The Truth About Stan Lee’s X-Men

I need to get my posting schedule back on track after yesterday’s lateness. So I’m tagging in some help from the Literature Devil.

As much as I try to avoid political discussions here, as my focus is on how the activists took over, it gets tougher and tougher as they replace the traditional superhero narratives with their own. Instead of physical action they’d rather get into social conflict, one-sided sociopolitical pandering born of stereotypes, and the everything for meeeeeeeeeeeeeee crowd in general insisting anything popular must be made for them. As “geek media” grows in popularity the anti-geek Hollywood types try to wrestle superheroes away while the businessmen who don’t understand or care about superheroes are ignorant of the whole failure, wondering why what used to be huge profit is taking such huge hits.

As the cool cliques and activists try to defend their position, the new warcry is “but it was always like this”. This falls on its face when you realize “if this is how it always was then why is it only now being ridiculed as it fails miserably and ruins both pop culture icons and the very marketing they wanted to use to push their agendas, whether it was money, ego, or politics?”, which the usual suspects have no actual answer for. Now the claim is that Stan Lee always meant for the mutants of the X-Men to reflect not just outcasts in general but the specific outcasts of the latest cause du jour, that Professor X was a stand-in for Martin Luther King, Jr and Magneto for Malcolm X (the wrong guy got the “X” in his alternate name?), and that it was always political or “woke”. So if it was always “woke” why do the anti-woke crowd or general people of all political views, races, genders, and orientations suddenly upset with what’s come out the last few years to what was escapist entertainment that maybe made them think about the world around them without heavy-handed preaching a one-sided narrow view ridden with stereotypes and false understandings?

In the following video by Literature Devil, he disputes these claims not only with the history of the X-Men but Stan Lee’s own words and the words of other creators who came after him, including the one who leaned more into the bigotry allegory when he took over. He also looks at depictions of the Hulk and She-Hulk in light of the differences between the MCU and the comics and what both messed up in recent years.

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> Lucky Comics Free Comic Book Day 2017

For those of you following the schedule, this isn’t from this year’s Free Comic Book Day so it counts as the current Drive Thru Comics library reviews.

Lucky Comics Free Comic Book Day 2017

Lucky Comics (May, 2017)

WRITER/LETTERER: John Michael Helmer

ARTIST: Eric Douthitt

EDITOR: Michael Waggoner

SENIOR EDITOR: Lou Mogin

Shown are both covers. Cover A, by Josh Holley, features Beetle Girl, the descendant of Dan Garret, Danni. That’s the Fox/Holyoke/Fox Again/first Charlton version, not the second Charlton/DC version. Cover B, by Salviano Borges, features “The Black Bat”, but is called the Bat because Cassandra Cain was going by Black Bat at the time (I think). The characters may be public domain, or at least Danni’s father is, but DC are notorious jerks when it comes to trademarks and copywrite lawsuits. Just ask anyone who worked at Fawcett at the height of Billy Batson’s success as the original Captain Marvel. Note that the stories are not in public domain but are owned by Lucky Comics. I think they also created Beetle Girl even if the original Blue Beetle is public domain-ish. Just don’t use her or her dad. If you get these from Drive Thru, which is free, it doesn’t matter which cover you have. The pages inside are just the same. I didn’t know that when I downloaded it. The covers are in color, but the comics are not.

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BW’s Daily Video> It Was Never About The Powers

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Scanning My Collection> Sonic Returns The King

Apparently my Sonic The Hedgehog Archie library still has mistakes, but I might have caught it sooner had I not mistaken it for another “director’s cut”. If you recall in “Yesterday’s” Comic, we’ve been going over Sonic and Tails chasing Ixis Naugus after the return of King Maximilian Acorn and his being freed of the crystal. There was a gap between issues where things happened that I remembered reading originally but wasn’t coming up in this reread. When did Naugus get here? What was that talk about dismantling Robians? I knew it happened but it seemed to be missing.

I should have checked the Sonic Super Special comics, because that’s where things went down. It got lost in the rotation somehow and when I finally saw it I thought it was a director’s cut or some other story. This is my fault and to get things back on track I’m doing a Scanning My Collection review to get caught up. I hope I don’t have to do this again. I have a bunch of Sonic Super Specials bunched together while in “Yesterday’s” Comic we have big revelations in Sonic The Hedgehog and Knuckles The Echidna coming out after these events. So let’s fix my mistake and hope the reading order doesn’t have any more mistakes like this.

No, He-Man as the superstrength. You have superspeed.

Sonic Super Special #4

Archie Comics Publications (1998)

INKER: Pam Eklund

COLORIST: Karl Bollers

LETTERER: Vickie Williams

EDITOR: J. Freddy Gabrie

“The Return Of The King”

WRITER: Karl Bollers

PENCILER: Sam Maxwell

“Down And Out In Downunda”

WRITER: Michael Gallagher

PENCILER: Nelson Ortega

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> Knuckles The Echidna #19

I’d make a weatherman joke but this isn’t normal weather for them at this time.

Knuckles The Echidna #19

Archie Comic Publications (December, 1998)

“The Forbidden Zone” part 1″: “Whatever Happened To Queen Alicia?”

WRITER: Ken Penders

PENCILER: Manny Galan

INKER: Andrew Pepoy

COLORIST: Barry Grossman

LETTERER: Vickie Williams

EDITOR: Justin Gabrie

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BW’s Daily Video> An Examination Of Mass Effect’s Asari Race

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Why The DCAU Should Be Allowed To Rest

I’m not a huge X-Men fan, so even if I had Disney+ I don’t think I’d be watching the current X-Men ’97. I don’t have anything against it, and I hear it’s better than anticipated…which may be why Disney fired the showrunner over a PG Onlyfans account. Doing things the fans like seems to be the opposite of current Disney’s goal, but that’s a whole other discussion. This resuming of the 1990s Fox Kids cartoon seems to be doing well and its fans actually enjoy it.

This has led to another big return being hoped for by nostalgic fans of the DC Animated Universe, specifically Justice League Unlimited. Bounding Into Comics contributor JB Augustine even wrote a piece asking for it back, which would go against James Gunn’s plans for combining animated and live-action productions into his shared DC Gunniverse. Not that it’s stopped My Adventures With Superman or the announced Batman: Caped Crusader shows, with varying levels of adaptation even though the now Adult Swim airing Superman show seems to have found an audience for finally getting Superman right. It’s just the world he lives in they royally screwed up, which is why I can’t get into it. Pretty boy Deathstroke is just wrong and I just saw a clip for season two that makes Amanda Waller full on evil in ways the last season of Unlimited didn’t even reach. And I’m one of a select few who didn’t like the Cadmus storyline or the “Epilogue” episode.

The DCAU was some of the best comic adapting out there, and even gave us new characters like Harley Quinn, Renee Montoya (which has been ruined by DC and further adaptations), and the villainess Livewire. I fully enjoyed all of it, even the shows that Bruce Timm didn’t work on. Static Shock was a version of the Milestone hero Static I could more get into tonally (so I have no ill will towards My Adventure With Superman fans and wouldn’t with the Snyderverse fans if they and Snyder himself weren’t such jerks about it at times) and while I didn’t get the chance to get into The Zeta Project, it was a unique addition thanks to the backdoor pilot in Batman Beyond, set in the DCAU thanks to a crossover with the Batman of the future. It was great storytelling and a good adaptation of the DC multiverse. Does that mean it deserves another chance like the Fox Kids X-Men are getting? I’m not convinced.

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