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Geech Dingum — the star of the strip. He is a lazy, unsuccessful, accident prone mechanic at a Merle's Service Station. Merle Sisson — Geech's boss. He is the owner as well as a mechanic, and is always trying to put Geech to work. Neither Merle nor Geech are very mechanically inclined.
Geech may refer to: . Ian McGeechan (born 1946), Scottish rugby union footballer; Geech (comic strip), an American comic strip that ran from 1982 to 2003; Geech, a comic book supervillain and adversary of the X-Men, who appeared in Uncanny X-Men #451 (December 2004)
The initial series, simply entitled Body Bags, was a launch title for Dark Horse Comics' Blanc Noir line of books. Produced by Gaijin Studios in 1996, Body Bags includes a large amount of blood, violence and characters who enjoy killing and cursing, which is displayed in a number of scenes in the book that have been deemed "shocking".
Jerry Bittle (October 8, 1949 – April 9, 2003) was a cartoonist who drew the comic strips Geech and Shirley and Son. Bittle was born in Wichita, Kansas and was the son of a barber. [1] A graduate of Wichita State University in Kansas, he worked as an editorial cartoonist for the Wichita Eagle and later the Albuquerque Tribune.
Beano is a multimedia franchise with spin-off books and Christmas annuals, a website, theme park rides, games, cartoon adaptations, and a production company. The Beano is the best-selling comic magazine outside Japan, having sold over 2 billion copies since its inception, and is the world’s longest-running comic magazine, having been run on a ...
Little Golden Book Land is an animated syndicated special produced by DIC Animation City and Western Publishing Company in 1989. [1] The special stars many popular characters from the Little Golden Books, a beloved children's book series. It was possibly a pilot episode because of the theme song and credits at the beginning and end, for an ...
United Feature Syndicate, Inc. (UFS) is a large American editorial column and comic strip newspaper syndication service based in the United States and established in 1919. . Originally part of E. W. Scripps Company, it was part of United Media (along with the Newspaper Enterprise Association) from 1978 to 2011, and is now a division of Andrews McMeel Syndicat
The comic first appeared in the Marin Independent Journal, and was offered to them for free. [8] The earlier comic strips were then reprinted in three Science Stuff You Can Do [11] books, a Best of, and was the bases for two specialty books, Beakman & Jax's Bubble Book and Beakman & Jax's Microscope Book.