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Rog-2000 (pronounced "Rahj-two-thousand", and sometimes spelled "ROG 2000") is a fictional robot that was the first professional creation of comic book artist-writer John Byrne. Rog-2000 serves as the mascot of Byrne Robotics.
John Lindley Byrne (/ b ɜːr n /; born July 6, 1950) is a British-born American [1] comic book writer and artist of superhero comics. Since the mid-1970s, Byrne has worked on many major superheroes; with noted work on Marvel Comics 's X-Men and Fantastic Four .
The John Byrne Forum; Spanish interview with many comic book covers and additional artwork by Byrne; Lambiek Comiclopedia; The Unofficial Handbook of Marvel Comics Creators; ROG-2000 background; Byrne interview on his early career, Comic Book Artist #12, 2001; Roger Stern interview re: Byrne, Comic Book Artist #12, 2001; What A Girl Wants #7 ...
Then there's the internet age, and his infamous forum, which is Darwinian in it's selection of those who love his work ("Membership in the JBF is strictly limited to fans of the work of John Byrne.") - thanks to much banning and deleting at one point, but there's less of that now for the simple reason that there's a critical mass of Big Byrne ...
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Byrne continued his stories in the brand new Superman #1, [28] and continued with Action Comics #584, while Marv Wolfman wrote Adventures of Superman which had been retitled from the original Superman book and began with #424. [29] Byrne and Wolfman continued the changes presented in The Man of Steel in these on-going stories. Although most of ...
The series was intended to fill in the team's chronology during the early 1970s when the original X-Men comic (#67–93) was publishing only reprints of earlier issues. . According to Byrne, the series "was clearly finite, since [Giant-Size X-Men #1] was out there as an "end point" for my series, but the way I had it worked out, I could have easily done 100 issues or more before I had to send ...