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Posts tagged comics.
Zoom NPR Book Review: With Mullet Or With Monkey, Everyone Knows Superman

Outdated, of course. Outmoded, of course. Superman’s a joke, a sadly irony-free outline filled in with bland 1950s platitudes; a white man’s wish-fulfillment muscle suit waiting to be punctured by any one of the myriad lurid rainbow varieties of Kryptonite. Square-jawed, square-shouldered, square all over, fit only for the peddling of breakfast cereals to the ingenuous. But you still know who he is. You grew up knowing…

Full review here.

NPR Book Review: With Mullet Or With Monkey, Everyone Knows Superman

Outdated, of course. Outmoded, of course. Superman’s a joke, a sadly irony-free outline filled in with bland 1950s platitudes; a white man’s wish-fulfillment muscle suit waiting to be punctured by any one of the myriad lurid rainbow varieties of Kryptonite. Square-jawed, square-shouldered, square all over, fit only for the peddling of breakfast cereals to the ingenuous. But you still know who he is. You grew up knowing…

Full review here.

04.19.13 3
04.15.13 2
Zoom DC Introduces First Transgender Character in Mainstream Comics


…[Gail]  Simone believes that diversity isn’t just a continuing issue for superhero comics: “It’s the issue for superhero comics. Look, we have a problem most media don’t have, which is that almost all the tentpoles we build our industry upon were created over a half century ago… at a time where the characters were almost without exception white, cis-gendered, straight, on and on. It’s fine — it’s great that people love those characters. But if we only build around them, then we look like an episode of The Andy Griffith Show for all eternity.”


Read the full Wired article.

DC Introduces First Transgender Character in Mainstream Comics

…[Gail]  Simone believes that diversity isn’t just a continuing issue for superhero comics: “It’s the issue for superhero comics. Look, we have a problem most media don’t have, which is that almost all the tentpoles we build our industry upon were created over a half century ago… at a time where the characters were almost without exception white, cis-gendered, straight, on and on. It’s fine — it’s great that people love those characters. But if we only build around them, then we look like an episode of The Andy Griffith Show for all eternity.”

Read the full Wired article.

04.13.13 7

themarysue:

Kate the Great.

03.09.13 785
Zoom iasthai:

comicsalliance:

The Big Issue: Comic Book Retailers On Orson Scott Card And Superman, Part 1 [Interview]
By Matt D. Wilson
When DC Comics issued its statement of no action in response to the outcry over its hiring of anti-gay-marriage crusader Orson Scott Card to write a story in its new Superman anthology, Adventures of Superman, the publisher essentially delegated the moral decision, not only to fans, but to retailers. Some of those retailers will sell the book normally. A few will sell the book, but donate their profits. Others, an ever-growing group, are choosing to keep the comic off their shelves altogether.The choices retailers are making and the debate surrounding those choices seem to indicate that the intersection of comic retailers, fans, creators and publishers isn’t what it used to be. It’s more political, more vibrant and perhaps more acrimonious than it’s ever been. In this first of a series of interviews with retailers here at ComicsAlliance, we chatted with one of the first and certainly one of the most outspoken comic shop owners opting not to sell Orson Scott Card’s Superman work, Richard Neal of Zeus Comics in Dallas, Texas.

I don’t care if Orson Scott Card penned the best sci-fi novel ever, he’s still an anti-gay bigot, and he will not get any of my gay money. He sits on the board of an organization that stands directly in the way of equality for gay people in this country. Not to mention the vile and reprehensible things that Card has written and said about gay people.
He has every right to say and write whatever he wants about gay people as he has done in the past, and we have every right not to buy or read any of his work. But when you start actively giving money and lobbying to subvert equality for gay people, then you’ve crossed a line.

Also from the interview:
Richard Neal: As an out gay man, I was already a target. Orson Scott Card spent nearly two decades attacking [me] in essays and posts about the evils of homosexuality. Card sits on the board of the National Organization of Marriage, a group determined to deny equality. Card would take away my relationship with my husband Chris. He’s equated homosexuality with rape, pedophilia and that we are born of abuse. While I am lucky to be surrounded by a strong, supportive group of family and friends, not everyone is so fortunate. You only have to look to the rate of LGBT teen bullying, suicide and projects like “It Gets Better” to understand that Card’s hate speech and advocacy directly impact the actions and beliefs of others.

iasthai:

comicsalliance:

The Big Issue: Comic Book Retailers On Orson Scott Card And Superman, Part 1 [Interview]

By Matt D. Wilson

When DC Comics issued its statement of no action in response to the outcry over its hiring of anti-gay-marriage crusader Orson Scott Card to write a story in its new Superman anthologyAdventures of Superman, the publisher essentially delegated the moral decision, not only to fans, but to retailers. Some of those retailers will sell the book normally. A few will sell the book, but donate their profits. Others, an ever-growing group, are choosing to keep the comic off their shelves altogether.

The choices retailers are making and the debate surrounding those choices seem to indicate that the intersection of comic retailers, fans, creators and publishers isn’t what it used to be. It’s more political, more vibrant and perhaps more acrimonious than it’s ever been. In this first of a series of interviews with retailers here at ComicsAlliance, we chatted with one of the first and certainly one of the most outspoken comic shop owners opting not to sell Orson Scott Card’s Superman work, Richard Neal of Zeus Comics in Dallas, Texas.

I don’t care if Orson Scott Card penned the best sci-fi novel ever, he’s still an anti-gay bigot, and he will not get any of my gay money. He sits on the board of an organization that stands directly in the way of equality for gay people in this country. Not to mention the vile and reprehensible things that Card has written and said about gay people.

He has every right to say and write whatever he wants about gay people as he has done in the past, and we have every right not to buy or read any of his work. But when you start actively giving money and lobbying to subvert equality for gay people, then you’ve crossed a line.

Also from the interview:

Richard Neal: As an out gay man, I was already a target. Orson Scott Card spent nearly two decades attacking [me] in essays and posts about the evils of homosexuality. Card sits on the board of the National Organization of Marriage, a group determined to deny equality. Card would take away my relationship with my husband Chris. He’s equated homosexuality with rape, pedophilia and that we are born of abuse. While I am lucky to be surrounded by a strong, supportive group of family and friends, not everyone is so fortunate. You only have to look to the rate of LGBT teen bullying, suicide and projects like “It Gets Better” to understand that Card’s hate speech and advocacy directly impact the actions and beliefs of others.

02.28.13 140
Zoom ComicsAlliance Presents The 50 Sexiest Male Characters in Comics“You probably won’t agree with this list, because it’s a list on the internet. That’s fine. If you want to make your own list, do so with our love. We think that would be great. Let’s start a conversation about sexy guys in comics.” Read (and see!) more.

ComicsAlliance Presents The 50 Sexiest Male Characters in Comics

“Y
ou probably won’t agree with this list, because it’s a list on the internet. That’s fine. If you want to make your own list, do so with our love. We think that would be great. Let’s start a conversation about sexy guys in comics.” Read (and see!) more.

02.15.13 1
Zoom
02.13.13 2227
Zoom fionastaples:

Saga #9 cover, featuring The Will and ex-flame The Stalk! 

fionastaples:

Saga #9 cover, featuring The Will and ex-flame The Stalk! 

02.12.13 895
Zoom Hawkman by Joe Phillips
01.31.13 246

Inspired by this.

01.23.13 3214