Zero-two-early - meaning and definition. What is Zero-two-early
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What (who) is Zero-two-early - definition

ALTERNATIVE COMICS ANTHOLOGY PUBLISHED BY FANTAGRAPHICS BOOKS FROM 1995 TO 2000
Zero Zero (magazine); Zero Zero magazine; Zero Zero comic; Zero zero comic; Zero zero comics; Alfred the Great (comics); Alfred the Great (comic); Zero Zero (comic)

Zero-two-early      
Military slang. Refers to an activity scheduled for way too early in the morning.
We're SPing at zero-two-early tomorrow, so I'll have to get back early.
Zero (art)         
  • Günther Uecker, photo by Lothar Wolleh
  • Otto Piene, photo by Lothar Wolleh
  • Günther Uecker, Gropiusbau, Berlin
  • ZERO, Guggenheim, New York
GROUP OF ARTISTS
ZERO foundation
Zero (usually styled as ZERO) was an artist group founded in the late 1950s in Düsseldorf by Heinz Mack and Otto Piene. Piene described it as "a zone of silence and of pure possibilities for a new beginning".
Bravo Two Zero (novel)         
1993 BOOK WRITTEN UNDER THE PSEUDONYM 'ANDY MCNAB'
Bravo Two Zero (1993 novel); Bravo Two Zero (1993 book)
Bravo Two Zero is a 1993 book written under the pseudonym 'Andy McNab'.Hanks, Robert "Andy McNab: The hidden face of war" The Independent, Nov 19, 2004 The book is a partially fictional account of an SAS patrol that becomes compromised while operating behind enemy lines in Iraq, in 1991.

Wikipedia

Zero Zero (comics)

Zero Zero was an alternative comics anthology published by Fantagraphics Books from 1995 to 2000. It was printed in a typical 6½″ × 9¾″ comic book format. Issues ranged between 40 and 64 pages in length, printed mostly in black-and-white with a color cover but occasionally including sections printed in one or two colors, notably a series of stories by Al Columbia. Its release schedule fluctuated between bimonthly and quarterly intervals over the course of its run.

A significant proportion of Zero Zero's pages were given over to serialized works, including Richard Sala's The Chuckling Whatsit, Dave Cooper's Crumple, Mack White's Homunculus, Kaz and Timothy Georgarakis's Meat Box, and Kim Deitch's The Strange Secret of Molly O'Dare and The Search for Smilin' Ed. Derf Backderf's short strip "My Friend Dahmer", which he later expanded to an award-winning graphic novel of the same name, also appeared in its pages.

Early issues of Zero Zero were not numbered, but the back cover of each issue featured a captioned illustration depicting an ordinal "Sign of the Impending Apocalypse" which also served as an ad hoc numbering system. For the twenty-seventh and final issue this feature was replaced with an Al Columbia strip, "Vladimir Nabokov's 'Cheapy the Guinea Pig'", depicting the killing of an experimental subject.