BW’s Saturday Article Link> More Proof Bob Iger Is Against His Company’s Legacy

“Seriously, what did you step in!”

I considered doing an article on this last week, but I’m just tired of talking about how Bob Iger clearly doesn’t care about Walt Disney’s legacy, and outright rejects it. I’m also not sure what I could add to this article from That Park Place about Iger’s recent comments about how the man who created the company you work for shouldn’t be “revered” because it holds them back or something. That’s an insult to the animator whose goal was to make families happy. “Let’s respect our past and not revere it.” he says. He’s not doing either by rejecting the form of media Walt created the company for and allowing the parks to turn into everything Walt was trying to push back against in the amusement park industry. Both of those things worked very well for the company and its reputation until Iger came along.

CBS Transformers> The Production Notes part 2

Last time we began looking at the various production notes the Sunbow Marvel Archive collected into a single file, which I didn’t know would be as long as it is. Some were typed notes but many of them were handwritten brainstorming ideas.

There’s a lot more typed notes in this next set of pages. This section, dated 2/23/84, is labeled as “Misc. Format Notes”. This section includes hand-written notes, presumably written during a discussion on them, but I don’t know the full history of that. We’ll conclude with a series of notes from Hasbro that came two days later, and we’ll hold the rest for a third installment. Like I said, I didn’t know it was going to be this long.

Whether or not we’ll get more hints as to why Hasbro rejected this first version this round I don’t know. I just skimmed to see where a good place to stop is before this article gets too long. So in the interest of not being too long and getting some interesting conversation going, I’m just going to cut the article intro short and get right on to it.

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“Yesterday’s” Comic>Amazing Man Comics #9

“Dude, what did you have for lunch?”

Amazing Man Comics #9

Comic Corporation Of America (February, 1940)

So the previous issue wasn’t all that great. We’ll see what this issue does, but seeing as I have to keep going to old reviews just to remember it, I’m starting to see how these never went very far. Stuffing so many stories into one book is not making them very memorable. They don’t have time to make the characters interesting beyond the scenario. Let’s see if this issue is an improvement.

[Read along with me here]

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BW’s Daily Video> Why Megatron Waited So Long To Off Starscream

Catch more from TheCommandR on YouTube

I think we can question Megatron’s competence as leader. Some of his plans are kind of stupid. I also wonder if Beast Wars Megatron’s belief that treachery keeps the wits sharp isn’t something else he borrowed from his G1 namesake. As for killing him off in the movie, we know that was a mistake thanks to Starscream coming back as a ghost, possibly because he’s too stubborn to die. Beast Wars tried to explain this away as a “mutant spark”, but I think it’s just Starscream’s ambition not letting him pass on to the Transformers afterlife, whatever that meant in the original series.

Making Your Character TOO Important

Add one more to the list of characters who were better before they were important. Or at least important to certain parties.

Sabine Wren, one of the heroes of Star Wars: Rebels, got an upgrade of sorts in Ahsoka when she was turned into a Force user, something that wasn’t in the show…by choice. A recent interview in the Rebels rewatch podcast Pod Of Rebellion, as reported on by Bounding Into Comics, featured an appearance by show producer Henry Gilroy among the usual podcast panel of show voice actors, was asked about Sabine being made a Jedi in her live-action appearance. Turns out that wasn’t just something the original animated series didn’t bother with, it was outright rejected:

In turn, the producer bluntly admitted, “I’ll say that it was absolutely not the plan,” before explaining, “As a matter of fact, we had a discussion in Season Three about whether that and we really felt, not only did it step on Ezra’s story, but it was like a retread – Okay, we already did this.”

“Yeah, the idea of Sabine training as a Jedi when she is already you know, this fantastic warrior of her own type, we felt like, ‘Well, this is overkill.’ So honestly, I had nothing to do with the Ahsoka series, so I was shocked because our entire story team had discussed it in Season Three and thought it was a bad idea. We kind of did a pros and cons list and were like, ‘Oh, yeah, this just kind of like a weak retread, why would we push that way?’”

“However, what I love with [Sabine’s] story about the Dark Saber is you don’t have to be a Jedi to have Jedi ideals and embrace the Jedi philosophy – and I think that’s what’s really like the more important thing rather than ‘Okay, now I’m gonna you know, force push Ezra, you know, one hundred feet when I’ve never used the Force before.’”

So Sabine didn’t need to be a Jedi to be an important character or for her character growth, and in fact her character arc was tied only in the idea that the Jedi ideals are something anyone can follow, which is a good message. Like with superheroes, you don’t need the powers and gear to emulate your favorite hero. A great message for kids that was lost to adults because someone insisted she’d only be good if she were among the important characters in the Star Wars universe, the Force users. Somehow you only matter if you have all the power, meaning that Han Solo, Lando Calrissian, Chewbacca, Padme Amidala, Dash Rendar, Giri, Wedge Antilles, the various droids, and anyone else who couldn’t manipulate minds and make things float don’t matter because they didn’t use or in a couple of cases believe in the Force. That is why they fail. It’s not even the only time I’ve seen this in Star Wars, and it’s definitely not the first time in fiction.

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> Tristan & The Cuddly Defenders FCBD

Or what if Toy Story had REAL villains to fight.

Tristan & The Cuddly Defenders Free Comic Book Day

Altworld (2013)

CREATOR: Nick Davis

COVER ART: Josh Lyman

WRITERS: Nick Davis, Scott Markley, & Jean Byrd-Davis

ARTISTS: Dan Nokes, Keir Knikia, & Veronica Smith

EDITOR: Kat Rotes

This comic appears to be a promotion for the comic series Out Of The Attic, which looks like an anthology about toys not just moving around without the notice of a child, but protecting those children from monsters who want them to be afraid, because fear gives them power. It’s actually an interesting idea on it’s own, but how do the individual stories fare?

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BW’s Daily Video> What You Don’t See About Some V-Tubers

Catch more from ItsShyver Live on YouTube

I don’t follow a lot of V-Tubers because I don’t have time with all the stuff I’m working on and my existing media backlog. I’ve heard them put down for this or that reason, but this is a side I hadn’t heard. The one with UC really interested me because Crohn’s is often linked to it not medically but because some medications target both. It has to be tough not being able to leave the house. I have days when I’m tired, but that’s more not getting enough sleep or being sedentary for so long watching a monitor as I work on projects and having nowhere to go. To be that way due to illness has to be far rougher. I’ve never put down a V-Tuber because I just figure they’re having fun without revealing their faces to the world, but I never questioned they were revealing their personalities. I just thought this was worth sharing.

Go to the video and do something rarely considered a good idea: read the comments of the people who benefited in front of the camera rig and those watching at home. There is a benefit to this community beyond being entertained and I’m all in favor of that.