 My work here on YouTube is supported by viewers. Please take a look at the link in the description below and visit my page at 50th Street where you can become a sponsor. I'm not done talking about she who must be obeyed. In my recent review of the H writer Haggard book I mentioned that I was familiar with the story of she because I had seen comics adaptations when I was younger and that's what I'm gonna tell you about now. The first was a classics comics adaptation by Marvel which appeared in 1977 right about the time that I first started buying and collecting comics. It's a faithful adaptation of the novel, but it's somewhat of a hack job and unremarkable and if not for this spectacular cover art, it would probably be forgotten entirely. But then in 1979 I found this copy of a Warren magazine called 1984 on the shelves of a local drugstore. It is a very much adult comics magazine. It's kind of the Warren magazine's answer to heavy metal, I guess, and I had no business buying this at the age of 13. There is some nudity in the stuff that I'm about to show you, but believe me, this is the tamest stuff in this book. Apparently there was an ongoing series in this magazine called Rex Havoc and the ass-kickers of the Fantastic. I've always loved that name and look at this tremendous team logo of theirs. Anyway, the people at Warren took this world-hopping adventure team of theirs and shoehorned the story of Haggard's she into one of their adventures and made some really interesting changes to the story to accommodate the existing series. For one thing she is now known as she who must be okay and her hidden kingdom in darkest Africa is somewhat of an open secret. It starts with a millionaire businessman who hires the ass-kickers to find this place and as it turns out, the lost kingdom of core is operating somewhat of a tourist trap and many of the citizens there are eager to overthrow she who must be okay. One of their motivations being the underground sweatshops she is operating to mass-produce tourist merchandise for Shiko. Of course when she who must be okay meets Rex, he is so good-looking and his name is Rex, which means King, that she immediately decides that he must be her long-lost calicoities. And then the thing that I remembered most clearly all these years was that there was a more complex and interesting ending. That they tacked on to this parody and until I read the original novel a few months ago I had always wondered if the Rex Havoc ending was reflected in the original novel and it is not. Re-reading this magazine now as an adult, decades later, I find it much more entertaining and I understand the humor much better. If any of my viewers would like to read this, let me know and I'll send you these scans. Thank you for watching. Please subscribe to my channel and please be sure to press that thumbs up button. That's how videos get recommended and seen here on YouTube. And please take a look at the link in the description below and go to my 50th Street page where you can become a sponsor.