The first issue of Rolling Stone magazine was published today in 1967. Let's look back at its first ten years in print. Image
Tiny Tim and the scandal of stereo. Rolling Stone, July 1968. Image
The death of Dr. Strange. Rolling Stone, October 1969. Image
American Revolution. Rolling Stone, April 1969. Image
What a Performance. Rolling Stone, September 1970. Image
Jimi Hendrix. Rolling Stone, October 1970. Image
The Lyman family. Rolling Stone, December 1971. Image
"A head as big as Elvis's belt buckle." Rolling Stone, July 1972. Image
Fear and loathing in Miami Beach. Rolling Stone, August 1972. Image
How to beat a bust. Rolling Stone, August 1973. Image
Dr. Hook. Rolling Stone, March 1973. Image
Who runs the economy? Rolling Stone, June 1974. Image
Tommy. Rolling Stone, April 1975. Image
The healing of Brother Brian. Rolling Stone, November 1976. Image
Star Wars Vs Dolly Parton. Rolling Stone, August 1977. Image
More rock journalism another time... Image

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More from @PulpLibrarian

5 Nov
Tonight is #BonfireNight, an event that puzzles many readers from outside the UK. What is this festival of anarchy and why do the Brits keep doing it?

Let me try to explain...
Guy Fawkes Night is a traditional re-enactment of naked sectarianism, domestic terrorism, licensed beggary, arson, anarchy and disrespect. It's all very quaint and happens each year on the 5th of November - #BonfireNight!
#BonfireNight 'celebrates' the disruption of an attempt to blow up the Houses of Parliament in 1605; a time in British history when everyone hated everyone else due to religion, nationalism and politics that would culminate 40 years later in a massive civil war. Like you do...
Read 13 tweets
30 Oct
Today's pulp question: which film do you think was more influential - Logan's Run or Tron?

I'm somewhat torn here. Logan's Run has a great dystopian narrative, and Tron really pushed the envelope on computer SFX. I'd happily watch either, but what do you think?
Well let's start with Tron: a tech-noir classic that pushed the boundaries of early CGI as well as using more traditional animation and post-production skills.

Get your light cycle ready...
"TRON" is a debugging command in some versions of BASIC and stands for TRaceON. It sounds cool and geeky.

Unsurprisingly the 2010 Tron movie sequel didn't use its complementary command: "TROFF"
Read 29 tweets
29 Oct
You know what I'm in the mood for? Wildcat Adventures!

Be warned: these may involve daring, danger and death... BY SNU SNU!
"The Marathon Switchblade Duel of the Naked Soho Tarts!"

Wildcat Adventures, February 1964.
"The Torrid Tiger Queen Of Nyasaland!"

Wildcat Adventures, October 1960.
Read 10 tweets
26 Oct
"Fear is the mind-killer," but movie production is a close second. As Denis Villeneuve's epic movie adaptation of Dune pulls in audiences worldwide, I look back at an earlier struggle to bring that story to the silver screen.

This is the story of David Lynch's Dune...
Dune is an epic story: conceived by Frank Herbert after studying the Oregon Dunes in 1957 he spent five years researching, writing, and revising it before publication. He would go on to write a further five sequels.
Dune is a multi-layered story and a hugely immersive novel. It's about a future where the mind rather the computer is king, aided by the mysterious spice melange. It also has more feuding houses than Game of Thrones.
Read 22 tweets
12 Oct
What do Batman, Spiderman, Bettie Page, Madonna and women wrestlers have in common? Well I'll tell you: they all feature in the life of today's featured pulp artist!

Today I look back at the career of "the father of fetish" Eric Stanton...
Eric Stanton was born in New York in 1926. His childhood was marred by many illnesses, and confined to bed he learnt to draw by tracing comic books. He was fascinated by strong Amazonian women like Sheena, Queen of the Jungle and soon began creating similar cartoons.
After high school Stanton joined the Navy in 1944, putting his skills to use in drawing aircraft recognition cartoons. Post-war he got a job with cartoonist Gordon 'Boody' Rogers, creator of Babe: Amazon Of The Ozarks.
Read 18 tweets
8 Oct
In January 1919 a new magazine heralded the dawn of the Weimar era. Its aesthetic was a kind of demented Jugendstil, and its stories were dark gothic fantasies.

This is the story of Der Orchideengarten...
Der Orchideengarten: Phantastische Blätter (The orchid garden: fantastic pages) is probably the first ever fantasy magazine. Published in Munich by Dreiländerverlag, a trial issue appeared in 1918 before the first full 24 page edition was published in January 1919.
"The orchid garden is full of beautiful - now terribly gruesome, now satirically pleasing - graphic jewelery" announced the advanced publicity. It was certainly a huge departure from the Art Nouveau of Jugend magazine, which German readers were already familiar with.
Read 12 tweets

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