The Joker Quotes Donald Trump via Mark Hamill
Jan 28th, 2017 by Aldouspi

For those who don’t know:

The Joker is a murderous arch-villain who has killed hundreds, if not thousands, of people in Gotham City, in truly horrible ways. Of course, The Joker only exists in comic books like “Batman” and other DC Comics titles. His crimes are “fantasy.”

Donald Trump is a narcissistic con man who has lied his way into the Presidency of the United States. While his current death toll is small as we are just one week into his being President, the economic toll and deaths due to his action are predicted to be enormous, even if major wars do not break out because of him. He is unfortunately, too real.

Mark Hamill is a lovable scamp known to many as Luke Skywalker and as the voice of The Joker in various Batman cartoons.

Of the three, I would love to meet Mark Hamill – that would be a treat. Meeting The Joker would be scary and dangerous unless he thought I was Jim Gordon or Bruce Wayne or Selena Kyle. I never want to meet Donald Trump – for he scares me more than The Joker.

Below the artwork and tweet references is a video where you can hear Mark Hamill doing the voice of The Joker quoting Donald Trump’s 2017 New Year’s Eve message to the citizens of the United States.


mark hamill reads donald trump tweet in jokers voice Just Mark Hamill Reading Donald Trumps Tweets as the Joker

 

On December 31st, President-elect Donald J. Trump sent the following Happy New Year message on Twitter:
 

 

The tweet immediately went viral, garnering a gamut of reactions; like this one from writer and actor Matt Oswalt:
 

 

That quip also went viral, so Luke Skywalker aka Mark Hamill happily obliged, reading Trump’s now (in)famous tweet in his best Joker voice. Et voilà:
 

 

The Internet remains undefeated

[via Slate, The Verge] –
TwistedSifter


    The Joker & Mark Hamill Art Related Items For Sale

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News About Trump Tweets

Harley Quinn Captured by Gotham City Police Pin-up By Mel Milton  
Nov 22nd, 2014 by Aldouspi

Harley Quinn is one of my favorite Batman foes. Driven insane when she as a psychiatrist was trying to treat The Joker, she is both funny and sympathetic. And almost cured on occasion by the efforts of Batman, but she always relapses…

Here a mug shot pin-up of the super villianess when she is captured by the Gotham City Police.

By Mel Milton  

Pinup Arena

Bits About Gotham City


Gotham City is hot. The Bat books are top sellers, the recent Batman movies were all smash hits and TV series Gotham shows us Batman and friends from a whole new angle. Enter Gotham Academy, showing us yet another bit of Gotham lore. It’s all about the titular school, a private school housed in an old, creepy looking mansion. A certain mister Bruce Wayne is one of the financial backers of the school, and one of the characters in the book is related to The Penguin.

Fans of the Batman series will find all these little nuggets of background information here that they will probably love. But the book is also fun enough for people who aren’t that much into Batman. There’s a creepy school. There’s a mysterious leading character with a past that might come back to haunt her. There’s a broken relationship. There are creepy things going on at night. There might be a ghost haunting the school. And there’s the occasional Batman sighting, but then again, things like that happen more often in Gotham…


Gotham City Sirens #1 written once again by Paul Dini tells of the adventures of Gotham girls Catwoman, Poison Ivy and of course Harley Quinn.


Will the real Gotham City please stand up? Gotham City is a fictional American city appearing in comic books published by DC Comics, best known as the home of Batman. Batman’s place of residence was first identified as Gotham City in Batman #4 (Winter 1940). New York Times journalist William Safire described Gotham City as “New York below 14th Street, from SoHo to Greenwich Village, the Bowery, Little Italy, Chinatown, and the sinister areas around the base of the Manhattan and Brooklyn Bridges.” Batman artist Neal Adams sees the 1940s mobster history of Chicago as the basis for Gotham, while writer/artist Frank Miller has stated that Metropolis is New York in the daytime and Gotham City is New York at night.


Gotham City’s atmosphere took on a lighter tone in the comics of the 1950s and part of the 1960s, similar to the tone of Batman stories of that era. However, by the early 1970s, particularly with Dennis O’Neil becoming a prominent Batman writer, the tone of the city, along with that of the stories, had become grittier. In most stories since the 70s, the portrayal of Gotham is that of a dark and foreboding metropolis rife with crime, grime, corruption, and a deep seated sense of urban decay. This tone was particularly prominent in the parts of the city not rejuvenated post “No Man’s Land”.


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R. Kelly – Gotham City (BATMAN AND ROBIN SOUNDTRACK VERSION)

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