Thread:Peteparker/@comment-1713281-20121216023049/@comment-1713281-20121216151546

I thought about having some fun with it and uploading the cover with a bar over her bottom that read "Too Hot For Wikia!", but I wasn't sure how warmly Wikia staff would have recieved it.

As for content, the vast majority of stuff released by Curtis Magazines and it's continuiation Magazine Management Company was comics. They were just printed in a magazine-sized book, which meant they were longer, black and white, and could feature material outlawed by the Comics Code (as our title in question shows). The only ones I know for a fact where not comic-based were Gothic Tales of Love (basically supernatural-romance short stories), Tommy: The Movie (essentially a pressbook) and Monsters of the Movies (horror film-lovers magazine with articles and interviews). Additionally, a small number ran a 50/50 mix of comics and text features, The Senuous Streaker included, as well as The Deadliest Heroes of Kung Fu and The Wit & Wisdom of Watergate. As far as I can tell, everything else is comic-based (but copies of these titles are not the easiest to scrounge up to verify).