I picked this out some time ago, otherwise, in view of the posts re posting a Western I probably would have chosen one.
The one I have chosen today is My Date #2 (Hillman) by Kirby and Simon's studio. Only went for 4 issues. Features Kirby, Dan Barry, Mike Suchorsky and Jack Keller, And that's all I will say about it for now.
https://comicbookplus.com/?dlid=41274
Please also feel free to read the whole run of the book and comment on that too. Enjoy!
I wonder how many sales this publication got? I'd have been surprised if they got many. Clearly, these stories were written by people (men) who wrote about the worst stereotypes of young women, who were mainly awful, unsympathetic, non-empathetic, conniving, selfish, and shallow people. There were some sympathetic characters in the stories, but, somehow, they weren't true protagonists followed throughout the stories. Is this style what pre-teens and teenaged girls wanted to read in the late 1940s?
Although some of the stories had funny moments, but they were pretty much run-of-the-mill. I found these stories not enjoyable enough to want to read more of this series. The artwork was fairly good, but with nothing eye-catching, as is the norm in this genre.
I'll review the stories one-by-one, and add them to this post through modifications as I re-read each story.
Swifty Chase/HouseDateHarryThis story gives the impression of a pure comedic/fantasy, with little relation to the real World. A young man who is a lazy freeloader, who pretends to want to date a young woman so he can stay at her parents' house, eat his fill from their refrigerator, lie on her parents' sofa, and watch TV, wouldn't get very far with that, either with the young women, or, especially her parents. That would be especially true if we are to believe he has the longtime citywide reputation for doing that. So, he is an automatic "villain". But, this story followed him around like he is the protagonist. The so-called protagonist (good guy) is very weakly developed, and relatively late in the story, at that. I found the "story" weak, not very interesting, and too unbelievable to be funny. Everything is too predictable, once Harry's character is shown. At least the morals of the story are correct - the selfish, greedy rich woman gets what she deserves, and the good-hearted, respectful, young man, finds the good-hearted, respectful girl (both of whom are good-looking, of course!). And they avoid ending up with the selfish, greedy or shallow, narcissistic people as their dates.
Ultra VioletHa! Ha! No one in town recognises the the fantasy version of the girl (lead character) as a changed version of herself! This reminds me of Carl Barks having no one in Duckburg recognise Donald Duck or Uncle Scrooge when they simply wear a pair of wire-rimmed spectacles!
I agree with Crash and SuperScrounge that this story is constructed poorly. I don't know what story the writer is trying to tell the reader. Too much magic with no indication why magical defiance of the physical laws of nature are able to be broken.
Fran Pickert/First Date/Unusual Dates This story was pretty straightforward. It was a common theme of the somewhat inward schoolgirl not fitting in, and then all the other students realise they'd been cruel, and they discover her "value", and do their best to try and befriend her, and make her feel welcomed (she becomes outgoing and popular. The artwork was a little above average.
GinnyThis story is a standard teenage "caper" story, similar to many of the scrapes Archie, Wilbur, Henry Aldrich, and Andy Hardy got into - situations in which they need to keep an adult away from finding out what mischief they are up to, at all cost, to avoid a disaster. Of course, they fail, - but, like magic, the results are much better for them in failing than if they had succeeded. And there is the preachy moral lesson, that it is better to tell the truth, or let yourself be vulnerable, than to hide from guessed, but far from certain, bad results. The artwork was good.
Lindy Hopp GagThis is a dull, unfunny gag. The artwork is below par, too simple, with virtually no background details.
The Rosebud SistersA story about VERY resourceful old ladies, who must be advanced scientists or witches who can work magic, as a horseless carriage made between 1895 and 1905 couldn't move much more than 20 mph, let alone 140, unless they took out the original engine, and replaced it with a mini-rocket engine, which would have shaken the 1890s auto body so strongly, that the car would have fallen apart at that speed.
Dippy GagThis was a silly, expected, pun gag, drawn weakly, as quickly as possible, with no background detail.