In 1989, he sold Musicade and started Revolutionary Comics, which produced Rock 'N' Roll Comics, a line of unauthorized comic book biographies of rock stars prompted in part by the success of an unauthorized Bruce Springsteen parody comic called "Hey Boss."
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Todd Loren (1960–1992, born Stuart Loren Shapiro) was an American comic book publisher, owner of Revolutionary Comics and its title Rock 'N' Roll Comics.
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Loren's father, Herb Shapiro was the President of the company operating Revolutionary Comics, Infinite One Inc.
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Gröss has worked for a number of comic book companies, including Marvel Comics, DC Comics, Image Comics, Malibu Comics, Heroic Publishing, Revolutionary Comics, Chaos! Comics, and Innovation Publishing.
Jay Allen Sanford is an author and cartoonist best known for his work with Revolutionary Comics, Carnal Comics, and the San Diego Reader.
He was the proprietor of Cafe Frankenstein, and co-created the comic book series Deepest Dimension Terror Anthology with cartoonist Jay Allen Sanford for Revolutionary Comics, which adapted his stories from The Twilight Zone (including unproduced teleplays) and stories by his friends and contemporaries such as Larry Niven, Robert Bloch, and Dennis Etchison.