Smasher interacts with Al in a great moment in Johns JSA. I'm far saltier about OG Mr. Terrific and Roulette being left ambiguous.
Since you are a JSA man, I'd like to talk about the mixed feelings I have on the Thomas era JSA.
Given what we know now, that McCarthy was essentially right about deep penetration by communists, I don't know that the excuse for the OG JSA breaking up being the result of McCarthy holds up well. Then you have the pandering in Thomas' All-Star run, which got pretty cringe at times. Don't get me wrong, Thomas did some great stuff. But would I rather not have Roy Thomas lecture me about racism or whatever every three or four issues of my superhero book? Yeah.
Still great comics and if I'm ranking JSA runs it's probably third or fifth on my list.
Absolutely. But I don't thinks it's just age. McFarlane was older and so was Silvestri. Yet you have this whole Image generation and what is their contribution?
Todd McFarlane had one memorable two issue arc on Spidey that was the culmination of Tom Defalco and others Symbiote suit stuff. He had a decent run and Hulk, and some okay stuff at DC. But that's it, outside of a couple of years of Spawn, which most people agree is pretty but kindof junk.
Compare that to prior generations. Frank Miller and Walt Simonson (Daredevil and Thor), John Byrne and George Perez, (NTT and Uncanny X-Men), Neal Adams and Jim Steranko, (Nick Fury and Batman), or Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko. Thousands of issues with hundreds of characters still beloved and used. Todd? Venom, a take on the Symbiote suit. Rob? Deadpool and maybe Cable. Marc? Witchblade, a character he never drew an issue for. It's not just them. Guys like Joe Quesada and second generation figures are in the same boat.
The speculator boom encouraged a whole generation to produce less.