Graeme, because you care more about sales and market performance… do you think DC’s Futures End September event will wind up doing worse than it would have because of the general disinterest in the weekly series? You know I’m still digging it, but the grumblings you find around seem to be that the weekly series is shit… will that wind up killing the event? Should they have maybe started with the event instead of the series?

I think this September event would’ve been a damp squib no matter what, to be honest – it’s not like there’s really been a massive groundswell of interest about Futures End at any point, so I think it’s as likely to be a success now as it would’ve been had it launched before the main series. I’m actually more curious whether or not the event, which is likely to be more successful than the series just because of the scale of DC’s September events as a whole, will somehow jumpstart interest in the series. We’ll see?

(Also: surely interest in this stunt month can’t be any lower than “Villain’s Month” from last year?)

Special Credit

I’m kind of surprised seeing people sharing that Guardians of the Galaxy credits still as evidence of a good thing on Marvel’s part. Given that the creators actually listed as, you know, character creators in the credits are (a) two creators who threatened legal action–or, in Gerber’s case, actually went to court–to try and wrest control of their creations back and (b) a creator who has been the subject of a massive social media campaign to shame Marvel into appropriately crediting him and renumerating him for his work (and associated artists who worked with said creators), it really doesn’t seem like something to boast about.

Also, the effect of crediting Jim Starlin, Bill Mantlo, Keith Giffen, Steve Gerber and Val Mayerik with “created by"s and only giving Englehart, Kirby, et al "special credit” is to create a weird caste system. Why don’t the creators of the movie’s lead character get credited with “created by”? Aren’t they important enough?

opting out

opting out

How Gamora, Black Widow and other Marvel women handle sexism

How Gamora, Black Widow and other Marvel women handle sexism