Roy Raymond is a fictional character that appears in comic books published by DC Comics. He was introduced in "Impossible... But True!", a back-up strip in Detective Comics, beginning with issue #153. In 1997, a new character appeared, Roy Raymond, Jr., the grandson of the original Roy Raymond.
Roy Raymond is the host of a television show called Impossible... But True!, which bears a strong resemblance to Ripley's Believe It Or Not. The stories involve Raymond and his assistant, Karen Duncan, investigating claims and exposing hoaxes, ensuring all the stories on the show are true. In the first adventure, Roy investigated a village in the Amazon Jungle where it's rumored that travelers suddenly grow old. The strip was later retitled "Roy Raymond: TV Detective". In the Silver Age, Aquaman took over the back-up slot in Detective Comics. Raymond subsequently appeared in the Superman titles, where it was revealed he had been kidnapped by a supervillain and brainwashed into committing crimes. After being rescued by Superman, he resumed his television career at Metropolis' Galaxy Broadcasting, which at the time was also the employer of Clark Kent.
Trapped in a limo
Roy Raymond also appeared during Rick Veitch's tenure on Swamp Thing. He is portrayed as an avaricious media figure; surgery has made him appear much younger, and he wants to use Swamp Thing to further his career. He and his assistant, Lipschitz, are trapped for days in a limo being driven by a monstrous and insane failed earth elemental called "The Wild Thing". He spends the latter part of the ordeal, before being discovered by cops, hallucinating a business deal with Morgan Edge, the head of the broadcasting company WGBS. Roy's hallucinatory conversation is over the concept of Swamp Thing. Lipschitz died after having spent his last hours face down in filth at the bottom of the limo, injured and unable to move, pleading with Raymond to summon help. Raymond also ended up with severe facial damage, his plastic surgery having come undone during the trip. Raymond rebounds in issue #81 with a repaired and older face, recommitted to being an honest investigative reporter who will reveal society's corruptions.
Roy Raymond, Jr.
Robin #38 introduced Roy Raymond, Jr., the grandson of the original, who presented a tabloid television series in Gotham City called Roy Raymond: Manstalker. There is mention of Raymond in Detective Comics #818, where Batman describes Raymond as one of the few detectives he admires, but who "chooses to waste his talents on daytime television" and so is apparently still hosting his TV show. In Superman #669, a flashback shows that Raymond did indeed have a show under WGBS years ago, during Superman's early years. It was advertised on a billboard Superman was passing. Raymond, Jr., appeared in The Flash, working for a news station in Keystone City that was launching a smear campaign against the Flash. Unknown to him, his boss was the malformed supervillain Spin, who uses media manipulation to control reality. Following the death of Bruce Wayne, Alfred Pennyworth approached Raymond in Outsiders Special #1 to join the Outsiders. He accepted the offer and became Owlman, with equipment left for that purpose by Batman. As seen in the first issue of Blackest Night, Raymond has written a book on the murder of Sue Dibny.
Other versions
Roy Raymond appeared in the 1997 Tangent ComicsOne ShotGreen Lantern alongside the Tangent version of King Faraday in a story revolving around King Faraday's final mystery and the death of Ralph Digby. Raymond is the current owner of "The House Of Mystery" as he purchased the company's stock after the murder of Digby, who in turn had recently purchased the company from Alfred Pennyworth. Raymond appeared in Darwyn Cooke's 2004 as a Hollywood celebrity who bravely refused to comply with McCarthy's Congressional Committee on Un-American Activities investigation into supposed communists in the entertainment and superhero worlds. He was blacklisted as a communist sympathizer for refusing to name communist celebrities or his own political position, thus presumably losing his TV and radio shows as well as his newspaper column.