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At least they don’t have the whole Captain Marvel lesbian haircut.

Ms. Marvel was such a good character from House of M and afterwards until Khamala Khan I guess.

To me the character was part Starbuck from Battlestar Galactica and part Liz Lemon from 30 Rock(in the way she was overextending herself), played straight by 80's Brigitte Nielsen. She had the military background, discipline and still did a lot of gnarly military work, at the same time she believes she can make everything work while living the normal life of a metropolitan women her age, she can have it all! She's close to getting her book deal done and her agent says that.... but first she has to go to Texas, AIM made a small town into a shambling mass of body horror that can never be seen by the public.
She also wants to be seen as pretty, she's building a brand and trying to create a legacy. It was a good character.
 
What do guys think about Jill Soloway directing Red Sonja? I'm personally not looking forward to it.
 
War of the Realms seems like fun. Is it worth a look? I see all the bigwigs show up. Thor, Jane, Sif, Loki, Frigga, Odin, Hela, Captain Marvel, Black Widow, Wolverine, Deadpool, Daredevil, Valkyrie, Winter Soldier, She Hulk, etc
 
This will turn around the sinking ship that is IDW! I'm sure they'll sell tens of copies!

Comic Publisher Turning Mueller Report Into Graphic Novel -HuffPo, so you know it'll be unbiased!


POLITICS
06/21/2019 07:40 pm ET
Comic Publisher Turning Mueller Report Into Graphic Novel
Editor Justin Eisinger says illustrating the controversial report is “the easiest way to get people to actually read it.”
headshot
By David Moye


A San Diego-based comic publisher has figured out a novel way to actually get people to read the Mueller report: Turn it into a graphic novel.
IDW Publishing announced on Friday that it is publishing “The Mueller Report: Graphic Novel,” an illustrated version of the investigation by special counsel Robert Mueller and his team into Russian interference in the 2016 U.S. election.

REAL LIFE. REAL NEWS. REAL VOICES.
Help us tell more of the stories that matter from voices that too often remain unheard.
Join HuffPost Plus
Justin Eisinger, who’s editing the book, believes comic illustrations are the key to drawing more eyeballs to the report’s findings.
“This really is the easiest way to get people to actually read it,” he told HuffPost.
Artist Shannon Wheeler, who is doing the book with journalist Steve Duin, said he was surprised by how “readable” Mueller’s report actually is — and says real-life characters like President Donald Trump, former Attorney General Jeff Sessions and former Trump adviser Steve Bannon are “straight out of Dick Tracy.”
Wheeler promises a combination of factual information (there will be footnotes referencing the report throughout the book) and a lot of real-life hilarity.
“The part of the report where Trump learns about the investigation and freaks out, saying ‘I’m fucked!’ It makes me laugh every time,” Wheeler told HuffPost.
Here’s a sneak preview:
5d0d622a250000a81ae94ddf.jpeg

SHANNON WHEELER COURTESY OF IDW PUBLISHING

The graphic novel is expected to be published next April, and the text will be based on factual sources.
However, Wheeler admits he’ll be taking artistic license with how the events are depicted.
“Overweight guys like Steve Bannon and Chris Christie are really fun to draw, and ― who knows? ― maybe we’ll put a dunce cap on Donald Trump Jr.,” he said.
 
Sina Grace is a piece of shit, back to bite the hand that fed him at Marvel Comics, lambasting them for ... uh ... I don't know, babying him? Supporting his comic work even though it sold horribly? Giving him multiple chances when he was nothing more than self-admitted diversity hire?


As Pride Month comes to a close, it’s time I spoke candidly about my experience at Marvel Comics.
To date, I’ve always been honest about the joy of writing Iceman’s journey as an out gay superhero, but I’ve skirted around the challenges that came along with it. This is partially because I prefer to give off an upbeat vibe, and there’s also a fear that my truth will affect my career. With more corporations patting themselves on the back for profit-led partnerships wherein celebrities take selfies in rainbow apparel, and with buzz that Marvel Studios is preparing to debut their first gay character in the upcoming Eternals movie, there is an urgency to discuss the realities of creating queer pop culture in a hostile or ambivalent environment. Hopefully, my takeaways will serve as a guide for people in positions of power to consider when advocating for more nuanced and rich representation. In an ideal world, embracing our stories and empowering us to tell them will yield far more profitable (and way less messy) results than what I encountered while writing Iceman.

Stand by your people

It’s no surprise that I got the attention of trolls and irate fans for taking on this job. There was already backlash around the manner in which Bobby Drake aka Iceman came out, and Marvel needed to smooth that landing and put a “so what” to the decision. After a point, I could almost laugh off people making light of my death, saying they have “cancerous AIDS” from my book, or insinuating I’m capable of sexual assaultalmost. Between Iceman’s cancellation and its subsequent revival, Marvel reached out and said they noticed threatening behavior on my Twitter account (only after asking me to send proof of all the nasty shit popping up online). An editor called, these conversations always happen over the phone, offering to provide “tips and tricks” to deal with the cyber bullying. I cut him off. All he was going to do was tell me how to fend for myself. I needed Marvel to stand by me with more work opportunities to show the trolls that I was more than a diversity hire. “We’ll keep you in mind.” I got so tired of that sentence.
Even after a year of the new editor-in-chief saying I was talented and needed to be on a book that wasn’t “the gay character,” the only assignment I got outside of Iceman was six pages along, about a version of Wolverine where he had diamond claws. Fabulous, yes. Heterosexual, yes. Still kind of the gay character, though.
We as creators are strongly encouraged to build a platform on social media and use it to promote work-for-hire projects owned by massive corporations… but when the going gets tough, these dudes get going real quick.

Believe in the work

You may be asking if my Iceman book was any good, or if I’m just being sour grapes over a bad work experience. Believe me, I asked that, too. From the get-go, my first editor asserted that Iceman would be DOA if it were “too gay,” while also telling me to prepare for a cancellation anyway, given that most solo X-Men titles don’t last beyond a year. Never mind that my work on Iceman had gotten positive press in the New York Times (in-print), or that in spite of (since-deleted) critical sandbagging, the series nets glowing reviews on Amazon… Marvel still treated me as someone to be contained, and the book as something to be nervous about. Do you know how hard it is to not argue with a publicist when he’s explaining the value of announcing Iceman’s revival via the Marvel homepage? Sis, that’s a burial. Instead of clapping back, I just went and got myself more press from the New York Times. From there, they tightened my leash. I had to get all opportunities pre-approved, and all interviews pre-reviewed. This would be fine if it was the standard, but I assure you: none of my straight male colleagues seek permission to go on podcasts promoting their books.

What Marvel should have done is assign me a special projects editor. They should have worked with a specialty PR firm, rather than repeat a tiresome cycle of treating the book like a square peg, and getting confused when it’s a hit.

Give us a real seat at the table

There was a moment before Iceman was cancelled where I wrote then-editor-in-chief Axel Alonso an email, pleading for a Hail Mary arc. I explained that Iceman was landing with a newer generation of readers who focused more on binge-reading than month-to-month periodicals. The series needed time in the book market before its true strength could be assessed. To Axel’s credit, he was warm to the idea and even gave me an extra month, but when he left Marvel that idea got brushed away. Of course I was right. The first two volumes sold like gangbusters thanks to word-of-mouth, librarian love, and support from retailers big and small.

When the series returned, no one at Marvel asked me: “What do you think landed with readers?” Nor did they ask the question that Axel did: “What matters to your community?” So when I wrote what I thought the fans would be into, a story about a man learning to be a better ally in the war against hate, editorial totally missed its value.

Seat at the table pt II: The Shade of it all

All of the weird drama I put up with crystallized when I created a drag queen mutant, first called Shade, now called Darkveil. I told my editor that Shade would be a big deal for X-Fans, and asked how we should promote her. He said: “leave it up to the reader’s interpretation.” Everyone at Marvel shrugged off two years of goodwill and acted like I’d coordinated behind their backs on an announcement that made headlines. Beyond mentioning on Instagram the queens who inspired the character, I didn’t coordinate shit. Of course, their head publicist can’t admit that my quotes were pre-approved from an unreleased interview. At this point, I stopped believing that there’d be any more work for me. There were so many shady moves on their end that I’m still having trouble putting into language, but it all aligned with an experience I had in retail where a corrupt manager kept lying and moving the goal posts in order to keep me selling in a department I didn’t want to work in. I offered to give Darkveil a proper character bio, and I walked away.
I recognize that some of my complaints can be filed under “this is freelance life.” I am aware that it was not a queer person of color who joked to me that “it’s not a matter of if Marvel fucks you over, it’s a matter of when.” That came from a cis white male. The same-day turn-arounds without warning, the work emails on Christmas week… that’s the freelance bullshit. Truly, I don’t even think of this as discrimination, I call it general ineptness. It is my belief that if we are telling stories about heroes doing the right thing in the face of adversity, wouldn’t the hope be to embody those ideals as individuals? Instead of feeling like I worked with some of the most inspiring and brave people in comics, I was surrounded by cowards.

Truly, I hate writing this. In keeping with Pride Month, I am proud of the work I did on Iceman… I love the book! It sucks that I may be tarnishing its legacy going public about how the cookies were made. That said, the time for self-congratulating is over, and folks should be earnestly listening when they ask: what could we have done better?

He bends over backwards patting himself on the back for accomplishing nothing whatsoever. Hopefully this will get him blacklisted from Marvel but that place is a madhouse these days.
 
Sina Grace is a piece of shit, back to bite the hand that fed him at Marvel Comics, lambasting them for ... uh ... I don't know, babying him? Supporting his comic work even though it sold horribly? Giving him multiple chances when he was nothing more than self-admitted diversity hire?


As Pride Month comes to a close, it’s time I spoke candidly about my experience at Marvel Comics.
To date, I’ve always been honest about the joy of writing Iceman’s journey as an out gay superhero, but I’ve skirted around the challenges that came along with it. This is partially because I prefer to give off an upbeat vibe, and there’s also a fear that my truth will affect my career. With more corporations patting themselves on the back for profit-led partnerships wherein celebrities take selfies in rainbow apparel, and with buzz that Marvel Studios is preparing to debut their first gay character in the upcoming Eternals movie, there is an urgency to discuss the realities of creating queer pop culture in a hostile or ambivalent environment. Hopefully, my takeaways will serve as a guide for people in positions of power to consider when advocating for more nuanced and rich representation. In an ideal world, embracing our stories and empowering us to tell them will yield far more profitable (and way less messy) results than what I encountered while writing Iceman.

Stand by your people

It’s no surprise that I got the attention of trolls and irate fans for taking on this job. There was already backlash around the manner in which Bobby Drake aka Iceman came out, and Marvel needed to smooth that landing and put a “so what” to the decision. After a point, I could almost laugh off people making light of my death, saying they have “cancerous AIDS” from my book, or insinuating I’m capable of sexual assaultalmost. Between Iceman’s cancellation and its subsequent revival, Marvel reached out and said they noticed threatening behavior on my Twitter account (only after asking me to send proof of all the nasty shit popping up online). An editor called, these conversations always happen over the phone, offering to provide “tips and tricks” to deal with the cyber bullying. I cut him off. All he was going to do was tell me how to fend for myself. I needed Marvel to stand by me with more work opportunities to show the trolls that I was more than a diversity hire. “We’ll keep you in mind.” I got so tired of that sentence.
Even after a year of the new editor-in-chief saying I was talented and needed to be on a book that wasn’t “the gay character,” the only assignment I got outside of Iceman was six pages along, about a version of Wolverine where he had diamond claws. Fabulous, yes. Heterosexual, yes. Still kind of the gay character, though.
We as creators are strongly encouraged to build a platform on social media and use it to promote work-for-hire projects owned by massive corporations… but when the going gets tough, these dudes get going real quick.

Believe in the work

You may be asking if my Iceman book was any good, or if I’m just being sour grapes over a bad work experience. Believe me, I asked that, too. From the get-go, my first editor asserted that Iceman would be DOA if it were “too gay,” while also telling me to prepare for a cancellation anyway, given that most solo X-Men titles don’t last beyond a year. Never mind that my work on Iceman had gotten positive press in the New York Times (in-print), or that in spite of (since-deleted) critical sandbagging, the series nets glowing reviews on Amazon… Marvel still treated me as someone to be contained, and the book as something to be nervous about. Do you know how hard it is to not argue with a publicist when he’s explaining the value of announcing Iceman’s revival via the Marvel homepage? Sis, that’s a burial. Instead of clapping back, I just went and got myself more press from the New York Times. From there, they tightened my leash. I had to get all opportunities pre-approved, and all interviews pre-reviewed. This would be fine if it was the standard, but I assure you: none of my straight male colleagues seek permission to go on podcasts promoting their books.

What Marvel should have done is assign me a special projects editor. They should have worked with a specialty PR firm, rather than repeat a tiresome cycle of treating the book like a square peg, and getting confused when it’s a hit.

Give us a real seat at the table

There was a moment before Iceman was cancelled where I wrote then-editor-in-chief Axel Alonso an email, pleading for a Hail Mary arc. I explained that Iceman was landing with a newer generation of readers who focused more on binge-reading than month-to-month periodicals. The series needed time in the book market before its true strength could be assessed. To Axel’s credit, he was warm to the idea and even gave me an extra month, but when he left Marvel that idea got brushed away. Of course I was right. The first two volumes sold like gangbusters thanks to word-of-mouth, librarian love, and support from retailers big and small.

When the series returned, no one at Marvel asked me: “What do you think landed with readers?” Nor did they ask the question that Axel did: “What matters to your community?” So when I wrote what I thought the fans would be into, a story about a man learning to be a better ally in the war against hate, editorial totally missed its value.

Seat at the table pt II: The Shade of it all

All of the weird drama I put up with crystallized when I created a drag queen mutant, first called Shade, now called Darkveil. I told my editor that Shade would be a big deal for X-Fans, and asked how we should promote her. He said: “leave it up to the reader’s interpretation.” Everyone at Marvel shrugged off two years of goodwill and acted like I’d coordinated behind their backs on an announcement that made headlines. Beyond mentioning on Instagram the queens who inspired the character, I didn’t coordinate shit. Of course, their head publicist can’t admit that my quotes were pre-approved from an unreleased interview. At this point, I stopped believing that there’d be any more work for me. There were so many shady moves on their end that I’m still having trouble putting into language, but it all aligned with an experience I had in retail where a corrupt manager kept lying and moving the goal posts in order to keep me selling in a department I didn’t want to work in. I offered to give Darkveil a proper character bio, and I walked away.
I recognize that some of my complaints can be filed under “this is freelance life.” I am aware that it was not a queer person of color who joked to me that “it’s not a matter of if Marvel fucks you over, it’s a matter of when.” That came from a cis white male. The same-day turn-arounds without warning, the work emails on Christmas week… that’s the freelance bullshit. Truly, I don’t even think of this as discrimination, I call it general ineptness. It is my belief that if we are telling stories about heroes doing the right thing in the face of adversity, wouldn’t the hope be to embody those ideals as individuals? Instead of feeling like I worked with some of the most inspiring and brave people in comics, I was surrounded by cowards.

Truly, I hate writing this. In keeping with Pride Month, I am proud of the work I did on Iceman… I love the book! It sucks that I may be tarnishing its legacy going public about how the cookies were made. That said, the time for self-congratulating is over, and folks should be earnestly listening when they ask: what could we have done better?

He bends over backwards patting himself on the back for accomplishing nothing whatsoever. Hopefully this will get him blacklisted from Marvel but that place is a madhouse these days.
...I love how this guy insists his book was successful when it failed twice.

Also dude the New York Times will endorse almost anything that doesn't mean your work is liked.
 
The fact that Spidey and Venom becoming a full-blown mismatched partners buddy comedy has never happened is a huge missed opportunity.
 
...I love how this guy insists his book was successful when it failed twice.

Also dude the New York Times will endorse almost anything that doesn't mean your work is liked.

Iceman flopped because

A. They decided to get woke points by making the OG Bobby gay.....going against literally EVERYTHING-aside from Cloud and Northstar crushing on him-in the canon. ~ohoho our coming out as a mutant allegory in X2 wasn't enough~~
B. Not only did stupid new!Jean out new!Bobby horrifically, bobby then basically cornered OG Bobby to admit he was gay and had a crush on Angel.........
C. The series literally did nothing to advance Bobby as a character. It was stereotypical "recently out gay male has a romantic comedy" while managing to cram every fucking stereotype in the book. Oh and he happens to fight the baddies. Whoop de doo.
D. No on panel sex. Where the fuck is it?
E. No1curr enough for Bobby as a character to get a comic. If anything Storm needs an ongoing one.
F. Also there was a scene where the original Champions went to a club. Hercules crushing on women AND men was yet again ignored, also Natasha wasn't there to celebrate (because she's got some big identity issues....mainly resurrection + clone)

Seriously anything could have been better. They could have had him experience a horrible grindr date that turns to rape and have him focus on the PTSD and ramifications of that plus the stigma. Anything better than what we got.
 
Iceman flopped because

A. They decided to get woke points by making the OG Bobby gay.....going against literally EVERYTHING-aside from Cloud and Northstar crushing on him-in the canon. ~ohoho our coming out as a mutant allegory in X2 wasn't enough~~
B. Not only did stupid new!Jean out new!Bobby horrifically, bobby then basically cornered OG Bobby to admit he was gay and had a crush on Angel.........
C. The series literally did nothing to advance Bobby as a character. It was stereotypical "recently out gay male has a romantic comedy" while managing to cram every fucking stereotype in the book. Oh and he happens to fight the baddies. Whoop de doo.
D. No on panel sex. Where the fuck is it?
E. No1curr enough for Bobby as a character to get a comic. If anything Storm needs an ongoing one.
F. Also there was a scene where the original Champions went to a club. Hercules crushing on women AND men was yet again ignored, also Natasha wasn't there to celebrate (because she's got some big identity issues....mainly resurrection + clone)

Seriously anything could have been better. They could have had him experience a horrible grindr date that turns to rape and have him focus on the PTSD and ramifications of that plus the stigma. Anything better than what we got.
In all honesty the two problems I had with Gay! Ice Man was:

1. The way they made him gay felt an awful lot like he was pressured into it or that Jean "converted" him.

2. He was an irresponsible and selfish asswipe and the worst stereotype of a gay man and Marvel and Sina thought he should be a role model for it.

You'd think a gay man like Sina Grace would have picked up on 1's unfortunate implications and avoided 2 like the plague.

Though I can't really blame Ice Man fans for being pissed Marvel decided to wokeify him. I'm still bummed out Psylocke's not Asian anymore and hoping Hickman reverses it.
 
In all honesty the two problems I had with Gay! Ice Man was:

1. The way they made him gay felt an awful lot like he was pressured into it or that Jean "converted" him.

2. He was an irresponsible and selfish asswipe and the worst stereotype of a gay man and Marvel and Sina thought he should be a role model for it.

You'd think a gay man like Sina Grace would have picked up on 1's unfortunate implications and avoided 2 like the plague.

Though I can't really blame Ice Man fans for being pissed Marvel decided to wokeify him. I'm still bummed out Psylocke's not Asian anymore and hoping Hickman reverses it.

Don't get me started on Betsy. Dazzler fucking destroyed her original body so why the fuck we doing this now? Why cant Kwannon be British Betsy. Lol

Isn't Bobby dating an inhuman?
 
Don't get me started on Betsy. Dazzler fucking destroyed her original body so why the fuck we doing this now? Why cant Kwannon be British Betsy. Lol

Isn't Bobby dating an inhuman?
I'm fucking sure it was done for woke reasons like Betsy "stole" Kwannon's identity or some shit. * ignoring that Kwannon was a murderer and I'm pretty sure she was trying to kill Betsy with her body swap *

It's stupid because Psylocke being a psychic ninja is her most iconic look and all the merch and games are ignoring Marvel's bullshit so just change her back already morons!

* ahem *

Sorry for the autism but Psylocke and Wolverine are my favorite X-Men so yeah I'm still kinda pissed at Marvel for their recent bs they've pulled with the two * at least Logan's back now *.

ironically the first X-Men comic I read featured Revanche.


TBH I largely stopped following X-Men after they killed Wolverine. * changing Betsy's race was the last straw. *
 
You'd think a gay man like Sina Grace would have picked up on 1's unfortunate implications and avoided 2 like the plague.
I suspect the reason he didn't avoid 2 was because he's a terrible stereotype of a gay man himself. Also there seems to be this tendency for SJWs to think, both in their characters and themselves, that 'irresponsible, selfish asswipe' is an endearing description. They can't seem to write characters that aren't arrogant, selfish assholes, I suspect because that's who they wish to be, and often try to be online. His recent whine-fest certainly suggests that he's an arrogant, selfish asshole himself.

And I agree, why not bi? It would still be only done for wokeness, but it at least doesn't invalidate so much of what Bobby has been in the past; also, didn't Emma Frost take his body over at one point? If your psychic has fewer morals and respect for personal boundaries than the White Queen, they're not quite the hero you're painting them as. But that would be a potential, if ripe for horrendous backlash, way to undo Bobby being gay - having Jean interpret Bobby having a crush on or confused teenaged feelings for whoever as him being completely gay, and subconsciously rewriting his mind so that he was gay. And doing the same for adult Bobby, because she believes (possibly correctly - I have no idea where they came down on this) that they're the same timeline, so adult Bobby must be gay if she thinks younger Bobby as gay.

Hell, if you want to provoke maximum REEEEEEEing, remember that young Jean is from the 60s, so her mental conception of what a gay man is remakes Bobby into being the most shallow, sex-obsessed stereotype that he became, because that's all she knows of what a gay man is like.

They'd never do it, but it's how they could. If Marvel ever gets run by someone who realises the loudest complaints are always from people who don't actually buy their stuff, they can have that idea for free.

It's stupid because Psylocke being a psychic ninja is her most iconic look and all the merch and games are ignoring Marvel's bullshit so just change her back already morons!
I get that perspective, and no-one much cared about Psylocke before she became a ninja - but as someone who enjoyed 80s X-Men and Excalibur, I do actually miss the fashion model, Captain Britain's sister, version, and kind of like that she gets her old body back. I'm not particularly invested in it - I just don't object.
 
I suspect the reason he didn't avoid 2 was because he's a terrible stereotype of a gay man himself. Also there seems to be this tendency for SJWs to think, both in their characters and themselves, that 'irresponsible, selfish asswipe' is an endearing description. They can't seem to write characters that aren't arrogant, selfish assholes, I suspect because that's who they wish to be, and often try to be online. His recent whine-fest certainly suggests that he's an arrogant, selfish asshole himself.

I get that perspective, and no-one much cared about Psylocke before she became a ninja - but as someone who enjoyed 80s X-Men and Excalibur, I do actually miss the fashion model, Captain Britain's sister, version, and kind of like that she gets her old body back. I'm not particularly invested in it - I just don't object.
Yeah and as a Millennial myself * I'm 28 * it kills me that asshats like Grace and the softbrains on Twatter are going to be our legacy.

That's fair.
 
I read immortal Hulk recently after seeing a few recs for it. It's real good! I never liked the story about bruce and hulk seperating and bruce being the villain, it always felt kind of hokey, more for the gimmick than the story. Here there's another gimmick but it feels more genuine, more real. Bruce and Hulk are back together but their powers are different, more like a werewolf set up now, but it still feels like the old stories where Hulk was as much a curse as a means to be a hero. He's also smarter now, but it's used to make him more of a threat to banner rather than to subvert their dynamic. My only gripe is that Hulk was always a science character and here they get into more mystical aspects of the lore. That always feels kind of cheap to me.

started reading Sensational She Hulk and it's absolutely fucking amazing.
 
If anything Storm needs an ongoing one.

I could've sworn Storm recently had her own series, but maybe I'm thinking of that Black Panther series in which she was BP's sidepiece and they teamed up to fight gentrification in Harlem.

Though, considering what they did to Scarlet Witch last year, maybe keeping Jordan D. White away from Storm is for the best.

RCO018_1487782885.jpg
 
I'm fucking sure it was done for woke reasons like Betsy "stole" Kwannon's identity or some shit. * ignoring that Kwannon was a murderer and I'm pretty sure she was trying to kill Betsy with her body swap *

It's stupid because Psylocke being a psychic ninja is her most iconic look and all the merch and games are ignoring Marvel's bullshit so just change her back already morons!

* ahem *

Sorry for the autism but Psylocke and Wolverine are my favorite X-Men so yeah I'm still kinda pissed at Marvel for their recent bs they've pulled with the two * at least Logan's back now *.

ironically the first X-Men comic I read featured Revanche.


TBH I largely stopped following X-Men after they killed Wolverine. * changing Betsy's race was the last straw. *

I was upset when Claremont killed her in 2001. Allegedly it was the higher ups decision......
 
I could've sworn Storm recently had her own series, but maybe I'm thinking of that Black Panther series in which she was BP's sidepiece and they teamed up to fight gentrification in Harlem.

Though, considering what they did to Scarlet Witch last year, maybe keeping Jordan D. White away from Storm is for the best.

View attachment 824483
In this on purpose? Is this supposed to be a joke? Marvel has to be intentionally fucking with consumers at this point. This isn't ignorance towards what fans want - this is knowing god damn well what fans want to see and then actively pissing directly omn their feet instead.
 
I could've sworn Storm recently had her own series, but maybe I'm thinking of that Black Panther series in which she was BP's sidepiece and they teamed up to fight gentrification in Harlem.
If I remember correctly, wasn't Black Panther and the Crew about them wanting to turn Harlem into an all-black place to live? Good luck kicking out all the other races and figuring out what to do with all the mixed race ones.
 
I could've sworn Storm recently had her own series, but maybe I'm thinking of that Black Panther series in which she was BP's sidepiece and they teamed up to fight gentrification in Harlem.

Though, considering what they did to Scarlet Witch last year, maybe keeping Jordan D. White away from Storm is for the best.

View attachment 824483

What did he do?
 
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