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Blackhawk Panel, Part 2
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"ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED 9/8/00
Hello. We're serializing a convention transcript and this is the second of two parts. It's the year 1999 and we're at the
Comic-Con International in San Diego. The masses are down in the main hall, squandering their shekels on vintage funnybooks. The
intelligentsia is up here, listening to a dialogue with two giants of the comic book field. The overweight Jewish kid is between them,
directing the discussion traffic.
On my left is Chuck Cuidera, who was described in Part One by the great Will Eisner as the man who made Blackhawk succeed.
On my right is the great Will Eisner.
We pause to thank Jon B. Knutson for the splendid transcription job. Then the talk resumes, as we sneak up on the topic of how
one of comics' all-time great features, Blackhawk, came to be...
M.E.: What was your arrangement with Quality Comics?
CUIDERA: Oh, "Busy" Arnold was the publisher. He saw some of my stuff, I think. Will, you were down south hunting
when I did the first story, weren't you?
EISNER: Actually, Dick French wrote the story. From him, you got the scripts.
CUIDERA: He didn't write the first one, did he?
EISNER: Bob Powell did. Actually, before you did that, Dave Berg was doing a thing called Death Patrol,
remember?
CUIDERA: Right.
EISNER: And that led to Arnold seeing Death Patrol and saying, "I'd like another feature like that." Arnold kept
doing that kind of stuff.
M.E.: At this point, they had a new title called Military Comics, and you were engaged to create features for it.
EISNER: That's right.
CUIDERA: Well, don't forget. Most of his competitors were doing military stuff because we were at war.
M.E.: Now, had anybody in the shop actually served in the military?
EISNER: Nobody.
CUIDERA: "
....
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