Good Girls is a 1987 – 1991 six-issue comic book limited series . It was created by Carol Lay and published by Fantagraphics and then Rip Off Press . The series parodies romance comics .
14-423: (Redirected from Good Girls ) Good Girl ( s ) may refer to: Books, comics, and art [ edit ] The Good Girls: An Ordinary Killing , a 2021 narrative non-fiction book by Sonia Faleiro Good Girls: A Story and Study of Anorexia , a 2023 memoir by Hadley Freeman Good Girls (comics) , a 1987–1991 comic book limited series Good Girl (comics) ,
28-422: A 2017 comic book volume for I Hate Fairyland from Image Comics Good girl art , illustrations with a strong emphasis on attractive females Film and television [ edit ] Films [ edit ] The Good Girl , a 2002 American comedy-drama film The Good Girl (2004 film) , a Spanish pornographic short film Good Girl (film) , a 2005 French comedy film The Good Girls (film) ,
42-416: A 2018 Mexican drama film Les Bonnes Femmes (lit. The Good Girls ), a 1960 French film by Claude Chabrol Television [ edit ] Good Girl (TV program) , a 2020 Korean music competition program Good Girls (TV series) , a 2018–2021 American crime comedy-drama series "Good Girl" ( Law & Order ) , a 1996 TV episode "The Good Girl" ( Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ) ,
56-1437: A 2019 TV episode Music [ edit ] The Good Girls (group) , an American R&B trio Albums [ edit ] Good Girl (Jill Johnson album) or the title song, 2002 Good Girl (Sherman Chung album) , 2007 Songs [ edit ] "Good Girl" (Alexis Jordan song) , 2011 "Good Girl" (Carrie Underwood song) , 2012 "Good Girl" (Dustin Lynch song) , 2018 "Good Girl", by Charlotte Cardin from Phoenix , 2021 "Good Girl", by Chrisette Michele from I Am , 2007 "Good Girl", by Hyuna from I'm Not Cool , 2021 "Good Girl", by K.Flay from Inside Voices / Outside Voices , 2022 "Good Girl", by Paenda , 2021 "Good Girls" (5 Seconds of Summer song) , 2014 "Good Girls" (Elle King song) , 2016 "Good Girls" (Joe song) , 1997 "Good Girls", by Carl Craig from DJ-Kicks: Carl Craig , 1996 "Good Girls", by Charli XCX , unreleased "Good Girls", by Chvrches from Screen Violence , 2021 "Good Girls", by Crystal Fighters from Everything Is My Family , 2016 "Good Girls", by Ian Hunter from Dirty Laundry , 1995 "Good Girls", by John Mellencamp from Chestnut Street Incident , 1976 "Good Girls", by LANY from LANY , 2017 "Good Girls", by Nick Jonas from Last Year Was Complicated , 2016 "Good Girls", by Obie Trice from The Hangover , 2015 "Good Girls", by
70-513: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Good Girls (comics) The comic book started with another strip, "Ms Lonelyhearts", which progressively disappeared. The second featured Irene Van de Kamp, an heiress who grew up in an African tribe who puts face markings and a disk in her lower lip. She meets an assortment of weird characters while trying to find romance and avoid people who are only after her money. Carol Lay gives an account of how
84-726: The Ronettes , 1962 "Good Girls", by Tim McGraw from Southern Voice , 2009 See also [ edit ] [REDACTED] Search for "good girl" or "good girls" on Misplaced Pages. Very Good Girls , a 2013 drama film Good Little Girls , a 1971 French film "Good Little Girls" (song) , a 2003 song by Blue County Good Girl Gone Bad (disambiguation) Good Girls Don't (disambiguation) All pages with titles beginning with Good Girl All pages with titles containing good girls All pages with titles containing good girl Good (disambiguation) Girl (disambiguation) Topics referred to by
98-401: The album title "a bit more literal [than just a concept]. When we were making the record, it was like half of our lives were lived through screens." The single "How Not to Drown" evolved from a piano and drum demo recorded by Doherty and was written during a time when he was dealing with "crippling depression and anxiety". Screen Violence is also the first Chvrches studio album to not have
112-468: The album to start out as something "escapist" but that the lyrics ended up being "definitely still personal". The album title came from an idea for the name of the band, but was then adapted for the title of the album due to the theme of violence "on screen, by screens and through screens – with songs addressing feelings of loneliness, disillusionment and fear, among other emotions". Martin Doherty called
126-511: The character started in her preface to the collection. It is a combination of a picture of three Ubangi women in Hustler magazine, DC romance comic Heart Throbs and Western Publishing Donald Duck and Uncle Scrooge comics that prompted her to create the character. She used her as filler in Good Girls #1 but eventually Irene took over. The influence of Tarzan is also evident in
140-414: The origin of the character. In Amazing Heroes #145 (July 15, 1988), Alan Moore gave a list of ten recommendations for current comics and about "Good Girls" he said: "GOOD GIRLS is another one that I shall certainly be checking out. I don't know why I find Carol Lay's stuff so wonderful and fascinating, but there's something about it that really tickles me. It might just be the quirky sensibilities of
154-415: The same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Good Girl . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Good_Girl&oldid=1241234177 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
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#1732786575695168-484: The stories, or the fact that her style is so reminiscent of traditional romance comics in places that the oddness of it looks all the more appealing in context. There's something about it which I find very, very charming". The sixth issue contained letters of appreciation by Scott McCloud and Peter Bagge . Jaime Hernandez has stated: "I've been a fan of Carol Lay's ever since The Pep Girls , and Irene has always been one of my favorite characters". A collection of
182-575: The strips called Goodnight, Irene: The Collected Stories of Irene Van De Kamp was published in June 2007 by Last Gasp ( ISBN 0867196599 ) with two new stories. Screen Violence Screen Violence is the fourth studio album by Scottish synth-pop band Chvrches . It was released on 27 August 2021 through EMI Records in the UK and Glassnote Records in the US. Lead single " He Said She Said "
196-619: Was released on 19 April. The album was announced alongside the second single, "How Not to Drown", a collaboration with Robert Smith , lead singer of the Cure . The album was promoted with a North American tour from November to December 2021. The album began in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic as ideas shared over video calls and audio-sharing programs. It was produced by the band and recorded between Glasgow and Los Angeles . Frontwoman Lauren Mayberry said it felt "freeing initially" for
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