And here is the small B&W ash can Eerie #1 that Warren rushed to publication to ensure that he held copyright to the name.200 were printed and the few that turn up in the marketplace are quite expensive. Counterfeits were also printed and even those trade for big bucks.
Quote from: horrorhunter on February 03, 2017, 05:03:01 PMWarren beat Myron Fass of Eerie Publications infamy to the punch and out of spite Fass named his company Eerie which evidently didn't infringe on the copyright for the mag title.Myron's middle finger salute to Warren.
Warren beat Myron Fass of Eerie Publications infamy to the punch and out of spite Fass named his company Eerie which evidently didn't infringe on the copyright for the mag title.
The cover of Eerie 1 was taken from the subscription ad that had made up the back cover of Creepy 2:
A well-deserved middle finger to James Warren in this case. The ashcan was a pr*ck move.
Why so, Hep? That was not uncommon in pulp publishing then. The comix folks did it, too.
"YUUUUUUUUGE!!!"
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