7 Weird Facts You Didn't Know About Comic Books

7. The FBI's Long Hatred Of Comic Books

In 1951 the FBI investigated the comics industry. They took issue not only with the popular horror comics of the time, but also with crime comics. The bureau felt the lurid violence depicted in horror comics resulted in increased juvenile delinquency.

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But Hoover personally disliked crime comics because he didn't appreciate their more exciting and romanticized depiction of law enforcement agents, and in particular, of the FBI. This dislike originated as early as 1935, when Hoover criticized the Great American newspaper comic strip adventures of Dick Tracy and Secret Agent X-19.

Hoover wanted to set the record straight, so in 1936 he created his own comic strip to depict the true workings of the Bureau. It was called "War on Crime!" And it was, to be blunt, boring. Readers mostly ignored it in favor of Dick Tracy's encounters with colorful villains like Prune Face and Flat Top; "super villains" who helped to inspire the writers of Batman when they dreamed up such mainstays as the Joker and Two-Face.

Later, the Bureau's contempt of comics grew, when W.M. Gaines' Mad Magazine waged a funny book war with the FBI by satirizing their boss Hoover. The Bureau sent the publisher a memo to "firmly and severely admonish Gaines... concerning our displeasure!"

Bill Gaines responded with another Mad parody featuring "the Honorable J. Edgar Electrolux." The FBI quickly countered with yet another memo - only this time, it was an internal memo. After losing this particular war on "crime," the Bureau wrote that it was "useless to protest... to a magazine of this poor judgment and capriciousness."

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