Hey, look below , it’s FBI Agent Joe Higgins, whom we know as the
superheroic “The Shield”, star of MLJ’s Pep Comics. At least until the advent of the red-headed
devil, Archie Andrews. We've spent a lot of time talking about the Shield, about early Pep Comics covers, and about the Evil That Calls Itself Archie in past posts; check it out if you're not familiar.
Any way….
Joe’s attending a baseball game in Pep Comics #7. Why? Because baseball
players are going to start dropping like pop flies, murdered while playing, and
The Shield will go into action as a baseball player to solve the murders.
Sound familiar? It should. This story (Pep Comics #7, August 1940) is the one KirbyandLee shamelessly
aped in their “Captain America/baseball” story (Captain America Comics #7, October 1941), which I did an entire week on here at the Absorbascon. Even some of the attacks on the
players are the same (such as the exploding baseball and sniping from the
stands). Eh; who can blame? An America-themed hero having a baseball story seems almost de rigeur, and they certainly made it an entertaining story for Captain America.
Of course, this is a Shield story were talking about; although you can imitate the plot, it’s got an inimitable style. For example, rather than the somewhat prosaic
deaths in the Captain America story where the players die by blow-dart and psittacosis and desperation and other quiet stuff, the Shield story starts with:
Blowing up an expy of Joe DiMaggio.
“Now pitching: Richard
Ben Cramer.”
Well, maybe he’s not dead, just a little—
Okay, well, apparently he’s a bunch of bloody little bits
spread out over the infield (possibly the outfield, too, and, frankly, before you take another bite you'd better look closely at that chili dog you were eating when he blew up ). Can’t you just hear Mom that evening: “Hi,
honey! How did the kids enjoy the big game at the ballpark?”, while Dad pours
himself a double, Susie runs to her room crying, and little Wes Craven starts
sketching things out feverishly on a storyboard.
The next player’s death is even more gruesome. Rather than
just getting shot, he—well, see for yourself.
And the radio announcer's thinking, "I really want to say 'oh, the humanity', but now I can't".
He’s shot with a special incendiary bullet that makes him
catch fire, immolating him as a shrieking horror in front of an audience of
thousands, who are outraged that something exciting is happening at a baseball
game (“Grab your coat, Mabel; if I went in for this kind of flaming
catastrophe as entertainment, we would have gone to see NASCAR or Nicki Minaj.”).
Naturally, it's all part of some goofy protection racket. Racketeers in the comics never spread the evil around; they always focus their protection racket on something weirdly specific like MLB players. That way there's an easy pattern for the good guys to spot.
Fortunately for everyone, baseball’s an inter-state crime, meaning
FBI Agent Joe Higgins and his gal pal Betty Warren can take the
case.
Betty does the sensible, normal
thing and talks to the widows of immolated/exploded players and, using her Women’s
Intuition ™, deduces that there’s a protection racket involved.
“This sister’s
clutching the Fifth like her coin bag at a clip joint! And I thought my Mickey Mouse Meatloaf hat
would make her spill the beans! Gotta find a new whisk to cook this omelet!” Because that’s how women talked in 1940, you
know.
The Micky Mouse Meatloaf Hat may not impress the widows, but it certainly scares the racketeers. Even though a host of local authorities have already come and gone, questioning the victim's wives, the racketeers decide to attack Betty out of fear that she might come to know too much.
This is because, while criminals are on the whole a superstitious and cowardly lot, racketeers (mere grown up bullies) are just plain stupid, and utterly unaware of it. Or maybe I'm stupid and they are wisely afraid of the unspoken powers of the Mickey Mouse Meatloaf Hat. It's hard to tell; just like Grant Morrison, Golden Age writers "respect your intelligence" and don't spoon feed their readers that kind of info.
Joe Higgins, meanwhile, does what seems like the sensible
normal thing to him: turns into the
Shield and takes the place of one of the New York Yankees, hoping to get shot
at. Well, at least he picked the team that would give him the best likelihood of it.
“Sure, you can take my
place! As long as I still get paid; I still get paid the same, right?”
Naturally, there are the requisite panels of ‘the Shield
being overly awesome at baseball’.
NOW IN 3D!
But eventually someone takes a shot at Joe, which of course,
just bounces off him. Hey, he’s not
called “the Shield” for nothing.
List of suspects for shooting a New York Yankee = Brooklyn White Pages
The Shield leaps to capture the sniper with his
characteristic flair.
This demonstration of
the principle of centrifugal force brought to you by Coo Coo Cola and Meskin’s
Matzos for Passover. Wait, what-- really?
Then things start to get really, well… Shieldy (below). More on that next time.
That's oddly put. And oddly erotic. Anyway, make sure you hamper those clothes, or the Yankees'll send you a bill for the dry cleaning.