- Joined
- Jan 15, 2019
i don't because i actually like the majority of what tom taylor wrote.i get tom king and tom taylor mixed up often tbh.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
i don't because i actually like the majority of what tom taylor wrote.i get tom king and tom taylor mixed up often tbh.
No, Tom Taylor is simply very invested in the current Jon book (he signed exclusive with DC recently) and it is pretty much his responsibility to make him work.Could it be that the great Tom Taylor is butthurt that a seeming nobody can get more eyes on his videos than Tommy-boy can for his shitty comic?
I just want Marvel to do a MC2 that wasn't purely retarded on the concept of world building. I'd love for Marvel's society to have cops with powers running around and the X-Men to be that group that lost purpose because they accomplished their goals. IRL what happens with minority rights groups is you get grifters living off the good will of the previous movement, Booker T. Washington saw this and most Civil Rights "icons" that still survive are grifters who need to stir up trouble to survive. Modern Marvel would never do that, but I'd just want X-Men having to deal with the Mansion loosing funding and support because better alternatives start popping up/ anti-telepathic technology makes it to market and Xavier can't manipulate donors and kids into coming to his school.I really fucking hate X-Men even back then.
it being shit nowadays just makes me happy. X-men is a concept that just doesn't work in marvel context
Among my other recent purchases was an IDW collection of a series they'd published a "continuation" of back in the Aughts, one of the rarest birds of titles seen in comics, whodunits, i.e. detective stories, with clues fairly presented to the reader, while the stars of the book solved the mysteries each issue. It was The Maze Agency. Originally published by Comico the series was the creation of Mike W. Barr. This was some time after he'd come off of an acclaimed run on Detective Comics including Batman: Year Two, Batman: Son of the Demon, and a run on Batman and the Outsiders. One notable thing about Barr's Batman work was emphasis on his detective skills. Barr had come to Comico with the idea for a detective series and he wanted to do it in the tradition of Dashiell Hammett and Ellery Queen. Indeed, one issue featured a crossover with Golden Age literary sleuth Queen in celebration of the character's 60th anniversary, with permission from Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine. The IDW collection consists of the first five issues and a special issue.
View attachment 2910567
His series focused on Jennifer Mays and Gabriel Webb, one of the more interesting couples in comics. Jennifer is a former poor little rich girl and disillusioned ex-CIA agent who went into private investigations, setting up the titular agency. Gabe Webb is her boyfriend, a true-crime writer toiling at writing for lurid magazines, who's also an amateur sleuth with a brilliant deductive mind who is always willing to lend her a hand on intriguing cases. However, he doesn't believe in mixing romance and business and turns down her repeated offers to hire him as a consultant as inappropriate.
Their relationship, complete with witty back-and-forth banter was the foundation of the series. It feels like a real relationship, suitably adult, and their differences make them an interesting combination. She's an impeccable dresser, he tends to wear old jeans and sweatshirts. She rarely has a hair out of place, he often needs a shave. She works out regularly and drives a vintage '55 Corvette, he's a couch potato, bookworm and drives a clunker of many colors. And when it's necessary, she's ready for action while he'd prefer to call the police.
Their relationship develops from the status quo early in the series and was free of any drawn out "will they or won't they" shenanigans.
Other regular characters included NYPD Lt. Bobbi Bliss, who was irritated by the way they ended up getting mixed up in homicides but recognized their talents and Ashley Swift of Swift Investigations, Mays' former employer turned rival who led a bigger PI agency, was much richer and was "intrigued" by Gabe.
Now, the artist on the early issues was none other than a rookie-stage Adam Hughes, with only a few jobs under his belt at the time and this is probably one of the books that helped build his rep.
Just as the series was building momentum and attention, after seven issues, Comico went bankrupt in 1990. Fortunately, rescue came in the form of Dave Campiti's Innovation Publishing. However, Hughes got big offers to work in mainstream comics and he took them. He still did covers; but, the interior art was handed over to other hands, though Rick Magyar stayed as inker.
At Innovation, the series continued from issues 8-23, and then Innovation ran into cash flow problems, which led to bankruptcy. After being published in a one-shot anthology, the series returned in '97 for a three-issue series at Caliber Comics, with art by Gene Gonzales that was consistent with the original series. Another three-issue series was published by IDW in '05 and the stories were decent but the art was pretty "eh".
The other part of the equation in this crossover is Ms. Michael(yes, a woman named Michael) Tree, created by Collins and Terry Beatty. Originally appearing at Eclipse Enterprises, the series went to being published for awhile at Aardvark-Vanaheim, then being co-published with Renegade Press and at the time of the crossover was solely being published by Renegade. After 50 issues, Ms. Tree returned as a quarterly mag published by DC for ten more issues, and she's made an appearance now and then, including a novel from Collins published by Hard Case Books.
He seems to be a just a mediocre writer. Dceased and Injustice are both incredibly underwhelming plot wise with most of the mileage being that the reader already cares about the heroes and in universe all the characters have history. This isn't to say he can't write good emotional moments or narratives just that it's easier to have those moments for capeshit than in anything else and everything I've read from him seems to peter out incredibly quickly.I wanted to gauge people's opinions on Tom Taylor.
I'm just asking because he recently attempted to roast noted lolcow Jeremy or the Quartering over the latter's comments on Superman: Son of Kal-El on Facebook. TLR, Tommy-boy is making claims that his Special Ed Superman title is seventh on the Amazon best-seller list (comics wise) and a best-seller on Comixology. However, he doesn't back it up with numbers as DC distributor, Lunar, and Amazon do not disclose units shipped/sold. It made me wonder, if Tom Taylor is such a big deal, then why is he even giving a neck bearded fool like Jeremy the time of day?
Then I looked at Jeremy's channel. He has 1.18M followers and I have seen his videos get as high as 400K views in the last few weeks. Could it be that the great Tom Taylor is butthurt that a seeming nobody can get more eyes on his videos than Tommy-boy can for his shitty comic? My opinion of Tom Taylor is that he is a mediocre-to-shit writer who is easily the most overrated in the industry. Hell, I just watch Arris at Variant Comics or Rob at Comics Explained if I want to know what's happening with DCeased.
Frankly, I see some lolcow potential in him if he's going all Mark "King Baby" Waid on Jeremy. For all his bluster and the comics media backing his books get, it must sting knowing that more people would rather watch an idiot with a camera than read your shitty book.
i liked it as a teen, but it's really overrated.Sandman is pretentious garbage.
That was Arisia. She looked like a 15 year old girl (and acted like it) when she first debuted, and she had a mad crush on Hal.
Hal, however, was like "15 gets me 20" and kept his distance....until she used her ring subconsciously to make herself look like a 25 year old woman. That's when her and Hal started getting biz-zay.
Eventually, a lot of readers were like, "But isn't she still a minor on Earth?" Which then got hand waved away with, "Sure, she LOOKED 15, but she's really 150 years old on her planet! So it's A-OK!". Nevermind that she had the build and maturity of a minor originally!
In what universe Steel or 90s Aquaman are popular?
Steel in the 90s was a very B-list hero. He had a few good creators work on him, like Louise Simonson.
90s Aquaman is a meme but he did show up in the DCAU and the Morrison JLA.
Nice to see the so called "Loli defense" has gone from being used by neckbeard weebs to mainstream creators trying to justify themselves."Sure, she LOOKED 15, but she's really 150 years old on her planet!
Gee it's almost like hiring an SJW manbaby who insists on retconing the son of Superman (aka the nu Superman) into Being a gay boy who marches for climate and racial justice was a terrible idea. There's a reason the joke DC stands for dying comics caught on so fast...this is that reason. Only time will tell when it goes from dying to dead.Or alternatively, using the Batman titles as a crutch and heaven help DC if the market kicks that out from them. It's actually a bit troubling when DC can't even get Superman to crack the Top 50.
Even the dumbest of that decade from electric Blue Superman to the Spider-Man clone saga will never reach the lows the industry has sunken too in current year, hell that least you can look back on crap like that and laugh at how popular it was, like looking at a yearbook photo when you ridiculous hair and clothes.Never let anyone say everything about 90s comics sucked.
Confusing shit.iirc they were gonna reprint all of the Gerard Jones Justice League stuff until he got arrested for uh. . .
![]()
Gerard Jones Sentenced to 6 Years in Jail on Child Pornography Charges
Gerard Jones, long-standing comic book writer, was sentenced yesterday by a San Francisco court to six years in federal prison on child pornography charges.bleedingcool.com
. . . for child porn charges ofc.
apparently DC ain't gonna print his stuff? It's a shame because Green Lantern: Mosaic was a fun idea, his JLA stuff had interesting moments, his Martian Manhunter stuff was decentish iirc, and whatnot.
THough I do wonder if any pedophilic shit is in his old work now that I think about it.
Isn't he the guy who had Hal fuck a character who looked like a child but "was totally thousands of year old, trust me" or something like that?
Good if you stop at the end of the Surtur storyline. Afterwards it just meanders about as Simonson had no idea where to go after that.How good is Walt Simonson's Thor?
They did a 90s Legion of Super Heroes omnibus recently, but it's weird how little material from the 90s gets reprinted. I'll never understand DC trade paperback policy.
Some of his work has been reprinted in the Justice League International omnibuses, bit they didn't call a lot of attention to it . I think there's going to be a third omnibus, but other than that, I don't think they have any plans to reprint anything else.
I wonder if they will retroactively credit him as Christopher Priest instead of James OwsleySame with the JLI omnibuses, as they put Keith Giffen's name on the front and don't mention Jones and (allegedly) why Christopher Priest's Justice League Task Force hasn't been reprinted yet, as far as DC allegedly wanting to mix it in with the last two years of Jones' JLA run for future reprints so they can sell it entirely off of Priest's name.
He had already switched over to the name Christopher Priest by the early 90s and used that name on his mid-90s DC work, like JLTF.I wonder if they will retroactively credit him as Christopher Priest instead of James Owsley
I'm not sure that I understand, Isn't entire Ostrander's SS run collected in trades? And Who's Who is collected in two omnibuses.DC reprints from 1976 through 1997 are kind of super fucked due to royalty issues. During that time period, DC has a rule in place if books sold x-number of copies, the writer/artist gets royalties on the material. It's why reprints for DC works in the late 70s and the 80s and 90s are so fucked; as they basically have to pay creators more than they would for work before or after that period unless the creator renegotiates their deal to take less money.
It's one of the chief reasons the Showcase Presents line died out as they reached the point where any volumes would require renegotiation and this led to a number of titles not being allowed reprints in the Showcase line and why some books (Suicide Squad and Who's Who) got canceled and never released.
I'm not sure that I understand, Isn't entire Ostrander's SS run collected in trades? And Who's Who is collected in two omnibuses.
I just want Marvel to do a MC2 that wasn't purely retarded on the concept of world building. I'd love for Marvel's society to have cops with powers running around and the X-Men to be that group that lost purpose because they accomplished their goals. IRL what happens with minority rights groups is you get grifters living off the good will of the previous movement, Booker T. Washington saw this and most Civil Rights "icons" that still survive are grifters who need to stir up trouble to survive. Modern Marvel would never do that, but I'd just want X-Men having to deal with the Mansion loosing funding and support because better alternatives start popping up/ anti-telepathic technology makes it to market and Xavier can't manipulate donors and kids into coming to his school.
@MirrorNoirThey've done most of that already. Going back to the first Roy Thomas run, there have been multiple periods where the X-Men are without the mansion or school or Xavier's trust fund and have to struggle to survive, though in the Outback and Kelly/Seagle runs, you had the X-Men finding room and board with a defeated super-villain lair or Archangel basically funding the group per the off-camera plot point of Warren regaining control over his family fortune after being declared dead.
Also, you had in the 80s the Hellfire Club and Emma Frost as a rival to the X-Men in the recruitment/ideology department which got pissed away when they made Emma a good guy. Which Emma actually doing mental manipulation to get kids to go to the Massachusetts Academy.
Also the "where where you when X happen" shit only happened in the MID 00s, not early 00s and was pushed by asshats who simped for Emma as the new Xavier. In general, the X-Men and Spider-Man franchises were the moneymakers for Marvel in the 80s and 90s, but Claremont was notoriously prickly about sharing shit and would only agree to crossovers if it involved the Simonsons, Nocenti, or if Shooter forced him to (as in the case of Secret Wars II).
Only two X-Men appeared in Infinity Guantlet (Wolverine and Cyclops) and the X-Men were explicitly stated to have not died when the snap happened (being off-world in a never shown noodles event type adventure that took place immediately following the Xtinction Agenda but before the X-Men, Wolverine included, were teleported to Shi'Ar space to overthrow Deathbird) and Jean, Warren, Bobby, and Hank the only confirmed snap victims, though Excalibur and New Mutants were MIA entirely during Infinity Guantlet.
Crossover tie-ins were few in Infinity Gauntlet because no one had much faith it would be a big thing, hence why War and Crusade had a TON of them. But while there were no X-Men family crossover issues, BOTH War and Crusade were written to put the X-Men in major roles in the main series. X-Factor and the X-Men played major roles in Infinity War with Havok and Polaris BOTH playing major roles in the final battle and Xavier/Jean Grey also given a major subpot. Meanwhile Infinity Crusade gave Storm a major role in the narrative as one of the Goddess's top brainwashed henchmen.
X-Men played a central role in the next major company wide crossover (Onslaught) and later in the next ones (Maximum Security and House of M) and Wolverine's Civil War tie-ins had him go after Nitro. The X-Men Civil War tie-in mini-series meanwhile was a stealth sequel to the 198, which itself was a stealth sequel to David Hines's District X and wrapped up loose ends from both books.
But in general, the isolation of the X-Men comes at the price of Marvel not wanting the rest of the super hero community bailing the X-Men out along with the toxic SJW types who want Emma and Scott to be smug and fix everything wrong with mutantkind themselves. The only reason we have crossovers with Empyre and King In Black, is that Marvel realized fans were waiting for the Krakoa era to be "erased" via Moira's plot erasing power and had to insert them into it to joss that notion that Krakoa won't last because no one else was referencing it.