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Evil Inc full page, week of March 12, 2019

Here's your first look at the full-page version of this week's Evil Inc comics!

Evil Inc full page, week of March 12, 2019

Comments

That Glove at the last panel. It is gonna be Miss Match isn't it ? Kinda hope Moon Maiden won't ruin Cap and MM because of her bitterness.

Taylan

Reading the comments of my Patreon backers has made me a very careful editor. I (try to) leave very little to chance these days.

Brad Guigar

It has meaning. :)

Brad Guigar

If you hadn't included that "now" text box in the last panel, I would have assumed that elderly Moon Maiden had sent Cap back in time and Captain Heroic was destined to become his own father or something.

Mr. Nobody

And what's "that time of the month" like for her?

Perry F. Bruns

Trying to decide how Moon Maiden ages. Does she go through the entire cycle, to be reborn each month? Is she reborn each year, like the New Years’ baby? Gives wild ideas about Fireworx and Moon Maiden. Equal problems with fertility.

David Heiligmann

Goodnight noises everywhere?

PixelThis

There is some dispute about who actually invented the high five. Some claim the gesture was invented by Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Glenn Burke when he spontaneously high-fived fellow outfielder Dusty Baker after a home run during a game in 1977. Others claim the 1978-79 Louisville basketball team started it on the court. Since no one could definitively pinpoint the exact origin, National High Five Day co-founder Conor Lastowka made up a story about Murray State basketballer Lamont Sleets inventing it in the late '70s/early '80s, inspired by his father's Vietnam unit, “The Fives.” Regardless of which high-five origin story is more accurate, there is little question of its roots. The high five evolved from its sister-in-slappage, the low five. The gesture, also known as “slapping skin,” was made popular in the jazz age by the likes of Al Jolson, Cab Calloway and the Andrews Sisters. <a href="http://mentalfloss.com/article/50163/brief-history-high-five" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank">http://mentalfloss.com/article/50163/brief-history-high-five</a>

Brad Guigar

did they do High Fives back in that day? (I guess this was the late 1960s or thereabouts? When did that start doing that anyway?)

Great Scott


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