Show notes
When the alien secession movement runs up against a civil authority that’s anything but, crusading reporter Spider Jerusalem just has to be there! Plus, we celebrate the 100th episode of Vertiguys, Rob Gordon style. Happy holidays, everyone, and we’ll see you next year!http://media.blubrry.com/vertiguys/content.blubrry.com/vertiguys/100_Transmetropolitan_2-3_edit_2.mp3 Show Notes2:39 – I might have accidentally quoted Love Actually there.4:25 – As we discussed in our last Transmetropolitan episode, Andre Ricciardi is a friend of Darick Robertson who served as the model for Spider Jerusalem.5:35 – Helix lasted only from 1996 to 1998 and covered only the first 12 issues of Transmetropolitan. It did have some reason for existing – DC courted a number of science fiction and fantasy authors to collaborate in making the imprint a success, but most of its titles that weren’t cancelled ended up under the Vertigo umbrella anyway.9:43 – Spider has a line here: “You think professional people are afraid of guns? Do you?” This can be read simply as Spider bragging about his own fearless pursuit of the Truth, or the professionals he’s referring to could be the police, but we also thought it might imply that guns are much more commonplace, and facing them endemic to many more professions, in this future.11:02 – Destructo Vermin Gobsmack, a.k.a. Martin Peters, a.k.a. Patrick McDonell, a punk rocker turned music manager turned real estate developer who Constantine remembers from his Mucous Membrane days, turned up in Hellblazer Annual #1 and again in Hellblazer #33, “Sundays are Different”.51:28 – Sadly, we are not on Stitcher, though that’s coming soon. The real reason Sean tried to install Stitcher on our mother’s cellphone was so she could listen to the Washington Post’s Presidential podcast.53:17 – “Nothing clean” is a reference to The Terminator, although I don’t know why Sean was doing Boris Karloff’s Frankenstein voice instead of Arnold Schwarzenegger.

