A posse tracking down Jesse James includes Marshal Matt Dillon, Major
Seth Adams, Annie Oakley, Wyatt Earp, Davy Crockett, Roy Rogers, and Tonto. Matt Dillon and Tonto are already in the CU. Wyatt Earp is played by
Hugh O’Brian, who played the historical lawman on the television series The Life and Legend of
Wyatt Earp, which is also in the CU. Major Seth Adams is from the television
series Wagon Train. Annie Oakley was a real person, of course, but she
is portrayed in this film by Gail Davis, who played Annie in the television
series Annie Oakley. Therefore, that series must depict the life of
Annie’s CU counterpart. The historical Davy Crockett lived from 1786-1836; his
appearance in this film should be viewed as a distortion. The Roy Rogers seen
in this film may be the same Roy who appeared as the main character in several
period Westerns, and an ancestor of the version of Roy seen in several set in
the modern day. It is worth noting that Bret Maverick appears in a deleted scene.

The Crossover UniverseTM is a companion blog to the books Crossovers: A Secret Chronology of the World Volumes 1-2 by Win Scott Eckert, and the forthcoming Crossovers Expanded Volumes 1-2 by Sean Levin. Material excerpted from Crossovers Volumes 1 & 2 is © copyright 2010-2014 by Win Scott Eckert. All rights reserved. Material excerpted from Crossovers Expanded Volumes 1 & 2 is © copyright 2014-present by Sean Levin. All rights reserved.
Showing posts with label Gunsmoke. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gunsmoke. Show all posts
Tuesday, June 2, 2015
Sunday, January 18, 2015
Crossover of the Week
Late January-March 2009
PLAY WITH FIRE
Occult detectives Quincey Morris and Libby Chastain and
their allies – FBI agents Dale Fenton and Colleen O’Donnell, hitman Mal Peters,
and a demon using the mortal alias Ashley –battle a cult that is literally
trying to raise Hell on Earth. Quincey says that one of his ancestors was a
Marshal in Dodge City. Quincey and Libby help occult P.I. Barry Love clear a
hellhound out of his office. O’Donnell refers to a report written by Monica
Reyes of the New Orleans Field Office. Fenton and O’Donnell’s boss Susan
Whitlavich became head of the Behavioral Science Unit after her own boss, Jack
Crawford, suffered a fatal heart attack. Whitlavich tells Fenton and O’Donnell
that she’s smoothed things over for them with Bernie Jenks at the Las Vegas
Field Office.
Novella by Justin Gustainis, 2012. Quincey’s ancestor
is Marshal Matt Dillon from the radio and television series Gunsmoke.
Barry Love is a disguised version of Clive Barker’s occult detective Harry
D’Amour. Agent Monica Reyes is from The X-Files. Jack Crawford is from
Thomas Harris’ Hannibal Lecter novels. Crawford died of a heart attack in Hannibal.
Las Vegas-based FBI agent Bernie Jenks met Carl Kolchak in the TV movie The
Night Stalker. Bernie would be elderly by 2009, so this Bernie Jenks must be
a relative of his, likely his grandson. The end of this novella leads directly
into the next entry in the series, Midnight
at the Oasis. However, as explained in the 2011 entry for that novella,
Gustainis must have compressed the actual amount of time between the two
stories.
Tuesday, April 8, 2014
Crossover Cover: The Lone Ranger Chronicles
This anthology of new stories from featuring the iconic western hero, published by Moonstone Books, has three stories with crossovers, including "Kemosabe" by co-editor and creative mythographer Matthew Baugh. Joe Gentile's "Hell Street" is a team-up between the Ranger and Tonto and O. Henry's outlaw the Cisco Kid, while Troy D. Smith's "The Fallen Angel of Dodge City" has references to two other famous western heroes from radio and TV.
Sunday, January 26, 2014
Crossover of the Day
Here's the first of a series of excerpts from the manuscripts for Volumes 3 and 4 I will be posting on a regular basis. Considering his corpus, Don Glut obviously shares my love of crossovers. This was a fun story, even though I had to use Google to identify many of these characters (though that's hardly the first or the last time I've utilized that particular search engine in my research):
Summer 1880
WHO REALLY WAS THAT MASKED MAN?
Summer 1880
WHO REALLY WAS THAT MASKED MAN?
In the 1930s framing sequence, a
Texas Ranger says that he recently brought cattle rustlers to justice in
cooperation with ranchers from the B-Bar-B in Big Bend County, the TM Bar in
Dobie County, and the Bar 20, as well as an Arizona rancher-pilot who is a kind
of “king” of the sky and a mystery-loving Texan detective called “Doc.” The
Ranger’s horse is named Charcoal, and other horses ridden during the operation
include Amigo, Tony, and Topper III. The Ranger was sent a historical puzzle a
few months back by a daily newspaper called the Sentinel. The stack of documents sent to him by the paper’s
publisher includes stories torn from the London
Times. The documents describe the true story of a former Ranger who became
a legend in the Old West. In the tale, a Dodge City Marshal talks with his
Deputy and a man who has a gray steel and rainbow mother-of-pearl six-shooter
in his holster. The man with the gun is planning to go shooting with Ted, an
old friend of his from Tennessee, who recently spent some time with a Mountie
and his remarkable dog in the Yukon Territory. The Marshal is friends with a
sheriff in Canyon County. The man with the six-shooter mentions “that lovely
lady down at the Longbranch.” A Masked Man and his Indian companion ride into
town to turn Deuce Cavendish, a cousin of an infamous outlaw they once brought
to justice, over to the Marshal. The Masked Man volunteers to take Cavendish to
Doc’s office. The Marshal has Wanted posters of two Mexicans, one of whom is
trim and handsome and calls himself “Kid,” while the other is fat and almost
slovenly. The Masked Man has a friend who is a Cavalry Captain at Fort Laramie.
The Mexicans, who ride horses named Diablo and Loco, come across the Masked Man
and the Indian. The Kid says he knows of only one man who is not a bandito and
who wore a mask, and the Masked Man is not El Zorro. A red-haired man and a
young Indian boy ride to Dodge City from Painted Valley to get a birthday
present for the Duchess. Three men meet in an outpost some distance from Dodge:
a man with dark, somewhat wavy hair and a thick mustache; a cattleman with
silver hair and a neckerchief clasp in the shape of a steer’s head; and an
Englishman who seems to be a kind of frontier gentleman, and who bears an
uncanny resemblance to the dark-haired man. The silver-haired man, who calls
himself Bill, has an elderly sidekick. The two come across the cave of a
Comanche and his grizzled companion, and Bill notices that the Comanche
resembles a rancher they recently encountered.
Short
story by Don Glut in Radio Western Adventures, Bill Cunningham, ed., Pulp 2.0 Press, 2010. This story is a
tour-de-force crossover between many characters from radio westerns. The Texas
Ranger is Jayce Pearson from Tales of the Texas Rangers. The B-Bar-B ranch and Amigo are from Bobby Benson and the B-Bar B
Riders. The TM Bar and Tony are from Tom
Mix Ralston Straight Shooters. The Bar 20
is from Hopalong Cassidy, based on
short stories by Clarence E. Mulford. The silver-haired man is Hopalong
himself, while his sidekick is California Carlson. Topper III is a descendant
of Hopalong’s horse Topper. The Arizona rancher-pilot is the title character of
Sky King, while the Texan detective
is “Doc” Long from I Love a Mystery.
The Sentinel is the newspaper
published by Britt Reid, aka the Green Hornet. The former Texas Ranger of the
Old West is John Reid, aka the Lone Ranger. The Green Hornet radio series established that Britt Reid was
John Reid’s great-nephew. The Ranger’s Indian companion is Tonto, while Deuce
Cavendish is the cousin of his foe Butch Cavendish. The London Times is from Frontier Gentleman. The title character of that show is Times
reporter J.B. Kendall. The Marshal and
his Deputy are Matt Dillon and Chester from Gunsmoke. “That lovely lady at the Longbranch” and Doc are Miss Kitty Russell
and Galen “Doc” Adams from that series. The man with the colorful gun is Britt
Ponset from The Six Shooter. The
Mountie and his dog are Sgt. Preston and King from Challenge of the Yukon. The Sheriff of Canyon County is Mark Chase
of Death Valley Sheriff. The Kid and
his sidekick are the Cisco Kid and Pancho. The radio version of the Cisco Kid
is much more good-natured than the character’s original version in O. Henry’s
tale “The Caballero’s Way.” Also, Henry’s Cisco Kid was a white man whose last
name was Goodall, rather than a Mexican. The radio Kid likely assumed his
literary namesake’s alias for reasons of his own. Diablo and Loco are the Kid
and Pancho’s horses, respectively. The Lone Ranger’s friend is Captain Lee
Quince from Fort Laramie. Zorro is
self-explanatory. The red-haired man from Painted Valley is the title character
of Red Ryder, based on the comic
strip of the same name, while his sidekick is Little Beaver. The Duchess is
Red’s aunt. The dark-haired man is Paladin from Have Gun – Will Travel. Both Paladin and J.B. Kendall were played
on radio by John Dehner. The Comanche is the title character of Straight
Arrow, who is also known as rancher Steve
Adams. His sidekick is Packy McCloud. The year is conjecture.
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