airline steward for Jet2.comithout much success and invariably got 'the sack' at the end of the day.
This feature was first broadcast on Saturdays during the fifth series but moved to Sunday's show a few weeks later, replacing the Looney Tunes cartoon. The feature was relatively short lived as it was discontinued later in series 5.
The Pants Dance
Towards the end of the programme, the Bungalow Head with the fewest bungalow points had to do "The Pants Dance", in which he or she danced with a pair of underpants on the head, singing:
I've got my head in my pants
(I wouldn't believe it 'less I'd seen it)
I'm in a groovy disco trance
(Are you sure that that's hygienic?)
They were clean on just last week
(Good grief they're gonna reek!)
Yeah, yeah baby, look at me
You gotta dance in your pants
Just like they do in France
You gotta take a chance
And do the knickers on your noodle prance
And dance in your pants!
(Lines in brackets are only sung in the accompanying music track, and not by the bungalowheads.)
Although the second line is "I'm in a groovy disco trance", Dick & Dom sing the line "I've got a groovy disco trance". This has previously been brought up on the show.
List of other features
Bungalow World Record Attempt
Dirty Day
Public Transport
Strangely talented
Regular characters
Either as part of the games or features, peripheral characters played by the other members of the cast often appeared on a regular basis. One of them was The Prize Idiot, played by Lee Barnett, who was the next door neighbour of Dick and Dom's bungalow. As the name implied, the character often came out with strings of logical errors and tautologies.
Another was Raymond Duck / Raymond Farmer / Raymond Newsreader. This character often provided links between cartoons that had been split in two. Raymond Farmer, played by Ian Kirkby, was also involved in several games in earlier series. In the Raymond Newsreader sketches Bungalow regualrs such as Melvin O Doom were invited to discuss the severity of the situation (relating to the cartoons) and often cartoon characters biggest fans would make an appearance also to discuss to cartoon or at times just talk rubbish!
Some other characters included:
Mr Choosy, a character with a balloon for a head. His routine was to come in, run around to his theme song and burst his head with a pin. Different substances would come out, such as glitter or "muck muck" (usually played by Melvin Odoom).
DC Harry Batt (sometimes DI or DCI Harry Batt), a policeman with a broad Geordie accent (played by Ian Kirkby) who would address crimes in the Bungalow. One such example in when during a game of "That's the stuff" in which Dick, Dom or one of the regulars had to eat copious amounts of disgusting items, Dom replaced Garlic Mayonnaise with yoghurt. DI Batt uncovered this (in reality he was stitched up by a crew member) and for the rest of the series Batt would randomly appear to try and force Dom to consume mayonnaise. It wasn't until the very last episode where he gained success by forcing Dom to eat a mixture of disgusting foods.
Melvin Odoom, a breakdancer and a regular extra who played many characters and was referred to by Dick and Dom as "tomorrows star". He famously replaced Rachel Stevens on the first edition of Series 5 when she refused to take part in Creamy Muck Muck.
Controversy and criticism
In 2004 the programme was the subject of a reprimand by media watchdog Ofcom after a viewer complained that Dom's T-shirt with the slogan "Morning Wood" referred to a state of male sexual excitement (rather than (good) Morning (Dominic) Wood).
On 17 January 2005 the programme was debated in parliament when Peter Luff (Conservative MP for Mid Worcestershire) attacked it for its "lavatorial" content. Referring to the show's web site, he invited the Culture Secretary to "join me in playing How Low Can You Bungalow, a test to see your response to grossly embarrassing personal situations, largely of a lavatorial nature; Pants Dancers in the Hall of Fame, photos of children with underwear on their heads; Make Dick Sick, a game which I think speaks for itself; and finally Bunged Up, in which you play a character in a sewage system avoiding turtles' poos coming from various lavatories". He added, "Is that really the stuff of public service broadcasting?"
Additionally 40 people complained about the last episode of series 4. During the finale Richard McCourt was seen to give birth to a countless number of babies, though they were dolls covered in "muck muck".
No celebrities allowed
The main rule of 'da Bungalow' was that there were no celebrities allowed, except for Comic Relief. Celebrity Bungalow Heads included: Fearne Cotton, Chris Parker and Timmy Mallett.
The lack of celebrity was symbolised in earlier series by the presence of a minor, and often somewhat cult, celebrity, locked up in a cage in the dungeon of the Bungalow. In later series, the celebrity would sit in the attic. In both cases they would say nothing and often do nothing. Some people who have been in the cage or the attic include: Vince Earl, Sarah Greene, John Kettley, Hugo Myatt (as Treguard from Knightmare ), Su Pollard, Bodger and Badger and Peter Simon.
For the final series, however, this rule was changed, and five Bungalow Heads were joined by a Celebrity Bungalow Head.
The first celebrity to enter the Bungalow was Rachel Stevens. It seems, however, that she did not know what she was letting herself in for; she later stormed out when it was time for the finale of the show, Creamy Muck Muck: Muckversity Challenge. Melvin Odoom had to take her place in the sketch, given that she obviously did not want to be covered in creamy muck muck. Reports suggest that Dick & Dom have banned Rachel Stevens from any live broadcast they do in the future.
List of celebrities
Comic Relief in Da Bungalow In order of appearance;
Brian Conley
Fearne Cotton
Rowland Rivron
Sin Lloyd
Ed Byrne
Michelle Heaton
Andy Scott-Lee
Antony Worrall Thompson
Poojah Shah
Colin McAllister
Justin Ryan
Sheila Ferguson
Kirsten O'Brien
Chris Colquhoun
Gina Yashere
Tom Fletcher
Danny Jones
Dougie Poynter
Iwan Thomas
Lisa Scott-Lee
Will Mellor
Chris Parker
Fran Cosgrave
Timmy Mallett
Rachel Stevens
Pro Celebrity Bogies In order of appearance; (* indicates they won the game)
Rupert Grint*
Craig Doyle
Carol Vorderman
Sara Cox*
Chris Moyles*
Lady Isabella Hervey
John McCririck*
Jodie Marsh*
Keith Harris and Orville
Lisa Scott-Lee
Dani Harmer*
Series 5 In order of appearance;
Rachel Stevens
Eugene Sully
Paul Danan
Dani Harmer
Andy McNab
Gina Yashere
Kate Lawler
Adam Woodyatt
Al Murray
Tony Christie
David Grant
Ewen Macintosh
Ryan Moloney
Freddie Starr
Bobby Davro
Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen
Brian Conley
Julia Winter
Oliver Skeete
Charlie Higson
Fearne Cotton
David Schneider
Lizo Mzimba
Sara Cox ( who appeared on the penultimate episode. There was no celebrity bungalow head for the last edition.
Merchandise
Dick & Dom In Da Bungalow: Da Book 2006 (book)
Dick & Dom In Da Bungalow: Da Book 2007 (book)
Dick & Dom's Joke Book (book)
Dick & Dom's Guide to Life (book)
Dick and Dom's Mucktivity Book (book)
Dick & Dom's Doodle Book (book)
Dick & Dom's Stinky Sleepover Kit (book)
Dick and Dom Funfax (Funfax)
Dick & Dom In Da Bungalow: Muck-azine (released by DeAgostini)
Dick & Dom Birthday Cards (6 different cards)
Da Board Game (Bungalow board game)
Dick & Dom in da Bungalow Music CD (Audio CD - 2 discs)
DVD and Video releases
On 18 October 2004, a DVD and Video was released under the title Dick and Dom in Da Bungalow - The Dirty Norris Files. This contains several 'best of' clips from the third series of the show.
In Da Bloomsbury!
On 30 April 2006 Dick and Dom did a show for the charity Myeloma UK, , in the Bloomsbury Theatre, London There were two shows (one at 2pm and another at 5pm), which consisted of games from the show including the Outboard Motor Gob Game, Sloppy Ploppy Choosy Pops and the Cereal Race. The 5pm show was filmed and is available on DVD.
Related TV series/programmes
Diddy Dick and Dom on CBBC
After TMi each Saturday on BBC Two there is a 5mins program looking at some of the best clips from the original Diddy Dick and Dom . There are now regular repeats of the series on CBBC.
Harry Batt
The BBC brought back the Bungalow character Harry Batt in his own comedy series. A 30-minute pilot based around the fictitious policeman aired as part of the CBBC comedy showcase series Gina's Laughing Gear on 12 January 2007.
The Slammer
Main article: The Slammer
In August 2006, six months after the end of Da Bungalow, a new programme was announced that would feature some of the regular cast from the programme.
According to Broadcast magazine "The Slammer" would be a programme where "the inmates are performers incarcerated for crimes against creativity". Each week the governor, played by actor Ted Robbins, puts on a show where four novelty acts perform in front of a "parole board" of 50 children to determine which will be released. Celebrities with special skills are also being lined up to become performing inmates.
Around half of each 30-minute show is scripted as a sitcom starring the cast of Da Bungalow, headlined by Ian Kirkby who played policeman Harry Batt. Melvin O'doom, Lee Barnett and Dave Chapman also feature.
The Slammer was made in-house for a Friday afternoon slot on BBC One. It went into production in early September 2006, with the first broadcast on 22 September 2006. There was later a second series.
It Started With Swap Shop
Broadcast on 28 December 2006, the programme focused on the first four versions of the BBC's Saturday morning output so like The Saturday Show and TMi, Dick and Dom were not featured in their own section, however a small number of clips were show in the 'Back in Time' and 'Up to Date' compilations.
Basil's Swap Shop
Continuing from 'It Started With Swap Shop, the BBC brought back a loved favourite to be hosted by a puppet just as old. The major link was the continuing Bungalow-style comedy and constant contributor and 'presenter' Melvin O'Doom. Later on, it was presented by Barney Harwood instead of Melvin O'Doom
Chute!
From the same producer as Da Bungalow and The Slammer also came another series 'Chute'. It too followed the previous by similar jazzy title music and comedic values. Ross Lee is trapped down the Chute with various old BBC archive material which is played in some might say a clip show. Dick and Dom both made an appearance as celebrity guests in an episode of series 1.
The Legend of Dick and Dom
A sitcom began at the start of 2009, Friday 4.30pm BBC1.
The overview of the show is a plague breaks out and after the antidote is made Prince's Dick and Dom are the first (and last) people to be cured after breaking the potion jar. They are then banished until they've retrieved all the items needed to remake the antidote. To make things worse the ingredients are very hard to get eg. a piece of fruit from the Nehii Tribe, because the Nehiis don't like fruit.
It was discovered at the end of series 1 (aired on 27/03/2009) that the team have been collecting the ingredients for a potion curing athletes' foot. A second series was therefore hinted at.
Da Dick and Dom Dairies
A new show started on BBC2 in January 2009 which is a compilation of the best bits of Dick and Dom in da Bungalow and some brand new sketches from Dick and Dom and the original cast. Dick and Dom only feature minimally in new sketches, one at the start of the show and one at the end. They are shown now to be living in a posh big house and we are told that only a few of their treasured Bungalow possessions survived the Muck Muck explosion. These possessions include their "Dairiy" which the show is based on. New sketches include
Game or No Game in which Little Noely (a parody of Noel Edmonds played by Ian Kirkby who appeared in the Bungalow on two occasions) presents a parody of Deal or No Deal in order to determine whether or not a game will be shown or not. Little Noely invited viewers to pick one of two boxes. We are led to believe that if the "No Game" box is picked the show will end. If the "Game" box is picked the name of the game shown in the box is played.
Good Game Good Game Gamey Game Game in which parodies of Bruce Forsyth and Tess Daly pick random cards each enlisting a game until a pair is found. The game which is the subject of the pair is subsequently shown, after "Bruce" says "What do we do with a pair?" and "Tess" says something like "Eat it!". For some reason in this feature Tess Daly is just a mini spinning cardboard cut out which talks with a gruff northern accent!
Batt Files in which Harry Batt interrogates former Bungalow Heads and relieves classic Bungalow moments. The Prize Idiot also features who we are now told is a Police Constable working for DI Batt.
Good Bungalows Go Bad Melvin O Doom features in a sketch in which he relieves some of his personal favourite Bungalow moments.
20 half-hour episodes of the show were produced and shown between January and February 2009 on CBBC on TWO in the mornings.
In the final episode, the Creamy Muck Muck finale was the final ever Muck Muck fight where the Bungalow exploded.
^ Kilkelly, Daniel (Sunday, September 11, 2005). "Rachel Stevens angered by Dick and Dom". Digitalspy. http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/tv/news/a24351/rachel-stevens-angered-by-dick-and-dom.html. Retrieved 26 January 2010.
External links
Dickndom.com Dick and Dom's official site.
Dick & Dom In Da Bungalow on Saturday Mornings (Which features a section full of data about the show, video clips and more)
Dominic Wood's Official Website (website requires Macromedia Flash Player 7)
Da Bungalow Online Fan Site
Dick and Dom in da Bungalow at the Internet Movie Database
Preceded by
The Saturday Show
Dick and Dom in da Bungalow
20022006
Succeeded by
TMi
v d e
British Saturday morning television programmes
BBC
Zokko Multi-Coloured Swap Shop Saturday Superstore Going Live! On The Waterfront UP2U 8:15 from Manchester Live & Kicking Parallel 9 Fully Booked/FBi/Saturday Aardvark The Saturday Show Smile (Sun only) The Mysti Show Dick and Dom in da Bungalow Mighty Truck of Stuff TMi Basil's Swap Shop Transmission Impossible with Ed & Oucho
ITV
Tiswas Saturday Banana The Saturday Show/The Saturday Starship The Mersey Pirate No. 73/7T3 Get Fresh Ghost Train Motormouth Gimme 5 What's Up Doc? Scratchy & Co./Massive Telegantic Megavision/It's Not Just Saturday WOW!/The Noise Tricky SMTV Live Ministry Of Mayhem/Holly & Stephen's Saturday Showdown wknd@stv
Channel 4
T4 (Sat/Sun)
Five
Milkshake! (Daily) Milkshake! FM / Shake! / The Core / NGA (Sat/Sun)
Sky Sports
Soccer AM Cricket AM
Categories: BBC children's television programmes | 2000s British television series | 2002 in British television | 2002 television series debuts | 2006 television series endingsHidden categories: Articles needing cleanup from February 2010 | All pages needing cleanup
where do I find all the comic book pieces in big nate island a walkthrough would help or just the pieces.?
I need to find the comic book pieces. It is fine if you can only give me the walkthrough.
ok here are te locations of all the pieces:
1 talk to man in comic store
2 top floor of pop-in shop
3 on the top of the right phone pole in the first area where you first arrive at the island
4 On the top of the wooden tower next to the paint next to the school
5 in the school science lab
6. one floating in the air in the top right corner in the playground
7 top of the light house
8.in the photo place
9. in the school on a broken microphone
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Old Master Q comic aim at the mainland to Taiwan when the Chinese biggest brand animation
Swept the three areas of the comic book, "Old Master Q," celebrating the 45th anniversary of the continuing expansion of publishing and licensing business, on January 15 next year will be launched in the Taiwan issue, and will promote the mainland authority, the future will look at Japan, Korea, Europe and America, vowed to become the greatest cartoon characters of Chinese brands.
Old Master Q Ha Media chief executive Wei-Jen Chen pointed out that next month's launch of "Master Q" magazine first issue, two thirds of the comic, the other is the related products and co-creative Daren reported.
Wei-Jen Chen said, "Master Q" Comics in Hong Kong, sold 1 million a year, while Japan and the famous " A Dream" comics, selling only its two-thirds or half. "Old man" has been published in the mainland Simplified Chinese cartoons, but in Hong Kong, Macau, North America and Singapore, Traditional Chinese, Malay in Malaysia. He pointed out that next year the authority will be more actively develop the mainland market, is expected to and in the mainland A share market leading Guangdong Olympic flying toy animation culture, and Shanghai family, to develop "Master Q" licensed products and Distribution Issues.
Old Master Q Kazakhstan in late 2006 set up the media capital of 3.5 million U.S. dollars. Revenue of less than one million U.S. dollars last year, but has started the third quarter earnings, revenue this year will challenge the 3 million U.S. dollars. "Master Q" Wong comic of his creation, is the son of Joseph's name as his pen name, this year more than 80 years old, currently lives in the United States. In addition to inheritance Joseph took "old man" of the bar, also served as chairman of Old Master Q Kazakh media.
Mainland Taiwan cartoonist leisurely Blue Ocean
"Master Q" Comics launched in January next year, monthly, in the family, such as convenience store shelves Lyle Rich, the former three special only 79 per single volume, display Attacking ambition of young people to read. "Master Q" found new life through new marketing tactics, Taiwan Tsai, Chu Te-yung, Ao Youxiang other famous cartoonist, is found in the mainland market blue sea.
Ao Youxiang famous comic book, "The House Wulong" in mainland China sales hit a record 2,000 to 10,000, an estimated 100 million people read this comic. "The House Wulong" wide range of readers, publishers have invested, will "The House Wulong" made into a movie, and the development of merchandise.
Ao Youxiang settled six years ago, Zhuhai, Guangzhou and set up studios in the coming year, the hope that Taiwan's comic experience of the successful mainland. "The House Wulong" the contents of the humor is full of interesting, given different interpretations of traditional Chinese martial arts point of view, on the mainland publishing market is a novel subject.
Beijing cartoonist Chu Te-yung has also announced that with Zhejiang Satellite TV, Beijing Children's Art Theatre company with hands, the new work "absolutely child," onto the television and theater stage, but also the success of comics in Taiwan into the mainland market one of the cases.
Taiwan's first popular in the mainland is a cartoonist Tsai Chih-chung, 1989, the "Chuang Tzu said," landing, the use of modern painting interpretation of ancient Chinese philosophy, readers can quickly, order up to 5 million. Subsequent "I said," "Shaolin Temple" and other Chinese classics, classic comics were released one after another; in 2006, the work is made more for the first time mobile phone animation, the cartoon extended to different industries.
Well-known cartoonist published in the open market after the invasion of the island in the Japanese comics, local cartoonist serious squeeze the market, coupled with severe publishing environment, forcing many local fine cartoonist comic stage in Taiwan gradually disappear.
Contrast, the mainland market, the reading population, the market is large; and the subject of most of Taiwan's cartoonists both recreation and educational value, such as Tsai; or rather from the perspective of humor analysis of modern gender relations, reflect the current state of the social portrayal such as Chu Te-yung's "te" is very popular, had also made into a TV series.
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Awakening in a bleak landscape as scarred as her body, Cass Dollar vaguely recalls surviving something terrible. Having no idea how many weeks have passed, she slowly realizes the horrifying truth: Ruthie has vanished. And with her, nearly all of civilization. Where once-lush hills carried cars and commerce, the roads today see only cannibalistic Beaters—people turned hungry for human flesh by a government experiment gone wrong. In a broken, barren California, Cass will undergo a harrowing quest to get Ruthie back. Few people trust an outsider, let alone a woman who became a zombie and somehow turned back, but she finds help from an enigmatic outlaw, Smoke. Smoke is her savior, and her safety. For the Beaters are out there. And the humans grip at survival with their trigger fingers. Especially when they learn that she and Ruthie have become the most feared, and desired, of weapons in a brave new world….
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