Categories
FUCKING DAY

Fucking Day: City Dragon

Gather near and hear of The Ultimate Man, who fought like he made love: all day, with everyone, and feet first. A man who chose war with the world, because he could never hope to defeat himself. This is the legend of The City Dragon, and if it’s not a lost Shakespearean work, why is it in rhyming couplets, art-nerds?

The year was 1995, and Stan Derain’s dragon heart burned with a story that could only be told by combining bitchin’ combat with terrible song. His screenwriter, muse, and star? His own alter ego: MC Kung Fu. 

You read that right. Welcome to Planet Hotdog, motherfuckers.

Ray is a physical Da Vinci whose mixed media are pleasure and pain. His dream is to bridge The Martial/Venusial Ass Crack, in which the more ass you kick, the less ass you have time to crush. If he could turkeyslap a man back into his mother’s uterus, Ray’s work on earth would be complete. This is his world, and these are his Home Dogs:

Ray’s life is perfect. He has a Corvette, a barbell in his living room, three girlfriends, no job, and fingerless gloves he never doffs. He talks almost exclusively in rap, and to be clear: this character has no aspirations of a rap career. Rhyme and roundhouses are his natural state. He only leaves the bedroom to find ice cream or flee emotional attachment, although some say the gangsters whose jaws remain intact call him fight-father.

He falls in love with Tina at first rejection—perhaps ever in his life. When he gives her a pelvis-forward self-defense lesson, she sees the poetry of his violence and leaves John for Ray’s mighty melon-tits. She’s cool with him being a foot guy: 

Somewhere in here is a highly coincidental B-plot about Rick pretending to be a talent agent so Cheri—look, it’s irrelevant, Rick is only sleeping with women so the Jabroni Guild will consider his internship application.

John stalks them and picks a fight. But before Ray can make sweet violence to John’s face, Phil gets stabbed and basically leaves the movie. (He’s fine. Ray visits his hospital bed dressed like he’s dating Ferris Bueller.)

Infuriated by a foe unpunched, Ray goes home and starts rage-chucking. Tina touches the Dragon in the beautiful wrath of his personal Footloose, like a fool might.

Ray puts aside the City Dragon life and does his doggin’ only for Tina now. He challenges a new foe that cannot be kicked to death: emotional responsibility.

But! Tina’s dad kicks her out of the house for having gotten pregnant by John, a punchy man for whom not crying equals consent. 

Thus is Ray’s doom written. He proposes to his weeping girlfriend and by this covenant sinks into drab reality. He takes a job synergizing spreadsheets to proactive paradigms, and the seas themselves turn red. 

Someone calls John at work to tell him Tina got engaged. It goes badly for his colleagues made of eggshells, and he crushes their skulls. Off to Crazy Prison for you, my goodly lad!

Taking advantage of this self-shackled sex dragon, Ms. Jones threatens Tina’s fetus if Ray does not donate to his boss’s orgasm fund. The honorable Ray submits to her to protect his income. Somewhere, a street thug feels the echo of a mule-kick.

Depression poisons Ray’s heart, and he loses all interest in sucking Tina’s toes. Fuckin’ Rick congratulates Ray on being sexually coerced to keep his pregnant wife off the street. 

Tina discovers the affair and leaves! It is sad? Ray’s in trouble for five minutes but Rick, of all idiots, has the idea to broadcast a love song to Tina on Phil’s radio show. By pure chance she hears the seductive “Chemistry,” and it breaks her heart and water. Her womb immediately evacuates the baby to make space for Ray’s superior seed.

By another coincidence, John is at the hospital murdering his doctor, who’s such a devout asshole you cheer for the spree killer. Sneaking out in disguise, John bumps into Tina and kidnaps their kid. But Original Ray-cipe shows up, having smelled a newly pregnable vagina from across town. John leads him on a merrily racist chase to the roof, and…look, you know how this ends. Let’s dig into why it’s so weird. 

City Dragon only looks like an action movie. This is a side-scroller game whose immune system can’t fight off a Noah Baumbach retrovirus of micro-scale personal drama no matter how many times MC Kung Fu strips his shirt off.

When we first meet Ray, he’s tossing your gun away to show you how a craftsman ruins lives. But smashing noses is just his occupation. His calling is smashing genitals.

That’s almost exactly how we meet the Capulets in Romeo & Juliet. No notes.  

His buddy Rick introduces himself as an honorary Black man by slurring Black people: a clever script choice to show this dweeb has lived his whole life without consequence under Ray’s protective lats. I know what you’re thinking, but keep that outrage on simmer; you don’t want to reach full boil before the only (mincing) queer character gets drowned in a slop sink.

For this next part—look, a certain amount of flirtation we’d consider cheesy was cringeless to the people of the ’90s. None of that excuses when Ray sings the “I’m Going to Have Sex” song.

“We loves the look of lingerie” he croons to her, like the Gollum of smegma. 

He writes her a song telling her he was great in bed and love is a lie. And also she owns a portrait of a vampire? 

The immediate next scene shows Ray creeping a parking lot, sneaking up behind a busty blonde. 

He’s been carrying a rose in his pocket the entire weekend and it unlocks sex for him! If that’s not video game rules, then Porsche product-placed this film as a cautionary PSA that Corvette drivers hang outside gyms to sniff the women’s locker vents. If you replaced CJ in GTA: San Andreas with Leisure Suit Larry, Ray would be the ANSI laxative in your hot coffee. 

Now it’s a full-fledged music video! MC Sex Pest’s life is so sweeeeeeeet!

Further proof we’re in a Double Dragon installment: when John confronts the Dogs, ten of his friends appear from nowhere. Ray takes their street weapons and turns them against his assailants, but forgets that the switchblade is the real get here. 

This is the crossing point. When Phil, co-creator of this universe, is sliced, a tear opens in his share of reality. An opportunistic emotional drama pours into the Phil’s spleen-shaped hole. Goodbye, City Dragon. You’re watching Dragons of the Heart now.

Rick’s plan to trick women into sex leads to a manly clinch on Ray’s floor. This whole film is people entering Ray’s apartment without knocking, so Tina walks in on it. Lame ’90s throwaway homophobia humor, or the first symbol of indie examination of masculinity and mistrust? 

I say the latter and here’s why: when John slaughters his coworkers with light shoving, pay special attention to two characters.

Queen Mary: Theater’s laziest straight man coos about hot hunks, then dies in a pool of scummy grey water. He’s a repellent gay stereotype, but maybe also an artifact of the first half’s poisonously masculine misconceptions? Either way, Mary cannot exist in this new reality and is symbolically destroyed. In his last breath, he stops murmuring about chafing cucumbers and whispers, “You’re in touch with your anger, and that’s good. I respect that. Glub.”

Almost-Dirty Harry: a fake cop on the edge who never gets to take a shot arrives too late to save anyone. This is Baumbach-19’s doing: action heroes are being watered down in real-time. 

A British (for gravitas) judge sentences John to mental care in a scene that definitely does not take place only in his fracturing mind. Oh lord, and the character has the same name as the actor; the infection is mutating into a Charlie Kaufman variant!

Next, consider that Kathy Barbour is a talented actress hiding in this dumb action tale like an undercover agent. Watch her pretend to enjoy Ray’s “special surprise gift” of a terrible rap. 

If an elderly white person dropped those bars in an Adam Sandler film, it would be an insensitive mockery of an elderly white person having David Spade in a stroke film. But Tina sells her joy till you fall in love with her. And I’ve seen chemistry this forced before; I survived the bookstore scene in Dan in Real Life

City Dragon’s natural defenses produce antibodies like that stretch of Inception that shouldn’t have been boring. While buying Tina ice cream, Ray’s accosted by an eclectic street gang of Uncle Randys. Some are definitely cosplaying as Chicano. 

One mullet-cowled mook in a Baja sweater handles nunchucks like he’s heartbroken they’re not salami. Based on their bloated faces, flair for pageantry, and complete misunderstanding of Cholo diction, you’d assume they were Packers fans who got lost in LA after sabotaging the Rams’ moving van—except they hate dairy products.

The game’s next defense is to force a neutral video format where indie dramas can’t survive. The script turns Ray’s office into a mandatory sexual harassment training video. Alas! The Kaufman variant is overwriting City Dragon’s DNA; John’s mental struggles take point as the Dragons’ marriage disintegrates. 

As fever grips the game, violence follows Ray like he owes it money. In fact, one NPC claims he does! Would you sacrifice your teeth to a swole bro like MC Kung Fu over a dollar? Only if the universe wanted to prove violence is the answer.

And holy shit, this guy whales on our hero in the movie’s sweetest fight! Ray, punch your way out of this navel-gazing, mirthless dramedy meant for people who became parents late in life! 

The infection lobs a gruff doctor, but the game filters him into a mission-authority exposition type advocating extreme prejudice. This is the street vigilante film the liberals want! 

What about sex appeal? Rick offers sacrificial virgin Jalapena Helen to the god of warriors. It’s too late! Depression is Ray’s only lover now. The poor bastard’s trapped in a series of mild observations of human nature that win awards from film’s driest critics.

Then John’s brother Jack tows his pudgy bar-darts league to Ray’s third dojo. Now even the fights have decayed into dull family arguments. No wonder everyone in this gang is your Uncle Randy.

Ha ha ha ha, take a gander at these wundertools. Every one of them looks like their special attack is to spill mustard on their clothes. Jack almost definitely united this posse by telling them Ray said their choice of telephoto lens was woefully unprepared to take pictures of underage girls at the beach. They’re an All-Star team of dudes released from To Catch a Predator as “too inept to consider dangerous.”

And I know we’re supposed to hate John, but he must do amazing work in his community to inspire this level of devotion. Two dozen men would die for his honor while your best friend doesn’t even know your birthday. 

Ray kicks Jack’s ass so hard he inadvertently kills the Skidz pants trend. He dedicates his victory to Bruce Lee’s honor. “You’re still the king of kung fu!” he tells the air. Silence answers. This IP is Langoliers country.

Now, a cuckoo in the nest: “Chemistry” is not an MC Kung Fu song?! Phil and some choad named Valentino, who knows very little kung fu, are the credited artists. Our protagonist gets aurally cuckolded, and a pregnant woman cries. Ugh, people are already talking Oscar nom. 

By the end, this movie has become a boring custody battle in a bitter divorce. The game puts all its effort into one last chance…John lays the baby down, surrendering his villainous advantage. The only reason to fight now is for blood itself. Ray knows what he must do: but can he? Does he dare “accidentally” step on that baby? Can he summon the dragon to mule-kick it out of his narrative and restore arcade combat?

No, he falters on the backswing. The film pretends this is a happy ending, but look at how awkward that kiss is. City Dragon damns Ray by his own heel.

This is a tragedy of a man who cannot strike mercilessly, as a dragon must, to reclaim his destiny. Trapped by responsibility, he will rhyme no more. The final boss must go unfought.

The message is clear: society is a lie that turns dogs into cogs. Don’t get married, warriors. Don’t take a job. You will suffocate all your days, or until Philthy completes City Dragon 2

And to Peacock Films, I say: fans deserved better than the Baumbach edit. #ReleaseThePhilthyCut you cowards! I triple-home dog dare you. 

Brendan wholeheartedly supports this film’s argument that Bruce Lee is the greatest.

Categories
UPSETTING DAY

Upsetting Day: The Pumblechook & Figg Catalogue of the Christ-Mass 2021 🌭

It was the best of times, it was the end of times. It was all times and no time at all. It was the Great Transversing of the Nameless Ones in our world. In 2021, as every year, it would be opposed by the sacrificial offerings of The Pumblechook & Figg 

Holidays Catalog of Boxing-Day Gifts. 

…

If you’re feeling giving this holiday season, Brendan recommends All Hearts & Hands.

This article was brought to you by our fine sponsor and Hot Dog Supreme, Neil Bailey, who is all leg and very little torso and is looking for his brother.

Categories
LEARNING DAY

Learning Day: The O’Reilly Factor… For Kids!

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NERDING DAY

Nerding Day: The Crusaders 🌭

They’re found in church bathrooms and AA meeting garbage cans. They’re more disappointing to get on Halloween than a Bit O’Honey around a razor blade. They’ve done more to humiliate Jesus than Pontious Pilate. They’re Chick tracts:

Today we’ll recreate the disappointment of youth with The Crusaders #1. If Chick tracts are fun-size boredom, The Crusaders is king-size banality with a Jesus-butter center. 

If you’re religious, get your Offense Punchcard ready for its 11th freebie, because we will be making fun of Jack Chick’s most cherished beliefs and possibly some of my mom’s. I don’t do this because religion is the term for the opinions people agree to be unreasonable about, but because blasphemy might win me enough Edgy Points to get verified on MySpace.

Personally, I’m an apatheist—I don’t care which version of God tells you to have less fun, provided you’re cool to hang out with. But Chick says humanity implicitly deserves eternal suffering, and boy does this adventure swing on some weird hinges because of it. 

For example, meet Romania’s dumbest Soviet citizens, more worried about the availability of the Bible than which camp their children will die in: 

Cold War America wasn’t perfect. We handed out MANPADs to brutal dictators like they were Chick tracts at an All Hallow’s Eve Abstinence Party. But we also let you say grace at the McDonald’s we built atop your family’s unmarked graves. That’s why these doomed souls rest their hopes in Dr. Koslov, who’s in Chicago soliciting Christian Nick Fury’s help.

Our Trump lookalike pulls up G.I. Joe file-cards for two agents astoundingly hazardous to this mission. Meet Timothy Emerson Clark: Green Beret. He speaks eight languages, though six of them are just different dialects of flying knee attack. He will use none of them on this operation.

A missionary saved his life when he was definitely not leading illegal incursions into Laos:

The mafia asked him to be a hitman—twice! He refused, because he’d become a radiant Christian and a dull man. Look at yourself, Tim. A year ago you were drinking scorpion vodka and answerable only to a CIA spook codenamed Tartarus. Now you get a worried expression when the neighborhood kids play a prog rock 78 about wizards. 

Tim’s brother in Christ is Jimmy Carter. (No relation. So what if there was? Family comes in many forms. Examine your precepts!) Jim’s a badass black belt, but an even more badasssss “Black militant” and drug-slinger. Those two callings seem at cross-purposes, but who am I to tell a teenager in Urban City his business? A dealer is just a leader slightly mixed up. Anyway, he quit both when a brave preacher clued him in to God’s troubling ideas about bodily autonomy:

How embarrassing to reach drinking age in America without hearing the full deal on this Jesus guy! Now that he’s One of the Good Ones™ our friend Jim abandons the Black Liberation Army to cheer “Right on, brother!” whenever Tim quotes scripture. I think “Submit meekly to state-sponsored violence by European imperialists” is the wrong message to take from Jesus’s life, but I haven’t read Colossians.

Is this what college-age men looked like in 1974? It was a very hairy era, and our best scientists can only guess at what maturity looked like back then, based on the reconstructed frieze of David Cassidy’s sarcophagus. 

Timmy and Jimmy are ablaze with the chance to die for their Lor—

Oop, well, never mind. They need “one week to pray* about it!” But eventually they say yes. Maybe they were distracted by that thumbnail, which looks like it just got back from a two-week vacation up a witch’s butthole.

Back then vaccinations weren’t considered unchristian, so the two men line up for shots and then head to the Chicago Immigration Building(?) to get passports. Jim provides a nervous level of detail:

Impossibly, that’s when everything gets weird.

When you’ve read as many Chick tracts as I have, you can recognize his poker tells. So I’ll bet everything right now this lady’s toothless smile belies her sinister intent. And looking closer at her, I’ll buy insurance (shut up, it’s blackjack now) that she embodies Chick’s complicated relationship with Judaism. 

For eight panels and two pages, this Soviet mole makes copies of passport photos, when—

Didn’t I call it? Even though several major characters go nameless, Chick pointedly tags Gertrude Levits, a fairly common Latvian-Jewish name meaning…uh, ”Latvian.” I can smell an anti-Semite at 20 cubits. 

Middleman Max burns an entire page delivering the photos to Moscow, and cripes, we’re already halfway through this issue. The photos delight K.G.B. spymaster Col. Cherkov. You see… 

This is probably some allegory for 2 Timothy, but nobody cares about allusions to the Rattle & Hum of Paul’s epistles. Onward, Christian soldiers! 

It’s adorable that at disco’s dawn, Chick thought a Green Beret and Purple Heart recipient nailing a beautiful local—from a place of love!—on his vacation would create a scandal. And that’s the most reliable step in this scheme. 

It’s a dumb enough plot for worldly types, but Chick is plotting for The Lord, so he has to make it celestially gooftacular.

Wait, is “dishonor” code for something darker? Are they going to frame this guy for—for… you know, you take a job writing comedy, and you never think you’ll be compelled to write the word “rape” so frequently. 

This is an international conspiracy to get a diplomat fired over a personal vendetta that hinges on a young woman having sex under duress at best, and these dumb Russkies don’t even know there’s a microfiche Bible being smuggled. Tim is innately the worst possible person to undertake this mission. This plot inspired 2002’s The Bourne Identity, in which Matt Damon’s library fines are used to discredit Worcester, MA First Selectman Jason Born. 

Anyway, not to be outdumbed by Satan’s atheists, Koslov’s Crusaders formulate their plan to loll around Romania for days without taking action.

Any idiot would use a dead-drop for info that has no confidential value; it takes a special idiot to bring children to a handoff hotspot:

Elsewhere and in lieu of story, Cherkov the Jerk-Off bitchfits for pages and pages about needing more info, and boy, can readers relate. Meanwhile, Tim and his new coiffure are still preparing to visit Bucharest and wondering who stole all the photos of his exes that every man keeps on display so visitors see how heterosexually active he is.


Those photos aid Moscow in recruiting Sofia Toffsky, a Black Widow minus everything cool about that job, and chosen from a harem of women known as “swallows” (woo!) because she’s Tim’s type.

Cherkov doesn’t specify the punishment for having an unfuckable daughter, but it can’t be worse than traveling with Tim & Jim.

A conspicuously large and Christian crowd sends The Crusaders off on their covert mission. Gang, we’re 24 pages in, and these guys are just now boarding the plane to the town of Persecutiongrad. God wants these characters to enlighten Romania, but He’s no match for Jack Chick’s delaying tactics.

That’s a whole page! The next one is the Russians complaining to each other how expensive it is to place 40 freaking agents on the trail, which—just to iterate, is about tricking a 21-year-old into making love to his dream girl. I honestly think if a better project manager were in charge, Russia could have made a few hundred bucks on this op.

Ugh. Being a swallow sounds like Soviet Russia’s sixth-worst job, right behind Baba Yaga’s gynecologist, but just ahead of whoever has to clean and gut the wild matryoshka dolls.

Oh lord, they’re only in Paris and Tim is already on his third haircut. Now the Russians enact their scheme to introduce Sofia and beat up Jim—I guess to get her alone with Tim? I don’t know how sex works in a fundamentalist Christian’s version of realpolitik, but the Imaginary Soviet Union’s college parties must be quieter than Chick’s wife during their obligatory monthly intercourse—a.k.a. Operation Ovulation Infiltration.

Anyway, Jim feeds his assailant to the pavement. Soviet spycraft is no match for Black Militant Karate.

Finally the trio arrives in Romania, and Big Jim Carter makes it weird—

—though not as weird as Tim whitesplaining bigotry because nobody’s ever seen a Romanian smile:

See, folks? Everywhere is just as racist as America. So there’s no need to examine our national conscience. That’s in the Bible (Projections 2:11).

Cherkov is in Bucharest now? Ambassador Clark must be awesome to have enemies so personally invested in his tangential inconvenience. I bet his shadow smells like spring rain. 

So at this point the K.G.B. are blatantly stalking the Crusaders for the wrong reasons, while the boys are shrugging off all signs their mission might be compromised. This is like watching Wile E. Coyote chase OJ Simpson’s Bronco because the Road Runner’s real name is also Al Cowlings. If the Soviets are right and God isn’t real, then who squared up these two perfectly matched sets of idiots to make the world laugh? Checkmate, Communism.

I like to think every Romanian woman has one (K.G.B.) aunt to dish her the real facts of life: Boys will say they love you just to get incriminated between your thighs, good girls save sex-blackmail for marriage, and heavy spotting is just your body’s way of advertising its Red pride in the glorious people’s menses.

Rippling with passion, Sofia takes Tim on a moonlit walk. Jim stays behind, because the (K.G.B.) aunt wants to hear about growing up in a country that has done everything it can to disenfranchise him.

God, look at the passion radiating from Tim. His desire for a Christian union burns with the heat of one-thousandth brown dwarf stars. Thankfully Jim rescues him from kissing a woman out of wedlock.

On the penultimate page, Jim hands over the microfiche smoothly. Sofia’s handler shows up too late to intercept microfiche he’s unaware of, and Jim bribes him with most of a pack of stale cigarettes: a fortune in Soviet Romania! Unless that guy’s carrying a jar of pickled herring to make change, Jim might have accidentally purchased the man’s hometown.  

Having dragged us through 31 pages of preparations for espionage, Chick walks out on his own climax, just like he does when Mrs. Chick starts enjoying their reproductive skeet-shoot too much. Oh hey, speaking of avoiding sex, let’s watch Sofia’s last-ditch effort to save her parents’ lives.

The Crusaders came here to decline ass and hand out cancer sticks…and Jim’s all out of cancer sticks. Cherkov is not pleased to learn that Tim (fourth hairstyle) showed Sofia the long, hard Word of the Lord. But look:

This entire time they’ve been smuggling the Bible on microfiche, Tim has also been carrying a Bible, knowing his luggage is being searched. His next contraband is Sofia herself. She defects with his special forces skills, so they can squimp out a quiverful of Christian American yeehaw marriage babies.

I LIED. This book’s idea of a happy ending is two bros riding into the sunset in the Soviet Union’s only VW Bug, abandoning Sofia to her fate. They cheerfully wish their would-be seductress a happy death even as doom closes its claws around her. The comic ends thusly:

Prison camp must be so confusing for her unsaved parents. All they know is that their entire bloodline dies here, and then they’re on fire forever. Still, Sofia gets an awesome deal. The back cover enumerates her new superpowers and card-member benefits:

The book is very clear that freezing in Siberia is the best thing that can happen to this beautiful woman whose life just found meaning. And also that they use money in heaven.

Tim, revealing a hidden psychosis that lures young women to their deaths, starts dishing serial killer talk. Get a load of this religious kook! Here’s what he thinks is going to happen to the world:

Uh…actually. Gee. Wow. Let me see that prayer again.

Brendan prays for rain and death, but is all out of death. 

This article was brought to you by our fine sponsor and Hot Dog Supreme: Ken Paisley, who has generously sent countless young women to Siberian prison camps.

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UPSETTING DAY

Upsetting Day: Verotika

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NERDING DAY

Golden Age Comics: Captain Ghost 🌭

It’s Golden Age Comics week, just like every other week of my life, so I came ready to crush two things: this article, and the tsunami of poon-vag that follows comic book criticism’s lunar pull. Here are two other things that will be crushed in this article: evil and children’s skulls. But is there really a difference? Let’s ask today’s superhero, Captain Ghost! 

Alias “The Chattanooga Ghost,” he was a murderous vigilante with extremely poor judgment at best, and borderline personality disorder at yes, that one, that’s it. He embodied the exterminator archetype in a universe of gentleman tigers and guns that shot laughing rays. Obviously he kicks the most ass since the state of Tennessee outlawed mule-fighting rings.

Our narrator is Billy Batson, the boy who turns into Captain Marvel, A.K.A. Hoagiemouth Superman, but whom you probably know as Shazam. DC recently quit trying to claw the name Captain Marvel back from Marvel, but it’s what he’s called throughout this story, so it’s what I’ll use for consistency. Officially, I choose to do this because his disappointing movie was better than the other Captain Marvel’s disappointing movie. But unofficially, I distrust anyone who vanishes shortly after telling you his real name, and you should too.

Speaking of bodies disappearing:

Every year, MAD magazine founder Bill Gaines used to take his entire company on an all-expenses-paid trip. It’s history’s only instance of your boss inviting you on vacation that doesn’t smell like a crime in progress. Sterling’s anxious to flee town, and take his pet waif with him. Billy is a 13-year-old orphan with his own office at a radio station. What’s he even report on? Which baseball card packs have the most digestible gum?

This child can’t tell his boss no. His 9-to-5 life is the worst parts of being a kid and an adult conjoined. And the tragedy is at any point he could fly away and punch monsters for a living. If Captain Marvel and Billy Batson ever decided one of them had to go, they would unanimously vote Billy out of his own body.

The first place Mr. Morris takes Billy is Lover’s Leap. Holy moley, 1940s comics move fast. We’re still on page 1, and as promised, my hair is standing on end. Billy makes up an excuse to get away, and we meet The Chattanooga Ghost, out hunting perverts and revenuers.

Morris chooses death over exposure, but Captain Marvel saves him, and they agree to pretend he merely lost his footing. Meanwhile, a shaken Ghost flees the truth of what he has uncovered. His panicked flight alarms a nearby couple making love in the old-timey sense of reciting poems but never getting sticky.

Being The Chattanooga Ghost takes a certain kind of insight, and the person under the mask is still young, naive, and soft. But he’s being hunted at the speed of Mercury, and life on the edge is hardening him faster than Mr. Morris watching an orphanage go bankrupt:

This morning he was just a regular crimebuster. Now he’s dangling by his fingertips under a rope bridge while the sum of six demigods hunts him. The Chattanooga Ghost wears white to show he has no shits left to give.

As this story begins to resemble the plot of First Blood, some very important real-life Chattanoogans deliberate pragmatically. One of them is Bill McAllester, President of The Knothole Gang—which I assume to be a loose fraternity of bootleggers threatened by a local crime fighter. 

His co-conspirator in Knotholery, Joe Engel, swallows his pride and asks a rival radio station’s reporter for help. Oh sure, that’s how media executives act when nothing suspicious is going on.

This is where it seems like the entire strip is an ad, paid for by the Chattanooga Tourism Board; I recognize the type. So why does it depict The Noog as a place where delusional murderers prowl the state parks and the Scenic City’s most capable men require a child’s help? Maybe investigating The Knothole Gang will explain it…

Okay, The Chattanooga Times Free Press wants you to believe the Gang was merely a wholesome boys’ club devoted to baseball. But does the photo they ran with it look wholesome to you?

The press knows, and they’re scared to say it directly. The deeper I get into this story, the more I think the Chattanooga Ghost was an escapee from some kind of insidious True Detective cult. 

And look, it’s easy to find evidence of lunatic conspiracies to hurt children among innocuous material; QAnon’s got 15% of America doing that in a time when fact-checking is the easiest it’s ever been. But if this is just a comic from a more innocent time trying to raise sales in the local newsstands, then on a scale of 1 to crazy, The Chattanooga Ghost is the only Tennessee. But if he is crazy, then why do some pizzerias in Chattanooga have basements? Cui bono? (That’s Latin for “Who likes to bone?”) 

Keeping his god-face holstered, Billy free solos Lookout Mountain’s steepest face, desperate to feel alive when he can transform into an invulnerable titan with a breath. Cap’s nickname is actually “Earth’s Mightiest” and it’s only when everyone remembers Billy’s death wish that they sigh “…Mortal.”

Atop this climb, a man promises to show Billy a ghost if he accompanies him to a second location. This kid’s entire life is just blindly following strangers to isolated areas, and he didn’t stop once it got him the best set of superpowers out there. Or, as his therapist put it, “Not once in my professional career have I said the victim deserved it. Nevertheless…”

Twenty minutes later, the guy is still laughing at how naive the orphans who quit grade school are. It will be the last laugh his heart ever musters. He meets The Chattanooga Ghost’s stare, and sees his own capacity for evil gazing back at him. 

No longer is The Ghost shocked by the depth of man’s depravity. He stands at its bottom, where God Himself recoils from the twisted sinews of his heart.

Did you think the crushing was metaphorical? Evildoers—and thereby evil—will be literally crushed! Captain Ghost’s identity is ethereal; his methods are rock-solid. His weapon of choice is the boulder, and that makes him king of Rock City:

Now 90% of Captain Marvel’s battles are with Dr. Sivana or Mr. Mind, so it’s a pardonable assumption that anyone under a certain height is evil in the Fawcett Comics universe. But if achondroplasia didn’t exist, The Ghost would devise it anyway to continue heroically killing children. 

Soon, even this fiction will fall away. True annihilators know that to make an evil omelette, you have to break a few baby Hitlers.

I get it, TCG. I, too, worked in branded content, and nothing will make you want to crush a child’s skull faster than post-deadline feedback from the Chattanooga Chamber of Commerce, saying your comic book story lacks robust detail about the tachymeter factory (now-closed). But you can’t blame one stupid boy reporter for your time in the Knothole. 

Billy is the only boy in the world who gets more naive the more it tries to kill him. He’s deteriorated to where he can’t even tell what’s real. Look at this:

This guy trips over a statue of an innocent stalked through nature by a murderous lone wolf and doesn’t blink at the symbolism. Read the signs, you young fool! Go back to the city proper! 

YES! The Chattanooga Ghost crushes Billy under one ton of rock for every year he’s been alive, and laughs about it. An hour ago he was terrified he’d contributed to a pedarast’s death. Did he kill a dog or something in between scenes?

Did he just log his first murder? I have no idea what the rules are for hunting orphans in Tennessee. I just know this rocks so hard. He killed a Kryptonian-class magic user his first day on the job, and he already has a war journal.

Ha ha ha! Look how proud he is! “And what have you done today, you big, red cheese? Beaten up a Venusian inchworm?”

His day could not be going better! The guy he has a crush on just witnessed his greatest triumph! They’re going to team up! 

What? No, no it can’t go this way! A failure in his own hero’s eyes! Buddy is…crushed. 

He vows to amend his ways: Never again will he belittle anyone for having a developmental condition! And he will only murder people he can strongly suspect have committed crimes. Alas, his life is a warning, not an example. Billy returns home to mock him on mass media. 

But was Captain Ghost so wrong? Or was the Rockgate conspiracy real? Remember, Billy is our only source for this story! Let me show you how this trip began—and remember, this entire story is told over the radio from Billy’s perspective. Let me just give it a light edit, because nobody needs racism in their staturism:    

That’s how Billy Batson: Racist thinks his unprovoked aggression in the train station unfolded; an impossible caricature of a human being was delighted to be treated as a subaltern by a child too stupid to realize he’s being trafficked across state lines. 

Even Mr. Sterling Morris, currently in the middle of several federal crimes, is aghast. In a time before Xbox Live, people didn’t know a junior-high boy is the most atomically racist form of a human being. Billy is an unreliable narrator who rewrites history in his favor.

Now here’s how that meeting of crime fighters actually went: 

It’s not Captain Ghost’s fault that he was created for violence in a world of wonder. Initially a gentle soul, enraged by crimes against children, obsessed with killing criminals to the point where he sees them among normal people just living life. His arch-enemy has dwarfism and he uncovers a conspi—

Wait a second. 

Hey, Google: how approximate are the Charlton and Fawcett earths in DC’s multiverse?

Oh my God. 

Picture the ultimate vigilante stalking a world in freefall, born for this. Now transplant him to a childproof Earth. What would that look like? 

Now look. Look:

Loooooook!

I understand now. Buddy isn’t trapped in the Golden Age with Captain Marvel. Captain Marvel is trapped in the Fawcett Universe with Rorschach. 

Brendan wrote a comic book about a Golden-Age mad scientist turning men into babies long before researching this article. He’s also working on a Golden Age podcast, so prepare whatever anti-crushing measures you deem appropriate.