//=time() ?>
@ComicsandCleave Art Adams for his statuesque women. I'm a big fan of how he exaggerated their features, and anyone can spot an Art Adams lady just by looking at their face.
My out-of-left-field answer would be Akira Toriyama for his fun depictions of petite women which you don't see very often.
I had a Master System when I was little, Space Harrier was the only game I needed https://t.co/v5hL2Yd9we
It just goes to show how a really imaginative person can take something as cold and straight forward as scientific facts, throw in his own fascination with the unknown, and spin a totally out-there weird fiction story that, 60 years later, lives on as a cult classic movie.
@AnthonyLaFauci So, I chose three horror movie antags who, with varying degrees of ease, could be converted into superheroes. Then there's one challenge: The Blob.
How would you approach make something like The Blob sympathetic let alone a hero?
I got some ideas...
Sadly true. I always have an RX-78-2 model within reach. He's got his beam rifle in hand and twin beam sabers in his back with his red-white-blue-yellow color scheme.
I don't think there's one robot design more enduring than this colorful fighting machine from 1979 https://t.co/zBiZzYWin6
@muttman75 Jose Garcia's work never gets old, also can relate to awful feed