“Fabled and Notorious THROUGHOUT THE INDUSTRY…” EXHUMING 2015’s DISGRACEFUL & Offensive ‘Amazing, Fantastic, Incredible!’

When it premiered in 2015, “Amazing Fantastic Incredible: A Marvelous Memoir” received credit from the press for being in the graphic novel format, as if this were some innovative approach in biographical storytelling. It was just another instance of the media giving Stan Lee credit for something that numerous creators before him had already done […]

Read More “Fabled and Notorious THROUGHOUT THE INDUSTRY…” EXHUMING 2015’s DISGRACEFUL & Offensive ‘Amazing, Fantastic, Incredible!’

“That’s When All The Gimmicks Are Over…” A Review of ‘Slugfest: Inside the Epic 50 Year Battle Between Marvel and DC”

The first thing I’d like to do is give Reed Tucker credit for taking the time to sift and compile both well known and lesser known information into a cohesive and mostly engaging narrative that will keep you occupied on a train ride and that’s not faint praise, I promise. While this is notable for […]

Read More “That’s When All The Gimmicks Are Over…” A Review of ‘Slugfest: Inside the Epic 50 Year Battle Between Marvel and DC”

“The Narrative Wouldn’t Exist Without Him As a Foil”- Thoughts on Martin Goodman

Think about how you know him. He’s subtly omnipresent to the point of existing in our collective unconsciousness the way founding fathers or historical figures are- he’s John Wilkes Booth, existing to be the assassin in Abraham Lincoln’s story. He’s Herbert Morrison, necessary to breathlessly describe the Hindenburg Disaster, so that it better becomes a […]

Read More “The Narrative Wouldn’t Exist Without Him As a Foil”- Thoughts on Martin Goodman

“…and pulled down fistfulls of the national zeitgeist.” Reviewing the gruesome ‘Stan Lee: the Man Behind Marvel’

Start a pot of tea because this is going to be a lengthy one, covering the 2017 pre-death Stan biography “Stan Lee: The Man Behind Marvel” by one Bob Batchelor. Apparently, it comes in multiple editions, (there’s a young readers adaption of the same book, not pictured) with what I presume is the latest update […]

Read More “…and pulled down fistfulls of the national zeitgeist.” Reviewing the gruesome ‘Stan Lee: the Man Behind Marvel’

“What about the Darlin’ One?” How Dick Ayers was blacklisted and slandered by Marvel

“It was clobberin’ time for Stan Lee at a 1976 college lecture, a one-two punch, feint and jab. “Hey, Stan” came the question from the floor. “Do you remember Dick Ayers?” Lee beamed. “Darlin’ Dick?” he grinned, using an old credit-box endearment. “Sure, I remember Darlin’ Dick! What about the Darlin’ One?” How come Darlin’ […]

Read More “What about the Darlin’ One?” How Dick Ayers was blacklisted and slandered by Marvel

“And using it to further a White Man’s story is so f**king awful…” Thoughts on those who forget the past

This past May, the comic reading community once again had reason to be upset when Marvel decided to kill the popular Kamala Khan incarnation of Ms. Marvel in, curiously, the pages of Amazing Spider-Man. While no longtime reader of comic books expects the beloved Ms. Khan to stay dead, especially in lieu of that character […]

Read More “And using it to further a White Man’s story is so f**king awful…” Thoughts on those who forget the past

“Energized by her own enthusiasm”: 11 Untruths in 2002’s Stan Lee Autobiography

It was nothing if not a genuinely pleasant surprise to witness that the recent documentary/propaganda piece “Stan Lee“, directed by David Gelb, actually had the unintended effect of nudging a certain conversation a few more inches forward into the lexicon. That conversation was largely about the lack of credit and acknowledgement for collaborators such as […]

Read More “Energized by her own enthusiasm”: 11 Untruths in 2002’s Stan Lee Autobiography