Eddie deAngelini
View articlesEddie deAngelini is a long time comic book fan and collector. He is the writer and artist of the internet comic strip Collectors, which is loosely based on his own life, marriage and comic collecting obsession. His love of comics began at a young age and his claim to fame is owning every issue of Amazing Spider-Man. He currently lives in Los Angeles with his wife Kristen, where they plan together for the inevitable zombie apocalypse.
You might be interested in …
Collectors Punchline Contest Winners
Congrats to Jose Antonio Rivera for winning the Collectors Punchline Contest! Thank you to everyone who gave it a go. It was a tough choice between a final four, so we’ve got three runners up. […]
6 Comments
Leave a Reply
Social
Recent Comments
- Hornacek on Panel of the Day #1549 (Splash Page Sunday!): “@Evan Berry: As a Canadian, I get most of my Canadian history from Heritage Minutes, which are a series of…” May 7, 17:05
- Evan Berry on Panel of the Day #1549 (Splash Page Sunday!): “@hornacek — Thank you for sharing that article. I’ve not seen Oppenheimer, and, at the risk of sounding uncultured or…” May 7, 15:39
- Hornacek on Panel of the Day #1549 (Splash Page Sunday!): “@Evan Berry: Back in 1984, it was rare. Now it’s hip and cool to mention Canada. I remember at the…” May 7, 15:15
- Evan Berry on Panel of the Day #1549 (Splash Page Sunday!): “@hornacek — I was going to say that I wondered if the scene was improvised. I thought that may have…” May 7, 15:04
- Hornacek on Panel of the Day #1549 (Splash Page Sunday!): “@Evan Berry: According to IMDB Trivia, “When Louis Tully mingles with his party guests (commenting on the price of the…” May 7, 14:25
- Evan Berry on Panel of the Day #1549 (Splash Page Sunday!): “@hornacek – I wonder if the fact that Rick Moranis is from Toronto has anything to do with that line…” May 7, 12:07
- Hornacek on Panel of the Day #1549 (Splash Page Sunday!): “I also saw Ghostbusters in the theater, but I missed most of the dialogue of the last third of the…” May 6, 14:54
- Evan Berry on Panel of the Day #1549 (Splash Page Sunday!): “@hornacek — I think that’s a reasonable assumption to make. When I was little (Ghostbusters came out when I was…” May 6, 14:41
- Hornacek on Panel of the Day #1549 (Splash Page Sunday!): “@Evan Berry: For many years I assumed that Stay Puft was a real marshmallow brand, and the Stay Puft Marshmallow…” May 6, 13:59
- Evan Berry on Panel of the Day #1549 (Splash Page Sunday!): “I do appreciate the “Stay Puff” [sic] marshmallows in the grocery cart.” May 6, 11:49
Still loving the Strip, Eddie. Great stuff. As a hardcore Spidey-Aholic, I’m just lucky that I’ve got the best wife ever. She understands my addiction, and supports it 110%. Granted she’s a kid just like me, she’s a hardcore Video Gamer, comic reader, collector, and a Heavy Metal/Hard Rocker girl, and we have been together over 25 years now… so like most of my friends say, she’s a definite keeper…and I’m never letting her go. B-) Keep Up the strips, and I’ll order the book from ya when you get enough to go to print!!!
Keep On Thwipin’!!!
Sam
Thanks for the input, Dan. In my mind, I see Collectors growing beyond an overused gag and I’d like to translate that into the strip. Now onto the important business: which 5 issues do you have left to finish your ASM run?
I think this could go much further with its ideas. Right now a lot of the jokes derive from the perspective of an outsider looking into the comic collector’s plight and a joke deriving from that mashup. I think this is an idea that can sustain for a large number of jokes, but at some point it might take a turn into becoming almost objective scorn towards the collector and his/her obsessive nature. What if this strip took it for granted that collectors are normal people too and it took a look at the humorous nature of the collecting world itself.
As someone who is missing 5 books from a complete ASM collection, I can’t begin to tell you all of the zany situations that I’ve found myself in and the people that I’ve met. Even inside the world of collectors there are people who take it too far and I’d love to see them brought to life in a comic. What is life at a convention like for an average person who just so happens to collect comic books?
Dan, you make a very good observation. Is a comic strip just a quick gag or can it be more? Where would you like to see it go? Where would I like to see it go and how far can a simple Sunday style strip go? Hmmm…
These are funny and well made, but is the reoccurring joke going to always be about how socially dysfunctional collectors are and how their loved ones put up with them? Its working for me now but I’d love to see you stretch into new territory, especially because your production is so good.
Bit similar to a previous installment, but still funny. =)