But it was mainly the comics of the time. I went through puberty in the '90s, and as anyone who read comics in that era can tell you, comics were a bit different back then. Superheroines got in trouble a lot more. And when they did, the comics often didn't cut away. They'd... linger. You'd get covers like this...

...and a little something would stir in the cloudy recesses of your 13-year-old brain. If you were looking for it (and believe me, I started), it turned out there was plenty of what we now know as the genre this forum is dedicated to hidden away in everyday newsstand comics.
One standout for me was a title called Mantra. To a parent or comics code authority, it just looked like a kid's book. Pages. Staples. But if you were paying attention, Mantra was a page-by-page ode to superheroine peril.

Seriously, this poor girl got the crap kicked out of her. She got electrocuted. Drowned. Suffocated. Mantra got knocked unconscious so often it was a miracle she was ever able to solve crimes. And she was drawn -- lovingly, voluptuously -- by a penciller named Dave Roberts.
Sadly, Mantra only lasted seven brief issues. But by then I was hooked, and on the lookout for other comics like this -- comics that spoke in the secret code of what I was looking for. I stumbled on an indie comic named FemForce, a title with a limited print run, a specific audience and a singular superheroine peril mission statement. And who was penciling them... but Dave Roberts.

Then the internet happened, and nobody needed comics anymore. The good stuff was online -- real girls, drawings, something called "cosplay". One of the first ever sites that started catering to superheroine stuff was a pretty crappy, sporadically updated site called Superheroine Central. It boasted actual pictures and movies of models in peril. It even boasted commissioned comics. One of them was by a guy named "Danny Ryan". The name was different, but there was no mistaking that style:
Now it wasn't even secret code anymore. This guy -- who a few years ago was drawing Marvel Comics -- was into this sort of thing. He had to be. He was one of us.
Danny Ryan popped up from time to time at one superheroine site or another, or even on DeviantArt, but more and more rarely. Maybe he just grew out of it. Maybe the pay was crap. Maybe he got other commitments. But either way, while he never outright disappeared, he became impossible to follow. And as the 90s gave way to the 00s and then the 2010s, a veritable tidal wave of superheroine fetish stuff filled the void. I mean, seriously: Look at the daily activity on this forum. That would have been equivalent to a year's activity in the superheroine fetish community in 1999.
Anyway. I was cleaning out some stuff in the garage last weekend and stumbled on an old box. and in it was my Mantra collection, and as embarrassing as it is to admit, I actually got nostalgic for stuff I used to spank it to when I was a kid.
Does anyone know what happened to Danny Ryan? Is he still producing stuff? The guy is a titan of the superheroine peril genre. He should be held up as our Jack Kirby. Instead he just kind of faded away.

