Marvel Cancels Black Lives Matter Comic

  • Thread starter Thread starter RI 360
  • Start date Start date
  • 🏰 The Fediverse is up. If you know, you know.
  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
https://heatst.com/entertainment/ma...s-black-lives-matter-comic-due-to-poor-sales/

Marvel Cancels Ta-Nehisi Coates’ Black Lives Matter Comic Due to Poor Sales
No one is buying Marvel’s lineup of social justice-themed comics. It’s no surprise, given that few readers want politics to be forced down their throats. Thus liberal darling Ta-Nehisi Coates and Yona Harvey’s Black Panther & The Crew is getting the axe after poor sales, just two issues after its launch. Its cancellation comes just weeks after a Marvel VP revealed that comics with forced messages of “diversity” were responsible for the publisher’s sales slump.

Joined by Luke Cage, Manifold, Misty Knight, and Storm, the titular superhero who entered the limelight with Captain America: Civil War gathers his all-black crew of superheroes to investigate the death of a civil rights activist who died in police custody. It has echoes of Sandra Bland’s death.

Set in a near-future Harlem-turned-police state patrolled by robotic police officers controlled by a private security contractor, the comic has every element you’d expect from a comic attempting to tell a story inspired by Black Lives Matter. The cops beat people up for no reason, too.
xK56CYM.jpg

Naturally, the social justice superheroes take justice into their own hands and go to battle against the corrupt system, while learning about the historical figures of the Civil Rights Movement. Univision-owned entertainment vertical Gizmodo enthusiastically describes The Crew as one that “[tells a] timely [story] about real world issues, like how police brutality devastates black communities.”

Coates explained to The Verge that Marvel decided to kill the publication due to poor sales, and that there wouldn’t be any continuation after the current story arc ends in its sixth and final issue. The market spoke, and Marvel listened.

Christopher Priest’s original run of The Crew in 2003 performed similarly poorly, and was canceled after just seven issues. Like Coates’ new effort, Priest’s run was also made up of non-white superheroes who took on gentrification in New York City.
R4ErO79.jpg

Gizmodo writer Charles Pulliam-Moore takes issue with Marvel’s business decision, to opine how the publisher was cancelling the only mainstream comic featuring a “majority-black” (a misnomer) cast of characters. Describing it as a “bad look” for Marvel, the writer says the publisher should have considered “more thoughtful approaches” instead of cancelling the underperforming title.

Pulliam-Moore argues that the comic book industry “needs to change in order to sustain itself and cultivate new readers,” and insists that stories like The Crew “deserve to be told,” but offers no solution for “culturally relevant” comics that just don’t sell.

Given Marvel’s failed forays into “culturally relevant” storytelling, it’s clear that any attempts to cultivate a new audience shouldn’t come at the cost of alienating existing readers.

If there is any market at all for Black Panther & The Crew, it certainly isn’t with the social justice warriors who cry when their stories are canceled but refuse to spend any money on them.

Markets be praised, no one in their right mind is buying this shit
:story:
 
Wow. So according to that guy, fans should keep rewarding them for horrible writing, preachy political soapboxing, garbage art and considering their longtime fans less valuable than potential SJW customers.

Because of "Privilege"
 
I decided to give my own shit to this comic, even if it is retarded.

The cops are attacking blacks, but not under their own control. In reality, they've been hacked by the late activist's partner, and plans to use them to spark hatred against whites and authority. It would add to the message "Not all blacks are nigger dindus, but all cops aren't racist pigs". And possibly, on a character level, it would make the Crew rethink their humanity, as they realized they've fallen into the trap of ignorance, and added more fuel to the fire.
Sounds autistic, but a bit of a step-up to Marvel's shit lately.
 
Set in a near-future Harlem-turned-police state patrolled by robotic police officers controlled by a private security contractor, the comic has every element you’d expect from a comic attempting to tell a story inspired by Black Lives Matter. The cops beat people up for no reason, too.

lmao that future Harlem is CWCville with jerkops
 
Why would robotic police officers beat up black people anyway? Are they literally programmed to be racist? That's kinda hilarious but it seems to me like the real bad guy is some white-nationalist programmer working in the basement of Marvel Cyberdyne, not the robots.
 
Wow. So according to that guy, fans should keep rewarding them for horrible writing, preachy political soapboxing, garbage art and considering their longtime fans less valuable than potential SJW customers.

Because of "Privilege"
It's the hidden hand of the free market in action. This is why the Venn diagram of these assholes and communists is pretty much a set of concentric circles.
 
No wonder Marvel Studios is distancing themselves from Marvel Comics, these new comics are fucking horrible.

You'd think that all these bombs would give them a hint, but they're still doing it. It's the definition of insanity.
 
Wow. So according to that guy, fans should keep rewarding them for horrible writing, preachy political soapboxing, garbage art and considering their longtime fans less valuable than potential SJW customers.

Because of "Privilege"

If you're a long time fan of comics, you have comic-buying privilege. You need to buy badly written comics or you're a bigot.

This is an actual opinion someone actually has.
 
There's some sanity in the Gizmodo article comments, although of course idiots are trying to nix it:
download.jpg
Screen Shot 2017-05-15 at 8.26.55 PM.jpg

Bobbylee and Jon B have it exactly right: 1.) people hate reading about one-dimensional stereotypes whose only traits relate to their sexuality/race/gender/etc, and 2.) these comics are sinking because nobody's fucking buying them. Minorities are called minorities for a reason; they're never going to be a more profitable demographic than the majority.

And more importantly, upwards of 95% of minorities (ie, black people, Muslims, LGBT people, etc) have absolutely no interest in reading comics like these. Shockingly, minorities don't enjoy reading stories with cringe-worthy stereotypes, ham-fisted dialogue, and heavy-handed themes any more than people belonging to majorities do.
 
>Macho
Since when has Captain America, Spider-Man, or most of their characters been about how "macho" they are? Shit, Thor's one of the closest to that and his origin story has him getting kicked out of Asgard to live a life as a crippled man until he learns to cut that shit out. Wolverine's habits aren't shown to be positive either. This isn't the guns and muscles 90s anymore.

If you're a long time fan of comics, you have comic-buying privilege. You need to buy badly written comics or you're a bigot.

This is an actual opinion someone actually has.
I never will understand why they love these books so much but they don't buy them themselves. "Oh, they'll cancel it in half a year" is an obvious conclusion if no one is buying, they could've survived if all SJWs complaining would've actually put money forward.
 
Captain Contrarian is speaking some bullshit. The diversity complaints are directed towards characters the press (Univision/The Mary Sue/other cancer) feel the need to yell at you at every corner how diverse they are. I've seen that obese blond woman's comic with titles telling me she's body positive. Other than fat women, who is going to want to read that garbage?

Him saying the diverse characters got no promotion is a lie. Miles Morales was revealed in a huge press event. Lady Thor got unveiled during The View. If Marvel didn't give d-list characters like Captain Marvel, Black Power Rangers and autistic Squirrel Girl any ads it's because they already knew better.
 
Back
Top Bottom