Character Name: | The Jam |
Publisher: |
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Debut: | New Triumph Featuring Northguard #2 (1985) |
Creators: | Bernie Mireault |
Alter Ego: | Gordon "Gordie" Kirby |
Species: | Human |
Homeworld: | Montréal, Quebec, Canada |
Partners: |
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Aliases: |
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Powers: |
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The Jam, formally known as the Jammer, is a fictional costumed hero, created by writer-artist Bernie Mireault, who originally appeared in Canadian comic books published by Matrix Graphics Series. The Jammer made his first appearance in New Triumph Featuring Northguard #2 (1985).
The Jammer is the alter ego of Gordon "Gordie" Kirby, an otherwise normal guy who found he enjoyed patrolling the rooftops of his home city of Montréal in a homemade superhero costume. The Jammer is not really a superhero. He often finds himself in the right place at the right time, and is compelled to act heroically. Sometimes he is hired to do good deeds. His personal mission is to "dominate the world with peace, love, and free beer". Through the course of his career, he has battled terrorists, a delusional psychiatrist, and even servants of the Devil.
The first published stories of the Jam appeared in New Triumph Featuring Northguard from Matrix Graphic Series between 1985 and Summer of 1986. These stories were collected, along with a new unpublished story, by Matrix Graphics Series as The Jam Special #1 in 1987. A second special, The Jam, Urban Adventure: Super Cool, Color-injected, Turbo Adventure from Hell #1, was published in 1988 by Comico, and advertised a series "bi-monthly starting this summer from Matrix".
Slave Labor Graphics published The Jam, Urban Adventure #1–5 between November 1989 and the Summer of 1991. The Jam, Urban Adventure #1 (November 1989) was an expanded version of the new story found in The Jam Special #1 (1987). Tundra Publishing colorized and republished The Jam, Urban Adventure #1–5 between January and May 1992. Dark Horse Comics picked up the title and published issues' #6-8 between October 1993 and February 1995. Finally, Caliber Comics published issues #9–14 between 1995 and 1997, as well as the Jam short story "The Chair" in Negative Burn #25 (1995). From then on several mini-series', one-shots and short stories were published (see list below).
Bernie Mireault was featured in Demi-Dieux, 40 ans de super-héros dans la bande dessinée québécoise ("Demi-Gods: 40 Years of Superheroes in Québec Comics") published by Jean-Dominique Leduc at Mem9ire (2014). The Jammer appeared, along with other notable characters, on the cover of the book.
Date | Publication | Publisher | |
---|---|---|---|
1985 | New Triumph Featuring Northguard #2[1] | Matrix Graphic Series | |
1985 | New Triumph Featuring Northguard #3[2] | Matrix Graphic Series | |
1986 | New Triumph Featuring Northguard #4[3] | Matrix Graphic Series | |
1986 | New Triumph Featuring Northguard #5[4] | Matrix Graphic Series | |
1986 | Canadian Comics Cavalcade[5] | Artworx | |
1987 | The Jam Special #1[6] | Matrix Graphic Series | |
1988.05 | The Jam, Urban Adventure: Super Cool, Color-injected, Turbo Adventure from Hell #1[7] | Comico | |
1989.11 | The Jam, Urban Adventure #1[8] | Slave Labor Graphics | |
1990.01 | The Jam, Urban Adventure #2[9] | Slave Labor Graphics | |
1990.03 | The Jam, Urban Adventure #3[10] | Slave Labor Graphics | |
1990.05 | The Jam, Urban Adventure #4[11] | Slave Labor Graphics | |
1991.01 | Amazing Heroes Swimsuit Special #2[12] | Fantagraphics Books | |
1991 | The Jam, Urban Adventure #5[13] | Slave Labor Graphics | |
1992.01 | The Jam, Urban Adventure #1[14] | Tundra Publishing | |
1992.02 | The Jam, Urban Adventure #2[15] | Tundra Publishing | |
1992.03 | The Jam, Urban Adventure #3[16] | Tundra Publishing | |
1992.04 | The Jam, Urban Adventure #4[17] | Tundra Publishing | |
1992.05 | The Jam, Urban Adventure #5[18] | Tundra Publishing | |
1993.10 | The Jam, Urban Adventure #6[19] | Dark Horse Comics | |
1994.03 | The Jam, Urban Adventure #7[20] | Dark Horse Comics | |
1995.02 | The Jam, Urban Adventure #8[21] | Dark Horse Comics | |
1995.07 | Negative Burn #25[22] | Caliber Comics | |
1995 | The Jam, Urban Adventure #9[23] | Caliber Comics | |
1995 | The Jam, Urban Adventure #10[24] | Caliber Comics | |
1995 | The Jam, Urban Adventure #11[25] | Caliber Comics | |
1995 | Caliber Comics 1996 Calendar[26] | Caliber Comics | |
1995.12 | Overstreet's Fan #7 (Indy Jam Variant)[27] | Gemstone Publishing | |
1996 | The Jam, Urban Adventure #12[28] | Caliber Comics | |
1996 | The Jam, Urban Adventure #13[29] | Caliber Comics | |
1997 | The Jam, Urban Adventure #14[30] | Caliber Comics | |
1998.07 | Madman/Jam #1[31] | Dark Horse Comics | |
1998.08 | Madman/Jam #2[32] | Dark Horse Comics | |
1999 | Madman Boogaloo! Starring Nexus & The Jam[33] | Dark Horse Comics | |
2007.10 | Awesome: The Indie Spinner Rack Anthology[34] | Evil Twin Comics | |
2007 | The Comic Eye: Comics About Comics [35] | Blind Bat Press | |
2008.04 | Modern Masters, Volume Sixteen: Mike Allred[36] | TwoMorrows Publishing | |
2009.10 | "The Jam Lives"[37] | CO2 Comics Comics | |
2011 | To Get Her[38] | BEM Graphics | |
2012.10 | Madman 20th Anniversary Monster![39] | Image Comics | |
2013.03.15 | "The Jam 00a"[40] | Comic Art of Bernie Mireault | |
2013.03.21 | "The Chair"[41] | Comic Art of Bernie Mireault | |
2013.03.25 | "Team Jam"[42] | Comic Art of Bernie Mireault | |
2014.04 | Demi-Dieux, 40 ans de super-héros dans la bande dessinée québécoise[43] | Mem9ire | |
2016.03 | Tesseracts Nineteen: Superhero Universe[44] | EDGE Science Fiction and Fantasy Publishing | |
2017.03 | XVI Short Stories[45] | About Comics | |
2022.01 | The Jam, Urban Adventure: Super Cool, Color-injected, Turbo Adventure from Hell #2[46] | About Comics |
While vacationing in Montréal with friends, the Blood King hired Jane Marble to protect him from a small but determined army of terrorists who followed in his wake. Jane contracted the Gordon Kirby to be the king's body double.
Spans The Jam, Urban Adventure #1–5 (1989–91).
The Devil took a special interest in Gordon Kirby when he learned Gordie's happiness ratings were "off the chart".
Spans The Jam, Urban Adventure #1–5 (1989–91), #9–10 (1995).
Jane Marble referred Gordon Kirby to Dr. Andrew Mandigo who was willing to pay the Jammer to talk about his life as a crimefighter.
Spans The Jam, Urban Adventure #6–8 (1993–5).
Gordon Kirby and Janet Ditko had been together for 10 years. Gordie had rediscovered his calling as a comic artist. Janet was frustrated and looking for a change.
To Get Her (2011).
Gordon Kirby was sent to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania to personally deliver a message to Jane Marble's client Mark Trimble. She offered to tear up Mark's bill if he told Gordie about the Kinetic.
Spans The Jam, Urban Adventure #13–14 (1996–7).
Gordon Kirby met Frank Einstein who had traveled to Montréal to uncover the mystery behind a reoccurring dream.
Spans Madman/Jam #1–2 (1998).
The Jammer happened upon Jane Marble being mugged in an alleyway at knifepoint.
Found in New Triumph #2 (1985).
The Jammer spotted a mother and her child being threatened on an adjacent rooftop by an angry man with a gun.
Found in New Triumph #3 (1985).
Gordon Kirby tried to return bottles to a convenience store when it was robbed at gunpoint.
Found in New Triumph #4 (1986).
Gordon Kirby called Jane Marble about a job opportunity and overheard an intruder breaking into her office.
Found in New Triumph #5 (1986).
The Jammer happened upon an enraged man dangling another from the roof of a building by a rope.
Found in The Jam Special #1 (1987).
Gordon Kirby dreamed he was the Jammer Omniscient, ruler of Hell for Assholes.
Found in The Jam, Urban Adventure: Super Cool, Color-injected, Turbo Adventure from Hell #1 (1988).
Gordon Kirby visited his bank and noticed two suspicious men walking in and another waiting outside behind the wheel of a car.
Found in The Jam, Urban Adventure: Super Cool, Color-injected, Turbo Adventure from Hell #1 (1988).
Gordon Kirby and Janet Ditko attended the debut of the Balloons at the Blue Angel Bar's New Talent Night.
Found in The Jam, Urban Adventure #2 (1990).
Janet Ditko dreamed she was a superhero attempting to rescue Gordon Kirby (in his Jammer costume) from the clutches of the evil Hell Lord.
Found in The Jam, Urban Adventure #4 (1990).
Tony Matootsi was killed in a freak accident. His wife Nina held a religious vigil.
Found in The Jam, Urban Adventure #6 (1993).
Gordon Kirby and Janet Ditko scrambled to acquire nice a chair that had been abandoned in an alley across from their apartment building.
Found in Negative Burn #25 (1995).
Gordon Kirby met his friend Rex at the Blue Angel Bar to talk about an event that had been bothering him.
Gordon Kirby and Janet Ditko were invited to Studio C by Janet's Aunt Zoe for the opening of Klee Shonin's new show.
Found in The Jam, Urban Adventure #12 (1996).
Snuuger Dü, Bug-Eyed Monster, Dr. Robot, and No.1 met the Jammer when they got lost following a storyline.
Found in Awesome: The Indie Spinner Rack Anthology (2007).
Gordon Kirby attended a regular drawing workshop and social hour for cartoonists at La Sala Rosa Restaurant. The attending artists produced a collaborative comic.
Found in To Get Her (2011).
Gordon Kirby witnessed a man being shot with an arrow by a bowman from an adjoining rooftop.
Found as prose in Tesseract Nineteen: Superhero Universe (2016) and adapted as comics in The Jam, Urban Adventure: Super Cool, Color-injected, Turbo Adventure from Hell #2 (2022).[47]
"Mayhem in Alphabet Town" was a bedtime story created by Gordon Kirby for his nephew Ronnie. It is a murder mystery wherein the residents of Alphabet Town come together to determine who killed Q.
Found in The Jam, Urban Adventure #9 (1995).
"Internal Dialogue" is a 16-page comic written and illustrated by Gordon Kirby about a man who is held ransom by his mistreated organs.
Found in To Get Her (2011).
"Hi-hat" is a series of newspaper-style comicstrips written and illustrated by Gordon Kirby that serve as an allegory to his struggles as an artist.
Found in To Get Her (2011).
"Asshole" is a 10-panel newspaper-style comicstrip about a clown asking for a handout from a disillusioned good samaritan.
Found in To Get Her (2011).
The Jammer is athletic and in good physical shape, regularly leaping between rooftops when patrolling his neighborhood. The Jammer is a capable hand-to-hand combatant, having knocked armed assailants unconscious, subdued a religious fanatic who was assaulting a woman in the street, easily defended himself against two opponents in the back of a police wagon, and performed an impeccable tomoe nage on a man who attacked him with a cane. The Jammer has also displayed a resistance to hypnotic induction.
The Jammer's costume consists of a loose-fitting dark-green hooded jogging suit (from Sears); a white belt; and dirty white cavalier-style gloves and boots. Bits of orange material were added to the hood to form a mask with large square eyeholes; and an inverted orange triangle was sewn onto the chest. The clumsy hand stitching shows plainly. Gordie's sister Nancy made the costume for him as a joke in reference to his early superhero comic habit and his devotion to the original Batman television series.
The Jammer's "futility belt" is a jury-rigged tool belt that features four small tubes on either side of a rectangular interlocking buckle. From this belt, he has produced a smoke pellet, a business card, a dog whistle, a notepad & pen, and a plastic pet-waste bag.