But you said that to argue
@Strix454's point which was about the
result of trolling (minor Ecelebrity) not
accomplishment on the back of the result.
"You're not talking about the result, you're talking about the result of the result".
lol
It's not as if kids just don't want to read comics in general. Manga is proof of that. Kids just don't give a shit about superheroes outside the context of non-comics media. The comics are not meant for them anymore. They aren't written simply and they aren't priced properly for younger readers to get a foot in the door. Manga has proven that people of every demographic will read graphic fiction they are interested in.
If nothing else, manga has proven that an audience for graphic fiction is there
. Hollywood has proven that an audience for superhero fiction is there.
Hardly scientific of me, but when I go to the local bookstore there's been an explosion of graphic novel adaptations of not just children's but also more mature fare. Book publishers are furiously taking anything that looks adaptable into a comic book and running with it. Simon & Schuster may not be able to make a movie adaptation of a great book, but they can bankroll a graphic novel adaptation of it to a comic reading audience that apparently exists.
https://www.businessinsider.com/cha...f-comic-book-industry-expert-analysis-2019-10
2 major changes happening in comic books could shape the industry's future — and comic shops will have to adapt to survive
...
Milton Griepp, the ICv2 CEO, told Business Insider that this change was due to two major shifts in the industry:
- The graphic-novel format is becoming more popular: Graphic novel print sales reached $635 million in 2018 and single-issue (or periodical) print sales were at $360 million. The gap between the two has been widening thanks largely to the book channel. Graphic-novel sales through the channel was at nearly $500 million last year, but at less than $200 million through comic shops.
- New types of content are becoming more popular: Children's comics, which are almost exclusively sold in the graphic-novel format, have surpassed superhero comics this year as the most popular genre, according to ICv2. "Superheroes have dominated the comics business for as long as I've been in it, but there are some amazing things happening with kids content," Griepp said at last week's conference.
emphasis added mine
https://www.publishersweekly.com/pw...of-graphic-adaptations-for-young-readers.html
Old Stories in New Formats: The Growth of Graphic Adaptations for Young Readers
...
With the greater acceptance of graphic novels by schools and libraries, the old complaint that readers will prefer the (presumably easier) graphic novel to the original has not cropped up like it used to. In fact, quite the contrary seems to be true. “I tend to think that kids are like adults: if they like something, they want all the versions,” Saylor said. “Adaptations don’t necessarily replace the prose books at all. If you like the prose book, you will want the graphic novel and the streaming series.”
This has proved true with manga, Saylor pointed out, as manga sales have boomed because so many people were watching anime during the pandemic. “As we have seen with the Baby-Sitters Club, the prose books are going strong,” he said. “In fact, the graphic novels reinvigorated the whole brand. One doesn’t replace the other. It’s expanding on characters and series that are already beloved in some way.”
The bolded part is a very interesting point. Anime adaptations spur on manga sales. YA and graphic novel adaptations spur prose sales. Hell, even Garth Ennis'
The Boys' went through the roof sales after the Amazon Prime Video adaptation, and that's a indie creator owned superhero series.
Yet after a decade of global blockbuster Marvel and DC movie adaptations of comic book IPs... nothing. People who like
The Boys on Amazon order the omnibus, they're going to get a complete and accessible story. People who like the latest MCU film go to buy a copy of
Iron Man, they get a boring, meaningless, contextless snippet of Patsy Walker scolding Tony Stark for being a cis white male while he mopes in a chair. The writer has to work with the dumbass Hellcat fan fiction/paean to white guilt that preceding creator Dan Slott selfishly used the Iron Man comic as a vehicle for while the artist was picked because he renders characters well but can't do action scenes so it's just 22 ad-filled pages of people sitting in chairs. There's no reason why Garth Ennis' capeshit like The Boys is able to leverage non-comic adaptations but Marvel and DC can't, other than Marvel and DC can't or simply don't want to make accessible material that gives the customer what they want to see.
So, how does Comicsgate line up with these trends in graphic novels?
For one, given all the complaining about superhero fare done by Comicsgate for views, in practice Comicsgate creators in general do not seem very attached to the superhero genre. Many of the most prominent offerings of conventional superhero fare (
Kamen America, Lonestar, Red Rooster) aren't considered CG anymore, leaving
Jawbreakers, Black Flag, Art Thibert's
Black & White as well as the less conventional
Graveyard Shift,
Cyberfrog and the gay catbook as CG's superhero offerings, along with lesser known properties like Patrick Thomas Parnell's
Ultra Star, RJ Shaw's
Thomas Valiant, Twitless'
Omega Girl, etc. This sounds like a lot, but it is in the minority when held up against all of Meyer's non-Jawbreakers work, none of which is in the superhero genre. Neither are Graham Nolan, Aaron Lopresti's, Mandy Summers', Charlie's London, Nasser's or Narwhal's work in the superhero genre. Or for that matter all the dumbass werewolf comics CG makes. The further down the ladder of one goes, the more avant garde, indie and less conventional it gets.
As far as the trend of customers flocking towards more accessible material goes, Comicsgate is, uh, certainly going against the grain here. In going on four years, Frog has yet to establish the post-1997 Cyberfrog universe beyond a prologue. Meyer actively made the Jawbreakers universe opaque and inaccessible to mask his flaws as a writer and then killed off his cast as if trying to hide the evidence after the fact. Cecil, Raging Golden Eagle and Dan Fraga failed to even provide a comic, which is the definition of inaccessible. Gonna have to dock points here.