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Tweets from 2010-07-22

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5 Comments To "Tweets from 2010-07-22"

#1 Comment By Avocet On Fri 23-Jul-10 1:09am @ 1:09am

Just saw that the cast of The Big Bang Theory was signing autographs today. If I had known about that, I might have gone. Kaley Cuoco… /sigh

#2 Comment By Avocet On Fri 23-Jul-10 1:11am @ 1:11am

JMS is a good writer, but he didn’t “wow” me until his work on The Brave & the Bold. Did you read the Wonder Woman/Zatanna/Oracle story? /cry

#3 Comment By ***Dave On Mon 26-Jul-10 4:08pm @ 4:08pm

Even where I don’t agree with the story directions JMS has gone in some of his storylines, I always enjoy his writing, if that makes sense. So I always enjoyed his Spider-Man, even if I thought the whole avatar bit was unnecessary. I liked his take on the FF, and very much enjoyed his Thor.

I think he’s doing some triffic stuff on B&B (apparently he got a LOT of hate mail on that one).

#4 Comment By BD On Fri 23-Jul-10 7:08am @ 7:08am

So, what were you going to ask that you didn’t get to ask?

So, were was Margie at Dinner?

#5 Comment By ***Dave On Mon 26-Jul-10 4:20pm @ 4:20pm

1. There has been a lot of talk about dealing with changing teams on a book (e.g., PAD having to deal with having put together a whole “Captain Marvel goes crazy” storyline to work with Chris-Cross’s ability to draw crazy people, only to have him leave the book and the series get a string of artists who, well, couldn’t), plus trying to deal with intrusions into stories from company Events (something PAD’s also had to suffer through with X-Factor, IMO).

A big part of the discussion had also been on what makes a character a myth, vs. a character — so, for example, if you ask someone who Superman is, they’ll say, “Oh, he’s the last survivor of Krypton, he can fly, he lives in Metropolis,” as opposed to saying, “Oh, he’s a character played by Chris Reeves” or “He’s a comic book character published by DC.” Or, for example, Sherlock Holmes is “he’s the world’s greatest detective, lives in Victorian London, hangs with Dr. Watson,” before saying, “He’s a fictional character written by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, subject of numerous short stories.” In other words, the character becomes mythic when detached from his particular origins / actor /writer.

So I was going to suggest that, while someone’s run on a character (or even a creator-owned character) may be fantastic, the character is not going to become truly mythic unless the character transcends those origins, such that it goes beyond the original publisher, writer, artist, author, playwright, etc. The gods and heroes of the Greek Myths had numerous tales told about them — and have been the subject of retelling and reimaging countless times over the centuries. Superman and Batman have done the same despite being handed off to innumerable writers and different media forms and presentations — in fact, not despite but *because* of it.

Which would have been a much shorter, much less coherent, and much more questiony question had I actually given it.

2. Duh. Margie was sitting with me. Her presence was to be assumed. 🙂