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Roy Carson is a British hard-boiled detective created in 1948 by Denis McLoughlin and his brother Colin and first published by Boardman Books in their series of rotogravure comic books (1948–1954). Roy, with his plucky girl companion Silk, faced all manner of underworld adventures with an odd combination of American and British elements.
Roy Carson is a factory worker at Presage Paper, and Nathan Sears' arch-rival. He is killed when Nathan accidentally pushes him in front of a construction hook that ...
Nathan, who has returned to the factory, accidentally kills his co-worker Roy Carson during an argument. He relays this information to the remaining survivors, who believe that Nathan must have claimed Roy's remaining lifespan. When Dennis arrives to question the incident, a wrench launched by a belt sander splits his face, killing him. That ...
One McLoughlin story features hard boiled detective Roy Carson while the other has science fiction hero Swift Morgan. The story Swift Morgan and the Flying Saucers is a reprint from 1949. As such, it is a very early UFO story. The other comic content is reprinted (in color and black and white) from U.S. Quality Comics Group. Comic content includes:
Roy Batty, the leader of the renegade replicants in the film Blade Runner; Roy G. Bivolo, DC Comics supervillain known as Rainbow Raider; Roy Carson, from Final Destination 5; Roy Cropper, from the British soap opera Coronation Street; Roy Earle, from the game L.A. Noire; Roy Greenhilt, from the webcomic The Order of the Stick
6,123: October 23, 1989 (): Jay Leno (guest host), Rue McClanahan, Roy Blount, Jr.: Clint Black: 6,124: October 24, 1989 (): Jay Leno (guest host), Dennis Weaver ...
Roy Carlson (American football player) (1906–1984), American football player in the NFL Roy E. Carlson (1918–1995), American football and baseball coach Roy Carl Carlson (1937–2011), American educator and politician.
Given his success on that occasion, Bean decided to keep using the odd-sounding but memorable name. (Bean again told the story nearly verbatim on the Carson show September 23, 1976, but Carson appeared to not remember having heard it before.) [15] Bean claimed that his name was a blend of the pompous and the amusing.