My ma had Far Side books. I used to read them sometimes. I didn't think it was strange that my ma just had random assortments of Far Side on her desk that she never seemed to read.
My ma had Far Side books. I used to read them sometimes. I didn't think it was strange that my ma just had random assortments of Far Side on her desk that she never seemed to read.
I actually own It's A Bird. Good stuff. But it revealed to me that the biggest problem with Superman is that he somehow keeps attracting creators who want nothing to do with him. I mean I know Seagle came around, but that point niggles in my head every time I hear some creator's hot take on Supes.
Does the main idea still have room to be explored then? Something that appealed to me was the idea of a teen stuck in the Marvel U who's basically trying to stay popular enough to not die. I've always wanted to read a story like that, but from what I hear it leaves much to be desired. It would be a shame if that idea…
Do you have any favorites in the YA/All-ages stuff arena?
I was a Garfield/Peanuts kid. Like I used to buy an embarrassing amount of Garfield books. Not just the comics but prose spinoffs of the comics, joke books, etc.
How is Gwenpool btw?
Teglgemeir apparently makes up about 6% of all GN sales in America. And that's just mind-blowing. I hope I could even have a fraction of that kind of success.
So the Enough Space Kickstarter is nearing 20% and apparently 78% of campaigns that reach 20% meet their funding goals. So I'm pretty excited about that. I was worried that I might not be able to pay all the great artists/writers who contributed. But I still have a long way to go.
I don't really care about you and WoodSword's whole thing. But I am actually am a friend of the artist and do think it's pretty unfair to say "Super-established award-winning comic artist does things WAY better than newbie comic artist who just got one of their very first big gigs". But at the same time you lack the…
I gotta be honest, when I was a really little kid i had no idea Nedry was supposed to be this really intelligent guy. His exact function didn't really occur to me until I read the book a couple years later. So I feel like this is partially the logic this comic is running off of. What Nedry seemed like to a huge part…
I really want to see where the rest of the show would've went. I'm especially intrigued by the fact that Weisman basically confirmed that they weren't going to kill Gwen Stacy, which is an unfortunate staple of every other Spider-Man iteration.
I always hear great things about A&A. So yeah, I'll definitely give it a shot!
I understand why it works for some. But I feel like it was trying too hard to force a new DCAU into being without really giving itself enough room to breathe.
I read all of Van Lente's Ivar, Timewalker and that may have been the most fun I had reading a comic in years.
I'm rooting for you. I know what it's like to be worried about income and trying to dodge all the jobs you know you'd hate. I wouldn't wish that on anyone!
I tried getting my superhero fix by rewatching Young Justice and all it did was prove that I actually don't really like that show. We live in the darkest timeline for superhero cartoons, friends.
I don't think I've seen a single episode of the Zeta Project and until a few years ago wasn't even aware it was part of the DCAU. It just seems like some weird tertiary canon to a universe that didn't even have a secondary canon.
Best of luck there!
Does this include The Zeta Project? That show is like the redheaded stepchild of the DCAU.
I didn't realize you used to hang out on the Toonzone boards too. I was a reporter there for a brief second. My sole claim to fame was reviewing Rio when it came out.