Showing posts with label Dandy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dandy. Show all posts
Saturday, September 5, 2015
River City History: The threat of MEDUSA
Yankee Doodle Jones would equate himself for months as a daring agent for the Allies in the early days of the war. But like his predecessor, the monster of Frankenstein, his mental stability would not last.
As war loomed closer, Yankee Doodle Jones and Dandy uncovered a specially designed unit of Fifth Columnists known as MEDUSA (Military Echelon for the Downfall of the United States of America). They fought the agents of MEDUSA for much of 1942.
Whether by the nature of his multiple bodies or as a result of Stein’s serum, Yankee Doodle Jones grew more and more paranoid about MEDUSA’s activities. He started to see Nazi agents in everything, from street crime to inside the police precincts. He became increasingly distant from Dandy as his paranoia increased, even accusing his young ally of being a Fifth Columnist himself.
Dandy would start to work less and less with his partner. Uncle Sam assigned him to a new unit alongside Georgia hero Johnny Rebel and the New York based Yankee Boy. As the Young Americans they would become a popular group working to build support for the Allied soldiers while also working as crime-fighters and attempting to uncover the masterminds behind MEDUSA. By mid-1943, Dandy would leave River City and Yankee Doodle Jones permanently to work with the Young Americans. The unit, soon joined by Nathan Hale and Canadian heroine Jetgirl would work together regularly well into their twenties and the next decade.
Jones remained in River City though, intent on rooting out MEDUSA where it originated—and everywhere else as well. The massacre of three off-duty River City police officers and their wives in early 1944 would be the last straw. His paranoia had morphed into a murderous rage that threatened everyone in the city. The city’s other heroes would have to unite to defeat the super-powered threat.
Thursday, August 20, 2015
River City History: Yankee Doodle Jones
As Andy Stein watched the new being rise and meet his father, a group of Fifth Columnists attacked the facility. Breaking in on the lab, they opened fire. The super-man leaped to the defense of his maker, but it was already too late. Albrecht and Andy Stein both took several hits from submachine gun fire. Albrecht died instantly. His son struggled to the nearest lab table where the serum that ran through the super-man’s veins rested. He drank the remainder of the formula even as he quickly bled out from his wounds.
The new man leaped into action against the traitors. He made short work of them as his bulletproof skin and super-strength made him more than a match for armed killers. He left them broken, bleeding and dying, just like the man that created him.
Andy Stein’s wounds healed quickly as the serum slowly replaced his own bloodstream. He would be the first—and last—human to survive the use of this formula (though distillations or similar formulas would give powers to Black Terror and Doc Strange).
The new creation was the sum of all his parts, but the patriotic fervor of the veterans proved his strongest trait. He declared himself a protector of the freedoms and standards of the American people. He dubbed himself Yankee Doodle after first helping Andy to his feet. When the boy introduced himself, he misheard the boy’s name as Dandy.
Yankee Doodle and Dandy would become the first super-powered agents of a mysterious American spymaster known only as Uncle Sam. He gave the new hero the last name Jones. (Dandy would also operate under the pseudonym Andrew Jones.)
The new man leaped into action against the traitors. He made short work of them as his bulletproof skin and super-strength made him more than a match for armed killers. He left them broken, bleeding and dying, just like the man that created him.
Andy Stein’s wounds healed quickly as the serum slowly replaced his own bloodstream. He would be the first—and last—human to survive the use of this formula (though distillations or similar formulas would give powers to Black Terror and Doc Strange).
The new creation was the sum of all his parts, but the patriotic fervor of the veterans proved his strongest trait. He declared himself a protector of the freedoms and standards of the American people. He dubbed himself Yankee Doodle after first helping Andy to his feet. When the boy introduced himself, he misheard the boy’s name as Dandy.
Yankee Doodle and Dandy would become the first super-powered agents of a mysterious American spymaster known only as Uncle Sam. He gave the new hero the last name Jones. (Dandy would also operate under the pseudonym Andrew Jones.)
Saturday, August 1, 2015
River City History: The legacy of Frankenstein
Frankenstein became a name synonymous with uncontrolled science in the twentieth century, but the legacy of Victor Frankenstein’s creation sat fresh in the minds of many people around the world as the Second World War raged on. Dozens of artificial beings inspired by the original creature were created over the course of that half-decade, but perhaps the strangest had his origins in River City.
Albrecht Stein is now believed to be a descendant of the Frankenstein legacy, but modern records cannot be sure if even he was aware of that knowledge when he set to work on creating an artificial man as the United States entered the war in 1941. It is known that despite his German heritage he had an unrepentant hatred for the Nazi war machine.
But perhaps that does not forgive what some still call a crime against nature.
Stein gathered three veteran military men, all crippled in battle. None of the men remained functional members of society and Stein picked them because they all exhibited suicidal tendencies. Still, his methods still seem insane to most. Instead of operating on corpses like his ancestor Victor, Stein abducted these three men to make his artificial being. (Debate still exists as to whether the three men came willingly or not.)
It took him only a matter of hours to complete the complex surgery necessary to create his artificial man. Three men died, but a super-man took his place. Stein filled his creature’s veins with another experiment of his, a serum that caused that made his ubermensch nearly indestructible as well as faster and stronger than a mere mortal.
Albrecht’s son Andrew watched the whole procedure. Unfortunately for the Steins, he did it while compromising the job assigned to him by his father. Stein’s experiments were known to the United States government, but they were also known to Fifth Columnists within the U.S. ranks.
That would, in the end, cost numerous American lives.
Albrecht Stein is now believed to be a descendant of the Frankenstein legacy, but modern records cannot be sure if even he was aware of that knowledge when he set to work on creating an artificial man as the United States entered the war in 1941. It is known that despite his German heritage he had an unrepentant hatred for the Nazi war machine.
But perhaps that does not forgive what some still call a crime against nature.
Stein gathered three veteran military men, all crippled in battle. None of the men remained functional members of society and Stein picked them because they all exhibited suicidal tendencies. Still, his methods still seem insane to most. Instead of operating on corpses like his ancestor Victor, Stein abducted these three men to make his artificial being. (Debate still exists as to whether the three men came willingly or not.)
It took him only a matter of hours to complete the complex surgery necessary to create his artificial man. Three men died, but a super-man took his place. Stein filled his creature’s veins with another experiment of his, a serum that caused that made his ubermensch nearly indestructible as well as faster and stronger than a mere mortal.
Albrecht’s son Andrew watched the whole procedure. Unfortunately for the Steins, he did it while compromising the job assigned to him by his father. Stein’s experiments were known to the United States government, but they were also known to Fifth Columnists within the U.S. ranks.
That would, in the end, cost numerous American lives.
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