What are you talking about, if I may?I refuse to buy World's Finest with the shit job they did on Power Girl (and I'm not even talking about the lack of boob window).
Pretty much. They're your standard volumes they sell, putting a few issues together into a trade. Just thought I'd post it up for anyone that was waiting for the volumes to be sold before going in.I'm guessing this is just a collection of the first few issues?
I don't know, I only read the peripheral bat-books (Batwing, Red Hood, Nightwing, Birds of Prey, and Batgirl) and I think they've done an excellent job keeping each story self contained. Each hero/team fights a different Talon, each book gives you the information you need to understand the Court of Owls, and each series features its protagonist triumphing over their Talon. No "Follow Red Hood to Batman: Dark Knight #9!" foolishness in sight.So far have 1-9 of everything I'm interested in. However I'm going be dropping another 4 or so from my pull list. I'm really turned off by this whole "Court of Owls" thing. I hate cross-overs that make you buy from a series you don't read at all, or worse, buy entire side comic sets to get the story. I want to follow my character, I want to buy her series and not have to buy anythingelse to see what happens to her.
Wonder Woman, OMAC, Aquaman, Firestorm, Deathstroke, Batwing, Suicide Squad, generally most of the B-Level titles.For someone getting into the new 52 with these volumes, which ones would you recommend?
If Nick dropped a Superman book, you know it has to be terrible.
L...lll...liiieeessss... ^hic^The Epic Story of One Man, Facing his Troubles as he Realizes he's not actually an Alien, but it's all part of his alcohol-induced hallucinations.
That was my reaction... Um... Jade and Obsidian?What's funny is that Alan Scott had a gay son in prior to the New 52. Oh well, if they even bother, they'll probably just have Thorn rape him or something so they can still have Obsidian. Because who gives a fuck about Jade, amirite?
That depends. It takes about six months (or at least it did in the 90's, it may be less than that now but it's presumably still at least four) to take a comic from start to finish. Northstar has been out and proud for twenty plus years, a major character in X-Books on and off for about a decade. When did Marvel start hinting at his upcoming wedding?So, after much speculation, they've revealed which iconic DC character is gay (in a totally non-exploitational way, comics don't do that kind of thing).
It's the Earth 2 version of the Green Lantern no one gives a shit about, Alan Scott.
I dunno, maybe I'm just being cynical but it really does seem more like a me-too thing with the Marvel Northstar deal going on right now than an actual honest to goodness stab at making a non-stereotypical gay character.
The thing is that it is editorial making a big deal of this. Based on the promo page they released, while it is a "big reveal" in the issue itself, it's not a "big deal" in the long run. The character is gay, out of the closet, and has a boyfriend - it's the reader for whom this is a big change. Like The Flash's connection to the Roman Gods , the deaths of the Trinity, and Kendra Saunders being the first Hawkgirl, this is just another one of the differences on new Earth-2.Why is this even an issue? We already have great gay DC characters, who's sexual orientation isn't really that much of a defining characteristic for them ANYWAY. Why do they feel the need to "reveal" established ones that no one cares about as being gay as well? It's clearly meant to drive sales and the long time fans know this.
None of the Infinity, Inc. generation exist. Jay Garrick just graduated from college for goodness sake, his peers can't have adult children. If anything, the new Alan Scott is gay precisely because of Pre-Flashpoint Obsidian.What's funny is that Alan Scott had a gay son in prior to the New 52. Oh well, if they even bother, they'll probably just have Thorn rape him or something so they can still have Obsidian. Because who gives a fuck about Jade, amirite?
I love the Justice Society, but they could have chosen so many other characters that would make more sense. Alan Scott is actually my favorite character from that era and I feel one of the few who kept relevant in the mainstream universe as well. Obviously, I'm not at issue with more gay characters, but really, why make Alan Scott gay?And please knock it off with the "no cares about the Justice Society" crap. I get that you're saying that the mainstream isn't familiar with them and that Alan Scott isn't who most people think of when people think Green Lantern, however the Justice Society had their own series from August 1999 to October 2011 (with a four month gap between the October 2006 JSA #81 and the February 2007 Justice Society of America #1 to break the stride), not counting the multiple spin-off minis and on-goings. The team has fans, dammit.
If I'm being cynical, I'd say it is to take the place of Obsidian on the list of gay DC characters. If I'm being optimistic, I'd say its because this is a New Earth-2 which is re-imagining all the JSA characters and their origins. The shortest is: I don't know yet. Alan Scott appeared on all of two pages in the first issue.I love the Justice Society, but they could have chosen so many other characters that would make more sense. Alan Scott is actually my favorite character from that era and I feel one of the few who kept relevant in the mainstream universe as well. Obviously, I'm not at issue with more gay characters, but really, why make Alan Scott gay?
There are literally two titles handling alternate universes on any sort of regular basis - Earth-2 (which says in the title that it's a different earth) and World's Finest (which is about two refugees from Earth-2 living in the mainstream DCnU, no more confusing than time travelers or aliens). The only time alternate universes become remotely confusing to new readers is when they become required reading to understand what's going on in the "mainstream" universe, and even then its not that confusing if it's written properly. Comics have had the concept of "multiverses" and "imaginary stories" for something like sixty years. They will NEVER go away. Even when DC said "No More Mulitverse!", it took about ten years for them to decide "But there is Hypertime" and half that for them to say "Elseworlds are OK too".Why... THE FUCK... are they adding in alternate universes? They already admitted that the idea behind those things was just fucking confusing for new readers.
Anyone more familiar with the JSA in the reboot able to give me some idea of the point of it now?