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CONTEST
Lantern Power Ring Giveaway

By Shaun Hatton - December 21st, 2009

Lantern Power Ring Giveaway

Over a month ago, we teased about an upcoming contest. It took a while to get to, but now it’s finally here. If you’re a fan of comics, then you might be familiar with DC’s Blackest Night event. As part of the promotion for it, the comics giant offered retailers the opportunity to give away different-coloured lantern power rings with select comics throughout the month of November.

Our friends at Sidekick Comics have given us a full set of these awesome rings to give away to one lucky winner of this contest. The rings are solidly constructed and are sized for adult fingers, unlike previous promotional Green Lantern rings. These rings all feature great metallic finishes and, since they come in every colour of the rainbow, are great for accessorizing.

All you need to do if you want to enter this contest is: A) have a Canadian (UPDATE: Or US) mailing address and B) leave a comment on this post with the name of your favourite comic book hero in it. “Hero” in this context can be a fictional character, an artist, writer, or even creator.

The contest closes January 1, 2010. We’ll draw a winner at random* when we wake up that day. Keep in mind due to festivities, this might not be until rather late in the day. We’ll contact the winner at the email address used to leave the comment for some follow-up information, so be sure to use a real one.

UPDATE: Check out the WINNER’S ANNOUNCEMENT to see who won!

*If, however, the winning comment we draw has Rob Liefeld listed as a comic hero, we will disqualify that entrant from this and all future contests.
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    10 responses so far:
  2. By James D.
    Posted on Dec 22, 2009

    Batman. Nuff’ said.

  3. Posted on Dec 22, 2009

    To be honest GL has been a longtime fav but in honour of straying from my norm. I’m gonna pick a Marvel character.

    Hulk.

    Planet/World War Hulk is probably one of the most favourite things I’ve ever read. I still get a little misty-eyed at the end of PH. Only other comic I can think of to consistently ‘get to me’ is Death of Superman.

  4. By JDavis
    Posted on Dec 23, 2009

    That one’s hard to pin down for me. Growing up, I would have instantly answered “Spider-Man!” …but I don’t think that back then I would have considered the TMNT, who I was a much bigger fan of, to be comic characters. (I was mainly a fan of the cartoon back then). In more recent years I might say Deadpool, simply because his craziness always keeps things entertaining.

    As far as picking a “Hero” from the industry, I think Stan Lee would be the obvious choice.

    Since this is a contest for DC-related items, I’ll take a minute to consider heroes from the DC universe(s). To be honest, most of my exposure to DC comics have been the more stand-alone/what-if stories: Red Son, Kingdom Come, Dark Knight Returns, Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow, Secret Identity, etc.

    However, I did grow up in the 90’s, with the increasingly terrible 80’s/90’s Batman movies, the awesome Batman/Superman/Batman Beyond/Justice League animated universe, and I even used to watch reruns of the 60’s Batman… So I’m somewhat predisposed to say “Batman” on the DC side.

    So, coming down to the wire and having to say just one… I’ll go with Stan Lee.

  5. By Amanda
    Posted on Dec 23, 2009

    Green Lantern rules!

  6. Posted on Dec 23, 2009

    In my heart of hearts, my #1 comic book hero right now has to be Toronto’s own Bryan Lee O’Malley. I’m a late-comer to the Scott Pilgrim party, but as a writer he’s an inspiration. A shining example that comics don’t all have to be about men in tights. A close runner up for the same reason would be Gene Luen Yang.

  7. Posted on Dec 24, 2009

    main stream choice? Deadpool.

    you know him you love him, he’s the perfect blend of smart ass and bad ass.

    outside of that?

    Marko Djurdjevic.

    I mean damn… have you not seen that man’s work? that man single handedly is ringing in the new era of the comics industry and totally revolutionizing and setting the bar so damned high that many artists that have been working for decades before him are throwing in the gauntlet. check this out (god save the person on dial up that clicks this:) http://www.conceptart.org/forums/showthread.php?t=137859

    Seriously, as a comic lover, and as an artist, marko is not only a hero, but a true inspiration.

  8. By EdEN
    Posted on Dec 29, 2009

    Mike Wieringo. The energy he put into drawing really showed in the art page. Impulse, Spiderman, Fantastic Four and too many others to mention wouldn’t be the same without his pencil. Tellos was also a nice surprise. I’ve looking for the hardcover forever but it seems it was only printed in reaaaaaaaaaaally small amounts.

  9. By Tony
    Posted on Dec 29, 2009

    Superhero: Captain America
    Other: John Constantine

    I’d give Constantine the overall nod. I love Hellblazer.

    Writer wise I like Andy Diggle a lot. He even responded to my e-mail haha.

  10. Posted on Dec 29, 2009

    Vote: Mr. Spider Jerusalem - A hero in the age of information flows.

    Authored by Warrent Ellis, the Transmetropolitan series (1997-2002) from Vertigo featured Raoul Duke (Hunter S. Thompson) in the distant Future. Spider Jerouselem, the Gonzo journalist in question, used live blogging and no-nonsense fisticuffs to rectify mass injustice and hypocrisy.

    Who else can f*** people up with twitter and some amphetamines?

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transmetropolitan

  11. By Justin
    Posted on Dec 31, 2009

    Do I get disqualified if I list more than one name? This is a really hard choice.

    Wallace Wells, of Brian Lee O’Malley’s Scott Pilgrim, is someone who I try to model my life after. Five volumes later and I’m still stuck on the step where I get to share my bed with a straight man.

    As far as serious answers go, I think I’m gonna have to say Superman. Many seem to feel that he’s become to symbolic of “truth, justice, and the American Way” to be relatable as a character, yet I’ve always been fascinated by the very way in which Superman is situated as a quintisentially “American” hero, tirelessy fighting to protect the American populace’s culture and way of life, and how that contrasts with his alien origins. I wonder how someone whose status as an outsider is so ingrained in him as to literally be the source of his powers is even able to come to love and understand something so foreign that they’ll conciously decide that, “yes, I will dedicate my life to protecting it.” I’m reminded of the one bit in Grant Morrison’s All-Star Superman where Superman welcomes Lois Lane into the Fortress of Solitude and tries to share with her all these heretofore personal aspects of his life and she is so alarmed by how alien it all is that her only response is to attempt to kill him. And she’s in love with the man! And what of his alter-ego, Clark Kent? It’s essentially an alien’s attempt to pass for human, adopting what he percieves to be essential qualities of humanity. And what are those? More than mild-mannered, Clark Kent is hesitant, doubting, and the most utterly middle-class weakling ever invented.

    For a hero who is supposed to be so “pure” (and to some, even boring), and who fights for truth and justice in those black and white terms, there’s a lot of greyness written into his character and about the reconciliations the self and one’s status as an outsider, and how predominant cultures respond to minorities.

    Also, Superman is a dick. So there’s that, too.

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