September 1966
From Amazing Spider-Man, Vol. 1, No. 40
"The turning point for comics was about three years ago, when Stan Lee decided to try to reach readers beyond the bubble-gum brigade. Aiming at high school and college students, he created the Fantastic Four... The result for Marvel is impressive and promising. It is selling 33, 000, 000 copies a year."
From Fantastic Four Vol. 1, No. 50
"Anyway, our tantalizin' titles are sold thruout Latin America with one exception - the bearded one has banned all comic books in Cuba as subversive literature! That's probably the nicest compliment we've had all year!"
From Amazing Spider-Man, Vol. 1, No. 35
"For example, all Stan [Lee] has to do with the pros like Jack "King" Kirby, dazzling Don Heck, and darlin' Dick Ayers is give them the germ of an idea and they make up all the details as they go along, drawing and plotting out the story. Then, our leader simply takes the finished drawings and adds all the dialogue and captions! Sounds complicated? Maybe it is, but it's another reason why no one else can bring you that old Marvel magic!"
From Fantastic Four, Vol. 1, No. 48
When I was a kid, there was this series of hardcover juvenile adventure books featuring a character named Jerry Todd. They were something like the Hardy Boys, but they had a lot of humor mixed in with the adventure. And at the very end of each book, the publisher printed letters from the readers as well as responses from the author himself. It was so informal, so warm...it made me feel like I knew these guys and they cared about what their readers thought. I was surprised at the time other books didn't see what a great idea this was. I don't know if I consciously remembered those books when I set out to do the Bullpen page years later, or if I was unconsciously influenced and only afterwards realized where I got the idea from. I do know that talking to the readers informally and indirectly seemed like the natural thing to do."