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Quotes About Comics

I'm supposed to be making comics, so I had to do it the best way I knew how, which is what those guys at the beginning of the Twentieth Century were doing.
~ Art Spiegelman
In another assignment, he wrote about how one day, when he refused to do extracredit homework, his mother padlocked his comic book collection in a closet; unable to pick the lock, he removed the hinges and took off the door.
~ David Kushner
I love 'Afterlife with Archie.'
~ Madelaine Petsch
I know my 'Archie' history.
~ Mark Waid
there was a generation in the U.K. who'd grown up reading DC comics from a bizarre perspective. In America, those comics were perceived without irony; in England, they were like postcards from another world. The idea of a place that looked like New York, the idea of fire hydrants and pizzerias, was just as strange to us as the idea that anyone would wear a cape and fly over them.
~ Unknown
For the most part, comedians are pretty friendly with each other. They always say they badmouth each other, but most of the time, they're friends. We're the only ones that can really stand our type of humor.
~ Colin Quinn
I've been reading comics since I was four. I used to get them when I would go grocery shopping with my mom. I remember getting the digest versions of old DC comics. The one that I remember reading first was Paul Levitz' 'Justice Society of America' stuff that he was doing in the '70s.
~ Jeff Lemire
The first big long-form work I did in comics was 'Scalped' for Vertigo, which ran for 60 issues.
~ Jason Aaron
The general public has been conditioned to think 'comics = superheroes' for as long as caped crusaders have been around - by critics, mass media, and Marvel and DC themselves, who have what you might call a vested interest.
~ Antony Johnston
I'm a big veteran of being able to, in one comic, explain to you everything that you need to know to get forward in the story without you having to refer back to years of continuity and a universe in these superhero comics.
~ Mark Waid
I had been working on this series called 'Everything Dies,' and it was basically me doing non-fiction essays, responding to religion and stuff like that, and I really got into this ideas of telling factual stories via comics.
~ Box Brown
I remember hearing the name... 'Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles - what the hell is that?' But I was hit by the bug as well. I used to watch the cartoon every morning before I went to school, played the video game at the arcades, and was a big fan of the comics.
~ Sheamus
People who liked the 'Arkham Asylum' video game can Google comics to download.
~ Jim Lee
When I was a teenager, I felt my life was constrained by rules, school, my parents. I wanted to feel like I was empowered and different; that's why superheroes, comics, manga, and video games filled my needs. When I got older, I realized power is not free; it comes with responsibility.
~ Jenova Chen
I used to draw comics a lot. I was obsessed with 'The Young Ones,' and was massively into video games, although I was no good at them.
~ Charlie Brooker
Kids don't even read comic books anymore. They've got more important things to do - like video games.
~ Ang Lee
Not everyone reads comics, although most people know the major superheroes, but the majority of people play video games.
~ Jim Lee
Inspiration for my 'Nerdy Nummies' videos comes from all over. Many of the ideas originate from the games, comics or movies I'm excited about. My family is really creative as well and are constantly sending me their thoughts.
~ Rosanna Pansino
Today, comics is one of the very few forms of mass communication in which individual voices still have a chance to be heard.
~ Scott McCloud
I cannot stand superheroes. I do not understand any of its appeal. It has just bored me to death since I was a little kid.
~ Roz Chast
You'll b-b-be sorry. A g-g-girlfriend will w-walk away sooner or later, but a g-good comic b-b-b-book c-can be enjoyed over and over again.
~ Dean Koontz
I've always been a big Avengers guy: Nightcrawler, Hawkeye and Iceman.
~ Brook Lopez
I wasn't really a deep-rooted comic-book dude.
~ Ghostface Killah
DISC is based on concepts created in 1928 by a psychologist named William Marston, who also created the comic book character Wonder Woman. That tells you pretty much all you need to know about DISC. Other
~ Unknown