21 thoughts on “Bob Haney is “Down” With the Kids

  1. You have to recap that story. And yeah, was I more about the blogging, that would’ve been an image I’d post.

  2. And by “time to prepare,” we mean “time to take off his safari jacket and ascot and burn them!” For God’s sake, man! You’re Batman, not Roger Moore!

  3. Superman’s son should know better than to ask his dad to do the Funky Robot. Superman HATES robots, funky or otherwise.

  4. So, I clicked on the Amazon link, and just thought I’d share that they credit this TPB as:

    by Bob Haney (Author), Dick Dillin (Photographer)

    Photographer? I never realized that the Saga of the Super Sons was photojournalism. But the first page of World’s Finest No. 215 (which I believe is the first of the Super Sons stories) does say:

    “Imagination? Put-on? NO!”

    So there you have it. This is REAL.

  5. Wow, Batman and Superman (and their sons) should never be that close without one of them wearing a costume.
    They’re identical!

  6. “I think he’s doing the dice thing a little too much.”

    “It’s pretty much all he’s got.”

  7. Without words I would have thought this was a fight scene. I don’t know what that says about the artist…

  8. America is such a wonderfully big place, so many varied people . . . . and all the teeming millions as wrong as could be, to think “Flight of the Concords” are meant to be a comedy routine.

    Our (Kiwi) “humour” usually, and SPECIFICALLY in this case, circulates around how gullible we can prove others. They are a twin national embarrassment, on us because we spawned them, on you because you made them famous.

    I am sorry to break it to you.

  9. Flight of the Conchords are good. And particularly good since unlike nearly 100% of all Kiwis the bludgers didn’t rock over to Oz to cadge our freaking welfare.

  10. um. how did we get from a super multi-generational dance off to ‘flight of the conchords’?

    more disturbing than anything in this shot-there’s no stereo of any sort, and no indication that music is wafting in from afar. picture that panel accompanied only by the breeze across the open plains.