Robot 6
Comics A.M. | The comics Internet in two minutes
I believe we’ve reached the pre-Thanksgiving industry slowdown.
Internet | A website called the Home of the Green Arrow, which supports the far-right British National Party in its “fight to secure a future for the indigenous peoples of these islands in the North Atlantic which have been our homeland for millennia,” has co-opted Jock’s art from the DC Comics miniseries Green Arrow: Year One for its banner. “This is leaving a horrible taste in my mouth,” the artist wrote this morning on Twitter. He has contacted DC’s legal department. [Jock's Twitter feed]
Art | Frank Frazetta’s original cover painting for the 1967 Lancer paperback edition of Conan the Conqueror sold at auction last week for a reported $1 million. That’s nearly four times the previous record price for the artist’s work — $251,000 — paid in 2008 for the cover to Edgar Rice Burroughs’ Escape on Venus. [Spectrum Fantastic Art, via Sci Fi Wire]
Art | As of Thursday morning, bids on the 18 pieces of original art by Joe Kubert had reached $30,000. The auction, held by Heritage Auction Galleries, opens to the public today. [Daily Record]
Awards | Mike Keefe, editorial cartoonist for the Denver Post, has won the 2009 Berryman Award for Editorial Cartooning. [The Daily Cartoonist]
Publishing | Dark Horse Assistant Editor Brendan Wright discusses one of the perks of his job: seeing the doodles and character designs that Stan Sakai occasionally leaves on the back of his Usagi Yojimbo art boards. [The Wright Opinion]
Publishing | Lauren Davis takes a look at celebrities who dip their toes into the comic-book pool. [io9.com]
Retailing | “Superheroes saving comic book stores from recession.” Yeah. [Daily Camera]
Creators | Phil Hester talks about his career and his new BOOM! Studios series The Anchor, and offers some advice to young writers and artists. [Surfing the Bleed]
Creators | Scott Thill interviews Martin Eden, creator of the gay-superteam comic Spandex, which earlier this week had been heralded as presenting “the first gay superheroes.” “Let’s not kid ourselves,” Eden said. “Spandex aren’t the first-ever gay superheroes. At the moment, for instance, you’ve got a lesbian Batwoman, a lesbian Question, Rictor and Shatterstar in X-Factor, and there’s been Apollo and Midnighter in the Authority, who were gay versions of Superman and Batman. There are probably a few more, but not many. I mean, I was thinking of pitching a gay series to Marvel a while ago, but could barely think of any gay characters they had, which surprised me.”
Blogosphere | Tucker Stone delivers a special, positive edition of “Advanced Common Sense”: “That’s what being a hero is all about — is that sometimes you have to take out a baby.” [The Factual Opinion]
- November 20, 2009 @ 08:07 AM by Kevin Melrose



4 Comments
Joe Palmer
November 21, 2009 at 6:15 am
>>“Let’s not kid ourselves,” Eden said. “Spandex aren’t the first-ever gay superheroes. At the moment, for instance, you’ve got a lesbian Batwoman, a lesbian Question, Rictor and Shatterstar in X-Factor, and there’s been Apollo and Midnighter in the Authority, who were gay versions of Superman and Batman. There are probably a few more, but not many. I mean, I was thinking of pitching a gay series to Marvel a while ago, but could barely think of any gay characters they had, which surprised me.” <<
There aren't many more LGBT characters that are high profile (Wiccan, Hulkling, the Ultimate version of Colossus, both versions of Northstar), but there are also quite a lot that have low profiles.
Here's a list to start: http://www.gayleague.com/wordpress/characters/
Joe
Omni-man
November 22, 2009 at 9:01 am
Do we really need more gay superheroes? When did it become all about their sex lives? Do peter Parker and MJ do anal? The readers need to know, so that it gives context to his next fight with doc ock. It’s pathetic.
Kevin Melrose
November 22, 2009 at 10:05 am
Do we really need more heterosexual superheroes? The way Clark Kent and Lois Lane, Peter Parker and Mary Jane, Reed Richards and Susan (Storm) Richards, Matt Murdock and [fill in the blank], Bruce Wayne and [fill in the blank], and Dick Grayson and whomever he’s hopping into bed with this month flaunt their heterosexuality is pathetic.
Gokitalo
November 23, 2009 at 4:30 pm
And to answer Omni-Man’s third question:
http://jaypinkerton.com/spiderman/06.jpg
Yes.
“Bruce Wayne and [fill in the blank], and Dick Grayson”
Do they really need a “fill in the blank” keeping them apart?