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Word: supermans (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
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Usage:

...Comics had a code name for their "Bizarro Comics" project, it should have been "Faust." This deluxe, hardcover book brings together many of alterna-comix best talents to write and draw stories using the many superheroes, like Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman and Aquaman, owned by mainstream behemoth DC (owned by AOL Time Warner, the same parent company as this website.) Would there be a price to pay for playing with the big, bad money? Sure enough, a whiff of sulfur may fill your nostrils as you plunk down your...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How Much for Those Comix? | 6/29/2001 | See Source »

...expect Superman to become a potty-mouth, or Batman and Wonder Woman "get it on." Although the back cover promises "wild and uninhibited stories," reading the book feels a bit like watching precocious children play with daddy's very expensive toys while daddy watches them very closely. Ironically the results of these "adult" artists' work may well be the best all-ages fare DC has produced in a long time. As with most anthologies the quality varies, but of the nearly thirty tales a number stand out as particularly charming and memorable uses of the famed characters...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How Much for Those Comix? | 6/29/2001 | See Source »

...numbers, the biggest, baddest, thrilling-est roller coaster in North America is "Superman: The Escape" at Six Flags Magic Mountain - 415 feet high with a 328-foot drop and cars that travel as close as roller coasters get to a speeding bullet: 100 miles per hour. Behemoths like that get built for a reason - that's how park-goers want it, and a real headliner roller coaster, though it may take $20 million to build, can make a park into a financial success by drawing beer-and-bravado-laced teens from miles around...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The New Roller Coasters: Thrills, Chills and Few Spills | 6/26/2001 | See Source »

Through the wall? Yes, indeed. A whole new generation of surveillance technology has been developed since Kyllo was busted. Some of these new devices are already turning up at airports, prisons, border crossings and crime scenes. And while none of them is quite up to the standards of, say, Superman, they can see through clothing and peer into private homes well enough to raise thorny privacy issues for all of us. Among the leading contenders...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: X-Ray Vision | 6/25/2001 | See Source »

...show is hot, every new one a sure hit, and every network is No. 1. The WB? No. 1 in teens! NBC? No. 1 in the rich! Through the magic of statistics, ABC is No. 1 overall--and CBS is too! Today's buzz: Smallville, the WB's teen-Superman series; on ABC, Jason Alexander's sitcom Bob Patterson and college-girl-turned-spy thriller Alias, which ABC hypes as a combination of Dark Angel and the cure for cancer. "Hype is just an acronym," Alexander tells the ad buyers. "It stands for Hope You Purchase Everything...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: James Poniewozik's Journal: Up Close At The Upfronts | 5/28/2001 | See Source »

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