The last of earth left to discover

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mckelvie:

catherina-rose:

YOUNG AVENGERS #6
KIERON GILLEN (W) • KATE BROWN (A) Cover by JAMIE MCKELVIE Wolverine Costume Variant By Mike Del Mundo • Ever wonder what the super hero equivalent of a terrible soul-sucking talent-wasting temp job is? You haven’t? Oh go on. Actually, don’t. We’ve done it for you and written a story about it. This one. • Wonder what Tommy (aka Speed) has been up to? Discover herein. • Wonder why mutant David Alleyne (aka Prodigy) hasn’t been even in the background in any one of the eight thousand X-books? Discover that herein too. • Existential horror turns cosmic horror as something emerges from the shadows of the past. It seems the Young Avengers have yet one more thing to worry about. 32 PGS./Rated T+ …$2.99
Aw yes, Speed is back! I’m so happy about this. 

Looks like the solicits for #6 are out! And there’s our guest artist, Kate Brown!

mckelvie:

catherina-rose:

YOUNG AVENGERS #6

KIERON GILLEN (W) • KATE BROWN (A) Cover by JAMIE MCKELVIE Wolverine Costume Variant By Mike Del Mundo • Ever wonder what the super hero equivalent of a terrible soul-sucking talent-wasting temp job is? You haven’t? Oh go on. Actually, don’t. We’ve done it for you and written a story about it. This one. • Wonder what Tommy (aka Speed) has been up to? Discover herein. • Wonder why mutant David Alleyne (aka Prodigy) hasn’t been even in the background in any one of the eight thousand X-books? Discover that herein too. • Existential horror turns cosmic horror as something emerges from the shadows of the past. It seems the Young Avengers have yet one more thing to worry about. 32 PGS./Rated T+ …$2.99

Aw yes, Speed is back! I’m so happy about this. 

Looks like the solicits for #6 are out! And there’s our guest artist, Kate Brown!

YOUNG AVENGERS 4 - *that* double page spread

mckelvie:

By now lots of you have read YA #4, which came out this week, and there’s been a lot of talk about the double page spread on pages 2 and 3. So I thought I’d use that to talk a little about the collaboration process of YA. Kieron mentions in the AR segment for the book that when you make comics as a team you’re really trying to pretend to be one person making the whole thing. That’s why we believe the best comics come out of close collaboration, and not just a production line. Spoilers after the cut.

Read More

See http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1714915
mckelvie:

kierongillen:

idontlikemyhairneat:

marlo-noni:

kateoplis:

Jarmusch’s vampire film (!), Only Lovers Left Alive, added to Cannes’ competition lineup. 

Well, this is a hell of a thing.

WHAT

I KNOW!?!

hang on is this a real thing that exists in reality for real

See http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1714915

mckelvie:

kierongillen:

idontlikemyhairneat:

marlo-noni:

kateoplis:

Jarmusch’s vampire film (!), Only Lovers Left Alive, added to Cannes’ competition lineup. 

Well, this is a hell of a thing.

WHAT

I KNOW!?!

hang on is this a real thing that exists in reality for real

Unlettered page from Young Avengers vol. 2 #3 by Kieron Gillen and Jamie McKelvie.  May 2013.

Unlettered page from Young Avengers vol. 2 #3 by Kieron Gillen and Jamie McKelvie.  May 2013.

vejigante:

desidesidesi:

xombiedirge:

The Avengers Acura TL by Humberto Ramos / Twitter

Full video walk-around HERE.

HOLY FUCKING SHIT. 

Sweet!

westcoastavengers:

Marvel Girls by Simone Bianchi

Clockwise from top: Jean Grey (as Phoenix), Emma Frost, Storm, Psylocke, Elektra, and Medusa.

westcoastavengers:

Marvel Girls by Simone Bianchi

Clockwise from top: Jean Grey (as Phoenix), Emma Frost, Storm, Psylocke, Elektra, and Medusa.

lokikingofasgard:

inspired-by-hiddles:

 Tom Hiddleston reports on visiting Guinea for UNICEF
by Frances Wasem / 7 March 2013 
Earlier this year, Tom Hiddleston was asked to join UNICEF UK in Guinea, in West Africa. The actor travelled across the country by car, visiting UNICEF projects, learning about their work for children on the ground. Tom then wrote blogs and posted on Twitter (as far as the limited internet allowed) in an effort to highlight the plight of children in Guinea. Now back in London, Tom has written a retrospective account, exclusively for Bazaar, about his extraordinary trip and life changing experienceDuring my first two days, I experienced joy and sadness in equal measure. I was delighted, enlightened, and confused. The UNICEF team in Guinea gave me the most comprehensive introduction to their programmes for children, and a deeply complex picture of life began to emerge.CLICK HERE TO SEE PHOTOGRAPHS FROM TOM HIDDLESTON’S UNICEF TRIP
I immediately got a real sense of one of the biggest challenges that children face in the country: hunger and malnutrition. When a baby doesn’t receive the right nutrients in the first thousand days of life, it can irreversibly ‘stunt’ their physical and emotional development. They will grow up unable to realise their full potential, so that even if hunger doesn’t take their life, it will almost certainly take away their future.One of the first places we visited was the National Institute of Child Health and Nutrition (INSE) in the Donka Hospital in Conakry. Here I met some of Guinea’s most experienced doctors and child-care specialists, in whose charge are some of the most severely malnourished children. Seeing these children immediately tempered any surges of adventurous adrenalin that I’d felt about travelling in West Africa; I was simply overwhelmed by seeing so many small infants in such great need.One small ward, about the size of a single room, housed at least twenty children, some of whom had slim chances of survival. Their arms and legs were indescribably thin, their cheeks tear-stained, their skin a harrowing, slate-grey. Most shocking to me was the speed and urgency of their breathing, asleep or awake, it was uniformly unsettled and uneven. When you see a child struggling so hard simply to breathe, it makes your heart hurt. Most if not all had been admitted because of malnutrition, or a condition inherited from their mother’s malnutrition.The doctors are doing everything they can, but they need more and better equipment, as well as greater capacity. In the ward of twenty children, there was one life-support machine supplying oxygen. Just one.It was tough to get to sleep that night, remembering the sight of those children, but I had come expecting the week to be tough one, full of mixed emotions.The next morning heralded an early start: a drive along the one main motorway in Guinea to the remote village of Loppe, to see UNICEF’s sanitation work, to meet the families who live there and use local wells and latrines. Separating water sources is vital to keep water wells clean and to protect them from run-off from the land in the rainy season, which is contaminated by animal waste.This basic hygiene and good sanitation raises the standard of general health, and protects mothers and children from passing on disease. If there’s no bar of soap, a bucket of ash will do the trick. This is particularly crucial for children suffering from malnutrition. Diarrhoea, caused by drinking dirty water or bad sanitation, is one of the biggest killers of children. Even if they live, it can leave their weak, young bodies struggling for survival.What happened next was one of the most uplifting experiences of my journey. I was invited into the home of a young family with one boy and two girls. They lived in a thatched roofed circular hut, under which was one singular room. Inside was a bed, which also served as bench and table. I compliment the mother and father on how well their children look, how strong they seem. Her elder daughter reminds me of my niece.My travelling companion asked the mum if she was able to breastfeed her children. “Yes,” she says, “for six months, each of them”. How did you know to do that? I ask. “I walked to the centre de santé,” she replies, “when I was pregnant. They told me I should breastfeed. Also I heard it on the radio”. ‘That’s fantastic’, I say. I’d been alarmed how few women knew that breastfeeding for the first six months is extremely important for nutrition and to prevent malnutrition.I then tell the father I’ve been looking at the village’s new water hygiene programme. He replies that it’s very important. He always tells his son he must wash his hands before eating.I found it heartening and stirring to talk to a family, for whom life is hard, but who are making the best of things. It was so encouraging to know that messages about nutrition and hygiene were getting through.One of the last stops we made on the journey across Guinea was also a happy one. At a school in Kouroussa – L’École Primaire Layiya – we were introduced to several classes of the best-behaved, attentive and sweet children I’d seen since I’d arrived. A little girl, in a red-checked school dress and braids in her hair, was so shy and smiley that she couldn’t even tell me her name. After the heart-breaking sight of the tiny babies in the Donka Hospital, seeing these children happy, healthy and so keen to learn left me feeling optimistic that children in Guinea (with the help of UNICEF) can grow up to realise their full potential.Now that I am back to the hustle and bustle of London, I miss the warmth and people of West Africa and even wrap myself in a mosquito net each night. The week that I spent in Guinea was truly life changing. There, I made certain connections about the way the world works, and all the ways it doesn’t work: connections that I’ve been in search of for many years. Before my trip, child malnutrition, global hunger, water paucity, and poverty had been important issues but academic in my mind. Now, they are real, present and urgent.I learned in Guinea that we are all responsible for the state of our world, particularly for the most disadvantaged women and children in it, struggling to survive simply because they do not have enough to eat. All I can do now is help make people aware of what is happening, of what they are doing. Help me spread the word.UNICEF UK is part of the Enough Food for Everyone IF campaign, a great movement of individuals and organisations united to tackle global hunger in 2013. Please visit www.unicef.org.uk to find out more.CLICK HERE TO SEE PHOTOGRAPHS FROM TOM HIDDLESTON’S UNICEF TRIP
 Source: http://www.harpersbazaar.co.uk/going-out/who-what-where/unicef-supporter-tom-hiddleston-on-the-plight-of-children-in-guinea

lokikingofasgard:

inspired-by-hiddles:

 Tom Hiddleston reports on visiting Guinea for UNICEF

by Frances Wasem / 7 March 2013 

Earlier this year, Tom Hiddleston was asked to join UNICEF UK in Guinea, in West Africa. The actor travelled across the country by car, visiting UNICEF projects, learning about their work for children on the ground. Tom then wrote blogs and posted on Twitter (as far as the limited internet allowed) in an effort to highlight the plight of children in Guinea. Now back in London, Tom has written a retrospective account, exclusively for Bazaar, about his extraordinary trip and life changing experience


During my first two days, I experienced joy and sadness in equal measure. I was delighted, enlightened, and confused. The UNICEF team in Guinea gave me the most comprehensive introduction to their programmes for children, and a deeply complex picture of life began to emerge.

CLICK HERE TO SEE PHOTOGRAPHS FROM TOM HIDDLESTON’S UNICEF TRIP


I immediately got a real sense of one of the biggest challenges that children face in the country: hunger and malnutrition. When a baby doesn’t receive the right nutrients in the first thousand days of life, it can irreversibly ‘stunt’ their physical and emotional development. They will grow up unable to realise their full potential, so that even if hunger doesn’t take their life, it will almost certainly take away their future.

One of the first places we visited was the National Institute of Child Health and Nutrition (INSE) in the Donka Hospital in Conakry. Here I met some of Guinea’s most experienced doctors and child-care specialists, in whose charge are some of the most severely malnourished children. Seeing these children immediately tempered any surges of adventurous adrenalin that I’d felt about travelling in West Africa; I was simply overwhelmed by seeing so many small infants in such great need.

One small ward, about the size of a single room, housed at least twenty children, some of whom had slim chances of survival. Their arms and legs were indescribably thin, their cheeks tear-stained, their skin a harrowing, slate-grey. Most shocking to me was the speed and urgency of their breathing, asleep or awake, it was uniformly unsettled and uneven. When you see a child struggling so hard simply to breathe, it makes your heart hurt. Most if not all had been admitted because of malnutrition, or a condition inherited from their mother’s malnutrition.

The doctors are doing everything they can, but they need more and better equipment, as well as greater capacity. In the ward of twenty children, there was one life-support machine supplying oxygen. Just one.

It was tough to get to sleep that night, remembering the sight of those children, but I had come expecting the week to be tough one, full of mixed emotions.

The next morning heralded an early start: a drive along the one main motorway in Guinea to the remote village of Loppe, to see UNICEF’s sanitation work, to meet the families who live there and use local wells and latrines. Separating water sources is vital to keep water wells clean and to protect them from run-off from the land in the rainy season, which is contaminated by animal waste.

This basic hygiene and good sanitation raises the standard of general health, and protects mothers and children from passing on disease. If there’s no bar of soap, a bucket of ash will do the trick. This is particularly crucial for children suffering from malnutrition. Diarrhoea, caused by drinking dirty water or bad sanitation, is one of the biggest killers of children. Even if they live, it can leave their weak, young bodies struggling for survival.

What happened next was one of the most uplifting experiences of my journey. I was invited into the home of a young family with one boy and two girls. They lived in a thatched roofed circular hut, under which was one singular room. Inside was a bed, which also served as bench and table. I compliment the mother and father on how well their children look, how strong they seem. Her elder daughter reminds me of my niece.

My travelling companion asked the mum if she was able to breastfeed her children. “Yes,” she says, “for six months, each of them”. How did you know to do that? I ask. “I walked to the centre de santé,” she replies, “when I was pregnant. They told me I should breastfeed. Also I heard it on the radio”. ‘That’s fantastic’, I say. I’d been alarmed how few women knew that breastfeeding for the first six months is extremely important for nutrition and to prevent malnutrition.

I then tell the father I’ve been looking at the village’s new water hygiene programme. He replies that it’s very important. He always tells his son he must wash his hands before eating.

I found it heartening and stirring to talk to a family, for whom life is hard, but who are making the best of things. It was so encouraging to know that messages about nutrition and hygiene were getting through.

One of the last stops we made on the journey across Guinea was also a happy one. At a school in Kouroussa – L’École Primaire Layiya – we were introduced to several classes of the best-behaved, attentive and sweet children I’d seen since I’d arrived. A little girl, in a red-checked school dress and braids in her hair, was so shy and smiley that she couldn’t even tell me her name. After the heart-breaking sight of the tiny babies in the Donka Hospital, seeing these children happy, healthy and so keen to learn left me feeling optimistic that children in Guinea (with the help of UNICEF) can grow up to realise their full potential.

Now that I am back to the hustle and bustle of London, I miss the warmth and people of West Africa and even wrap myself in a mosquito net each night. The week that I spent in Guinea was truly life changing. There, I made certain connections about the way the world works, and all the ways it doesn’t work: connections that I’ve been in search of for many years. Before my trip, child malnutrition, global hunger, water paucity, and poverty had been important issues but academic in my mind. Now, they are real, present and urgent.

I learned in Guinea that we are all responsible for the state of our world, particularly for the most disadvantaged women and children in it, struggling to survive simply because they do not have enough to eat. All I can do now is help make people aware of what is happening, of what they are doing. Help me spread the word.

UNICEF UK is part of the Enough Food for Everyone IF campaign, a great movement of individuals and organisations united to tackle global hunger in 2013. Please visit www.unicef.org.uk to find out more.

CLICK HERE TO SEE PHOTOGRAPHS FROM TOM HIDDLESTON’S UNICEF TRIP

 Source: http://www.harpersbazaar.co.uk/going-out/who-what-where/unicef-supporter-tom-hiddleston-on-the-plight-of-children-in-guinea

May 9
agentmlovestacos:

I just saw this in my email and that Brian was going to post it. If he didn’t, I would have. Good LORD, I just can’t handle the All-New X-Men team and everything they’re doing. Y’all better be readin’ that book.
via brianmichaelbendis:

Good Morning! EXCLUSIVE! cover pencils to All-new X-Men 13!!  
you guys have been so nice about all new X-Men and the brand-new issue that came out today that I asked for special permission to post this.  because I think this is stuart immonen at his very best.  
 and this image should get you X nerds heads a’spinning :-)

agentmlovestacos:

I just saw this in my email and that Brian was going to post it. If he didn’t, I would have. Good LORD, I just can’t handle the All-New X-Men team and everything they’re doing. Y’all better be readin’ that book.

via brianmichaelbendis:

Good Morning! EXCLUSIVE! cover pencils to All-new X-Men 13!!  

you guys have been so nice about all new X-Men and the brand-new issue that came out today that I asked for special permission to post this.  because I think this is stuart immonen at his very best.  

 and this image should get you X nerds heads a’spinning :-)

May 9
art by Adam Hughes

art by Adam Hughes

May 8
brianmichaelbendis:

i did see this cover as a young man and made it so :)

brianmichaelbendis:

i did see this cover as a young man and made it so :)

May 8
fairestcat:

Sif: You will drive us to Broxton.Cabbie: Where the hell is that? Jersey?Sif: Oklahoma.Cabbie: You’re crazy! That’s, like, 2,000 miles from here.Sif: Is that far?Cabbie: Far as I’m concerned, there’s no help for anybody wants to drive, walk or fly to Oklahoma, lady.Sif: So you will not help us?Svip: He’s of no use. Kill him.Sif: Wait— My good man. Do you have…a phone?Cabbie: If I say “yes,” do I get to live? — From Journey Into Mystery #649 by Kathryn Immonen, art by Valerio Schiti.  April 2013.

fairestcat:

Sif: You will drive us to Broxton.
Cabbie: Where the hell is that? Jersey?
Sif: Oklahoma.
Cabbie: You’re crazy! That’s, like, 2,000 miles from here.
Sif: Is that far?
Cabbie: Far as I’m concerned, there’s no help for anybody wants to drive, walk or fly to Oklahoma, lady.
Sif: So you will not help us?
Svip: He’s of no use. Kill him.
Sif: Wait— My good man. Do you have…a phone?
Cabbie: If I say “yes,” do I get to live?

— From Journey Into Mystery #649 by Kathryn Immonen, art by Valerio Schiti.  April 2013.

May 7

Bullseye: Well, look at you.

Daken: Yes, do.  Don’t worry. I won’t tell anyone you want to tap my… assets.

By Guiseppe Camuncoli and (probably) Matt Fraction.

(Source: )

May 7

Electra Assasin by Bill Sienkiewicz.

Electra: And I wait.


Electra Assasin by Bill Sienkiewicz.

Electra: And I wait.

(Source: technochaun)

May 7
brianmichaelbendis:

 

Neal Adams by Neal Adams.

brianmichaelbendis:

 

Neal Adams by Neal Adams.

May 6
greyusurper:

Phyla-Vell - June 2012 Sketch-a-Day 05by *JeremiahLambert

greyusurper:

Phyla-Vell - June 2012 Sketch-a-Day 05by *JeremiahLambert