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RaceWarrior Boosts Caliber of Racing Entertainment

21 February 2000





New Comic Book Gives Futuristic View of Auto Racing

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (Feb. 10, 2000) -- Stock car racing will get a cyber-boost
into the future with the March release of RaceWarrior, a weekly
action/adventure comic book about racing in the year 2020. Appealing to
race fans and comic book readers of all ages, RaceWarrior joins "NASCAR
Racers," an animated television series, in entertaining the sport's next
generation of fans.

	Described as his mid-life crisis, RaceWarrior creator John A. Powell III,
developed the initial concept for RaceWarrior in 1991. Powell and an
impressive team of 22 writers, pencilers, inkers, letterists, color guides,
computer colorists, graphic branders and cover illustrators create the
"skrash! skroom! whap!" of futuristic stock car racing. Competing on
SuperLooper Battletracks, RaceWarrior teams use radical race cars and
cyber-gear to vie for the supremacy of the International Racing Federation.
The artistry and story lines are free of the sex, graphic violence, and
underworld overtones that characterize many of today's comics.

 "Stock car racing is a family sport and RaceWarrior is a family comic
book," Powell said. "These books hearken back to the golden era of comic
books, when action comics had heroes and villains, when the characters knew
right from wrong and parents didn't have to worry what their kids were
seeing in comic books."

Although set two decades into the future, RaceWarrior remains true to the
heart and soul of stock car racing through the advice of 1973 NASCAR
Winston Cup Series champion Benny Parsons. Driver Mark Martin, who, along
with son Matt, also have signed on to support the RaceWarrior team.
"I think it's great that there is a racing product that both my son and I
can endorse," Martin said. "RaceWarrior is exactly what this sport needs to
introduce the younger generation to the excitement of racing."
But what really sets RaceWarrior apart is the authenticity of its vision.
Powell chose some of the nation's best designers to help with visual
effects. One of Hollywood's most sought-after talents, Harald Belker, is
the visionary behind the RaceWarrior vehicles, including the futuristic
race cars. Belker brings the same level of creativity to RaceWarrior that
he brought to the Batmobile, Inspector Gadget's car and his current work on
an upcoming Steven Spielberg movie, in addition to his "real world" work on
the Mercedes M and S Class cars.

RaceWarrior will debut March 1, 2000 with a new edition every week for 38
weeks, coinciding with the NASCAR Winston Cup Series season. Each
collectable book will display 20 pages of high-quality graphics, plus an
editorial section featuring members of the racing community written by auto
racing insider Claire B. Lang. Like an ensemble cast of a television
series, characters such as Zax Hammer, Ty Rod, Augusta Wind, Speedy
Pittman, (not to mention Skidmark and Pothole, two bumbling pit crew
members) will flow in and out of a story line that introduces 26 characters
in the first year of the series.

Nine years in the making, RaceWarrior is futuristic in ways other than its
story line. The comic's unique sponsorship arrangement with 7 UP allows
RaceWarrior to be distributed through grocery stores, CVS drug stores, and
"big box" retailers, including some Super Wal-Mart, Target and Kmart
stores, unlike most comic books which are sold primarily through comic
dealers. RaceWarrior sells for $0.99 with the purchase of 7 UP products or
$2.99 when purchased separately.

Valvoline, which sponsors RaceWarriora's International Racing Federation's
Valvoline Cup Series, also brought the opportunity to develop a
relationship with driver Mark Martin, who will wear the RaceWarrior logo on
his helmet and uniform for the entire NASCAR Winston Cup Series season.
"The addition of sponsors to the comic book adds three things," Powell
said. "First, it adds authenticity. What's a race car or a driver's suit
without sponsorship decals? Second, it gives us an additional form of
revenue, which keeps the cover price down. And third, by selling the books
with the soda in grocery stores, rather than by themselves in comic book
stores, it makes RaceWarrior available to a much wider audience."
Powell pointed out that from the very beginning, comic books have promoted
products.

"The very first comics were created to sell soap," Powell said. "Through
the years, they have been vehicles for all sorts of products. In our case,
instead of selling sea monkeys, 3-D glasses and itching powder, we are
helping market 7 UP, a major soft drink, and Valvoline, a premier
automobile products company."

Powell, a longtime comic book fan, is relishing the opportunity to revive
the "Golden Age" of comics with a major, nationwide launch of RaceWarrior.
"By the end of March, there will be 4,250,000 copies of RaceWarrior on the
stands," Powell said. "That's the biggest launch of a comic book ever."

www.racewarrior.com

* Editor's Note: Art available on CD by request.