Sad, in a way...
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(Hi :> I have different aliases these days amd I don't prefer this one, but this is the only way people will recognize me without a big explanation... so HI EVERYONE. I've gotten bored enough to visit and register, it's been forever.)
Well. I don't know if I mentioned this in the past, but a couple years ago, I was working this ride thing at a festival. One day I wore a sonic shirt (a Sonic Adventure one, plainly with just Sonic on the front and back, the words "SONIC" and blahblah), and out of about the 1,000 kids or so I served that day, only a couple to a handful exclaimed that they recognized the character.
One of the kids was this boy that was basically like "OMG it's Sonic", and apparently he had been exposed to Sonic Adventure(2 and maybe 1?), and his favorite character was Shadow. (>_>;)
That was somewhat hopeful to me, anyway.
Well. I don't know if I mentioned this in the past, but a couple years ago, I was working this ride thing at a festival. One day I wore a sonic shirt (a Sonic Adventure one, plainly with just Sonic on the front and back, the words "SONIC" and blahblah), and out of about the 1,000 kids or so I served that day, only a couple to a handful exclaimed that they recognized the character.
One of the kids was this boy that was basically like "OMG it's Sonic", and apparently he had been exposed to Sonic Adventure(2 and maybe 1?), and his favorite character was Shadow. (>_>;)
That was somewhat hopeful to me, anyway.
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Considering that manga and comic books sales have pretty much split apart from eachother as more and more people have started buying their manga from bookstores, I would guess not.Spazz wrote:Does that include Manga comics? I'm sure that those outsell plenty of other comics, besides the really popular ones.
I hope the "traditional" comic industry crashes and burns, though. I'm sick of that thirty-two-page-jazzed-up-once-a-month bullshit.
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I didn't even know the Sonic comics existed until like 4 years ago when my friend let me borrow his collection. The storylines didn't make any sense, but I was shocked that I claimed to be a Sonic fan and had never heard of the comics. Then I became an internet whore.Green Gibbon! wrote:When I was looking for issue #134, I had to run all around Lafayette. There's a comic book shop not far from campus, so I figured I'd just stop and pick it up on my way back from school, but they didn't have a trace of Sonic anywhere. I had to cross town before I finally found some at Books a Million.
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Graphic novels are the way forward. They're selling better than they ever have done, are in good reprint and most that are part of a series even have volume numbers on them.Pepperidge wrote:Considering that manga and comic books sales have pretty much split apart from eachother as more and more people have started buying their manga from bookstores, I would guess not.Spazz wrote:Does that include Manga comics? I'm sure that those outsell plenty of other comics, besides the really popular ones.
I hope the "traditional" comic industry crashes and burns, though. I'm sick of that thirty-two-page-jazzed-up-once-a-month bullshit.
The formats have been experimented with as well. Traditional comic sized trade paperbacks still dominate most of the market (excluding Japanese comics), there's an increasing amount of digest sized trade paperbacks (both black and white and full colour) and Marvel's hardcovers that they produce for their top selling titles have proven very popular.
A big problem is the lack of marketing. Why don't Marvel advertise Spider-Man graphic novels during screenings of Spider-Man 2 for example? TV even. Hell, DC Comics is owned by AOL Time Warner, they could do a shit load of advertising - I know I'd rather have a preview magazine of DC comics than another one of those fucking AOL discs.
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I just remembered something. Last summer when McDonald's had those Sonic LCD toys, I saw a few kids crowded around the toy display thing and they seemed pretty exited. I heard them go: "Cool!" and "Ooh! I want that one." "That one's cool!" Yet I don't know if they were exited to see Sonic, or if they were just happy because they were "Video Games."
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Kids get excited over anything that's brightly colored or shiny. That's why kids are dumbasses. All of them.Spazz wrote:I just remembered something. Last summer when McDonald's had those Sonic LCD toys, I saw a few kids crowded around the toy display thing and they seemed pretty exited. I heard them go: "Cool!" and "Ooh! I want that one." "That one's cool!" Yet I don't know if they were exited to see Sonic, or if they were just happy because they were "Video Games."
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Funny that you mention the state of the lack of marketing GN. Tokyopop just started advertising their manga selection on television some weeks ago. Odd that much larger companies like Marvel and DC never advertised their comics on TV at all while Tokyopop does.A big problem is the lack of marketing. Why don't Marvel advertise Spider-Man graphic novels during screenings of Spider-Man 2 for example? TV even. Hell, DC Comics is owned by AOL Time Warner, they could do a shit load of advertising - I know I'd rather have a preview magazine of DC comics than another one of those fucking AOL discs.
My guess is that Marvel & DC believes that the cartoons and live-action movies are a better form of 'advertisement' for the comic than an ad promoting the Graphic Novels themselves. *shrugs*
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Hopefully Marvel and DC will follow (and I wouldn't exactly call them "much larger" comanies, Tokyopop is really damn huge and mainstream). I downloaded on of the Tokyopop ads, not great, but it does the job and shows the art.Ngangbius wrote:Funny that you mention the state of the lack of marketing GN. Tokyopop just started advertising their manga selection on television some weeks ago. Odd that much larger companies like Marvel and DC never advertised their comics on TV at all while Tokyopop does.A big problem is the lack of marketing. Why don't Marvel advertise Spider-Man graphic novels during screenings of Spider-Man 2 for example? TV even. Hell, DC Comics is owned by AOL Time Warner, they could do a shit load of advertising - I know I'd rather have a preview magazine of DC comics than another one of those fucking AOL discs.
The moives and cartoons are good advertisers of the characters and franchises, but not so much of the comics themselves. Comics are an overlooked and often belittled art form, they need as much direct promotion as they can get.My guess is that Marvel & DC believes that the cartoons and live-action movies are a better form of 'advertisement' for the comic than an ad promoting the Graphic Novels themselves. *shrugs*
And yeah, Sonic outselling X-Men sounds VERY bullshitty.
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I've just recently gotten back into comics. It's true that some of the new talent is really impressive, and the quality of mainstream series has definitely gotten better. Recently I've been following the work of writer Jeph Loeb, who is freaking awesome. He wrote the Batman series <B>Hush</B>, which is absolutely great and I recommend it to anyone who has any remote interest in the character (it's also a great intro to Batman beginners). Also, the currently running Superman/Batman crossover also written by Loeb is just as good.
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You liked Hush? Really?
The only positive thing I can say about the writing is that the artwork was nice.
If you're looking for some good Batman stories, check out (if you haven't already) The Dark Knight Returns. There's a reason it gets as much praise as it does. The Killing Joke, too.
Also, though it's not Batman, Watchmen is incredible. Probably the best comic/graphic novel I've ever read and one of the better stories of any medium, too.
The only positive thing I can say about the writing is that the artwork was nice.

If you're looking for some good Batman stories, check out (if you haven't already) The Dark Knight Returns. There's a reason it gets as much praise as it does. The Killing Joke, too.
Also, though it's not Batman, Watchmen is incredible. Probably the best comic/graphic novel I've ever read and one of the better stories of any medium, too.
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That bit about the Sonic comic outselling the Uncanny X-men comic 2:1 in the mid ninties is actually true, I swear. It was mentioned in a few industry mags, and you can even check it by comparing the circulation numbers published annually in both books. How was that possible? Well, just remember:
1. Uncanny X-men (the main X-men title) is only one of about six or seven different X-Men comics that were published monthly at that time. So it was only outselling one X-men book, not all of them.
2. The Sonic comic sold really really well back then... readership somewhat inexplicably went up as the influx of new games and television shows stopped.
3. The Sonic comic follows the Archie publishing motto. It's about half the price of an X-men book, and it's heavily circulated at newstands, grocery stores, and back in the mid-nineties, at Wal Mart.
I still remember those times, man. You'd walk into a grocery store, or a 7-11, or some place that only carries a handful of comics, and the only comics they'd all be guaranteed to have were Spiderman, Xmen, Batman, Superman and Sonic the Hedgehog. Those were strange times.
I buy everything in Graphic Novel format now, too, incidently. It's great that so many publishers are supporting it now!
1. Uncanny X-men (the main X-men title) is only one of about six or seven different X-Men comics that were published monthly at that time. So it was only outselling one X-men book, not all of them.
2. The Sonic comic sold really really well back then... readership somewhat inexplicably went up as the influx of new games and television shows stopped.
3. The Sonic comic follows the Archie publishing motto. It's about half the price of an X-men book, and it's heavily circulated at newstands, grocery stores, and back in the mid-nineties, at Wal Mart.
I still remember those times, man. You'd walk into a grocery store, or a 7-11, or some place that only carries a handful of comics, and the only comics they'd all be guaranteed to have were Spiderman, Xmen, Batman, Superman and Sonic the Hedgehog. Those were strange times.
I buy everything in Graphic Novel format now, too, incidently. It's great that so many publishers are supporting it now!
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Wasn't this around the time the Sonic comic started to really suck? I could be wrong though as around that time I've lost interest in Sonic the Hedgehog and wouldn't gain it back 'til Sonic Adventure 1.2. The Sonic comic sold really really well back then... readership somewhat inexplicably went up as the influx of new games and television shows stopped.
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I honestly think the UK Sonic the Comic was actually, for the most part, pretty good-- when Elson was drawing the art was good enough (even if everything else was less so), and when Thingy was writing the stories were unpretentious, straightforward and honestly gripping. Then it sort of went crap. Who cares.
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You're kidding right? ........... Have CDs really taken over that much?The Almighty Bunghole wrote:Kids these days are growing up with different games. Kids these days are growing up PS2's etc. Since Sonic hasen't made such a big impact for years, kids may only know him from the tv. Unless they have older siblings who grew up with Mega Drive's and SNES', they probably don't even know what it's like to play a 16-bit game.
It reminds me of kid of cam into my work (I work in a video game arcade) and he was looking at some of the prizes and he asked me "what's that?" pointing to a portable cassette player, and I told him it was such, and then he turned to his mum and said "What's a cassette?" It's a thing called the generation gap, it comes in many forms.
Hey Green Gibbon and Spazz how is it being in the 2nd worse state ever? Yes I down here too. Damn it.
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Think that makes you old? I have records.Delphine wrote:...there is a child in the world who doesn't know what a cassette tape is? B-but, but they still sell them, and, and...
Oh lord. I'm OLD.
Just because some little banyard doesn't know about non-digital stuff isn't your fault, you know.
It's the little banyard's parents' fault.
In fact, casettes, being cheaper than most CDs, outsell their discoid counterparts by a sizable margin (I forget the exact statistics. I'll have to look them up now...).
One more thing: I agree, the current "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" cartoon series rules (my only quibble is that they didn't go with a new version of the original theme from the '80s. Other than that, I have no real complaints).
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shiny things hurt my eyes...bright colors relfect from the sun causing more hurt to my eyes.Squirrelknight wrote:Kids get excited over anything that's brightly colored or shiny. That's why kids are dumbasses. All of them.Spazz wrote:I just remembered something. Last summer when McDonald's had those Sonic LCD toys, I saw a few kids crowded around the toy display thing and they seemed pretty exited. I heard them go: "Cool!" and "Ooh! I want that one." "That one's cool!" Yet I don't know if they were exited to see Sonic, or if they were just happy because they were "Video Games."
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