![]() ![]() I'm starting to wonder if the comic writers have a time machine or futuristic almanac of their own. This issue was published the same week that Trump fired Comey and I'm sure we all remember Trump's later comments to the Russians that "I faced great pressure because of Russia. "Thanks to you, the Senate hearings have been canceled and there won't be any scandals," Nixon tells him. Nixon invites Biff to the Oval Office and personally thanks him for his assistance. He renames it The Biffington Post and fires Woodward and Bernstein as their investigation is in its infancy, thus preventing the Watergate scandal and keeping Nixon in power. ![]() Set around the time of the Watergate break-in, Biff buys the Washington Post in order to silence a who was writing negative editorials about him. What really made me sit up and take notice was issue #4. Biff uses his gambling winnings to take control of real estate holdings, opens a casino, threatens people around him, etc. Basically, it's the backstory to Back To The Future Part II. ![]() The mini-series shows how young Biff rose to power after being given Gray's Sports Almanac by his future self. I know we're talked about how Back To The Future's Biff Tannen was based on Trump's '80s persona, but the recent "Biff To The Future" comic book dials this comparison up past 11.
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