Rudy Panucci On Pop Culture

Month: August 2025 (Page 4 of 4)

The RFC Flashback: Episode One Hundred Forty-Seven

This week we go back to November, 2011, for Radio Free Charleston 147, “Mighty Avengers Shirt.” This installment of our webshow featured music by Miniature Giant, Dual Core, Volt 9000 and Disturbing The Peace. We also have animation from Frank Panucci and other weirdness.

Host segments were shot at a random parking lot in Kanawha City along MacCorkle Avenue. The reason for this is lost to history.

First up in this show we had Miniature Giant, with the song “Piss and Vinegar.”  Then we went to a “Lax” meditation toon by Frank Panucci. Dual Core, the nerdcore rapper, performed “My Girlfriend’s a Hacker,” recorded at Hackercon 3.

Killink checked in from Istanbul. We then presented the music video for Volt 9000’s song “Trancers,” animated by Frank Panucci. On the way out we presented a performance from a show at The LaBelle Theater. It’s a cover of the Drowning Pool Song “Bodies” by Disturbing The Peace, joined by Bret Wood from Born of Conviction. You’ll also see Hugh Deskins from Remains Unnamed chiming in on vocals.

That was a pretty jam-packed episode of the show, when you look back at it. We had punk rock, rap, electronica, metal and lots of weird crap. And I didn’t even mention the Teaberry gum.

The People of Kentuckiana

The PopCulteer
August 8, 2025

As I mentioned yesterday, I’m way behind with posting photos and video from last month’s Kentuckiana GI Joe Toy Expo.

A surprise pre-birthday trip to Cinncinnati sprung up this weekend, and your humble blogger will be, by the time you read this, enjoying some cool museums in a city that we’ve never really visited much (except for a trip to the outskirts to visit a Barbie convention a few years ago).

I still have dozens of photos and loads of video to process from Kentuckiana, and I hope to have all that wrapped up by a week from Sunday, but today I’m going to bring you a dozen or so photos of some of the friends I got to see at the show. Some folks didn’t make the cut because yours truly has to deal with occasional shakiness from Myasthenia Gravis, and the photos were too blurry to use. In other cases, I had so much fun catching up with old friends that I forgot to whip the phone out to snap a picture.

Part of the reason for this photo essay is that, in the past, I have been guilty of focusing too much on the toys at the toy shows and didn’t remember to get enough pictures of humans.

For those of you who actually preferred things that way, expect a gigantic toy-only photo essay next week. There was several tons of rare, exotic and ultra-cool toys at Kentuckiana this year.

Our header image this week is a bunch of folks I don’t know, and that selfie shot of me at the top right is yet another example of better living through Temu.

But now…let us meet some Joe folks…

Spotted working security, mere weeks before his triumphant return to hardcore music in Dunbar, the man…Dana White!

Speaking “the man”…it’s the man behind Kentuckiana (and Adventure Command figures) Steve Stovall, hamming it up for the camera

Also hamming it up, as always, is Ace Allgood, who can be counted on to have the most astounding vintage items at the show.

Ace also had a very special limited edition custom figure set, and Mel just happened to catch him telling me about it right before I bought the last one he had at the show…

Brad Curry, of Bee Active Toys fame, a 3D-printing wonder!

The man behind  Mattsquatch Customs, Mat Stevenson

Legendary (and colorful) GI Joe dealer, Dean Morrison

The GI Joe Land Adventurer, Still Kung Fu Gripping after all these years

Our old Johnny West buddy, Dave Roth

Still hard at work repairing Talking GI Joes, and almost over the trauma of working on mine a few years ago, it’s Scott Wilde!

Tearle Ashby and Scott Ferguson with their incredible custom uniform sets for the show. You can catch up with their amazing work HERE.

Who’s got two thumbs, co-runs ToyLanta and has been seen playing guitar on the Radio Free Charleston video show? It’s Alex Massey!

Finally, it’s the arms and glasses of my lovely wife, the very camera-shy Mel Larch, snapping a photo of Plankton commandeering one of Greg Autore’s Ghost Tanks to send to our friend Pixie.

With that, we call a close to this week’s PopCulteer. Check back for fresh content every day here at PopCult, even when we are running so ridiculously behind schedule that we’ll probably still be sharing photos from Kentuckiana a month after the show ended.

Heck, I still have photos from June that I haven’t run here yet.

But we’ll also have all our regular features, even if I have to finish them on the road.

Cindy Scott’s Bob Hope/USO Diorama

With your PopCulteer headed out of town for a pre-birthday trip while also being way behind schedule on bringing you images from last month’s Kentuckiana GI Joe Toy Expo, today and tommorrow we’ll be presenting some short photo essays from that show.

Today we have the newest creation of Cindy Scott.  I first told you about Cindy a couple of years ago when we covered her diormas in depth, and this year she’s added a really impressive new display that we’ll look take a look at here.

Cindy Scott is a proud member of the Sixth Scale Collector’s Club of Ohio and she has built an amazing recreation of a WWII-era USO stage from one of Bob Hope’s legendary tours to raise the spirits of our fighting forces in the Pacific.

Hope, of course, extensively toured war zones with his USO tours, not just during World War II, but also in Korea and Vietnam.

The detail is amazing, even the things you can’t see.  Cindy built the stage herself using hobby wood, and it’s constructed exactly like a real stage of the era, with joists and braces underneath and tiny nails, pushed in rather than hammered, holding it all together.

We have a few close ups (like the newsreel cameraman seen above left) and some cool notes about the figures and accessories.

In the captions we’ll go over the details…

It’s a Pacific Theater USO stage from World War Two, with Bob Hope front and center, and loads of cool details.

Bob Hope’s USO efforts were celebrated with a Hasbro GI Joe back in 1998. The facial likeness is amazing, which I should have made more of an effort to catch on camera. The Barbie represents Frances Langford (If I remember correctly) and Hope’s manager and guitarist are historically accurate.

Another angle of this cool diorama

Another cameraman, and seated on the end of the row, John F. Kennedy (Hasbro released a GI Joe figure of him as Captainh of the PT Boat). JFK was known to have attended one of Hope’s USO shows.

Cindy built the stage herself, using designs from the era.

Some detail elements were cleverly repurposed, like this Christmas ornament horn, which became a loudspeaker.

Cindy with her latest masterpiece.

We’ll also show you a couple of shots of Cindy’s other dioramas, on display again after debuting in previous years. This log cabin is remarkable.

The level of detail in Joe’s Garage is mind-blowing. I think she’s added to this since last year.

We leave you with another shot of the garage, complete with the tool rack. Tomorrow we’ll meet some more of the people at Kentuckiana.

State Fair To Middlin’ STUFF TO DO

The 2025 West Virginia State Fair happens this weekend, and aside from knowing that it’s the 100th such State Fair and that Kansas and 38 Special are performing there Friday, my knowledge of the State Fair is pretty much non-existent. I’m not much of a State Fair (or County Fair) guy. I think they have carnival rides and cows…possibly cow rides, or cows on carnival rides, but that’s really just a guess on my part. If you have an interest in such things, go HERE for the relevant details.

That is the big thing happening here in the mountainy state this weekend.

Outside of West Virginia, even though we can’t make it this year, Monsterama is happening in Atlanta. Like I said, we can’t make it down there this year, unfortunately, but eventually we’re going to return to Atlanta and enjoy this cool horror convention that Anthony Taylor and his crew assemble each year. This year they are celebrating the films of Jack Hill (Spider Baby, The Big Doll House, Coffy) and the 100th birthday of Rod Serling. We got to hang out a bit with Anthony at Kentuckiana and I really want to go to Monsterama eventually.

If you’re in the Atlanta area, or in decent driving distance, you should check it out.  You can find more details HERE. I seriously wish we could’ve fit it into our schedule this year. They had me at the program cover (top right).

Back to the goings-on besides the state fair here in West Virginia, let’s go for a quick tour of STUFF TO DO around the state, shall we?

As always, you should remember that THIS IS NOT A COMPLETE LIST OF EVENTS.  It’s just a starting point, so don’t expect anything comprehensive, and if you feel strongly about me leaving anything out, feel free to mention it in the comments. Also, if you have a show that you’d like to plug in the future, contact me via Social Media at Facebook, BlueSky , Spoutible, Instagram or possibly Elon’s beast, if it should ever choose to forgive me.  I dont charge for this, so you might as well send me something if you have an event to promote. Note that some links look like they shouldn’t work because they have lines through them, but that’s just a WordPress glitch, so click on them anyway. They should still work.

We are also very happy to remind you that Cristen Michael has created an interactive calendar that is way more comprehensive than this list of STUFF TO DO, and you can find it HERE. Just click on the day and the event and you’ll be whisked away to a page with more details about loads of area events.

City Center Live at Slack Plaza in Charleston has announced their schedule for the summer.  Events resumed this week after wisely taking the entire month of July off.  You can find their schedule HERE.

You can find live music in and around town every night of the week. You just have to know where to look.

Most Fridays and Saturdays you can find live music at Taylor Books. There is no cover charge, and shows start at 7:30 PM. This weekend they have Steve Himes on Friday, and Pete Kosky on Saturday. Sunday at 2 PM they have music from Ray + Jon.

You can find live music every night at The World Famous Empty Glass Cafe. Mondays feature open mic night. The first Tuesday of every month sees the legendary Spurgie Hankins Band perform. There’s both Happy Hour music and local or touring bands on Thursday and Friday, and live bands Saturday nights.  On Sundays when there’s a new Mountain Stage, musicians from the legendary WV Public Radio show migrate to The Glass for the Post-Mountain Stage jam.

Live at The Shop in Dunbar hosts local and touring bands on most weekends, and is a nice break away from the downtown bar scene.

Louie’s, at Mardi Gras Casino & Resort, regularly brings in local bands on weekends.

In Huntington, local institution, The Loud (formerly The V Club), brings in great touring and local acts three or four nights a week.

The Wandering Wind Meadery holds several events each week, from live piano karaoke to bands to comedy to burlesque.

The multitude of breweries and distilleries that have popped up in Charleston of late bring in live musical acts as well. I tend to miss a lot of these because, being a non-drinker, they fly under my radar.

Roger Rablais hosts Songwriter’s stage at different venues around the area, often at 813 Penn, next door to Fret ‘n’ Fiddle in Saint Albans and also at The Empty Glass many Tuesday evenings. You might also find cool musical events at Route 60 Music in Barboursville and Folklore Music Exchange in Charleston.

To hear music in an alcohol-free enviroment, see what’s happening at Pumzi’s, on Charleston’s West Side. Pumzi’s looks to be beefing up their offerings in the coming weeks and months, so be sure to check that link in case we miss something.

You can also visit Coal River Coffee in Saint Albans for live music in an alcohol-free environment. This Friday at 7 PM  Coal River Coffee features Minor SwingI am looking to expand this list, so please contact me through the social media sites above if you know about more alcohol-free performance venues. The Huntington Music Collective has recently started hosting all ages shows at Event Horizon.

For cutting-edge independent art films, downstairs from Taylor Books you’ll find the Floralee Hark Cohen Cinema by WVIFF. Each week they program several amazing movies in their intimate viewing room that you aren’t likely to see anywhere else.

Please remember that viral illlnesses are still a going concern and many people who have very good reasons are still wearing masks, and many of us, understandably, are still nervous about being in crowds, masked or not. Be kind and understanding  while you’re out. And if you’re at an outdoor event, please remember that it’s awfully inconsiderate to smoke or vape around people who become ill when exposed to that stuff. If somebody asks you to refrain, don’t be a jerk about it.

Keep in mind that all shows are subject to change or be cancelled at the last minute.

Here we go, roughly in order, it’s graphics for local events that I was able to scrounge up online…

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Three Hours of New Radio Free Charleston Includes New Music and Rare Gems From Our Archives

Despite the best efforts of your humble blogger, Tuesday is once again “New Show Day” on The AIR  but with only a new episode of Radio Free Charleston. I’ll tell you what happend to The Swing Shift below. To listen to The AIR, you simply have to point your cursor over and tune in at the website, or you could just stay here, and  listen to the cool embedded player found elsewhere on this page.  

You can hear Radio Free Charleston Tuesdays at 10 AM and 10 PM, with boatloads of replays throughout the week.

This week our all-new three-hour Radio Free Charleston is loaded with great new music from old friends and new favorites, and our final our takes a deep dive into the RFC Archives with more cool live performances.

We open the show with new music from A Tale of Two. This Nashville-based Americana duo performed last week at Folklore Music Exchange, and Mel and went and had a blast.  The duo consists of Aaron Lessard and Stephanie Adlington, and quite some time ago, Mel and Stephanie performed together with the West Virginia Symphony.  So it was a great reunion and an evening of wonderful, atmospheric original music. This was our first time at Folklore, and it will not be our last. In addition to opening the show, we play another song by the band in our second hour.

Our show is packed full of new music from Speedsuit, Novelty Island, Erik Woods, The Settlement, Byzantine, Tyler Childers and more.

We also have some great local and indie tracks from the vault, as well as, from deep, deep in the vault, a third hour that includes four live songs by The Defectors (you heard them already if you watched our Sunday Evening Video two days ago) and eight live songs by Go Van Gogh. The Go Van Gogh tracks date back to 1990, at the Levee, and the set ends with a Rutles cover, so  you know it’s extra special.

Part of the reason we’re playing the Defectors’ songs is to observe the first anniversary of the passing of Lynne Sandy, their lead singer.  Coincidentally, it’s been around eight years since we lost my friend, Johnny Rock, the drummer for Go Van Gogh, and someone who worshipped The Defectors. I thought it’d be nice to let their bands finally play on a double bill.

Even though I forgot to mention it in the show this week, links below will take you to a website for the artist, where available. Check out this impressive playlist…

RFC V5 235

hour one
A Tale of Two “Renegade”
Novelty Island “Northern Nowhere”
Matching Outfits “Everybody Drives”
Erik Woods “My Turtle”
Masser Chups “Insomnia of the Mummies”
Corduroy Brown “4th Avenue”
Speedsuit “Paroled”
Guitarmy of One “Kolchak Meets the Sea Mobster”
Byzantine “Riddance (Instrumental Version)”
Karma To Burn “Nineteen”
Red Audio “Robotomy”
Be Bop Deluxe “Sleep That Burns”
The Settlement “Rainbow”

hour two
Tyler Childers “Bitin’ List”
Joy Viver “Precious Stones”
June Swoon “What Ever After”
M Robin Scott “God Knows Why”
A Tale of Two “Once Upon A Summer’s Day”
Brian Diller “Drive”
Sheldon Vance “Tonight We Sing”
The M.F.B. “Karaoke Casualty”
Frank Zappa “Let Me Take You To The Beach”
Tony Levin “Uncle Funkster”
The Heavy Hitters Band “Voicemail (live)”
Heavy Set Paw Paws “Summer Sweat” “Larry Sanders”

hour three
Captain Beefheart “Big Eyed Beans From Venus”
The Defectors (live at the Mound in 1983) “I Want Candy,” “Take It All,” “Los Angeles” and “Easy Target.”
Go Van Gogh (Live at The Levee in 1990) “Don’t Leave Me Alone,” “Be My River,” “Da Da Da, I Love You,” “Ballet Dancer,” “Nothing As Strong As Love,” “I Fall Down,” “Born Too Late,” “Goose Step Mama”
Emmalea Deal & The Hot Mess “I Wanna Leave”

You can hear this episode of Radio Free Charleston Tuesday at 10 AM and 10 PM on The AIR, with replays Wednesday at 9 AM,  Thursday at 2 PM, Friday at 9 AM, Saturday at Noon and Midnight, Sunday at 8 PM and  Monday at 11 AM, exclusively on The AIR. Now you can also hear a different classic episode of RFC every weekday at 5 PM, and we bring you a marathon all night long Saturday night/Sunday morning.

I’m also going to  embed a low-fi, mono version of this show right in this post, right here so you can listen on demand.

 

After RFC, stick around for encores of last week’s episodes of  MIRRORBALL at 1 PM and Curtain Call at 2 PM.

At 3 PM we planned to offer up a new episode of The Swing Shift but after recording and editing the show, technology failed us, and the file became corrupted. I will have to rebuild it from scratch. I still have all the parts, but I did not have time to reconstruct it, so you’ll have to wait until next week. In the meantime, I’ll schedule encores of some classic episodes into the timeslot today.

 You can hear The Swing Shift Tuesday at 3 PM, with replays Wednesday at 8 AM, Thursday at 9 AM,  Friday at 10 AM and 8 PM and Saturday afternoon, only on The AIR . You can also hear all-night marathons, seven hours each, starting at Midnight Thursdays and Sundays.

Monday Morning Art: Unused Band Logo

This week’s art is a digitally-colored bit of calligraphy that your humble blogger created over thirty years ago as a band logo. This was hastily scrawled on drawing paper with a Sharpie, with no pencils or guides or anything.

And, I feel condident in saying…it shows.

Sadly, I could never persuade a band to name themselves “20 Nekkid Penta Costals.”

I suppose you want to know the story behind that name, if you don’t already. This is a story that was in the news in the early 1990s, but for some odd reason, I keep making references to it. Here’s how AP covered it back then:

COPS CHASE CAR, FIND 20 NUDE PEOPLE
(Associated Press, August 20, 1993)

Police in Vinton, La, were surprised when a driver wearing only a towel got out of a car they stopped, then got back in and sped off. They were dumbfounded when the car hit a tree and disgorged 20 people wearing nothing at all. “The Lord told them to get rid of all their belongings and go to Louisiana. So they got rid of all their clothes and pocketbooks and wallets and identification and the license plate off their car and came to our gorgeous state,” Vinton Police Chief Dennis Drouillard said.

All 20 were from Floydada, Texas, in the Texas Panhandle, about 550 miles from the southwest Louisiana town of Vinton. Drouillard said he believed they all were related. Driver Sammy Rodriguez and his brother, Danny, both said they were Pentecostal preachers, Drouillard said. Floydada Police Chief James Hale said he had been looking for the Rodriguez family since Tuesday night, when relatives reported them missing. “They made statements like the devil was after them and Floydada was going to be destroyed if they stayed here,” Hale said.

The family left in 5 or 6 cars, abandoning 1 in Lubbock and a second in San Angelo. Police found a thrid in Galveston, along with the family’s clothes, pocketbooks, wallets and other belongings. The chase in Vinton began after a campground owner called police. A Calcasieu Parish deputy stopped their car, and a man wearing only a towel got out. “When the officer went to ask what was going on, he jumped back in and took off,” Drouillard said. They sped down Vinton’s main street until the car hit a tree at the baseball park at the end of town. Fifteen adults, as old as age 63, and 5 children, piled out of the 1990 Pontiac Grand Am. “And they were completely nude. All 20 of them. Didn’t have a stitch of clothes on. I mean, no socks, no underwear, no nothin’. Five of them [the children] were in the trunk,” Drouillard said.

The car was totaled, but the injuries all were minor, Drouillard said. Rodriguez was booked with reckless driving, flight from an officer, property damage and several minor traffic violations.

There are, believe it or not, funnier details.

The wannabe cult leader responsible was Sammy Rodriguez.  He’d told his flock, comprised entirely of relatives, that the Lord had told him that their clothes had been cursed by the devil. so they all stripped off and piled into five cars.  Along the way to the promised land in Louisiana, four of the cars broke down, so they kept consolidating until they only had one car left, with the children riding, buck-assed naked, in the trunk, which had, thankfully, been propped open so they could get air.  On reaching  Louisiana the group attempted to steal an RV, which they claimed had been promised to them by God.

Of course, there’s a country song about the incident. You can hear it HERE.

To this day, this story keeps popping into my mind and it never fails to crack me up.  It should be a shocking story, but because nobody was seriously injured and everybody seems to have just gotten on with their lives afterward…it is simply hilarious.

I have never been able to determine if the Sammy Rodriguez from this story is the same person as the now highly-respected Pentacostal preacher, Samuel Rodriguez.  Part of me doesn’t want to know. It’s more fun to just think it’s him.

Anyway, this probably explains why I don’t get asked to design many band logos.

If you want to see this image larger, click HERE.

Meanwhile, over in radioland, Monday beginning at 2 PM on The AIR, we bring you a classic episode of Psychedelic Shack, and then at 3 PM an also classic edition of Herman Linte’s weekly showcase of the Progressive Rock of the past half-century, Prognosis.  You can listen to The AIR at the website, or on the embedded radio player elsewhere on this page.

Psychedelic Shack can be heard every Monday at 2 PM, with replays Tuesday at 9 AM, Wednesday at 10 PM, Friday at 1 PM,  and Saturday at 9 AM. You can hear Prognosis on The AIR Monday at 3 PM, with replays Tuesday at 7 AM, Wednesday at 8 PM, Thursday at Noon, and Saturday at 10 AM.

At 8 PM you can hear a classic episode of The Comedy Vault devoted to the satirical brilliance of Tom Lehrer, who just passed away eight days ago at the age of 97. I may have more to tell you about Mr. Lehrer in the coming weeks.

Tonight at 9 PM for the Monday Marathon we bring you ten hours of episodes of Radio Free Charleston. These are not our most recent episodes, but they are gems of local, independent and cult free-format radio from earlier this year.

Sunday Evening Video: More of Lynne & The Defectors

It’s been just about a year since we lost Lynne Sandy.

Lynne Sandy, a friend and a Charleston music legend passed last August, and her loss is still being felt. You can hear a special episode of Radio Free Charleston (the radio show) that includes an in-depth interview with Lynne HERE. A video edition of RFC brought you archival footage of Lynne with her band, The Defectors, perfrming at The Criel Mound in South Charleston. You can se that HERE.

When we dropped that show I promised you guys a documentary about the life and music of Lynne Sandy, and I am running behind schedule producing that documentary. To hold you over, and to observe the anniversary of Lynne’s passing, I brought you a chunk of that concert that had not been seen publicly last week.

Above you see another chunk of that concert, remastered and sestores.  This is more of the the foundation of that documentary, which is a video of a performance by The Defectors, at the Criel Mound in South Charleston, on June 16, 1983. The video was shot by Dana Grooms.

This clip contains four complete songs: “I Want Candy,” “Take It All,” “Los Angeles” and “Easy Target.”  These have been restored and remastered for inclusion in the documentary. The goal is to completely restore the performance and record the interviews with Lynne’s bandmates and friends and have the finished film ready to go as soon as is logistically possible. We also have somebody working to further restore the audio, so it’ll sound better than what we have here.

To mark a year since Lynne’s passing, please enjoy this sneak peek at the work in progress, Over the next few months I plan to present more songs in this space.

It”s been a year, and we still miss Lynne very much.

The RFC Flashback: episode One Hundred Forty-Six

From October, 2011, we bring you Radio Free Charleston 146, Pepper Fandango Shirt. This episode found us driving around the state looking at the fall colors. We had great music this week with songs from Born of Conviction, John Lancaster, Gabriel, and the cast of Jack The Ripper, plus we have animation from Frank Panucci and an art film by yours truly.

Our host segments were filmed all over West Virginia as Melanie Larch and I made the Charleston-to-Clarksburg-to-Parkersburg-to-Charleston loop so we could check out the changing foilage and basically just take a day away from everything.

This was a fun show, loaded with music and cool stuff, and you can read the original production notes HERE.

Hail Bulletman! Plus A Bandcamp Friday Reminder

The PopCulteer
August 1, 2025

Bandcamp Friday

Okay, folks, it’s Bandcamp Friday.

That’s the day when my favored streaming service, Bandcamp, foregoes their usual cut of the money and lets the artists keep all the money spent on their music and merch. However today they make an exception.

The artists get a much bigger cut of the proceeds.  If you scroll down and check out almost any episode of Radio Free Charleston that has a playlist in this blog, you will find that the list of artists have links, many of which take you directly to that artist’s Bandcamp page.

In recent week’s we’ve seen new releases from the likes of The Settlement, Byzantine, Brian Diller, Sierra Ferrell w/Nikki Lane , Corduroy Brown, The M.F.B. , Saycouth and many others. Plus this is a good time to pick up older releases and merch from your favorite local and indie artists.

You know what to do to support the local scene and independent artists.

Defenders of Bulletman at Kentuckiana

Your humble blogger took a bit too many photos at The Kentuckiana GI Joe Toy Expo, and it’s taking me a while to sort them out and get them all presentable for you. today we’re just going to focus on one tiny part of that show.

There was an exhibit commemorating the 25th anniversary of The Defenders of Bulletman, a group dedicated to celebrating what was once one of the most unjustly-maligned action figures of all time.

Thanks to their tireless efforts, Bulletman, the oddball superhero member of the GI Joe Adventure Team, has gone from being the butt of many a joke…a mere punchline…to one of the most ridiculously expensive vintage toys of its era.

The figure wasa bit of a flop when it came out. In one of those “kick yourself” memories that all toy collectors have, back in 1978, at the Murphy’s Mart in Dunbar, I came across a shopping cart filled with carded, unsold Bulletman figures, marked down to a dollar each. Of course this was when I was a broke teen, and was also in that brief phase where I wasn’t interested in toys at all, but had I been wise enough to have bought one (or the whole cart), then I wouldn’t have had to drop three figures to get one loose in 2014.

Over the years, the DOB crew have memorialized Bulletman in a variety of ways, by creating custom figures, custom ancillery merchandise, original artwork, accessory sets, vehicles, and some amazing artwork. This mini-exhibit (which I believe is travelling to other shows) was curated by Brian Becker (seen in our feature image above) with lots of assistance from his fellow DOB members.

So shine up your helmet, we’re going to take a deep dive…

First we’re going to take in the whole exhibit, going right to left (because I numbered the pictures wrong).

The middle part

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