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DID ULTIMATE SPIDER-MAN JUST BREAK ANOTHER BARRIER?
Posted July 29th, 2010
on Newsarama Blogs
Spider-Man, pining in a park with all the loving couples. But what’s that to his far right? Your eyes aren’t deceiving you — that’s a happy homosexual couple, moving in for a kiss. Is this a first for Marvel Comics, putting a gay kiss on a...
COMICS RECS: THREE FUN BOOKS I FOUND AT COMIC-CON
Posted July 28th, 2010
on Pop Candy
Wuvable Oaf by Ed Luce (Goteblud Comics, $3.95) -- I can't believe I'm just discovering this series. Oaf follows a beefy, hairy, sensitive guy who loves kitties, Morrissey, metal, dolls, '80s nostalgia, comics and men. (We have a lot in common.)
REVIEW: STUCK RUBBER BABY BY HOWARD CRUSE
Posted July 26th, 2010
on Lambda Literary
It struck me, while reading Stuck Rubber Baby so many years after its publication in 1995, that its setting, what its author Howard Cruse refers to as “Kennedytime,” makes it the perfect accompaniment to Mad Men and the current...
COMIC-CON WEEKEND MUSTS: "GAYS IN COMICS" AND "GLEE" PANELS
Posted July 24th, 2010
on San Diego Gay & Lesbian News
Comic-Con International 2010 is still going strong this weekend at the Convention Center. Two particular events are of keen interest to the LGBT community.
THE WEEKLY GEEK: GETTING GAY AT COMIC-CON
Posted July 23rd, 2010
on After Ellen
COMIC-CON FANS THWART WESTBORO PROTEST
Posted July 23rd, 2010
on The Advocate
Holy headlines, Batman! Fred Phelps brought his group of hate-mongering protesters to San Diego’s Comic-Con on Thursday, only to be met with a 50-strong group of Jedis, robots, aliens, and other costumed counter protesters.
COMIC-CON QUEER COMICS PROGRAMMING 2010
Posted July 22nd, 2010
on Gay.com Daily
The GLBT comics programming at Comic-Con is huge, and we've got all your highlights here.
GAY COMIC-CON 2010
Posted July 22nd, 2010
on Gay and Lesbian Times
Prism Comics will be at Comic Con 2010 with nearly a dozen major comic creators attending for panels, meet and greets, creator signings and portfolio review.
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Recent News

HOWARD CRUSE, JENNIFER CAMPER AND IVAN VELEZ APPEAR AT BLUESTOCKINGS BOOKSTORE IN NYC!
Posted June 18th, 2010
HOWARD CRUSE, JENNIFER CAMPER AND IVAN VELEZ TO APPEAR AT JIM HANLEY’S UNIVERSE AND BAAD IN NYC!
Posted June 9th, 2010
STUCK RUBBER BABY RETURNS! HOWARD CRUSE’S CLASSIC REPUBLISHED BY VERTIGO, IN STORES NOW!
Posted June 8th, 2010
OSO ORO STRIKES AGAIN! GRAB YOUR FUNDOSHI AND GET YOUR ART ON SATURDAY, JUNE 5TH IN NYC!
Posted May 27th, 2010
IT’S A TIE! PRISM COMICS ANNOUNCES 2010 QUEER PRESS GRANT WINNERS ED LUCE AND ERIC ORNER!
Posted April 13th, 2010
NYU QUEER COMICS SERIES TO FEATURE WORKSHOPS BY IVAN VELEZ, KATIE DIAMOND, LYNDON CUDLITZ AND MORE.
Posted April 13th, 2010
PRISM APPEARING AT EMERALD CITY COMICON MARCH 13TH & 14TH
Posted March 6th, 2010
CATCH THE LATEST EPISODE OF THE WEREWIF!
Posted March 3rd, 2010
THIS MONTH’S THE WEREWIF IS UP AT PRISM’S WEBCOMICS PAGE.
Posted February 10th, 2010
ALEX FITCH INTERVIEWS BRIAN ANDERSEN ON “PANELBORDERS”! SO SUPER DUPER #9 DROPS IN FEBRUARY!
Posted January 29th, 2010
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Lambda Legal Announces “Life Without Fair Courts” Cartoon Contest Winners!
posted August 14th, 2007
[Print-ready Version]

New York, NY — The “Life Without Fair Courts” cartoon contest was launched this Spring together with Prism Comics and Diamond Comic Distributors, along with The Advocate as exclusive media sponsor. There were over 25 entries from all over the country, including two international entries from Poland. The finalists were chosen by a panel of judges including artist Mikhaela Reid who was commissioned by Lambda Legal to draw the “Life Without Fair Courts” cartoon series, DC Comics Editor Joan Hilty, freelance illustrator and comic book artist Phil Jimenez (Wonder Woman, Infinite Crisis), and Sean Kennedy, News Editor at The Advocate. Nearly 2,000 people voted to select the winners.

“The goal of our Courting Justice project, which designed and carried out the ‘Life Without Fair Courts’ cartoon contest, is to help the community better understand what our lives and the lives of all Americans would be like without a fair and impartial judicial system,” said Hector Vargas, Deputy Director of Education and Public Affairs at Lambda Legal. “The artists turned complex ideas into compelling graphic art in ways that make it easy to understand the impact of the court system on our everyday lives.”

Today, Lambda Legal announced the top three winners in the “Life Without Fair Courts” cartoon contest.

First Place: Greg Fox, “4 Reasons for Gays to Be Grateful”

Second Place: Ted Rall, “Explaining the Supreme Court”

Third Place: Matt Bors, “Future Courtroom Landmarks”

The First Place Winner, Greg Fox, best known for his current comic strip Kyle’s Bed & Breakfast, said he never intended on becoming a political cartoonist, but “working at home I hear a lot of talk radio. You might say my entry in this contest was a response to all of that antigay rhetoric I’ve been subjected to on the airwaves.” The Second Place Winner, Ted Rall, named “the most controversial cartoonist in America” by Cartoon.com, was inspired to create his comic strip because, “instances of judicial unfairness and bias have made such a negative impact on our society that they demand outrage and ridicule.” The Third Place Winner Matt Bors said not having fair courts “could spell doom for much of the progress we’ve made in the last 50 years.”

First prize in the contest is exposure in the current issue of The Advocate and on Advocate.com. Second and third prizes include donated shopping sprees from Diamond Comic Distributors. To see the winning entries, please go to www.lambdalegal.org/courtingjustice.

Lambda Legal is a national organization committed to achieving full recognition of the civil rights of lesbians, gay men, bisexuals, transgender people and those with HIV through impact litigation, education and public policy work. For more information, please go to www.lambdalegal.org.


Prism Comics promotes the works of the LGBT community in comics. It does not implicitly endorse any other material or products associated with those works. Any opinions expressed are those of the author(s).


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