[Filler Video] Why Girl-Bosses Suck

Look around this very site and you will find numerous of strong female heroes I grew up with. These heroines range from superheroes to sci-fi to the lone post-apocalypse story I actually enjoy. I have nothing against strong women taking the lead and kicking butt in their own way. It’s when they do it like a man would, or rather a poorly written male hero, that I get disappointed. I like seeing what they bring to the table that separates her from the guys.

We live in a time when writers are either afraid to make a female character struggle because of backlash from certain groups, or refuses to have them struggle because they’re part of those groups. This leads to a character so strong that she’s boring to watch, which when done with a male hero is still that boring.

In the following video, which if you’re reading this means I needed to get something out there due to no article ideas of not being able to work on anything in time for posting due to life, Literature Devil on YouTube digs into the evolution of the Mary Sue into a “girl-boss”, why they make for terrible or boring heroes, and gives us examples of heroines who did it better by being great characters instead of power fantasy stereotypes meant to represent the entirety of womanhood…ignoring those women both creative and in fandom who hate those characters. The video is an hour long, with some mild swearing, so have a seat and send the kids out, then read my own thoughts, with my own examples of this done right.

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> Fantastic Comics #2

That’s not how the Heimlich maneuver works.

Fantastic Comics #2

Fox Publications, Inc (January, 1940)

I was rather neutral towards the previous issue. Some stories were okay, and only a few were actually enjoyable. I’m hoping things improve with this issue, but it just be more of the same thing. After all, I had to double check my review, so nothing was all that memorable off the top of my head. Will that take it out of the review cycle or is there something that will keep me coming for the next issue? Let’s take a look.

[Read along with me here]

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BW’s Daily Video> More Thoughts On Sci-Fi Tank Designs

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Kids & Media: Under Siege On All Sides

We live in a time when kids aren’t allowed to have nice things. Not even a childhood.

I became a storytelling fan because of the stories I read and watched as a kid. (Video games as storytelling didn’t start until near my late teens/early adult period. Stories were just a blurb on the arcade cabinet or a page in a manual to explain why you were running from left to right shooting and hammering things or making a starship go pew pew.) TV, movies, comics, and novels were my go-tos at the time, and I enjoyed each of them for the different ways they could tell a story and ease of convenience. Back then your TV wasn’t fitting in your pocket. Not a real one, anyway. I would later be introduced to serials and audio dramas, partly through book & records and later just audio presentations. I’d watch cartoons and live-action material. And of course I was an avid reader, novels when I had time and comics when I didn’t. It was a wonderful time for someone who was just drawn to the power of storytelling.

Meanwhile today’s kids are getting the shaft. Stuff is still out there, but you have to track down and hope it will actually be good and not some psychologist/activist (you can be both and sadly there are too many) butcher job or written by someone who clearly doesn’t care about what they’re doing under the falsehood that kids will accept anything with bright colors and a song. Either they were never children or forgot their own childhoods.

Meanwhile, things I enjoyed as a kid are no longer kid-friendly, an attempt to show how mature the creators allegedly are. If I had been able to have a family the only way I could share the stuff I enjoyed as a kid with my kids would be show them the old stuff and hope they got into it, because the majority of not-stalgia and aged up properties by people using an old brand to push their new and unconnected crap is sadly also the majority of what’s coming out. The big problem is there isn’t just one group showing their hatred of kids and childhood. There are a bunch of groups to yell at for the declining state of kids media.

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> dinoDames #1

No, the comic is not called “Trash”. Look in the corner of the cover. That’s the title.

dinoDames #1

Markosia

no credits, no cover date, and the cover is confusing as to what the actual title of the comic is. Someone screwed up the digital edition I’m working with.

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BW’s Daily Video> Sci-Fi Tank Designs Are Weird

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Transformers: How I’d Write Cybertronian Life

(l to r: Windblade, Bumblebee, and Rubble)

In a previous post in what I guess I’m making a prose series, I talked about how I’d combine the Quintesson and Primus origins of the Transformers. If I had to choose I prefer the Quintessons as they’re more sci-fi and less supernatural, but nobody asked me and somehow Simon Furman’s comic book take bled into the cartoons. I blame Beast Wars, but what can you do? I like my compromise and hopefully someone else did as well. It got a few likes but no real push for more, so I was ready to call it there and move on.

My brain was not.

I’ve mentioned before that I don’t like the modern day backstory for Cybertron, the whole “forced caste system” leading to Cybertron being a terrible place, with Optimus and Megatron simply fighting over replacing a bad system. A system that makes no sense to me since literally from episode one of the cartoon and issue one of the comics we see that they can change their alternate modes pretty easy even before the protoform concept was introduced. (Also blame Beast Wars for protoforms and sparks and things, but I consider them good additions.) I prefer when the Autobots were fighting to protect something, though even before they left Cybertron they seemed to be losing. It made the Autobots seem like cooler characters and I wanted them to restore Cybertron and win the war more than the current ideas. The war is a bit more tragic when something good is being lost rather than the place being terrible and just choosing what terrible idea to replace it with.

So I want to write my own idea of what started the Great War between Autobot and Decepticon, building off of the shared origin. Before I do that I need to create a more positive culture of Cybertron, one that feels right for shapeshifting robotic lifeforms that should still feel like a living world but less like humans. Before I do that, however, I need to come up with the basis for Cybertronian culture, customs, traditions, and society. That means not just how Transformers live but the basis of their entire existence.

In the origin I did mention that the Quintessons created transforming robots for use as merchandise and war, but that Primus created the All-Spark, a copy of his lifeforce the Quintessons were using to power the planet, out of the planet’s energon. I also went over how sparks in my headcanon work (taking aspects from the cartoon and the comic as well as the toys that are the “source material” of this franchise), and how they chased the Quintessons off. The recent compilation update by Transformers: The Basics also helped me try to figure out just how Cybertronians in my version would live, which would be the origin point for their culture and society. Looking at previous takes on sparks, energon, and transforming among other aspects of the Transformers, as re-imagined in different continuities, gave me a starting point, but in order to get where I want to I need to come up with what my version would be like. I’m going to be pulling more from the toys and meta logic when it comes to the concepts I’m playing with, using various media takes to fill in gaps and form the building blocks of life on a planet of robots who can transform into things. Let’s see what I can come up with.

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