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That should be interesting. Mr. McDuffie consistently wrote excellent Justice League cartoons (and just as consistently wrote awful Justice League comic books). What is this, a D2DVD movie?
Never mind, I looked it up on IMDB. It has nothing to do with the JSA; it's the Crime Syndicate, Owlman and Superwoman and them. Lex Luthor is in it too. Didn't McDuffie already do that plot with the Justice Lords??
I thought you means that the appearances were pre-crisis...
In which case I am guessing Metamorpho is one of them.
Sorry I didn't make that clearer. Everything about the question is pre-Crisis. And yes, Metamorpho is one of them; he never joined the League, pre-Crisis, but fought at their side in JLofA #'s 100-102. The well-known Seven Soldiers of Victory story.
With Oracle and Calculator, we have seen rise to prominence the non-combatant computer genius archtype in DC comics. There's one example of this type that predates those two by ages, who has the unusual distinction of being the son of the President of the US. Name him.
Robin did join the JLA, albiet briefly, as Nightwing.
And Speedy, well, Red Arrow and all.
I was thinking it was all pre COIE. Red Arrow was well after COIE. Speedy was not.
And with Nightwing as a JLA member, I only remember that happening well after COIE as well.
E-2's Robin looked like a dork as an adult in that costume of his.
With Oracle and Calculator, we have seen rise to prominence the non-combatant computer genius archtype in DC comics. There's one example of this type that predates those two by ages, who has the unusual distinction of being the son of the President of the US. Name him.
(Not a DCU title, btw.)
If it's the one I'm thinking of, it is a DCU tittle this character named Fred "data" Martin who was part of a team called "7 Seconds" and the book was called "Thriller".
That was back in the mid-80's.
If it's the one I'm thinking of, it is a DCU tittle this character named Fred "data" Martin who was part of a team called "7 Seconds" and the book was called "Thriller".
That was back in the mid-80's.
That is correct. His father was (the first?) black US President.
And if Thriller was a DCU title, it was made so retroactively.
It was a DC Universe series. I think it was the first (for DC) Direct Market series. I remember getting an issue in a 3-pack of comics that the collector's shop was selling. One of those packs where you can't tell what comic is in the middle.
In a recent Simpsons episode, Homer gets a role in a movie as a comicbook character called "Everyman", who gets his powers by touching the comicbooks of various comicbook characters.
At one point, to save the President Of The United States, "Everyman" touches a Captain America comic to gain patriotism, and also touches a certain DC comicbook to gain the ability to distract the villian.The question is: What DC character's Comicbook did he touch ? And bonus points if you know what power of that character he used to distract the villian with.
It was a DC Imprint title, but it was not set in the DCU. There were no connections to other continuity, no sign of superheroess, and it was set in a near-future that showed no signs of being affected by having a superhuman populace.
It did show up in Ambush Bug, but hey-- he broke the fourth wall.
It was a DC Imprint title, but it was not set in the DCU. There were no connections to other continuity, no sign of superheroess, and it was set in a near-future that showed no signs of being affected by having a superhuman populace.
It did show up in Ambush Bug, but hey-- he broke the fourth wall.
That's like saying Earth-2 events didn't happen in the DCU.
I didn't say it happened in the regular DCU, but it was a "DC" comic, without an imprint name to it, much like the E-2 stories and the various other titles at that time that happened in various DC universes. I think it was out even before COIE.
And you've not tried to answer the question I posted.
Ignatz wins. (Not the question, just the argument.)
I'll guess Wonder Woman. It's a guess because I don't watch television regularly enough.
--wyld
When our story opens, the Question is investigating an impossible locked-room murder mystery involving a midget and a 6'6"-tall call girl into heavy bondage. Don't worry, I'll explain later. It's all vitally relevant.
--Alan Moore, Twilight