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6 answers

This is along the lines of Kaos's answer, and I wish I could remember how long ago I saw it, but there was a story in which a new young kid comes to town, and when he's around, everybody stops fighting with one another (you know, Moose stops pounding on Reggie, etc.). The kid was named "Gabriel," and the question at the end of the story was along the lines of "why do we have to wait around for some semi-mystical kid to come along before we start acting nice to each other?" (So I guess it was anti-religious, in some sense, depending on your view.)

And then there was a brief foray into postmodernism, where the artists portrayed themselves inside the story arc, conversing with the main characters, and trying to write themselves out of a jam and put closure on the story (so they could get out of the office and go golfing, if I remember correctly.)

And then there was the story where Dilton and Moose...

This is starting to scare me. How did I remember all this mundane stuff? I can't remember the names of the characters in the Brothers Karamazov, but I can remember Archie comics I read only once. Damn you, Bob Montana!

2006-10-27 04:03:37 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Actually, there were some Archie comics dealing with Christian issues. They were published by Spire Christian Comics, and were written and drawn by Al Hartley, who worked for Archie Comics at the time, and therefore got permission to use the Archie characters in many of the issues.

2006-10-26 16:50:53 · answer #2 · answered by Kaos 2 · 1 0

Most serious plot i have saw dealt with Archie and family moving from Riverdale!

Thats gotta be soo hard on kids --was a sad story
but fortunately his dad got a better job and they stayed !

2006-10-26 17:52:16 · answer #3 · answered by f4fanactic 6 · 0 0

The Pureheart the Powerful and Captain Hero stories! They were a lot more serious than the run of the mill Archie story...!

2006-10-26 16:15:07 · answer #4 · answered by cdf-rom 7 · 0 0

Jughead saw the girls spending money because of a "sale" sign and called them sheep. The girls countered and made a bet with him, to where he couldn't buy one thing due to some sort of advertisement for the rest of the day. Jughead had Archie running ragged, but he did not spend one cent on anything though he was bombarded with advertisements.

2006-10-26 15:42:01 · answer #5 · answered by howard the duq 4 · 1 0

they are never serious

2006-10-26 15:32:38 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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