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mygif

You really should write the legion it seems to me.

Your argument is well thought out, coherent and logical.

..but shamefully ignores putting more Wildfire and Timber Wolf in the book which is the real the point of the Legion.

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mygif

Yet again you prove why you should be given a shot on the Legion title. I have only picked up the odd issue over the years and nothing has really grabbed me but when I read your “50 reasons” I was excited. I would have gone out and bought the book if you had been writing it. Those reasons and the above text, shows how much thought you have put into a possible series. If only more proffesional writers did the same

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mygif

Nothing here I disagree with. I might add something about how the comic book industry *in general* could do with some expansion into non-comic-shop markets, but that obviously wouldn’t benefit the Legion exclusively.

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mygif

This is interesting timing: though I’ve read Legion comics now and again over the years, I’ve never really followed it. Saturday, however, I sat down and read SHOWCASE: The Legion of Super-Heroes V1. I imagine showcase will never get as far as the revered Levitz era (and archive is too damn expensive for exploratory reading), but it sounds like you’re right, and what the legion needs, as a property, is for people to read it once, and to not feel obligated to read anything else to follow it.

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mygif

It figures. The week I cancel my subscription, the title gets cancelled.

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mygif

“It figures. The week I cancel my subscription, the title gets cancelled.”

Obviously, you have MAGIC POWERZ.

And dude. MGK. If you know anyone who knows anyone, now probably wouldn’t be a bad time for a pitch.

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mygif

It’s too bad the cartoon tanked afted 2 seasons. It was a pretty decent cartoon, too, and it seemed like it was following the JLU model.

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mygif

I agree with the “ignore fanboys” part for every single media. People will always whine about how much better the past was.

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mygif

I think the most important thing to do with a ideal relaunch of the Legion would be to establish a ground rule that characters age in real time, but that the core legion will always be teenagers (since ultimately the Adventure Comics era is the heart and soul of the Legion). This means that there is a need to slowly renew the cast, bringing new members in as old members age, retire or even die, and lets you slowly work through the Legion’s whole membership from every era.

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mygif

How dare you call yourself a whining fanboy. Everything you’ve written about the Legion champions the potential of the title, I’ve read all your “Reasons why…” and I would pick it up in a heartbeat (comic, online, novel, whatever). I hate legion fans so much b/c all the talk about is the past when the Legion is all about the future.

I would follow you to war. Mainly a war with all the pissy old LSH fans out there that think some version of a superteam from 30 years ago can work now… But still, WAR.

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mygif
Michael John McGee said on October 6th, 2008 at 11:47 pm

This is as good a time to ask as any. Why DOES the Legion of Super-Heroes need to be teenager-centric to start with?

I have a mental block about teenage superheroes in general, which is why Kick-Ass fascinates and disturbs me and why I never fully got into Batman. I can just about buy a guy like Jamie Reyes who has super-powers and therefore you can argue he’s the best for the job, but one thing about the Legion is that many members DON’T have super-powers in the traditional sense – i.e. abilities that set them apart from the norm, because for many their abilities ARE the norm. All of Saturn Girl’s people are telepathic, all of the Naltorians can dream the future, etc.

So with so many on a given planet to choose from, why would they choose teenagers for such risky work when there’s plenty of older, more experienced people with the same abilities?

And yeah, I know, it’s comics, but everyone’s got their suspension of disbelief threshold and an army of teenagers goes beyond mine, and nothing in the concept strikes me as really NEEDING teenagers as a rule rather than the rare super-powered exception.

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mygif

Why DOES the Legion of Super-Heroes need to be teenager-centric to start with?

Because the willingness of youth to overlook cultural and racial barriers is paramount to the concept of the Legion, a group of young heroes representing not just countries but indeed entire planets or even solar systems.

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mygif

I was concerned we’d get a fourboot once I heard Geoff Johns natter on about how much he loved the Legion when he was younger. So our restart is the Silver Age Legion, which means what? If it’s as goofy as the Silver Age is wont to be, most comics fan will crap on it. If it’s got the same tone as the DnA or Waid Legion, the people the book is ostensibly targeted at will eventually crap all over it. Which will prove what, exactly?

Because am sad Legion fan, you’ll carefully note I never said I won’t buy it, but still.

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mygif
Paul Wilson said on October 7th, 2008 at 5:47 am

I really liked the 70s and 80s Legion I discovered through 10p back issues when I started collecting comics, although I have to admit all the reboots and restarts have kinda lost me. I tried the threeboot for a year, but it just wasn’t as fun.

I really enjoyed your “Why I should write the Legion” articles, and it’s a Legion I’d be interested in reading, but I appreciate why it’s unlikely you ever will. It seems that DC comics is only interested in Silver Age concepts if Geoff Johns is writing them.

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