Burgos and others, including Centaur Publications writer-artist Bill Everett, then followed Centaur art director Lloyd Jacquet to Jacquet's own newly formed packager, Funnies, Inc..
Novelist Mickey Spillane, who began his career in comics and worked at Funnies, Inc., recalled in 2006 that, "Our boss, Lloyd Jacquet, a dead ringer for Douglas MacArthur (corncob pipe and all), was a wonderful man, but could never understand living among wildcat writers and artists. All of us were pretty much freelance people, so firing us would have been a useless gesture".
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Among its other achievements, Funnies, Inc. supplied the contents of Marvel Comics #1, the first publication of the company that would evolve into Marvel Comics.
Andrew Lloyd Webber | Frank Lloyd Wright | David Lloyd George | Lloyd Kaufman | Lloyd's of London | Julian Lloyd Webber | Christopher Lloyd | Harold Lloyd | William Lloyd Garrison | Lloyd Alexander | Marie Lloyd | Lloyd | Lloyd Richards | John Lloyd Cruz | Lloyd's Register | Curtis Gates Lloyd | Lloyd Cole | Lloyd's | Lloyd Stearman | Lloyd (singer) | Hugh Pughe Lloyd | Hugh Lloyd | Hapag-Lloyd | Clive Lloyd | Matthew Lloyd | Lloyd Moseby | Lloyd George Avenue | Lloyd Doggett | John Lloyd Stephens | George Lloyd |
Crime novelist Mickey Spillane, who worked for Lloyd Jacquet's Funnies Inc. packager during the 1930s and 1940s, teamed with Sahle on a number of occasions, including on the character "Mike Danger", which Spillane described as "the original concept of Mike Hammer", the archetypal hardboiled detective of mid-20th century paperback novels.