Black Hood is a fictional character created by MLJ Comics during the period known as the "Golden Age of Comic Books".
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Black Hood is a fictional character created by MLJ Comics during the period known as the "Golden Age of Comic Books".
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Black Hood has been in four self-titled series as well as in his own radio show, Black Hood .
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In recent decades, the Black Hood has been sporadically licensed and published by DC Comics.
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Black Hood became a popular character and was given his own title, Black Hood Comics, a pulp magazine in 1943.
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The Kip Burland Black Hood is unmasked in court by a character named "Needlenoodle".
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Black Hood enjoyed popularity for a while until he dropped from the covers and was gradually replaced by talking animal characters, as the popularity of the superhero genre faded in the late 1940s.
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Black Hood was seen teaching Karate in issues of Adventures of the Jaguar and Adventures of The Fly.
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Black Hood focused on the adventures of a series of vigilante characters with the same name throughout history.
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Black Hood is Mateo Burland, a young Detroit criminal whose sister is murdered by the same criminals Mateo worked with, when Mateo himself tries to escape their influence.
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Black Hood is seen intervening in a gun fight but takes a shotgun blast to the face.
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Black Hood is able to fire off one final shot before he loses consciousness.
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Black Hood slowly begins to go out more as the Black Hood and after being framed by the local drug ring, and being demoted to desk duty, he sets out to take down the leader known only as "The Connection" while helping with civil disturbances.
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