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Video Comic Book | |
---|---|
Starring | Diane Disque William Hamilton Charles Pickard |
Opening theme | Ride of the Valkyries |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Producer | Dana Kadison |
Release | |
Original network | Nickelodeon Columbus Alive! (C-1) |
Original release | 1979 – 1981 |
Video Comic Book, alternatively called Video Comics, was a children's show that originally aired on Columbus Alive! (C-1), a channel on QUBE, and was produced at QUBE's studios in Columbus, Ohio. It later aired on Nickelodeon from 1979 to 1981, and was one of the nascent network's inaugural programs. The show panned and scanned Silver Age DC Comics such as Green Lantern, Swamp Thing, Aquaman, Sugar and Spike, The Flash, Adam Strange, Nutsy Squirrel, The Three Mousketeers, Doodles Duck, and the Atom. The show's opening depicted kids riding their bicycles to get to a comic book store, to the tune of "Ride of the Valkyries".
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QUBE was an experimental two-way, multi-programmed cable television system that played a significant role in the history of American interactive television. It was launched in Columbus, Ohio, on December 1, 1977. Highly publicized as a revolutionary advancement, the QUBE experiment introduced viewers to several concepts that became central to the future development of TV technology: pay-per-view programs, special-interest cable television networks, and interactive services.
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Fan Expo Chicago, is a comic book convention held during the summer in Rosemont, Illinois, United States, at the Donald E. Stephens Convention Center. It was traditionally a three-day event, but in 2006, it expanded to four days. It was founded in 1972 as Nostalgia '72, Chicago Comic Con and later as the Chicago Comic and Nostalgia Convention by a local dealer named Nancy Warner.
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The Wizard World Columbus Comic Con, formerly known as Mid-Ohio Con and then the Wizard World Ohio Comic Con, was a comic book convention held during the fall in Columbus, Ohio, United States, at the Greater Columbus Convention Center. Initially held in early November, from 1994–2007 the Mid-Ohio Con took place on the first weekend after Thanksgiving. Normally a two-day event, in 2012 it expanded to three days.
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Columbus, Ohio is served by several newspapers, magazines, and television and radio stations.
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America Goes Bananaz is a teenager-oriented variety show presented by Michael Young and Randy Hamilton. It premiered locally on QUBE's C-1 channel in 1977, with the title Columbus Goes Bananaz. The series was renamed America Goes Bananaz in preparation for a move to then-upcoming youth-oriented national network Nickelodeon; all episodes aired from January 19, 1979, onward used this title.