Barack Obama, Fierce Advocate of LGBT Rights! (See also: Grim Amusements: love and anger)
ComicCritics.com » Archive » The sad, strange tale of Dwayne McDuffie: As the book where most of DC's characters come together, JLA ought to be one of their big, frontline books. As it turns out, as the book where most of DC's characters come together, it winds up being at the mercy of every single other one of those books, every single crossover, and subject to rampant editorial dictat. Alone of DC's titles, JLA is a slave to past and ongoing continuity of every major title, whereas the other titles are primarily if not purely slaves to their own continuity. Which means that it's a bitch to write, because it almost never gets to tell its own story, so to speak.
All's I got to say is: Victoria's Secret is a bajillion times worse. (The horror, the horror ...)
Have I ever mentioned that I have an unusual fondness for this strip? Really, quite quite fond.
My. Apparently Luke Wilson is very hardcore. Who knew?
Well, who hasn't?
ComicCritics.com » Archive » The sad, strange tale of Dwayne McDuffie: As the book where most of DC's characters come together, JLA ought to be one of their big, frontline books. As it turns out, as the book where most of DC's characters come together, it winds up being at the mercy of every single other one of those books, every single crossover, and subject to rampant editorial dictat. Alone of DC's titles, JLA is a slave to past and ongoing continuity of every major title, whereas the other titles are primarily if not purely slaves to their own continuity. Which means that it's a bitch to write, because it almost never gets to tell its own story, so to speak.
All's I got to say is: Victoria's Secret is a bajillion times worse. (The horror, the horror ...)
Have I ever mentioned that I have an unusual fondness for this strip? Really, quite quite fond.
My. Apparently Luke Wilson is very hardcore. Who knew?
Well, who hasn't?