I’ve started to believe that this show helps foster the growing animosity toward the post-One More Day direction of Spider-Man comics, especially its latest turns with Paul. The fact that Peter has been stuck unable to properly develop for nearly 20 years? I still see where they’re coming from, but I don’t follow the comics closely enough to lead that angry charge.
I could see it? I feel like there has always been that animosity, though. This show may help build a more rational case that Joe Quesada was wrong and the marriage wasn't a liability...but I don't know that either side of that argument is interested in a rational argument.
I'm maybe not the best person to ask because, aside from the issues I absolutely have to read for work, I haven't read Spider-Man comic since "One More Day" happened. It's nothing quite as dramatic as a boycott. It's just that the post-OMD version isn't "my" Spider-Man anymore.
I’ve started to believe that this show helps foster the growing animosity toward the post-One More Day direction of Spider-Man comics, especially its latest turns with Paul. The fact that Peter has been stuck unable to properly develop for nearly 20 years? I still see where they’re coming from, but I don’t follow the comics closely enough to lead that angry charge.
I could see it? I feel like there has always been that animosity, though. This show may help build a more rational case that Joe Quesada was wrong and the marriage wasn't a liability...but I don't know that either side of that argument is interested in a rational argument.
I'm maybe not the best person to ask because, aside from the issues I absolutely have to read for work, I haven't read Spider-Man comic since "One More Day" happened. It's nothing quite as dramatic as a boycott. It's just that the post-OMD version isn't "my" Spider-Man anymore.