This may wind up being double posted, as the importer from Dreamwidth appears to be having Issues again.

media relations / 12 January 2012 / and the first shoe finally drops


DC COMICS IN 2012 – INTRODUCING THE “SECOND WAVE” OF DC COMICS-THE NEW 52
Thursday, January 12th, 2012
By Josh Kushins

In May of 2012, DC Comics will release a “Second Wave” of titles as part of its historic DC COMICS-THE NEW 52 initiative. Six new, ongoing series will build on the shared universe and bold concepts introduced in September 2011 with the renumbering of DC Comics’ entire line of comic books.[...] The six new series will replace BLACKHAWKS, HAWK AND DOVE, MEN OF WAR, MISTER TERRIFIC, O.M.A.C. and STATIC SHOCK, all of which will conclude with their eighth issues in April....



Given sales, I can't say that any of the cancellations surprises me. All but one of them would have been a hard sell, conceptually. I haven't heard much about Blackhawks, OMAC or Men of War -- I don't know anyone who read them, and I didn't care enough to look up the reviews. Everyone I know who tried it, and the few reviews I've read, say that "Hawk and Dove" was outright awful.

"Mister Terrific" was on my pull list, and I can say that ... it wasn't very good, frankly. [...] The one title where the cancellation saddens but doesn't entirely surprise me is "Static Shock." Sad, because it would have been nice if the title had been given a little more time to find its audience. Unsurprised because, if you didn't read the previous Static Shock title or watch the animated series, this title would have been utterly baffling....


(And on a purely webgeeky note: smart quotes in the URL, DC? Really? Surely you know better than THAT.)
media relations / 12 January 2012 / and the first shoe finally drops

Given sales, I can't say that any of the cancellations surprises me. All but one of them would have been a hard sell, conceptually. I haven't heard much about Blackhawks, OMAC or Men of War -- I don't know anyone who read them, and I didn't care enough to look up the reviews. Everyone I know who tried it, and the few reviews I've read, say that "Hawk and Dove" was outright awful.

"Mister Terrific" was on my pull list, and I can say that ... it wasn't very good, frankly. [...] The one title where the cancellation saddens but doesn't entirely surprise me is "Static Shock." Sad, because it would have been nice if the title had been given a little more time to find its audience. Unsurprised because, if you didn't read the previous Static Shock title or watch the animated series, this title would have been utterly baffling....


Questions? Comments? Sabots? Sneakers?
iainpj: (Default)
( Aug. 10th, 2007 01:35 pm)
Shortpacked! -- Tokenism! TOKENISM!: ... Yeah, that about covers it, really.

America Jr.: The sanctity of matrimony!: I have a feeling that may be it on this topic until spring, when the wedding preparations kick into high gear, and we discover just how serious they were about that dress. As it stands, though, America Jr doesn't seem to have any laws regarding who may or may not marry; it's going to be interesting to see how the citizens react when it's not an abstract case, when it's just Ed and Andy from down the street.

The Onion's AV Club: Are Superhero Comics Played Out?: or, this is pretty much why DC's new Confidential titles and the theoretical All-Star line exist. Of course, Batman Confidential doesn't do anything new (although it at least isn't dragging quite so long a continuity tail behind); All Star Batman and Robin is expressly running counter to the original idea of the All-Star line (designed for newer readers, and not meant to force them to read all of Frank Miller's titles so that they could figure out what the hell was going on and why Batman had suddenly become Psychoman from Hell), which is either late (Batman and Superman) or nonexistant (Flash, Batgirl, Wonder Woman).

Sinfest: an excuse not to work: ... and that also about covers it.

Kelly: Fourteen words: and suddenly coming into focus and slightly out of the weird. Very slightly out.
With spoilers a-go-go, no doubt, so let's stick the whole thing behind a cut.

Included: Buffy season 8 #1, Girls 22, Dynamo 5 #1, maybe a few other things.

Insert Buffy opening theme music ... HERE. )
Reviews of graphic novels and individual issues, including: Captain Gravity and the Power of the Vril; Captain Gravity; The American Way; Sam Noir: Ronin Holiday #1; Fell #7, Nextwave #12, 7 Brothers #5. No big spoilers this time (except for the one as noted), but in order to keep from hammering friends lists, everything is behind the cut.

Walk this way... No, not THAT way, THIS way... )
STORMBRINGERS: coming April 2007
Interesting. I don't think I've ever seen a title with an all ethnic minority superhero squad before. Apparently self-published (although I saw the ad in IDW's Fallen Angel), so probably appearing only irregularly. According to the latest Glyphs, there may also be a financial issue; publication may be pushed back.
- reappropriate » Blog Archive » The All New Atom #2
- one diverse comic book nation: Revisiting The All-New Atom


Um ... wow. I mean ... wow.

One wonders if perhaps, just perhaps, when a creator gets tempted to respond at this level, they should maybe step away from the blogosphere for a day or ten. I myself don't read Atom, or any mainline DC except for All Star Superman and Superman Confidential, so I don't quite have anything invested in this specific issue. However, I can't imagine that Gail Simone did herself any good responding in this way and at this level. If people wanted to articulate their concerns directly to her, that would be one thing, but this public discussion may not have been wise.

I do wonder if she was taking this sort of flack when she was doing her miniseries Matador; with a Cuban-American lead and family. I don't remember hearing about it, but then, as a miniseries on Wildstorm, it would simply never have been read by as many people. And I wonder if Kurt Busiek is getting this sort of flack now, with Astro City: The Dark Age having both leads be Black when he himself isn't. The race is somewhat relevant there ... but only somewhat.

For what it's worth, despite, as she puts it, her red hair and pale skin, she seems to be doing a perfectly fine job with the Black sheriff and her sister in Welcome to Tranquility, but then, their race simply isn't any sort of issue in the story at the moment.


- The Beat: Finding a safe place for THE BOYS
- Comic Book Commentary: Let's Stop Blaming Retailers, and Start Blaming Publishers


Hmm. Apparently, DC cancelled Wildstorm's The Boys over Matters Of Taste -- the fact that The Boys had none. Exuberantly and by design. Seriously, what on earth did DC think they'd be getting with this title? The pitch had to be pretty clear on where they were headed. (Mind, the hyperviolent drugged-out superhero orgy was probably rather startling, what with the major drug use and the bleeding vaginas and the gay blowjobs and ... well, let's just say that it was probably a bit surprising to DC at times.) At least DC is allowing them to shop the title elsewhere, even letting Robertson be non-exclusive for that one creator owned title. I hope, for their sake, that they wind up at Marvel Icon/Max (for a theoretically deceased imprint, Max doesn't seem to have ever quite gone dormant). Winding up at Marvel will likely be the only way for them to sustain the sales level; if they don't mind selling maybe a third less, then perhaps IDW or Avatar (especially Avatar) would be the place to be; for all that Image and Dark Horse can be just as edgy and sexy and violent as anything else, I think this title might make them ... twitch, just a little, at times.

That said, The Beat pretty much undermines its refutation of the point that others are, in fact, not making. Other people are saying that The Boys will lose sales when it moves, not simply because it's moving from one publisher to another (which is the point that The Beat is refuting), but because there are a fair number of retailers that are only DC/Marvel shops, or who won't buy much in other labels because they get a much bigger discount from DC and Marvel. If it moves to, say, Image or Dark Horse or IDW or Avatar, there are places where it simply won't be sold that it was sold before. The two titles they cite only reinforce that point. Powers moved from Image to Marvel Icon, and sales increased, almost certainly in part because it was now in shops that didn't sell Image at all. Fallen Angel moved from DC Universe to IDW and lost a third of its audience. Yes, of course it still sells, and I'd think that the trades -- given that trades appear in bookstore markets and on Amazon as well as in comic stores -- sell quite well indeed. That doesn't change the fact that the monthly simply doesn't get seen in as many places.
Whoa! Coolness!

ICv2 News - 'Bluesman' Optioned for Feature:
Bluesman, a three volume NBM graphic novel series by Rob Vollmar and Pablo Callejo, has been optioned for a feature film by producers Jason Koornick and Lawrence Blume....


I wonder how they'll cast it. Frankly, I wonder how they'll make it; given that the comparatively few racial references in Dreamgirls got either softened or yanked entire, how do you make a film about something featuring music, sex, murder, and a really staggering amount of racism (from the modern perspective, anyway)? To be sure, this will be positioned as an indie of sorts, despite the fact that Revolution is entirely owned by Sony/Columbia. Even so... (Of course, there's an assumption of another order I'm making; just because the producers have worked with Revolution before doesn't mean that they'll do it again.)
iainpj: (Default)
( Dec. 22nd, 2006 03:07 pm)
Always Bet on Bahlactus » Blog Archive » What If? Superman was Black?:
I suspect that for a long time Superman was reflective of middle-class values in America. Would these values have impacted him differently if he was Black? What would a seemingly all powerful, sole-surviving alien, and Black develop into? Would he even become known as Superman? As the most powerful Black man on Earth, how would he interpret societal norms (and what would his reaction be towards them?). Would he remain on Earth? These questions come to mind when pondering What If? Superman was Black?



Emissary cover
Well ... basically, you'd have Emissary.

Albeit not quite, because Emissary takes place in the here and now, and in a world that's never had superheroes. (Though ... in DC continuity, such shards as remain after various Crises, isn't it canon that most of the DC universe never had superheroes until WWII, or thereabouts? Then suddenly there was Superman, then Batman -- without actual powers, of course -- and Wonderwoman and others.) So, yes, there would be differences in that respect.

As far as the sociobiological aspects go ... ick. Allowing for some exaggeration for storytelling, most of the social problems that Emissary is running into are entirely realistic. They'd only have been savagely compounded in the world of 60 years ago, when Jim Crow was still the rule, when apartheid was in its prime...
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