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Downloaded from
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Official YIFY movies site:
YTS.MX

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JOE QUESADA:
<i>The idea of dual identity became...</i>

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really clear to me
when I started at Marvel full-time.

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<i>It stemmed from a conversation</i>
<i>I was having with Stan Lee.</i>

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I facetiously asked him a question

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that I didn't think
there was an answer for.

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I said, "Stan, how do you create
the perfect Marvel character?"

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He's, like, "Joey, I'm gonna tell ya."

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<i>He said, "Imagine Spider-Man</i>

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<i>"is standing at the precipice</i>
<i>of a building.</i>

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<i>"He's just overlooking the city.</i>

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<i>"And he takes it all in,</i>

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<i>"and he whups his web, and he jumps off.</i>

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(SWISHING AND WHOOSHING)

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<i>"Awesome scene.</i>

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<i>"But tell me who he is?</i>

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<i>"Tell me who he loves.</i>

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<i>"Tell me who loves him.</i>
<i>Tell me what his problems are.</i>

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<i>"And now, when he flies off that building,</i>

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"our hearts clutch
because we're in that suit.

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<i>"Outside of that, it's just a red</i>
<i>and blue suit jumping off a building."</i>

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<i>And that really struck a chord with me</i>

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in understanding the alter ego

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is the most important
part of the superhero.

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BRIAN BENDIS:
<i>As old a tradition as telling of stories,</i>

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there's always been a story about

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a human with other powers
teaching us something.

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CHRISTOPHER PRIEST: <i>It's the power</i>
<i>of fantasy. I was hoping</i>

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<i>that the hero would show up and rescue me.</i>

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In real life that rarely happens,

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but in comics
it happens every 30 days.

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DAVID WALKER: <i>Comic book superheroes,</i>

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they serve as our moral compasses,

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<i>they allow us to make sense</i>
<i>of the world that we live in.</i>

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ROY THOMAS: <i>Every comic book generation</i>
<i>gets the comics it deserves.</i>

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You can't expect today's Spider-Man

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<i>to be exactly what it was 20 years ago.</i>

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Things change.

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Who puts that mask on?

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<i>That's really what inspires me</i>
<i>about superhero stories.</i>

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<i>They are fundamentally</i>
<i>about figuring out who you are.</i>

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QUESADA:
<i>You look at any great Marvel story,</i>

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<i>I don't care who the character is,</i>

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<i>what the team is,</i>

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it's always a great story
about the person behind the mask.

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NARRATOR:
<i>In this 1941 edition of</i> Captain America,

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<i>the Captain was up against</i>
<i>a Nazi villain called the Red Skull</i>

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<i>and the dialogue went like this,</i>

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<i>"This nation was founded by dissidents,</i>
<i>by people who wanted something better."</i>

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I think superheroes have always
been there in American culture,

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at least since the concept was first
introduced in the late 1930s.

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<i>Superheroes got us through</i>
<i>the tail end of The Depression,</i>

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<i>through World War Two, through</i>
<i>the '50s, the '60s, the '70s, the '80s.</i>

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<i>Every moment along the way,</i>
<i>the superhero has offered us</i>

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a language to think about our political,
civic, and personal identities.

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Comics, as a medium,
speak very symbolically.

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<i>I think because they're so</i>
<i>larger than life and are so allegorical.</i>

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You have this opportunity to
build interesting social narratives.

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JENKINS: <i>At the core,</i>
<i>are fundamentally civic questions.</i>

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Questions about how we govern our society.

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<i>Is it a vigilante? Is it someone</i>
<i>in the service of the police?</i>

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<i>Is it a man? Is it a woman?</i>
<i>Is he Black? Is she white?</i>

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<i>All of those questions are fundamentally</i>
<i>questions about identity.</i>

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And Marvel's universe is right smack
in the middle of those questions.

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PETER SANDERSON:
<i>Marvel from the very beginning,</i>

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<i>was radically different</i>
<i>as a comic book company.</i>

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<i>You had characters who sort of foreshadow</i>

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<i>what the classic Marvel hero</i>
<i>in the '60s became.</i>

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First of all,
you had the original Human Torch.

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Not to be confused with the later
version in the <i>Fantastic Four.</i>

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<i>Despite the original Human Torch's name,</i>
<i>he wasn't human.</i>

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<i>He was an Android,</i>
<i>an artificially created being,</i>

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<i>who tried to pass</i>
<i>as human and, in fact, did.</i>

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<i>But you already have the idea</i>
<i>of what became Marvel tradition</i>

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of the hero who is an outsider,

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who is in some way alienated
from the rest of the human race,

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who, nonetheless, tries to fit in.

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<i>Who tries to help a society that,</i>
<i>at times, was afraid of him.</i>

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SANA AMANAT: <i>What Marvel does really well</i>

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is play with secret identities

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and plays with the concept
of what an identity is.

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And what that really means is about

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the dualities that we all
encompass, right?

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<i>At work, we're one person,</i>
<i>when we're at home, we're another person.</i>

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<i>And I think, specifically,</i>
<i>within the Marvel landscape,</i>

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it's not necessarily
about hiding yourself,

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it's about uncovering yourself.

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SANDERSON: <i>Characters donning masks</i>
<i>to become superheroes.</i>

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This is the guise in which
they can exercise their higher power.

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<i>The concept didn't originate in comics.</i>

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<i>Before the rise of superheroes,</i>
<i>you had Zorro.</i>

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<i>The idea of a person</i>
<i>who takes on </i>

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<i>another heroic identity</i>
<i>that's unknown to the general public.</i>

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If a man must die,
it's up to the law to decide that.

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SANDERSON:
<i>It's not just a disguise.</i>

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A mask, the costume, enable a person

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to express a side of himself that is not
visible in his ordinary identity.

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JENNINGS: <i>One of the reasons</i>
<i>the idea of a secret or dual identity</i>

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<i>is so powerful is 'cause we all have</i>

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these multiple notions
about ourselves, right?

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<i>And, so, someone like Spider-Man</i>
<i>kind of becomes every man.</i>

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This notion that, in our mundane world,

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we're also capable
of something far greater.

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That's the thing,
especially with Marvel characters,

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where so many of them were mundane people.

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<i>And I think that double consciousness</i>

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allowed these larger-than-life characters
to also be very relatable

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on a personal, human level.

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We try to, just,
ask the reader to accept one thing.

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That a person has a superhuman power.

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He can scale a wall or has the strength
of 10 men or whatever.

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But once accepting that, we then try
to write it as realistically as possible.

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<i>The mere fact</i>
<i>that he has superhuman power</i>

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<i>doesn't mean that he may not have acne,</i>

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<i>or he may not have trouble</i>
<i>with his girlfriend,</i>

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<i>or get a sinus attack</i>
<i>in the middle of a fight,</i>

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<i>or perhaps have money troubles, you see?</i>

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<i>We don't just make them big and powerful</i>

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<i>and they always win the case</i>
<i>and everything is fine.</i>

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WALKER: <i>You look at a lot of the creators</i>
<i>in the '30s,'40s and '50s,</i>

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<i>many were Jewish immigrants,</i>
<i>either born in America</i>

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first generation or some of them
came over from parts of Europe.

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<i>And, you know, when you're an immigrant,</i>

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<i>they lived, to a certain extent,</i>
<i>a dual identity.</i>

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WEINSTEIN: <i>I think it's no coincidence</i>
<i>that Stan Lee was born Stanley Lieber</i>

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<i>or Jack Kirby was born,</i>
<i>you know, Jacob Kurtzberg,</i>

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and they themselves create characters
who have double identity.

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One identity at home
and another identity in the workplace.

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NEAL KIRBY: <i>My father, uh...</i>
<i>Growing up, it was a rough life.</i>

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Street gangs back then were...
You had a Jewish street gang,

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an Irish street gang,
an Italian street gang,

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<i>and it just depended</i>
<i>which block you lived on,</i>

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<i>and comic books in the late '30s</i>
<i>were just coming out,</i>

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and he saw that as an avenue
to escape the Lower East Side.

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The late 1930s were
a particularly anti-Semitic period.

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<i>Jews were barred</i>
<i>from many Ivy League schools,</i>

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<i>country clubs, even entire neighborhoods.</i>

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<i>So I think...</i>

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<i>Their creations, in many ways,</i>
<i>paralleled their own lives</i>

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<i>and what was happening in the world</i>
<i>at that time.</i>

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(INAUDIBLE)

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JENKINS: <i>For those groups that had been</i>
<i>excluded from the political mainstream,</i>

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<i>those metaphors of ripping your coat off</i>
<i>and being a superhero,</i>

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<i>putting on a mask</i>
<i>and going out into the night.</i>

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Those metaphors are incredibly powerful
ways of thinking

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<i>what you could contribute</i>
<i>to a society that's in turmoil.</i>

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WEINSTEIN: <i>It's no coincidence</i>

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<i>that the front cover of </i>Captain America #1
<i>sees, you know,</i>

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<i>Captain America smashing</i>
<i>Hitler across the face.</i>

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What a powerful image.

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<i>I think that's one of the most important</i>
<i>images of American pop culture history.</i>

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<i>And who better to be commenting</i>
<i>than assimilated Jewish immigrants.</i>

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KIRBY: <i>A lot of people were looking</i>
<i>at them like, "Wait a minute."</i>

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We have an American character punching
a foreign head of state in the face.

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We weren't at war with them yet.

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<i>But if there's one thing</i>
<i>my father did not like, it was bullies.</i>

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<i>And Steve Rogers became</i>
<i>a, you know, like, the vehicle for that.</i>

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"Punch me as many times as you like
and I'm still getting up."

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So, that was my father.

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ALL: One nation, indivisible,

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with liberty and justice for all.

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WEINSTEIN:
<i>I think, you know, the superhero</i>

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<i>can be looked at</i>
<i>as an assimilation archetype.</i>

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It's wanting to belong.

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<i>I mean, you know, like,</i>
<i>look at Captain America.</i>

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<i>He's the flag embellished as costume.</i>

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You know, he's Rockwell,
he's apple pie.

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<i>But, really, he's the wish fulfillment</i>
<i>of assimilated Jewish artists</i>

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<i>who wanted to be accepted as All-American.</i>

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I think it's interesting
that if you look at

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<i>a lot of early characters, they fit in.</i>

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<i>But if you look at those</i>
<i>particular characters</i>

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<i>that actually couldn't hide</i>
<i>their mutation,</i>

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<i>that were created after</i>
<i>the Golden Age of Comics...</i>

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<i>To me, that actually starts to map itself</i>
<i>onto other notions of otherness.</i>

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<i>Then we're talking about, like,</i>

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<i>"Well, you get isolated</i>
<i>because of what you look like."</i>

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WALKER: <i>The way I grew up,</i>
<i>I always felt like the odd one out.</i>

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<i>Someone who didn't quite fit in,</i>
<i>no matter how hard he wanted to.</i>

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Judged a lot by the way he looks, that...

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You know, the clothes
that I wore, you know?

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And just wanting to be yourself.

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<i>Dwayne McDuffie and I</i>
<i>had a conversation many years ago.</i>

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<i>"Who's your favorite</i>
<i>Black superhero?"</i>

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<i>My favorite, you know,</i>
<i>Black superhero is The Thing,</i>

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<i>and he was, like, "Okay. Why?"</i>

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<i>And I said, because he's the one</i>
<i>that always stands out in a room,</i>

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<i>no matter where he's at.</i>

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And he's always going to be judged
by how he looks

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before he's judged by who he is.

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<i>And, to me,</i>
<i>that's something that's very universal</i>

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<i>to my experience as a Black man.</i>

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You know, The Thing was my father.

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<i>Ben Grimm kind of acted the same way</i>
<i>my father would act.</i>

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<i>Or my father would act the way</i>
<i>Ben Grimm would.</i>

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<i>You could interchange the two.</i>

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<i>I think, in some ways,</i>
<i>my father almost envisioned himself.</i>

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This humanoid, tough guy creature
that could protect people.

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<i>You know, you have the story of the golem.</i>

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<i>A mythical creature from the mud</i>

202
00:11:45,414 --> 00:11:48,876
<i>that would somehow</i>
<i>save the Jews of Eastern Europe.</i>

203
00:11:49,334 --> 00:11:52,671
I think it's very simple that writers
write about what they know about.

204
00:11:52,754 --> 00:11:59,261
And many of these themes in superhero
narrative are rooted in Biblical story.

205
00:12:00,220 --> 00:12:01,805
<i>For example, The Hulk.</i>

206
00:12:01,889 --> 00:12:03,932
<i>The Hulk was originally gray.</i>

207
00:12:04,016 --> 00:12:08,395
<i>Gray being the golem, which actually</i>
<i>formed the blueprint of Frankenstein.</i>

208
00:12:08,478 --> 00:12:11,481
<i>And many characters in pop culture...</i>

209
00:12:11,565 --> 00:12:13,734
<i>The golem figure...</i>

210
00:12:13,817 --> 00:12:15,527
<i>He's not really a bad guy.</i>

211
00:12:15,611 --> 00:12:18,864
<i>He's just... He looks different,</i>
<i>and because he looks different,</i>

212
00:12:18,947 --> 00:12:21,575
<i>you know, he's feared, he's misunderstood,</i>

213
00:12:21,658 --> 00:12:23,535
<i>he's the rootless wanderer.</i>

214
00:12:23,619 --> 00:12:26,121
So, I think there is a particularly
Jewish worldview.

215
00:12:28,373 --> 00:12:31,168
JENNINGS: <i>To me, Hulk is a man of color,</i>
<i>to a certain degree. </i>(CHUCKLES)

216
00:12:31,251 --> 00:12:34,838
And, so, when you look at constructions
around The Hulk and Monstrosity

217
00:12:34,922 --> 00:12:38,050
<i>and how Black men are kind of</i>
<i>put into that particular box,</i>

218
00:12:38,133 --> 00:12:40,260
<i>I can't help but think</i>
<i>of the James Baldwin quote,</i>

219
00:12:40,344 --> 00:12:44,056
"To be Black and conscious in America
is to live in a constant state of rage."

220
00:12:44,973 --> 00:12:47,643
GREG PAK: <i>Well, Bruce Banner</i>
<i>has this terror of The Hulk.</i>

221
00:12:47,726 --> 00:12:49,061
<i>He sees The Hulk as a monster.</i>

222
00:12:49,645 --> 00:12:53,398
But The Hulk is part of him,
and Banner himself is a hero.

223
00:12:53,482 --> 00:12:55,817
<i>You've got this very simple kernel,</i>

224
00:12:55,901 --> 00:12:58,987
<i>which is that anger</i>
<i>triggers you turning into a monster.</i>

225
00:12:59,071 --> 00:13:02,074
But what if this part of him
is the only part that's out there

226
00:13:02,157 --> 00:13:04,034
<i>and is thrust into a situation</i>

227
00:13:04,117 --> 00:13:09,248
<i>where his anger</i>
<i>and his strength are seen as virtues?</i>

228
00:13:09,331 --> 00:13:11,708
<i>And that very simple thing</i>
<i>allows you to look at this</i>

229
00:13:11,792 --> 00:13:15,838
<i>monstrous version of ourselves and see</i>
<i>how the thing that we look in ourselves</i>

230
00:13:15,921 --> 00:13:18,382
<i>and call a monster,</i>
<i>actually is redeemable.</i>

231
00:13:18,465 --> 00:13:20,634
I love that element of superheroes.

232
00:13:20,717 --> 00:13:24,680
When you have a simple rule,
a very simple set-up like that,

233
00:13:24,763 --> 00:13:28,308
it allows you to dig deep
and just do a lot with subtext

234
00:13:28,392 --> 00:13:30,269
and with the emotional story.

235
00:13:30,894 --> 00:13:34,064
PETER: <i>Uncle Ben is dead and, in a sense,</i>
<i>it's really I who killed him</i>

236
00:13:34,147 --> 00:13:36,149
<i>because I didn't realize in time...</i>

237
00:13:36,233 --> 00:13:38,652
REGINALD HUDLIN:
<i>When you look at the Marvel characters</i>

238
00:13:38,735 --> 00:13:40,696
<i>created in the '60s and '70s,</i>

239
00:13:40,779 --> 00:13:44,074
<i>versus the DC characters</i>
<i>that were created in the '40s,</i>

240
00:13:44,157 --> 00:13:46,535
the big difference
is the introduction of psychology.

241
00:13:47,703 --> 00:13:50,539
You have Spider-Man. He's a superhero,
but he's neurotic.

242
00:13:51,290 --> 00:13:55,085
<i>You have The Fantastic Four</i>
<i>who's this dysfunctional family.</i>

243
00:13:55,169 --> 00:13:58,380
So you get a new angle on things

244
00:13:58,463 --> 00:14:01,466
that you didn't see
in those archetypes created in the '40s.

245
00:14:02,759 --> 00:14:05,679
TOM BREVOORT: <i>The thing that Stan and Jack</i>
<i>kind of brought, at least initially,</i>

246
00:14:05,762 --> 00:14:08,599
was they made the characters,
at the least, two-dimensional.

247
00:14:08,682 --> 00:14:11,685
<i>Which is to say,</i>
<i>they were more focused on them</i>

248
00:14:11,768 --> 00:14:16,064
<i>as the people</i>
<i>inside the costumes and their problems</i>

249
00:14:16,148 --> 00:14:20,652
than they were in the overriding tropes
of superhero comics.

250
00:14:21,320 --> 00:14:23,989
QUESADA: <i>Batman. Young Bruce Wayne</i>
<i>walks out of the movie theater,</i>

251
00:14:24,072 --> 00:14:25,991
a criminal comes in,
shoots his parents dead.

252
00:14:26,074 --> 00:14:28,327
From that moment on,
literally from that moment on,

253
00:14:28,410 --> 00:14:30,245
little Bruce Wayne is dead.

254
00:14:30,329 --> 00:14:32,539
Batman then becomes Batman

255
00:14:32,623 --> 00:14:35,584
and as his life goes on,
he uses Bruce Wayne

256
00:14:35,667 --> 00:14:38,629
in order to facilitate what Batman does.

257
00:14:38,712 --> 00:14:41,173
Bruce Wayne is the mask.
Batman is the real character.

258
00:14:41,840 --> 00:14:45,093
<i>What Marvel did in the '60s</i>
<i>was they switched the paradigm.</i>

259
00:14:45,177 --> 00:14:47,221
It's Peter Parker who's really important,

260
00:14:47,304 --> 00:14:50,807
<i>and when he puts on the mask,</i>
<i>that becomes the facade.</i>

261
00:14:50,891 --> 00:14:52,851
<i>He becomes somebody completely different.</i>

262
00:14:52,935 --> 00:14:55,354
<i>He's able to quip.</i>
<i>He's no more the shy kid from school.</i>

263
00:14:55,437 --> 00:14:57,606
<i>He's able to do all these different things</i>

264
00:14:57,689 --> 00:15:00,275
<i>that he's not able to do</i>
<i>in his regular world.</i>

265
00:15:01,485 --> 00:15:03,529
RALPH MACCHIO: <i>With</i> Spider-Man,
<i>for example,</i>

266
00:15:03,612 --> 00:15:05,656
<i>you were really interested</i>
<i>in Peter Parker.</i>

267
00:15:05,739 --> 00:15:09,076
You were more interested in his life
than what he did as Spider-Man.

268
00:15:09,159 --> 00:15:11,245
<i>It was "What was</i>
<i>going to happen with Aunt May?</i>

269
00:15:11,328 --> 00:15:13,288
<i>"Was he gonna be able to pay the bills?</i>

270
00:15:13,372 --> 00:15:15,749
<i>"What was his romantic life</i>
<i>going to be like?"</i>

271
00:15:15,832 --> 00:15:19,336
<i>You had Flash Thompson</i>
<i>who is this high school jock</i>

272
00:15:19,419 --> 00:15:22,756
<i>and he despised Peter Parker</i>
<i>and he mercilessly picked on him.</i>

273
00:15:22,840 --> 00:15:25,467
But Flash Thompson
was a huge fan of Spider-Man.

274
00:15:25,551 --> 00:15:26,969
So, that was great.

275
00:15:27,594 --> 00:15:31,723
<i>That was just another way of Stan playing</i>
<i>with the idea of secret identities again.</i>

276
00:15:32,266 --> 00:15:35,269
What lonely kid,
and if you're not a lonely kid

277
00:15:35,352 --> 00:15:37,437
you have no business reading comic books.

278
00:15:37,521 --> 00:15:40,858
What lonely kid
has not loved the idea of...

279
00:15:40,941 --> 00:15:43,360
"Oh, if they only knew who I really was"?

280
00:15:44,653 --> 00:15:46,989
<i>Peter Parker, classic example, you know?</i>

281
00:15:47,072 --> 00:15:50,701
<i>The kid everybody bullies</i>
<i>and picks on and takes lightly.</i>

282
00:15:50,784 --> 00:15:55,038
And he puts on the mask, he's not
just this great athlete and a superhero,

283
00:15:55,122 --> 00:15:56,248
he's a smart aleck.

284
00:15:57,332 --> 00:15:59,334
JENKINS:
<i>I love that Peter Parker is tongue-tied</i>

285
00:15:59,418 --> 00:16:02,212
<i>and Spider-Man zings</i>
<i>one-liners right and left.</i>

286
00:16:02,296 --> 00:16:05,924
<i>It's circling the villain</i>
<i>and just making total nonsense</i>

287
00:16:06,008 --> 00:16:10,179
<i>of his ability to even think as he's</i>
<i>trying to do his grandiose monologue.</i>

288
00:16:10,262 --> 00:16:13,265
But that gap between
the tongue-tied Peter Parker

289
00:16:13,348 --> 00:16:16,643
and the zinger-slinging Spider-Man

290
00:16:16,727 --> 00:16:20,105
sort of captures something
of the ways we see ourselves.

291
00:16:20,189 --> 00:16:23,942
The person we see ourselves as being
and the person we'd like to be

292
00:16:24,026 --> 00:16:26,695
are both brought together
around the same figure.

293
00:16:26,778 --> 00:16:29,072
When I would pick up
a Marvel comic book,

294
00:16:29,698 --> 00:16:34,411
it taught me to, in life,
describe yourself with an adjective

295
00:16:34,494 --> 00:16:36,205
and tell the world who you are.

296
00:16:36,288 --> 00:16:39,708
<i>For instance, </i>The Amazing Spider-Man,

297
00:16:39,791 --> 00:16:43,629
The Incredible Hulk,
The Invincible Iron Man.

298
00:16:43,712 --> 00:16:48,217
And I remembered the description
of those characters always stuck in me,

299
00:16:48,300 --> 00:16:51,094
you know, to the point where, sometimes,

300
00:16:51,178 --> 00:16:53,514
when I would have to walk
from my house to school,

301
00:16:53,597 --> 00:16:56,558
I would say, "Today I'ma be
The Invincible Iron Man,"

302
00:16:56,642 --> 00:16:59,728
and if these bullies
come mess with me or, you know...

303
00:16:59,811 --> 00:17:02,231
"I'ma be stealth today.
I'ma be like Spider-Man."

304
00:17:02,314 --> 00:17:04,483
<i>So when hip-hop came over,</i>
<i>well, to me it was like,</i>

305
00:17:04,566 --> 00:17:08,362
<i>"Oh, my God, you can</i>
<i>tell stories about yourself over music?"</i>

306
00:17:08,445 --> 00:17:11,990
So my whole career,
I was just pretending to be

307
00:17:12,074 --> 00:17:15,536
"the most powerful entity
in the hip-hop universe."

308
00:17:15,619 --> 00:17:20,916
And that imaginative
creation of character and identity

309
00:17:20,999 --> 00:17:22,376
was all because of comic books.

310
00:17:23,085 --> 00:17:24,211
<i>When I get on that mic,</i>

311
00:17:24,294 --> 00:17:26,964
<i>I'm no longer mild-mannered,</i>
<i>Catholic school kid </i>

312
00:17:27,047 --> 00:17:29,883
<i>wearing glasses, nerdy,</i>
<i>comic-book-reading, straight-A student.</i>

313
00:17:29,967 --> 00:17:32,970
I transform into the mighty...

314
00:17:33,053 --> 00:17:35,013
DMC doesn't mean Darryl McDaniels anymore.

315
00:17:35,097 --> 00:17:39,101
Now it means
"The Devastating, Mic-Controlling," DMC.

316
00:17:39,184 --> 00:17:42,312
McDANIELS: (RAPPING)
<i>A superhero like D when it comes to war</i>

317
00:17:42,396 --> 00:17:44,982
<i>I come in like The Hulk</i>
<i>and The Mighty Thor</i>

318
00:17:45,065 --> 00:17:49,611
<i>The most powerful</i>
<i>in the hip-hop universe </i>

319
00:17:52,906 --> 00:17:55,450
BREVOORT: <i>The one choice</i>
<i>that got made very early on</i>

320
00:17:55,534 --> 00:17:59,288
<i>was Stan and Jack put</i>
<i>The Fantastic Four and then Spider-Man</i>

321
00:17:59,371 --> 00:18:03,208
<i>and then The Hulk and then Iron Man,</i>
<i>and so forth in the real world.</i>

322
00:18:03,292 --> 00:18:05,002
<i>"Well, what's the big deal about that?"</i>

323
00:18:05,085 --> 00:18:08,380
<i>Up to that point, superheroes existed</i>
<i>in sort of fantasy worlds.</i>

324
00:18:08,463 --> 00:18:11,383
Superman lived in Metropolis,
which was not a real city.

325
00:18:11,466 --> 00:18:14,511
It was an idealized version
of whatever New York was,

326
00:18:14,595 --> 00:18:16,430
<i>but not a real place.</i>

327
00:18:16,513 --> 00:18:22,394
It blew my mind
when Peter Parker really lived in Queens.

328
00:18:22,477 --> 00:18:27,149
<i>Stan Lee was a genius because the</i>
<i>superheroes was really in New York City.</i>

329
00:18:27,232 --> 00:18:29,776
So, it wasn't pretend to me. It was real.

330
00:18:29,860 --> 00:18:31,069
(CROWD CLAMORING)

331
00:18:35,782 --> 00:18:37,451
QUESADA:
<i>Stan was so ahead of the curve.</i>

332
00:18:37,534 --> 00:18:40,412
And to me, that was ultimately
the hope of Marvel comics.

333
00:18:40,495 --> 00:18:43,832
'Cause if you're growing up in the '60s,
in those incredibly turbulent times.

334
00:18:43,916 --> 00:18:46,043
<i>The civil rights movement,</i>
<i>the women's lib movement.</i>

335
00:18:46,126 --> 00:18:47,419
<i>Everything was just bubbling.</i>

336
00:18:47,503 --> 00:18:50,005
<i>And Stan and Jack</i>
<i>and everyone that was there,</i>

337
00:18:50,088 --> 00:18:52,466
they present a world in which it just is.

338
00:18:53,425 --> 00:18:56,178
BREVOORT: <i>Stuff is going on everywhere.</i>
<i>It's in the news.</i>

339
00:18:56,261 --> 00:19:00,974
And both Stan and Jack, in their own ways,
are aware of it and respond to it.

340
00:19:01,058 --> 00:19:05,312
Steve Ditko, he would just start sticking
characters of color into crowd scenes.

341
00:19:05,896 --> 00:19:09,107
<i>There'd be a bunch of kids</i>
<i>at Peter Parker's high school</i>

342
00:19:09,191 --> 00:19:10,901
<i>and there'd be Black kids.</i>

343
00:19:10,984 --> 00:19:13,487
<i>He would just draw them</i>
<i>that way and there they were.</i>

344
00:19:13,570 --> 00:19:15,614
<i>And there would be</i>
<i>no comment about it, you know?</i>

345
00:19:15,697 --> 00:19:18,659
<i>Nobody would address it or anything.</i>
<i>They were just there.</i>

346
00:19:18,742 --> 00:19:20,035
<i>There's an issue of </i>Spider-Man

347
00:19:20,118 --> 00:19:23,914
<i>where Spider-Man has been trapped</i>
<i>by the Green Goblin and the Crime Master</i>

348
00:19:23,997 --> 00:19:26,416
<i>and these, like, two or three beat cops</i>

349
00:19:26,500 --> 00:19:29,461
<i>come to help him out</i>
<i>and one of them is African-American.</i>

350
00:19:30,087 --> 00:19:33,882
Has the comic book industry
been pressured much by Black people

351
00:19:33,966 --> 00:19:37,094
to get more Blacks into the comics
or does that have anything to do with it?

352
00:19:37,177 --> 00:19:40,013
Again, I can't really talk
to the whole comic book industry,

353
00:19:40,097 --> 00:19:42,808
but as far as we're concerned,
it didn't require any pressure.

354
00:19:42,891 --> 00:19:45,769
We were doing it before there was
talk of the Black Movement.

355
00:19:47,563 --> 00:19:50,983
<i>Ten years ago we had a book called</i>
Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos.

356
00:19:51,066 --> 00:19:54,653
<i>We billed it as the war magazine</i>
<i>for people who hate war magazines.</i>

357
00:19:54,736 --> 00:19:56,947
We didn't try to play up
Black people particularly,

358
00:19:57,030 --> 00:19:58,532
but we tried to make it realistic.

359
00:19:58,615 --> 00:20:02,744
<i>And Sgt. Fury's platoon</i>
<i>had a Jewish boy named Izzy Cohen,</i>

360
00:20:02,828 --> 00:20:06,874
<i>an Italian named Dino Manelli,</i>
<i>a Black soldier named Gabe Jones,</i>

361
00:20:06,957 --> 00:20:08,458
<i>and we've been doing it ever since.</i>

362
00:20:08,542 --> 00:20:12,004
Just about every one of our books
has Black people in it

363
00:20:12,087 --> 00:20:13,380
and people of all types.

364
00:20:13,463 --> 00:20:15,632
And not in a token way

365
00:20:15,716 --> 00:20:18,927
but, my God, there are people
of all types in the world we live in.

366
00:20:20,846 --> 00:20:22,055
(INAUDIBLE)

367
00:20:32,733 --> 00:20:35,903
And the one that sort of
changed the game in terms of,

368
00:20:35,986 --> 00:20:40,324
yeah, bringing characters of color into
the superhero world is the Black Panther.

369
00:20:40,407 --> 00:20:44,203
<i>He was debuted in</i> Fantastic Four,
<i>and</i> Fantastic Four <i>was, at the time,</i>

370
00:20:44,286 --> 00:20:45,746
<i>Marvel's best-selling comic.</i>

371
00:20:45,829 --> 00:20:49,750
<i>And in that first issue, Panther</i>
<i>is treated like any other character.</i>

372
00:20:49,833 --> 00:20:51,502
<i>In a sense, surprisingly well.</i>

373
00:20:51,585 --> 00:20:56,256
<i>The fact that he is</i>
<i>an African hero is almost secondary.</i>

374
00:20:56,340 --> 00:20:58,634
<i>He shows up.</i>
<i>At first, he's a mysterious player,</i>

375
00:20:58,717 --> 00:21:01,887
<i>he invites</i>
<i>the Fantastic Four to his country.</i>

376
00:21:01,970 --> 00:21:05,849
<i>He immediately jumps them and spends</i>
<i>20 pages beating the hell out of them.</i>

377
00:21:06,475 --> 00:21:08,977
<i>It turns out, by the end of the thing,</i>
<i>he's not a villain,</i>

378
00:21:09,061 --> 00:21:12,314
<i>he's actually a good guy,</i>
<i>and he's doing this to test himself,</i>

379
00:21:12,397 --> 00:21:15,484
<i>you know, which is kind of a</i>
<i>crappy thing to do to the Fantastic Four,</i>

380
00:21:15,567 --> 00:21:16,735
<i>but they're superheroes.</i>

381
00:21:16,818 --> 00:21:19,238
<i>It's all part of the job,</i>
<i>and by the end of the issue,</i>

382
00:21:19,321 --> 00:21:21,823
<i>he takes off his cowl</i>
<i>in front of the Fantastic Four</i>

383
00:21:21,907 --> 00:21:24,201
<i>and they're all like,</i>
<i>"It's the King of Wakanda,"</i>

384
00:21:24,284 --> 00:21:28,622
and nobody says a word about the fact
that he's a Black man.

385
00:21:29,748 --> 00:21:33,669
QUESADA: <i>For the readers, you know,</i>
<i>when T'Challa takes off his mask,</i>

386
00:21:33,752 --> 00:21:37,714
the readers go,
"Oh, my God. It's a Black superhero."

387
00:21:37,798 --> 00:21:40,175
<i>But the Fantastic Four,</i>
<i>they don't say that.</i>

388
00:21:40,259 --> 00:21:43,762
<i>The beauty of it was that it just was.</i>

389
00:21:43,846 --> 00:21:46,056
<i>So if you're in the middle</i>
<i>of all this strife,</i>

390
00:21:46,139 --> 00:21:47,933
<i>in the middle of all this upheaval,</i>

391
00:21:48,016 --> 00:21:51,562
you read those books and you go,
"That's the world I want to live in.

392
00:21:51,645 --> 00:21:52,896
"That's where I want to be."

393
00:21:54,314 --> 00:21:57,401
SANDERSON:
<i>The Black Panther, T'Challa, is a king.</i>

394
00:21:57,985 --> 00:22:00,070
I think this was
a conscious choice to make,

395
00:22:00,153 --> 00:22:01,947
that the Black Panther is very impressive.

396
00:22:02,030 --> 00:22:04,992
That is, in effect,
the point of the first story.

397
00:22:05,576 --> 00:22:10,330
<i>I think it is meant to bowl the readers</i>
<i>over, to impress them with this guy.</i>

398
00:22:11,373 --> 00:22:14,501
What's amazing about
a lot of the early superheroes

399
00:22:14,585 --> 00:22:20,215
is that sometimes those
early characters came out perfect, right?

400
00:22:20,299 --> 00:22:22,926
It's like, normally,
the first pancake isn't so good,

401
00:22:23,010 --> 00:22:26,054
but Superman, perfect.

402
00:22:26,597 --> 00:22:28,098
Batman, perfect.

403
00:22:28,182 --> 00:22:31,643
(CHUCKLES) Wonder Woman, perfect.
Captain America, perfect.

404
00:22:31,727 --> 00:22:37,274
So the first Black superhero,
Black Panther, comes out perfect.

405
00:22:37,357 --> 00:22:42,237
<i>He's this cool, elegant,</i>
<i>handsome guy who's just got it on locked.</i>

406
00:22:42,321 --> 00:22:46,158
I love it! This is the guy who has it all.

407
00:22:46,742 --> 00:22:51,205
<i>And one by one, he beats</i>
<i>each member of the Fantastic Four.</i>

408
00:22:51,788 --> 00:22:56,752
<i>Now, a few issues ago,</i>
<i>they beat Galactus, who eats planets.</i>

409
00:22:57,586 --> 00:23:01,548
So Black Panther beats the guys
who beat Galactus.

410
00:23:02,174 --> 00:23:06,845
Ergo, Black Panther is the baddest cat
in the Marvel Universe. The end.

411
00:23:08,472 --> 00:23:10,516
BREVOORT:
<i>Now, by '66, it was pretty clear</i>

412
00:23:10,599 --> 00:23:13,393
<i>that the Marvel approach</i>
<i>to doing comics was working.</i>

413
00:23:13,477 --> 00:23:15,729
<i>Stan and Jack and Steve,</i>
<i>everybody realized,</i>

414
00:23:15,812 --> 00:23:18,524
<i>like, "Something's going on here.</i>
<i>We're selling really well</i>

415
00:23:18,607 --> 00:23:21,401
<i>"and proportionately selling</i>
<i>better than everybody else."</i>

416
00:23:21,485 --> 00:23:24,738
And, in fact, it would be 10 years

417
00:23:24,821 --> 00:23:30,452
before rival companies had any ongoing
Black characters in a lot of cases.

418
00:23:30,536 --> 00:23:33,914
ARCHIE GOODWIN: These are character
sketches I had John Romita work on for us.

419
00:23:33,997 --> 00:23:35,999
Great. Now this is the way he really is.

420
00:23:36,083 --> 00:23:37,793
-This is it in real life.
-Yeah.

421
00:23:37,876 --> 00:23:40,170
And this is how
Johnny's tried to glamorize it a bit.

422
00:23:40,254 --> 00:23:45,175
LEE: I like the pilot very much, yeah.
She's a Black girl. That's good.

423
00:23:45,259 --> 00:23:47,928
MAGGIE THOMPSON: <i>One of the problems</i>
<i>with diversity in comics</i>

424
00:23:48,011 --> 00:23:53,642
is that though the creators may seek to
have diverse characters in their stories

425
00:23:53,725 --> 00:23:55,269
and diverse storylines

426
00:23:56,061 --> 00:24:00,732
for years and years and years,
the primary writers and artists

427
00:24:00,816 --> 00:24:04,152
were white guys
in their 20s, 30s, and 40s.

428
00:24:04,862 --> 00:24:07,322
PRIEST:
<i>I'm the first African-American editor,</i>

429
00:24:07,406 --> 00:24:10,158
and to my knowledge,
the first African-American writer

430
00:24:10,242 --> 00:24:12,911
in, what we consider,
modern superhero comics.

431
00:24:13,495 --> 00:24:15,497
<i>I was 17 years old</i>
<i>when I started working there.</i>

432
00:24:15,581 --> 00:24:19,126
<i>I had no idea that I was</i>
<i>the first Black guy in the front office.</i>

433
00:24:19,209 --> 00:24:21,461
<i>I remember one morning,</i>
<i>I came out of subway</i>

434
00:24:21,545 --> 00:24:25,299
and I was skipping down Madison Avenue.

435
00:24:25,382 --> 00:24:29,178
I was skipping to work,
'cause I couldn't wait to get there.

436
00:24:29,261 --> 00:24:31,805
At some point, a couple blocks,
I realized I was skipping

437
00:24:31,889 --> 00:24:33,557
and I said, "Black people don't skip."

438
00:24:36,268 --> 00:24:39,313
DENYS COWAN: <i>Rich offered</i>
<i>to take me to DC Comics</i>

439
00:24:39,396 --> 00:24:42,399
<i>and introduce me</i>
<i>to editors there to show my work,</i>

440
00:24:42,482 --> 00:24:45,444
and the first person he took me in
to was the art director at DC.

441
00:24:45,527 --> 00:24:47,613
I went and showed this guy my work.

442
00:24:47,696 --> 00:24:49,823
It was a white guy. Everyone was white.

443
00:24:50,657 --> 00:24:54,203
Nodded at me and he looked at it,
put it all together, handed it back,

444
00:24:54,286 --> 00:24:56,288
and he said, "This is really great, kid,

445
00:24:56,371 --> 00:24:58,957
"but we already got
a colored artist working here."

446
00:25:04,505 --> 00:25:09,218
<i>Shortly after that, I was up at Marvel</i>
<i>and I met the editor at the time.</i>

447
00:25:09,301 --> 00:25:12,346
<i>I think it was Jim Shooter.</i>
<i>And he didn't call me a colored artist.</i>

448
00:25:12,429 --> 00:25:16,642
<i>He just said, "Go see this editor</i>
<i>and they'll see what they can do for you."</i>

449
00:25:16,725 --> 00:25:18,977
NOCENTI: <i>People always say,</i>
<i>"Was there sexism?"</i>

450
00:25:19,061 --> 00:25:20,896
<i>There was kind of the opposite of sexism.</i>

451
00:25:20,979 --> 00:25:24,816
Even though there
weren't many female fans yet,

452
00:25:25,609 --> 00:25:30,447
and, probably, the percentage
of the office was mostly guys,

453
00:25:30,531 --> 00:25:32,324
everybody was a mentor.

454
00:25:32,407 --> 00:25:36,954
<i>On any typical day at Marvel Comic,</i>
<i>there was an open door policy,</i>

455
00:25:37,037 --> 00:25:41,124
<i>any kid could come in with</i>
<i>his portfolio and annoy us long enough</i>

456
00:25:41,208 --> 00:25:43,293
<i>'til somebody would pick it up and go,</i>

457
00:25:44,211 --> 00:25:46,964
<i>"Okay. Well, here's a sample page.</i>
<i>Try inking that."</i>

458
00:25:47,047 --> 00:25:50,509
<i>And then as the day went on, you'd get</i>
<i>the bottle of whiskey out of the drawer</i>

459
00:25:50,592 --> 00:25:53,637
and, you know, and then (BLEEP) happens.

460
00:25:53,720 --> 00:25:54,847
Story ideas come up.

461
00:25:55,931 --> 00:26:02,020
PRIEST: <i>I can't express enough how much</i>
<i>fun these lunatics were who worked there.</i>

462
00:26:02,104 --> 00:26:04,857
<i>Everybody was just a lunatic at Marvel.</i>

463
00:26:04,940 --> 00:26:07,568
<i>It was completely unpolitically correct.</i>

464
00:26:07,651 --> 00:26:09,319
<i>Yes, there were Black jokes,</i>

465
00:26:09,403 --> 00:26:12,739
but there were Polish jokes, there were
Italian jokes, there were Jewish jokes.

466
00:26:12,823 --> 00:26:16,159
<i>So I had no sense,</i>
<i>when I started writing Black characters,</i>

467
00:26:16,243 --> 00:26:19,162
of changing a paradigm
or making a statement.

468
00:26:20,080 --> 00:26:21,707
BREVOORT: <i>Moving into the '70s,</i>

469
00:26:21,790 --> 00:26:25,836
<i>as there was more of an interest in</i>
<i>developing further superheroes of color,</i>

470
00:26:25,919 --> 00:26:28,922
<i>I don't know how much</i>
<i>anybody was thinking that hard</i>

471
00:26:29,006 --> 00:26:31,175
<i>about a lot of the choices that were made.</i>

472
00:26:31,258 --> 00:26:34,219
A lot of the writers
and artists were very young.

473
00:26:34,303 --> 00:26:38,557
<i>So, even the amount of life experience</i>
<i>that a number of these people had</i>

474
00:26:38,640 --> 00:26:41,518
<i>probably colored the way</i>
<i>they depicted things.</i>

475
00:26:41,602 --> 00:26:44,646
<i>They absorbed the culture</i>
<i>that was around them like everybody else,</i>

476
00:26:44,730 --> 00:26:47,107
<i>and it filtered through</i>
<i>the work that they did.</i>

477
00:26:47,191 --> 00:26:51,862
<i>So there are definitely instances</i>
<i>where people didn't present characters</i>

478
00:26:51,945 --> 00:26:53,822
<i>as well as they could have.</i>

479
00:26:53,906 --> 00:26:57,367
<i>You know, Luke Cage in particular,</i>
<i>he was intended to be, effectively,</i>

480
00:26:57,451 --> 00:26:58,869
<i>a blaxploitation character.</i>

481
00:27:00,120 --> 00:27:02,039
<i>Luke Cage </i>was created
because of <i>Shaft.</i>

482
00:27:03,415 --> 00:27:06,084
<i>That's what led</i>
<i>to that blaxploitation period.</i>

483
00:27:07,878 --> 00:27:10,464
PRIEST: <i>Marvel went through</i>
<i>a blaxploitation phase</i>

484
00:27:10,547 --> 00:27:15,385
with Brother VooDoo and Luke Cage,
you know, "Sweet Christmas."

485
00:27:15,469 --> 00:27:18,388
TONY ISABELLA: <i>I was very drawn</i>
<i>to characters of color.</i>

486
00:27:18,472 --> 00:27:20,807
And this stems
from my growing up in Cleveland,

487
00:27:20,891 --> 00:27:23,727
which was a very segregated town,

488
00:27:23,810 --> 00:27:27,731
and my first Black friends
were comic book fans,

489
00:27:27,814 --> 00:27:29,525
<i>and I thought it was really unfair</i>

490
00:27:29,608 --> 00:27:31,860
<i>that there weren't</i>
<i>more Black characters for them.</i>

491
00:27:31,944 --> 00:27:35,781
WALKER: Luke Cage,<i> as a child, was one of</i>
<i>my most favorite books at Marvel.</i>

492
00:27:35,864 --> 00:27:38,200
<i>My cousin and I</i>
<i>discovered </i>Luke Cage <i>together</i>

493
00:27:38,283 --> 00:27:40,744
<i>at a 7-Eleven in the '70s</i>
<i>when we were kids.</i>

494
00:27:40,827 --> 00:27:42,829
We read that comic until it fell apart.

495
00:27:43,705 --> 00:27:47,835
DUFFY: <i>I think it's because he was one</i>
<i>of the first African-American superheroes</i>

496
00:27:47,918 --> 00:27:49,545
<i>that they didn't wanna mask him.</i>

497
00:27:49,628 --> 00:27:52,297
It's like,
they were so doing the right thing,

498
00:27:52,381 --> 00:27:56,593
finally having heroes of color, it was,
like, yeah, they wanted people to see

499
00:27:56,677 --> 00:28:00,514
<i>this strong, handsome champion</i>
<i>of justice who was also a man of color.</i>

500
00:28:00,597 --> 00:28:02,307
If you read the<i> Luke Cage</i> comics,

501
00:28:02,391 --> 00:28:06,770
there's nothing about Luke Cage
that is actually a Black person, right?

502
00:28:06,854 --> 00:28:08,564
<i>The way he talks, the way he acts,</i>

503
00:28:08,647 --> 00:28:12,234
<i>there's this bizarre notion</i>
<i>of what "Blackness" is supposed to be.</i>

504
00:28:12,317 --> 00:28:14,611
PRIEST:<i> A lot of artists,</i>
<i>when they approach Black characters,</i>

505
00:28:14,695 --> 00:28:18,448
they give them this sort of slang.
And it's not real slang.

506
00:28:18,532 --> 00:28:21,618
<i>It's like what white people</i>
<i>think slang is.</i>

507
00:28:21,702 --> 00:28:25,038
WALKER: <i>A lot of times you square with,</i>
<i>what I call, the lack of humanity</i>

508
00:28:25,122 --> 00:28:28,000
<i>in some of these characters</i>
<i>the same way you reconcile</i>

509
00:28:28,083 --> 00:28:32,504
your childhood love of a James Bond movie
and then watch it as an adult and go,

510
00:28:32,588 --> 00:28:35,966
"Ooh, wait a sec. James Bond
is hugely problematic, right?"

511
00:28:37,134 --> 00:28:39,887
ISABELLA: <i>When I was writing</i>
Luke Cage <i>in the '70s,</i>

512
00:28:39,970 --> 00:28:42,890
I wasn't, as they say,
as woke as I am now.

513
00:28:42,973 --> 00:28:46,977
I tried to tell good stories
that respected the character,

514
00:28:47,060 --> 00:28:52,107
<i>that treated him not as</i>
<i>something special but just a great hero.</i>

515
00:28:52,191 --> 00:28:54,860
<i>This was a growth process for all of us.</i>

516
00:28:54,943 --> 00:28:59,114
<i>You don't suddenly wake up</i>
<i>to the world around you and go,</i>

517
00:28:59,198 --> 00:29:02,242
"This is how it should be."
You work your way towards there.

518
00:29:03,535 --> 00:29:06,121
PRIEST: <i>It's rare for me to craft a story</i>

519
00:29:06,205 --> 00:29:08,874
<i>from the perspective</i>
<i>of being a Black writer,</i>

520
00:29:08,957 --> 00:29:12,336
because I don't
consider myself a "Black writer."

521
00:29:12,419 --> 00:29:14,087
I'm a writer. I can write anything.

522
00:29:15,464 --> 00:29:17,674
<i>I wrote</i> Luke Cage <i>for a long time.</i>

523
00:29:18,425 --> 00:29:20,802
<i>Eventually I said, "Well, on demerits,</i>

524
00:29:20,886 --> 00:29:23,347
<i>"how should this person</i>
<i>present themselves?"</i>

525
00:29:23,430 --> 00:29:27,726
I didn't have him using the King's speech,
but some of that stuff had to go.

526
00:29:30,562 --> 00:29:32,981
JENNINGS: <i>I think that it does start out</i>
<i>as this exploitative piece,</i>

527
00:29:33,065 --> 00:29:36,568
but through, like, reappropriation,
we can actually start to sample

528
00:29:36,652 --> 00:29:38,695
and remix these things
and make them our own.

529
00:29:40,197 --> 00:29:42,616
<i>To go from, say,</i>
<i>like this kind of jive-talkin',</i>

530
00:29:42,699 --> 00:29:44,368
<i>steel-hard skin-having character</i>

531
00:29:44,451 --> 00:29:47,955
<i>to this really complex</i>
<i>father figure and leader</i>

532
00:29:48,038 --> 00:29:50,999
<i>who resonates with</i>
<i>a lot of people who live in this country.</i>

533
00:29:52,042 --> 00:29:53,293
I love <i>Luke Cage,</i> you know?

534
00:29:55,003 --> 00:29:57,214
NICOLE GEORGES:
<i>I think identity in comics is huge.</i>

535
00:29:57,297 --> 00:30:00,133
<i>'Cause when you're a kid,</i>
<i>those are the people you look up to,</i>

536
00:30:00,217 --> 00:30:01,927
<i>'cause they represent good.</i>

537
00:30:02,010 --> 00:30:05,055
On the page, it's like,
"This person's good, this person's evil."

538
00:30:05,138 --> 00:30:07,182
<i>I think everyone deserves</i>
<i>to see themselves</i>

539
00:30:07,266 --> 00:30:09,059
<i>reflected in the media they consume,</i>

540
00:30:09,142 --> 00:30:11,395
<i>and it is crazy to think</i>

541
00:30:11,478 --> 00:30:14,022
<i>that people would spend</i>
<i>so much money on entertainment</i>

542
00:30:14,106 --> 00:30:16,525
<i>that does not at all</i>
<i>reflect back their body type,</i>

543
00:30:16,608 --> 00:30:19,611
<i>their class background,</i>
<i>their race, their sexuality, their gender.</i>

544
00:30:19,695 --> 00:30:23,323
<i>It's wild that people have been</i>
<i>entertained solely by products</i>

545
00:30:23,407 --> 00:30:25,576
that didn't reflect
any of those things back to them,

546
00:30:25,659 --> 00:30:28,495
or did in like a real homogeneous way,
for years and years.

547
00:30:28,579 --> 00:30:30,289
(SINGING) <i>Rubbley-ub-dub,</i>

548
00:30:30,372 --> 00:30:32,624
<i>Oh, how she'll get ya with her</i>
<i>Rubbley-ub-dub</i>

549
00:30:33,333 --> 00:30:35,586
<i>She'll really throw ya with her</i>
<i>Rubbley-ub-dub,</i>

550
00:30:36,128 --> 00:30:38,547
<i>Hear them yelling...</i>

551
00:30:38,630 --> 00:30:42,217
JENNINGS: <i>Comics in particular,</i>
<i>they utilize stereotypes to tell stories.</i>

552
00:30:42,301 --> 00:30:45,637
That's one of the reasons why
you have so many problematic constructions

553
00:30:45,721 --> 00:30:49,474
around race in comics because they're
generally borrowing from social norms.

554
00:30:49,558 --> 00:30:52,311
<i>For instance, at the end of the heyday</i>
<i>of the Golden Age of comics,</i>

555
00:30:52,394 --> 00:30:55,147
<i>you have these really,</i>
<i>really horrific racial stereotypes.</i>

556
00:30:55,230 --> 00:30:58,692
<i>A lot of the propaganda around</i>
<i>Asian people during the Second World War.</i>

557
00:30:59,735 --> 00:31:02,946
PAK: <i>There was a time when Asian people</i>
<i>in comics were colored yellow.</i>

558
00:31:03,030 --> 00:31:04,698
They literally used yellow.

559
00:31:05,532 --> 00:31:06,950
<i>Larry Hama talks about this.</i>

560
00:31:07,034 --> 00:31:12,247
I would just say, "Hey, maybe we should
stop coloring Asian people bright yellow."

561
00:31:13,916 --> 00:31:17,586
<i>"Well, why do we do that?"</i>
<i>"Oh, well, we've always done that."</i>

562
00:31:17,669 --> 00:31:22,049
"Well, uh, maybe it's time
we stopped doing that." (CHUCKLES)

563
00:31:22,883 --> 00:31:26,178
BREVOORT: <i>The very first issue of</i>
Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos,

564
00:31:26,261 --> 00:31:28,138
<i>Gabe Jones is colored Caucasian.</i>

565
00:31:28,722 --> 00:31:32,643
<i>And he's colored Caucasian</i>
<i>because essentially up to that point,</i>

566
00:31:32,726 --> 00:31:37,189
there really had not been,
in comic books, a character of color.

567
00:31:37,272 --> 00:31:39,316
There were no Black people

568
00:31:39,399 --> 00:31:44,112
apart from <i>Amos 'n Andy,</i>
stereotypical, bug-eyed, big-lipped,

569
00:31:44,196 --> 00:31:46,448
<i>Stepin Fetchit kind of caricatures.</i>

570
00:31:46,532 --> 00:31:49,701
And so, the book was sent
to the printer and the color separator,

571
00:31:49,785 --> 00:31:52,996
and the color separator went,
"This must be a mistake,"

572
00:31:53,080 --> 00:31:55,123
colored him Caucasian like everybody else.

573
00:31:55,207 --> 00:31:58,335
<i>And Stan had to call him up</i>
<i>and kind of ream them out over it</i>

574
00:31:58,418 --> 00:32:00,337
<i>and get it corrected for future issues.</i>

575
00:32:00,420 --> 00:32:03,507
And, in fact, in those early issues
and in those early years,

576
00:32:03,590 --> 00:32:07,302
they don't even quite have
a skin tone that works.

577
00:32:07,386 --> 00:32:12,349
<i>Gabe Jones ends up looking more gray</i>
<i>and more like stone in a lot of issues</i>

578
00:32:12,432 --> 00:32:16,478
<i>than he does</i>
<i>a true, rich African-American brown,</i>

579
00:32:16,562 --> 00:32:20,232
because literally they just couldn't
figure out what's the combination

580
00:32:20,315 --> 00:32:25,153
of red, yellow, blue
to get a skin tone that works.

581
00:32:26,071 --> 00:32:28,907
HAMA: <i>You can yell and pound the desk</i>
<i>all you want.</i>

582
00:32:28,991 --> 00:32:34,872
What that type of aggression does
is it steels people against you.

583
00:32:34,955 --> 00:32:39,168
<i>It's more lasting and it has more meaning</i>
<i>if you become part of what it is</i>

584
00:32:39,251 --> 00:32:40,836
<i>and change it internally.</i>

585
00:32:41,879 --> 00:32:43,922
When I went to work at Marvel on staff,

586
00:32:44,006 --> 00:32:47,050
they were reprinting stories
from the 1950s,

587
00:32:47,134 --> 00:32:49,428
and one of the books
was <i>Jungle Action.</i>

588
00:32:50,596 --> 00:32:51,805
<i>And in those books,</i>

589
00:32:51,889 --> 00:32:54,391
<i>they were reprinting</i>
<i>a lot of these really racist</i>

590
00:32:54,474 --> 00:32:57,311
<i>jungle blonde Gods and Goddesses</i>

591
00:32:57,394 --> 00:32:59,271
<i>saving the natives stories.</i>

592
00:32:59,354 --> 00:33:02,149
(CHUCKLES) I would say to editorial,

593
00:33:02,232 --> 00:33:08,113
"I can't believe <i>Marvel</i>
is publishing this stuff in 1973.

594
00:33:08,197 --> 00:33:09,781
"What are you guys, crazy?"

595
00:33:09,865 --> 00:33:12,951
<i>And I know I must have</i>
<i>said something like,</i>

596
00:33:13,035 --> 00:33:17,289
<i>"Can't you at least have an African</i>
<i>character be the hero?"</i> (CHUCKLES)

597
00:33:17,372 --> 00:33:18,373
<i>They came and said,</i>

598
00:33:18,457 --> 00:33:21,627
<i>"We're gonna put</i>
<i>the Black Panther into </i>Jungle Action."

599
00:33:21,710 --> 00:33:25,130
I don't think editorial
had really thought what that meant.

600
00:33:25,756 --> 00:33:28,634
<i>Since everybody in the cast was Wakandan,</i>

601
00:33:28,717 --> 00:33:30,928
<i>it was going to be</i>
<i>an all-Black cast of characters.</i>

602
00:33:31,011 --> 00:33:35,641
This has never been done
in an American comic book series before.

603
00:33:41,855 --> 00:33:45,651
SANDERSON: <i>Don McGregor, his</i> Black Panther
<i>was a cutting-edge series at the time.</i>

604
00:33:45,734 --> 00:33:47,277
<i>He's the one who really created</i>

605
00:33:47,361 --> 00:33:51,406
<i>this incredibly futuristic,</i>
<i>super-scientific society.</i>

606
00:33:51,490 --> 00:33:53,617
<i>The world, the civilization of Wakanda.</i>

607
00:33:54,785 --> 00:33:58,497
DOUGLAS WOLK: <i>One thing that</i> Marvel
<i>did a lot that's fantastic</i>

608
00:33:58,580 --> 00:34:03,001
is they loved to play with tropes
and they loved to turn them upside down.

609
00:34:03,085 --> 00:34:07,130
<i>So the Black Panther, he's in Africa.</i>
<i>It's deep, dark Africa.</i>

610
00:34:07,214 --> 00:34:10,467
<i>This unexplored place.</i>
<i>Trope, trope, tropety-trope.</i>

611
00:34:10,551 --> 00:34:14,888
And Wakanda is a technological paradise
and the most wealthy country in the world.

612
00:34:14,972 --> 00:34:17,808
<i>Wait a second.</i>
<i>This is not a trope anymore.</i>

613
00:34:19,685 --> 00:34:23,355
JENNINGS: <i>The most interesting thing</i>
<i>I think about the</i> Black Panther <i>story</i>

614
00:34:23,438 --> 00:34:26,650
<i>is this idea of an untouched Black space.</i>

615
00:34:26,733 --> 00:34:29,653
<i>It's a space of power</i>
<i>and it's a space of celebration.</i>

616
00:34:30,404 --> 00:34:34,157
<i>Seeing this open, technologically</i>
<i>advanced, beautiful society,</i>

617
00:34:34,241 --> 00:34:36,326
it brought me to tears
almost instantaneously.

618
00:34:41,623 --> 00:34:44,626
DON McGREGOR: <i>There was a resurgence</i>
<i>of the Ku Klux Klan at the time...</i>

619
00:34:45,544 --> 00:34:49,298
<i>and that's how</i>
<i>the Panther versus the Klan came about.</i>

620
00:34:50,674 --> 00:34:52,384
<i>T'Challa is with Monica Lynne,</i>

621
00:34:52,467 --> 00:34:54,428
<i>who's the woman</i>
<i>he is with at that timeframe.</i>

622
00:34:54,511 --> 00:34:58,473
<i>And they start talking about an uncle</i>
<i>she had during the Reconstruction period,</i>

623
00:34:58,557 --> 00:35:01,226
<i>after the Civil War, in the United States.</i>

624
00:35:01,310 --> 00:35:03,812
<i>And when the mother tells the story,</i>

625
00:35:03,896 --> 00:35:07,566
<i>she's telling what historically happened</i>
<i>to her Uncle Caleb.</i>

626
00:35:08,317 --> 00:35:12,487
<i>And in alternate pages,</i>
<i>we have Monica thinking of it the way,</i>

627
00:35:12,571 --> 00:35:16,575
<i>if T'Challa existed</i>
<i>back in 1868 Reconstruction America.</i>

628
00:35:20,662 --> 00:35:22,289
<i>This goes right to the heart of,</i>

629
00:35:22,372 --> 00:35:25,959
"Why do people love costume
and superheroes in comics?"

630
00:35:26,043 --> 00:35:28,295
'Cause T'Challa makes it come out right.

631
00:35:28,378 --> 00:35:30,839
And in the real world, Caleb gets hung.

632
00:35:34,259 --> 00:35:37,179
As the books went along,
it became more and more apparent

633
00:35:37,262 --> 00:35:39,723
that they did not want
an all-Black cast of characters.

634
00:35:39,806 --> 00:35:41,600
<i>They wanted</i>
<i>the Avengers to be brought in</i>

635
00:35:41,683 --> 00:35:43,352
<i>to help the Black Panther out.</i>

636
00:35:43,435 --> 00:35:44,937
<i>I said, "No, this is not that book.</i>

637
00:35:45,020 --> 00:35:47,481
<i>"I don't want it to be a book</i>
<i>where the white guys come in</i>

638
00:35:47,564 --> 00:35:49,816
<i>"and help the Black guy</i>
<i>'cause he can't do it.</i>

639
00:35:49,900 --> 00:35:51,151
"T'Challa can take care of it.

640
00:35:51,235 --> 00:35:53,529
"He doesn't need
anybody else to be coming in there.

641
00:35:53,612 --> 00:35:55,697
"And he'll take care
of the important issues."

642
00:35:56,573 --> 00:36:00,077
ISABELLA: <i>There was a time when</i>
The Black Panther <i>became</i> The Black Leopard

643
00:36:00,160 --> 00:36:02,246
<i>because Marvel was afraid</i>

644
00:36:02,329 --> 00:36:05,207
<i>that he'd be associated</i>
<i>with the Black Panther party.</i>

645
00:36:05,290 --> 00:36:10,087
<i>There was a time when T'Challa</i>
<i>became a school teacher in America,</i>

646
00:36:10,170 --> 00:36:15,717
and that seemed to me
not quite right for an African king.

647
00:36:16,218 --> 00:36:18,303
Everybody makes mistakes.

648
00:36:18,387 --> 00:36:20,639
The question is
what you do from those mistakes.

649
00:36:20,722 --> 00:36:21,723
Do you learn from them?

650
00:36:26,937 --> 00:36:28,063
Stay quiet!

651
00:36:28,981 --> 00:36:33,360
CONWAY: <i>There was a tendency under Stan,</i>
<i>and whatever his strengths were,</i>

652
00:36:34,278 --> 00:36:36,989
writing strong
female characters were not among them.

653
00:36:37,072 --> 00:36:39,783
He tended to treat
all of the female characters

654
00:36:39,867 --> 00:36:43,453
as the lady scientist
in bad 1950s horror movies.

655
00:36:44,413 --> 00:36:48,375
<i>Beautiful, but not too bright.</i>
<i>A female character has to be rescued.</i>

656
00:36:48,959 --> 00:36:50,127
(SCREAMS)

657
00:36:53,797 --> 00:36:56,383
WOLK: <i>So one really interesting thing</i>
<i>about Marvel's history</i>

658
00:36:56,466 --> 00:36:58,927
<i>is that at the same time</i>

659
00:36:59,011 --> 00:37:02,472
as their superhero line
was starting in the early '60s,

660
00:37:02,556 --> 00:37:05,726
<i>the other half of the line</i>
<i>that they were publishing</i>

661
00:37:05,809 --> 00:37:07,769
<i>was comics about young women.</i>

662
00:37:07,853 --> 00:37:11,565
<i>They were doing</i> Patsy Walker
<i>and</i> Patsy and Hedy.

663
00:37:11,648 --> 00:37:14,443
<i>They were doing</i>
Linda Carter, Student Nurse,

664
00:37:14,526 --> 00:37:18,697
<i>the comedy romance</i>
<i>medical adventures of a student nurse.</i>

665
00:37:18,780 --> 00:37:22,618
<i>And there's a way</i>
<i>in which those got integrated</i>

666
00:37:22,701 --> 00:37:24,953
into the superhero stories.

667
00:37:25,787 --> 00:37:29,124
SANDERSON:
<i>The heroines tend to have lesser powers.</i>

668
00:37:29,208 --> 00:37:34,254
<i>The Wasp got to shrink down</i>
<i>and sting people and fly around.</i>

669
00:37:34,338 --> 00:37:37,674
Sue Storm was sort of
like the housewife at the Fantastic Four.

670
00:37:37,758 --> 00:37:39,843
<i>Originally,</i>
<i>her power was basically to hide.</i>

671
00:37:39,927 --> 00:37:41,094
<i>She turns invisible.</i>

672
00:37:41,678 --> 00:37:44,848
Male characters
were given the very physical powers,

673
00:37:44,932 --> 00:37:49,436
and female characters have
these sort of point and pose powers.

674
00:37:49,520 --> 00:37:50,812
So these powers where

675
00:37:50,896 --> 00:37:53,106
you just stand and look nice,
and you point,

676
00:37:53,190 --> 00:37:55,067
and you can do something with your mind.

677
00:37:55,692 --> 00:37:59,780
<i>The power where you can look good</i>
<i>while affecting those around you.</i>

678
00:38:00,489 --> 00:38:03,992
Every time that gender and sexuality
has been addressed in Marvel comics,

679
00:38:04,076 --> 00:38:07,871
it's very representative
of popular thinking at the time.

680
00:38:08,580 --> 00:38:12,125
<i>And strides have been made</i>
<i>with every subsequent generation.</i>

681
00:38:12,209 --> 00:38:13,836
WOMAN: What do we want?
CROWD: E-R-A!

682
00:38:13,919 --> 00:38:16,630
-When do we want it?
-Now!

683
00:38:16,713 --> 00:38:19,883
Stan wanted me
to create a female superhero

684
00:38:19,967 --> 00:38:22,761
that would have the Marvel name
in her character name,

685
00:38:22,845 --> 00:38:28,183
<i>and I brought together elements</i>
<i>from other books that were pre-existing,</i>

686
00:38:28,267 --> 00:38:29,685
<i>such as Carol Danvers,</i>

687
00:38:29,768 --> 00:38:33,397
<i>and gave her an origin story that tied her</i>
<i>into the </i>Captain Marvel <i>series</i>

688
00:38:33,480 --> 00:38:37,818
<i>and tried to create</i>
<i>a feminist superheroine.</i>

689
00:38:38,443 --> 00:38:43,490
When the strip was started in 1976,
like most of the things Marvel did in '76,

690
00:38:43,574 --> 00:38:46,952
it was an attempt to tap into
whatever was going on in the zeitgeist.

691
00:38:47,035 --> 00:38:50,414
<i>Women's lib was big.</i>
<i>We'll do a female super.</i>

692
00:38:50,497 --> 00:38:53,166
<i>She'll be Ms. Marvel.</i>
<i>That will be current.</i>

693
00:38:53,250 --> 00:38:57,629
<i>The first issue cover had a blurb like,</i>
<i>"This female fights back."</i>

694
00:38:58,255 --> 00:39:01,925
My goal was to write a feminist superhero.

695
00:39:02,009 --> 00:39:04,052
In fact, in the first issue,

696
00:39:04,136 --> 00:39:07,097
<i>there's a moment where,</i>
<i>there's a girl with her mom, she says,</i>

697
00:39:07,181 --> 00:39:08,765
<i>"I wanna be like her when I grow up."</i>

698
00:39:08,849 --> 00:39:11,476
<i>And I thought that was</i>
<i>an important thing to try to create,</i>

699
00:39:11,560 --> 00:39:15,314
<i>was a strong-willed</i>
<i>powerful female character</i>

700
00:39:15,397 --> 00:39:20,777
<i>who was independent</i>
<i>and not the object of a romantic liaison.</i>

701
00:39:20,861 --> 00:39:24,156
The book was a feminist book,

702
00:39:24,239 --> 00:39:27,326
much more heavy-handed
than anything I ever did.

703
00:39:27,409 --> 00:39:30,162
<i>She's got the Gloria Steinem glasses</i>
<i>and part down the middle.</i>

704
00:39:30,245 --> 00:39:32,873
<i>And he makes her</i>
<i>an editor of </i>Woman Magazine.

705
00:39:33,790 --> 00:39:38,295
But the Marvel Universe heroes
are ground level heroes.

706
00:39:38,378 --> 00:39:40,506
<i>They are people who have problems</i>

707
00:39:40,589 --> 00:39:44,384
<i>and things go poorly for them</i>
<i>personally, often.</i>

708
00:39:44,468 --> 00:39:49,598
<i>That makes sense to me,</i>
<i>but that also makes Carol a hard fit</i>

709
00:39:50,140 --> 00:39:56,772
<i>because Carol</i>
<i>is this overpowered beautiful blonde.</i>

710
00:39:57,481 --> 00:40:00,776
Like, there's a record scratch there.

711
00:40:00,859 --> 00:40:04,571
Our characters are fundamentally
about who they are behind the mask, right?

712
00:40:04,655 --> 00:40:08,909
<i>But then, anything that anyone knows</i>
<i>about Carol Danvers is the costume.</i>

713
00:40:08,992 --> 00:40:10,285
It's the first thing they look.

714
00:40:10,369 --> 00:40:13,080
It's a bathing suit
with thigh-high boots and a sash,

715
00:40:13,163 --> 00:40:16,375
<i>which I think is the most ineffective way</i>
<i>to beat up bad guys.</i>

716
00:40:16,458 --> 00:40:19,294
And very cold when you're flying
at really high altitudes.

717
00:40:19,878 --> 00:40:24,758
<i>But it was a different time,</i>
<i>and the male gaze was at the forefront.</i>

718
00:40:24,842 --> 00:40:28,053
The way a woman is drawn in a comic
where she has a super skinny waist

719
00:40:28,136 --> 00:40:29,638
and huge bullet boobs.

720
00:40:29,721 --> 00:40:33,183
<i>It's like a different version</i>
<i>of womanhood, and femininity,</i>

721
00:40:33,267 --> 00:40:36,937
<i>and a different version of toughness</i>
<i>because when women are drawn by men,</i>

722
00:40:37,020 --> 00:40:38,480
<i>and trying to show they're tough,</i>

723
00:40:38,564 --> 00:40:41,191
<i>they're often givin' them</i>
<i>male marks of toughness.</i>

724
00:40:41,275 --> 00:40:44,403
Being a woman and being tough
sometimes is different than that,

725
00:40:44,486 --> 00:40:46,572
or more nuanced than that.

726
00:40:48,073 --> 00:40:51,034
JEANINE SCHAEFER: <i>It's not that we need</i>
<i>women to be badasses,</i>

727
00:40:51,118 --> 00:40:55,831
or that we need women
to be strong in some, uh...

728
00:40:55,914 --> 00:40:58,166
socially acceptable way,

729
00:40:58,250 --> 00:41:00,544
<i>but when you have women</i>
<i>who aren't allowed to be flawed,</i>

730
00:41:00,627 --> 00:41:03,755
<i>or they can only look like this,</i>
<i>and they can only do these things,</i>

731
00:41:03,839 --> 00:41:08,343
<i>and they can't make bad choices,</i>
<i>that's boring. You know?</i>

732
00:41:08,427 --> 00:41:10,304
That's nobody's favorite character.

733
00:41:15,893 --> 00:41:20,689
CHRIS CLAREMONT: <i>My mom, when she was</i>
<i>in college, ended up joining the RAF</i>

734
00:41:20,772 --> 00:41:22,524
because she wanted to be a fighter pilot.

735
00:41:22,608 --> 00:41:24,193
They wouldn't let her be one

736
00:41:24,276 --> 00:41:26,236
because women
aren't allowed to fly Spitfires.

737
00:41:26,320 --> 00:41:31,408
So she ended up serving on a radar station
on the south coast of Britain in 1940,

738
00:41:31,491 --> 00:41:36,413
<i>which was an extremely adventurous time</i>
<i>to be in that place, doing that job.</i>

739
00:41:36,496 --> 00:41:40,542
So I figure if I know
people who do this for real,

740
00:41:40,626 --> 00:41:44,296
<i>why can't I put their equivalent on paper?</i>

741
00:41:44,379 --> 00:41:47,758
<i>Why should women in comics</i>
<i>just be girlfriends?</i>

742
00:41:47,841 --> 00:41:49,468
<i>Why can't there be boyfriends?</i>

743
00:41:49,551 --> 00:41:51,553
<i>Why can't you create</i>

744
00:41:51,637 --> 00:41:54,598
<i>idiosyncratic individuals</i>
<i>and then put them through hell?</i>

745
00:41:54,681 --> 00:41:56,350
No one else was doing it, I figured,

746
00:41:56,433 --> 00:41:58,644
"The heck?
I'll take a shot and see what happens."

747
00:42:02,564 --> 00:42:05,692
BREVOORT: <i>It's what we think of as</i>
The All-New, All-Different X-Men

748
00:42:05,776 --> 00:42:07,528
<i>that came in around 1975.</i>

749
00:42:08,237 --> 00:42:09,863
They took a group of characters

750
00:42:09,947 --> 00:42:13,242
who originally
were five white American kids

751
00:42:13,325 --> 00:42:17,079
<i>and replaced them</i>
<i>with an international team.</i>

752
00:42:17,996 --> 00:42:20,874
IVAN VELEZ JR.: <i>When I became a teenager,</i>
<i>the </i>Uncanny X-Men <i>came out</i>

753
00:42:20,958 --> 00:42:23,168
and something just took it
to another level for us.

754
00:42:23,252 --> 00:42:27,506
Maybe it was the time, maybe it was
coming off of the civil rights era

755
00:42:27,589 --> 00:42:29,758
<i>but it just seemed like brown skin</i>

756
00:42:29,842 --> 00:42:33,053
<i>and not even brown skin,</i>
<i>like that Black skin,</i>

757
00:42:33,136 --> 00:42:37,599
and their attempts to do Asian skin,
which was still too yellow for my taste,

758
00:42:37,683 --> 00:42:40,310
but it was just
like a beautiful thing just to see.

759
00:42:40,936 --> 00:42:44,231
<i>The X-Men</i>
of the '70s is totally fascinating,

760
00:42:44,314 --> 00:42:46,650
because it's such an aggressive attempt

761
00:42:46,733 --> 00:42:49,278
at the idea
of a representational diversity.

762
00:42:49,361 --> 00:42:51,321
<i>If we look at the X-Men of the early '60s,</i>

763
00:42:51,405 --> 00:42:53,907
<i>they were supposed to be different</i>
<i>than ordinary humans</i>

764
00:42:53,991 --> 00:42:55,409
<i>by virtue of being mutants,</i>

765
00:42:55,492 --> 00:42:59,746
<i>but they were essentially a group</i>
<i>of white, privileged teenage kids.</i>

766
00:42:59,830 --> 00:43:02,916
And, so, in many ways,
it didn't live up to its own promise.

767
00:43:03,000 --> 00:43:08,797
The X-Men<i> of the 1970s reinvigorates</i>
<i>the imagined category of the mutant,</i>

768
00:43:08,881 --> 00:43:11,341
<i>and it says,</i>
<i>"What if there were lots of mutants,</i>

769
00:43:11,425 --> 00:43:14,094
<i>"but they all</i>
<i>were radically different from each other?"</i>

770
00:43:14,178 --> 00:43:16,138
And then they had to create common cause.

771
00:43:17,181 --> 00:43:19,933
CLAREMONT: <i>The whole point for me</i>
<i>of the X-Men has been,</i>

772
00:43:20,017 --> 00:43:22,853
<i>they are the outsiders,</i>
<i>summed up by the phrase,</i>

773
00:43:22,936 --> 00:43:24,897
<i>"Serve and protect</i>
<i>the world that hates them."</i>

774
00:43:24,980 --> 00:43:27,774
And the idea was
that they can never get away from that.

775
00:43:28,525 --> 00:43:31,653
BREVOORT: <i>The X-Men were</i>
<i>the first superheroes who were the same,</i>

776
00:43:31,737 --> 00:43:34,031
<i>whether they were in the costumes or not.</i>

777
00:43:34,114 --> 00:43:35,365
With Wolverine,

778
00:43:35,449 --> 00:43:39,203
it didn't matter whether he was wearing
a plaid shirt and a cowboy hat

779
00:43:39,286 --> 00:43:41,997
<i>or the yellow and blue superhero outfit,</i>

780
00:43:42,080 --> 00:43:46,084
<i>he was the same dude and he reacted</i>
<i>to people exactly the same way.</i>

781
00:43:46,168 --> 00:43:50,631
There wasn't any artifice
of not being the person that you were.

782
00:43:51,590 --> 00:43:54,468
CLAREMONT: <i>The idea of wearing masks,</i>
<i>it just didn't fit.</i>

783
00:43:55,010 --> 00:43:58,680
If I was a normal kid
and I woke up on my 13th birthday

784
00:43:58,764 --> 00:44:01,475
and I'd turned into Nightcrawler,
I'd be pissed.

785
00:44:03,602 --> 00:44:05,479
<i>But if I'm born this way,</i>

786
00:44:05,562 --> 00:44:07,773
<i>if this is what I look like</i>
<i>coming out of the box,</i>

787
00:44:07,856 --> 00:44:09,650
<i>what kind of a person am I?</i>

788
00:44:09,733 --> 00:44:12,903
<i>And then I thought,</i>
<i>"Okay. I might as well make the best of it</i>

789
00:44:12,986 --> 00:44:15,531
<i>"because I can cling to walls,</i>
<i>I can teleport,</i>

790
00:44:15,614 --> 00:44:16,990
<i>"I have a tail that's articulate.</i>

791
00:44:17,074 --> 00:44:19,785
"I'm cool. I am just so cool."

792
00:44:20,744 --> 00:44:25,040
<i>If you're that far</i>
<i>on the outskirts of norm,</i>

793
00:44:25,123 --> 00:44:27,918
<i>it's either an asset or it's a liability,</i>

794
00:44:28,001 --> 00:44:30,254
and why would you want it
to be a liability?

795
00:44:30,963 --> 00:44:32,840
Embrace it and see where it leads.

796
00:44:34,508 --> 00:44:37,177
NOCENTI:
<i>Chris was pretty ahead of the curve</i>

797
00:44:37,261 --> 00:44:40,055
<i>with the diversity</i>
<i>and the female empowerment,</i>

798
00:44:40,138 --> 00:44:42,182
like no one else was.

799
00:44:42,266 --> 00:44:44,601
<i>When you really look back on it,</i>

800
00:44:44,685 --> 00:44:48,772
<i>the female characters</i>
<i>have the best storylines in Chris' </i>X-Men.

801
00:44:49,523 --> 00:44:52,860
He was also doing the early versions

802
00:44:52,943 --> 00:44:56,113
<i>of having people play around</i>
<i>with switching genders</i>

803
00:44:56,196 --> 00:44:58,115
<i>like you have all the time now.</i>

804
00:44:58,198 --> 00:45:04,705
<i>And I remember at one point he wanted</i>
<i>somebody to brainwash Professor Xavier</i>

805
00:45:04,788 --> 00:45:09,042
and have him in a dress with heels,
and I was like, "Chris, that's too far."

806
00:45:12,796 --> 00:45:15,841
FAWAZ: <i>What is so fascinating</i>
<i>about the </i>X-Men <i>in this period,</i>

807
00:45:15,924 --> 00:45:18,468
<i>is that it is very much invested</i>

808
00:45:18,552 --> 00:45:21,346
in the cultures of women's
and gay liberation in the '70s,

809
00:45:21,430 --> 00:45:23,473
even though the series would never mention

810
00:45:23,557 --> 00:45:25,601
any of those terms
in the actual comic book.

811
00:45:25,684 --> 00:45:28,520
<i>Gay liberation,</i>
<i>that social movement is saying,</i>

812
00:45:28,604 --> 00:45:30,772
<i>"We wanna be</i>
<i>able to perform our identities</i>

813
00:45:30,856 --> 00:45:32,858
<i>"visually in the way we dress,</i>
<i>the way we dance,</i>

814
00:45:32,941 --> 00:45:34,026
<i>"in the way we make love,"</i>

815
00:45:34,109 --> 00:45:37,946
<i>and that comic book said what does it look</i>
<i>like to transform those ideals</i>

816
00:45:38,030 --> 00:45:41,450
<i>into the way</i>
<i>that mutants look on the page?</i>

817
00:45:42,075 --> 00:45:44,244
The characters look
like they're dressed in drag,

818
00:45:44,328 --> 00:45:47,956
<i>their costumes</i>
<i>are extraordinarily flamboyant,</i>

819
00:45:48,040 --> 00:45:52,252
<i>and there are all of these epic scenes</i>
<i>where they go off into space</i>

820
00:45:52,336 --> 00:45:56,340
<i>and they really look like</i>
<i>they're a menagerie of disco divas.</i>

821
00:45:56,423 --> 00:46:00,093
Seeing that joy, it really spoke to me.

822
00:46:00,177 --> 00:46:03,764
<i>Like, "Oh, you can revel in this thing</i>
<i>that makes you different."</i>

823
00:46:03,847 --> 00:46:07,017
<i>The question is just, "Who am I?</i>
<i>Who am I in the world?</i>

824
00:46:07,100 --> 00:46:10,312
<i>"Who am I to the people around me?</i>
<i>Who am I to myself?"</i>

825
00:46:10,395 --> 00:46:13,440
So, sure, the superpowers were fun

826
00:46:13,524 --> 00:46:17,069
<i>'cause you've got big spectacles</i>
<i>and people flying through space</i>

827
00:46:17,152 --> 00:46:18,320
<i>and punching each other.</i>

828
00:46:18,403 --> 00:46:23,033
But really it was all dressing
for the really intimate discovery

829
00:46:23,116 --> 00:46:26,203
of who you were
and who the people around you were.

830
00:46:26,286 --> 00:46:30,749
<i>If you found the X-Men, you suddenly found</i>
<i>a community of people who knew you.</i>

831
00:46:32,417 --> 00:46:35,045
I was raised in the Bronx
and it was a rough time.

832
00:46:36,004 --> 00:46:37,965
<i>Comics were a great place to hide,</i>

833
00:46:38,048 --> 00:46:40,884
especially if you have stuff
to hide about yourself.

834
00:46:42,719 --> 00:46:45,848
<i>So, the queer part of me</i>
<i>always loved the isolation,</i>

835
00:46:45,931 --> 00:46:47,641
<i>and loved the parallels</i>

836
00:46:47,724 --> 00:46:50,018
<i>between being a gay youth</i>
<i>and being a X-Man.</i>

837
00:46:50,769 --> 00:46:53,897
<i>For the first time,</i>
<i>we felt like we were part of the story,</i>

838
00:46:53,981 --> 00:46:57,317
and that was really important
because before that it was like nothing.

839
00:46:57,401 --> 00:47:01,029
CROWD: I turn my back on AIDS.

840
00:47:01,154 --> 00:47:04,950
I turn my back on AIDS.

841
00:47:05,033 --> 00:47:08,328
VELEZ: <i>There was a movement going on</i>
<i>because of the AIDS crisis,</i>

842
00:47:08,412 --> 00:47:11,290
I think Marvel missed an opportunity
to have gay characters there.

843
00:47:12,499 --> 00:47:13,917
FAWAZ: <i>There are different ways</i>

844
00:47:14,001 --> 00:47:17,254
<i>of representing</i>
<i>the experience of human beings.</i>

845
00:47:17,337 --> 00:47:20,549
<i>One way that comics</i>
<i>have been really successful at,</i>

846
00:47:20,632 --> 00:47:25,220
is to produce
elaborate fictional metaphors.

847
00:47:25,304 --> 00:47:29,558
<i>So, you say being a mutant is like being</i>
<i>a racial minority in the United States.</i>

848
00:47:29,641 --> 00:47:32,811
<i>Or you say being a mutant</i>
<i>is like being gay.</i>

849
00:47:32,895 --> 00:47:36,899
At the same time, there comes a point
in which real people say,

850
00:47:36,982 --> 00:47:39,693
"I need to see myself in these texts.

851
00:47:39,776 --> 00:47:44,031
"I can't always be a fictional metaphor
because I'm a living human. "

852
00:47:44,114 --> 00:47:48,744
<i>So another way of representing</i>
<i>the lived experience of human beings</i>

853
00:47:48,827 --> 00:47:50,913
is to actually just represent people.

854
00:47:56,084 --> 00:47:59,171
I mean, they tried. They really did try.

855
00:47:59,254 --> 00:48:01,089
They had that thing
when Northstar came out.

856
00:48:02,382 --> 00:48:06,428
ALLAN HEINBERG: <i>Northstar was</i>
<i>the first out gay Marvel character</i>

857
00:48:06,512 --> 00:48:09,515
<i>and huge for the gay community</i>
<i>in terms of representation.</i>

858
00:48:09,598 --> 00:48:13,018
But the focus was never on his
personal life or his relationship life.

859
00:48:13,101 --> 00:48:15,979
It was always sort of a "I'm gay"
and that was it.

860
00:48:17,773 --> 00:48:19,191
BREVOORT: <i>But the writer of the series</i>

861
00:48:19,274 --> 00:48:22,069
<i>wanted him to go through a journey</i>
<i>where he got AIDS.</i>

862
00:48:22,152 --> 00:48:26,031
<i>And he started that story</i>
<i>and Marvel got skittish about it.</i>

863
00:48:26,114 --> 00:48:29,618
(CHUCKLES) And so that story
got changed in the telling,

864
00:48:29,701 --> 00:48:33,205
and instead
it became this really bizarre thing

865
00:48:33,288 --> 00:48:37,334
where it was actually
that Northstar was half...

866
00:48:37,417 --> 00:48:39,920
And I swear this is true. Half fairy.

867
00:48:40,879 --> 00:48:44,925
<i>It was nobody's intention,</i>
<i>but it's a really bad set of comics.</i>

868
00:48:46,009 --> 00:48:49,137
PAK: <i>If the only characters you see</i>
<i>are the stereotypes,</i>

869
00:48:49,763 --> 00:48:53,392
that's when they become stereotypes.
That's almost the definition of it.

870
00:48:53,475 --> 00:48:57,938
<i>If that's the only image you see</i>
<i>of an entire group of people,</i>

871
00:48:58,438 --> 00:49:01,108
then that's a little bogus.

872
00:49:04,152 --> 00:49:10,033
<i>But you let a character live and breathe</i>
<i>in multiple dimensions, it's a person.</i>

873
00:49:10,909 --> 00:49:13,287
<i>And it's not a stand in for a community.</i>

874
00:49:15,372 --> 00:49:18,750
At the end of the day,
what creators must do

875
00:49:18,834 --> 00:49:22,087
is to simply pay attention
to the world more closely.

876
00:49:22,171 --> 00:49:25,382
<i>To introduce characters</i>
<i>who come from different walks of life,</i>

877
00:49:25,465 --> 00:49:28,802
<i>and then take their own creative license</i>
<i>to take it somewhere else.</i>

878
00:49:29,344 --> 00:49:31,763
<i>So ultimately, the purpose of the creator</i>

879
00:49:31,847 --> 00:49:34,016
<i>is to take what we already know</i>
<i>about the world,</i>

880
00:49:34,099 --> 00:49:35,893
<i>which is that it is diverse,</i>

881
00:49:35,976 --> 00:49:39,271
<i>and to represent it to us</i>
<i>in new and exciting ways.</i>

882
00:49:40,022 --> 00:49:41,982
It's like run 'em through the mill.

883
00:49:42,065 --> 00:49:45,402
Run 'em through the mill
that we run every Marvel character through

884
00:49:45,485 --> 00:49:47,070
no matter who they are.

885
00:49:47,154 --> 00:49:48,655
<i>Go from hero to villain,</i>

886
00:49:48,739 --> 00:49:51,575
<i>die, get resurrected,</i>
<i>get seriously injured,</i>

887
00:49:51,658 --> 00:49:54,286
<i>come back from the injury,</i>
<i>join the Avengers,</i>

888
00:49:54,369 --> 00:49:55,662
<i>get thrown out of the Avengers.</i>

889
00:49:55,746 --> 00:49:59,541
Anything and everything
that's happened to Spider-Man,

890
00:49:59,625 --> 00:50:02,377
Captain America, or Iron Man
over these years,

891
00:50:02,461 --> 00:50:04,880
I want to happen to that character.

892
00:50:04,963 --> 00:50:06,423
<i>Because what it means then,</i>

893
00:50:06,507 --> 00:50:09,551
<i>is that writers</i>
<i>want to write that character,</i>

894
00:50:09,635 --> 00:50:11,678
<i>artists want to draw that character,</i>

895
00:50:11,762 --> 00:50:16,099
and that character now is included
into the fabric of the Marvel Universe.

896
00:50:16,183 --> 00:50:20,521
A lot of people wanna say it's diversity.
I wanna say it's inclusion.

897
00:50:23,398 --> 00:50:26,568
BENDIS: <i>We were sitting around</i>
<i>at lunch. We weren't having a meeting.</i>

898
00:50:26,652 --> 00:50:28,862
We're sitting, talking
about what we'd do differently

899
00:50:28,946 --> 00:50:30,405
with certain things we've done,

900
00:50:30,489 --> 00:50:34,785
and with <i>Ultimate Spider-Man,</i>
it was working fine. It worked great.

901
00:50:34,868 --> 00:50:37,704
It was a hit book for many years.

902
00:50:37,788 --> 00:50:41,792
<i>And we were talking about</i>
<i>if you unpack the origin of Spider-Man,</i>

903
00:50:41,875 --> 00:50:44,920
<i>a New York kid, and he lives</i>
<i>with his aunt, he's a science nerd,</i>

904
00:50:45,003 --> 00:50:47,172
<i>there's really nothing there</i>
<i>that says Caucasian.</i>

905
00:50:47,256 --> 00:50:50,133
There's a lot of things there that say,
just from location

906
00:50:50,217 --> 00:50:54,805
<i>and other things that he may be a kid</i>
<i>with a different kind of background.</i>

907
00:50:54,888 --> 00:50:59,017
<i>And then, once that idea is in your head,</i>
<i>it's hard to let go of it.</i>

908
00:50:59,101 --> 00:51:03,021
Like, if we did this again,
we would have made this kid a kid of color

909
00:51:03,105 --> 00:51:05,232
and developed a completely new voice.

910
00:51:05,315 --> 00:51:08,277
And we were like, "Yeah."
I'm like, "Hmm. Why don't we do that?"

911
00:51:10,362 --> 00:51:13,282
<i>Peter Parker passed away</i>
<i>in a very heroic way</i>

912
00:51:13,365 --> 00:51:16,743
<i>of saving Aunt May's life in the way</i>
<i>he couldn't save Uncle Ben's,</i>

913
00:51:17,411 --> 00:51:20,122
<i>but he didn't know that another young man</i>

914
00:51:20,205 --> 00:51:23,667
<i>had also been bitten by a spider</i>
<i>and his name is Miles Morales.</i>

915
00:51:28,714 --> 00:51:32,509
<i>As everyone dealt</i>
<i>with the shocking death of Spider-Man,</i>

916
00:51:33,177 --> 00:51:35,971
<i>Miles pulls off his mask</i>
<i>just to get some air</i>

917
00:51:36,054 --> 00:51:37,639
<i>and that's when we see who he is.</i>

918
00:51:40,809 --> 00:51:43,854
George Lucas said, the easiest thing
a writer could do is kill a puppy

919
00:51:43,937 --> 00:51:45,731
'cause everyone's gonna go, "Oh!"

920
00:51:45,814 --> 00:51:48,692
So by killing Peter Parker,
I had killed the puppy.

921
00:51:48,775 --> 00:51:50,402
<i>That wasn't a good enough story.</i>

922
00:51:50,485 --> 00:51:53,530
<i>But when it became that Peter Parker dying</i>

923
00:51:53,614 --> 00:51:57,034
<i>inspired Miles</i>
<i>the way Uncle Ben inspired Peter,</i>

924
00:51:57,117 --> 00:52:01,163
I knew this story
had elevated beyond dead puppies.

925
00:52:02,080 --> 00:52:04,374
<i>Miles was looking at the theme</i>

926
00:52:04,458 --> 00:52:06,585
<i>of "With great power</i>
<i>comes great responsibility"</i>

927
00:52:06,668 --> 00:52:10,672
<i>from a completely different point of view</i>
<i>than the way Peter Parker did.</i>

928
00:52:11,882 --> 00:52:15,636
The idea of these roles
being taken over by other characters

929
00:52:15,719 --> 00:52:17,137
is something we've seen before.

930
00:52:17,221 --> 00:52:21,266
The difference in this round
of the stories that we're seeing,

931
00:52:21,350 --> 00:52:27,940
<i>it is more a cast that reflects</i>
<i>the world that we actually live in.</i>

932
00:52:28,649 --> 00:52:34,780
So, with Carol, I go back to
what is at the center of her identity?

933
00:52:34,863 --> 00:52:36,281
<i>Where does her pain come from?</i>

934
00:52:36,365 --> 00:52:39,284
How can I make her
not just aspirational but relatable?

935
00:52:40,118 --> 00:52:41,411
She has to (BLEEP) up.

936
00:52:41,495 --> 00:52:44,373
She has to fall down,
she has to get back up,

937
00:52:44,456 --> 00:52:46,458
she has to have her ass handed to her.

938
00:52:49,044 --> 00:52:52,214
<i>So I go back, I read as much as I can</i>
<i>about her biography,</i>

939
00:52:52,297 --> 00:52:58,095
<i>and I find that her father who she loves</i>
<i>and adores has two boys and a girl,</i>

940
00:52:58,178 --> 00:53:01,890
<i>and he can't afford to send everybody</i>
<i>to school, and he's gonna send the boys.</i>

941
00:53:02,558 --> 00:53:06,311
<i>So Carol enlists in the Air Force</i>
<i>to pay for her education</i>

942
00:53:06,395 --> 00:53:10,482
<i>and spends the rest of her life</i>
<i>trying to prove to her father</i>

943
00:53:10,566 --> 00:53:13,694
that she is just as good as the boys.

944
00:53:15,487 --> 00:53:19,867
<i>And that is a thing</i>
<i>that is human and relatable.</i>

945
00:53:19,950 --> 00:53:23,495
And even though she's beautiful,
and even though she's powerful,

946
00:53:24,162 --> 00:53:26,874
like, she has a very real,
very human pain,

947
00:53:27,833 --> 00:53:32,129
<i>and that's how</i>
<i>you make a character you can root for.</i>

948
00:53:33,839 --> 00:53:35,424
When I started writing <i>Black Panther,</i>

949
00:53:35,507 --> 00:53:40,679
<i>I said I'm gonna make the comic book</i>
<i>equivalent of a Public Enemy record.</i>

950
00:53:40,762 --> 00:53:42,472
<i>When they make</i> Bring the Noise,

951
00:53:42,556 --> 00:53:46,393
<i>when they make </i>Party for Your Right
to Fight, It Takes a Nation of Millions,

952
00:53:46,476 --> 00:53:48,645
they're just like, "This is for us

953
00:53:48,729 --> 00:53:53,483
"and our friends,
and we're gonna super satisfy us."

954
00:53:55,068 --> 00:53:56,737
<i>When Hurricane Katrina happened</i>

955
00:53:56,820 --> 00:54:01,283
<i>and it's this incredible tragedy</i>
<i>in a very Black city,</i>

956
00:54:01,366 --> 00:54:03,577
<i>I thought, "Here's a situation</i>

957
00:54:04,411 --> 00:54:09,291
"where we could do a test run
of an idea I really wanted to do

958
00:54:09,374 --> 00:54:10,584
"which is Black Avengers."

959
00:54:12,002 --> 00:54:17,257
<i>Let's get Black Panther,</i>
<i>Luke Cage, Blade, Photon,</i>

960
00:54:17,341 --> 00:54:22,387
<i>put together basically, a Black super team</i>
<i>to come solve this problem.</i>

961
00:54:22,471 --> 00:54:23,805
It's the wish fulfillment

962
00:54:23,889 --> 00:54:26,225
that I've been wanting to see
my whole life

963
00:54:26,308 --> 00:54:27,893
<i>and that's what happened.</i>

964
00:54:29,394 --> 00:54:31,188
PAK: <i>I remember thinking about</i>
<i>Marvel Universe</i>

965
00:54:31,271 --> 00:54:34,566
and realizing that there were
very few Asian American characters

966
00:54:34,650 --> 00:54:37,694
and very few, in particular,
young Asian American male characters,

967
00:54:37,778 --> 00:54:40,489
and I was like,
"That's a niche I'd like to fill."

968
00:54:40,572 --> 00:54:45,702
<i>And, so, Amadeus Cho, this brilliant kid,</i>
<i>he has a close encounter with The Hulk.</i>

969
00:54:45,786 --> 00:54:48,956
<i>He's like, "Okay. Bruce,</i>
<i>you've had enough tragedy in your life.</i>

970
00:54:49,039 --> 00:54:51,291
<i>"I'm gonna cure you of being The Hulk,</i>

971
00:54:51,375 --> 00:54:53,669
"since I'm a cocky kid
who knows everything,

972
00:54:53,752 --> 00:54:55,170
"I'll take the power of The Hulk.

973
00:54:55,254 --> 00:54:56,713
<i>"I'm gonna be the best Hulk.</i>

974
00:54:56,797 --> 00:54:58,257
<i>"The Totally Awesome Hulk." </i>

975
00:54:58,340 --> 00:55:00,509
<i>And that was the book,</i>
The Totally Awesome Hulk.

976
00:55:01,134 --> 00:55:03,846
I was actually in middle school.
I was around 12 years old

977
00:55:03,929 --> 00:55:06,473
<i>when I realized</i>
<i>that people had a perception</i>

978
00:55:06,557 --> 00:55:10,936
<i>of Muslims</i>
<i>that was antagonistic or misunderstood.</i>

979
00:55:11,520 --> 00:55:13,105
Marvel really welcomed me

980
00:55:13,188 --> 00:55:17,109
and encouraged me to use my voice
to tell a different kind of Marvel story.

981
00:55:17,693 --> 00:55:22,322
<i>Kamala Khan, the all new Ms. Marvel,</i>
<i>she is a young, newly discovered inhuman.</i>

982
00:55:22,406 --> 00:55:25,826
<i>She's South Asian,</i>
<i>a Muslim girl from Jersey City,</i>

983
00:55:25,909 --> 00:55:30,747
<i>and Captain Marvel, Carol Danvers happens</i>
<i>to be her most favorite superhero ever.</i>

984
00:55:30,831 --> 00:55:33,417
<i>She is tall, she's blonde,</i>
<i>she has blue eyes,</i>

985
00:55:33,500 --> 00:55:35,878
<i>she's everything that Kamala Khan is not.</i>

986
00:55:35,961 --> 00:55:38,088
<i>First thing that happens</i>
<i>when she gets her powers</i>

987
00:55:38,172 --> 00:55:41,550
<i>is that her body morphs</i>
<i>and she subconsciously decides</i>

988
00:55:41,633 --> 00:55:43,844
<i>that she wants to look like Carol Danvers.</i>

989
00:55:43,927 --> 00:55:46,722
<i>So, her kind of finding</i>
<i>a way back to herself</i>

990
00:55:46,805 --> 00:55:51,143
<i>and her sense of balance within her power</i>
<i>is the beginning of her journey.</i>

991
00:55:52,436 --> 00:55:56,607
From a purely thematic point of view,
the idea of the masked superhero,

992
00:55:56,690 --> 00:55:59,693
the person who is afraid
to reveal themselves,

993
00:55:59,776 --> 00:56:03,155
<i>that doesn't have</i>
<i>as much power as it once did.</i>

994
00:56:03,238 --> 00:56:08,619
<i>I think we're actually seeing a broadening</i>
<i>of acceptance of differences,</i>

995
00:56:08,702 --> 00:56:11,205
<i>and of uniqueness of each individual,</i>

996
00:56:11,288 --> 00:56:14,124
and under those circumstances,
you don't need a dual identity.

997
00:56:14,208 --> 00:56:16,919
You can be yourself.
You don't need to hide who you are.

998
00:56:17,669 --> 00:56:19,922
AMANAT: <i>When we look at Captain America,</i>
<i>we look at Thor,</i>

999
00:56:20,005 --> 00:56:22,007
<i>we look at these big name characters,</i>

1000
00:56:22,090 --> 00:56:24,718
<i>we look at them</i>
<i>through those ideals that they represent.</i>

1001
00:56:24,801 --> 00:56:27,804
<i>These ideals</i>
<i>can really be encompassed by anybody.</i>

1002
00:56:28,514 --> 00:56:32,226
The metaphor of putting on a mask,
and taking off your mask,

1003
00:56:32,309 --> 00:56:35,938
and trying to figure out if you're
a superhero or just a regular person.

1004
00:56:36,021 --> 00:56:38,482
<i>You can be both. And we should be both.</i>

1005
00:56:39,316 --> 00:56:42,027
<i>We have to live in that space in between,</i>

1006
00:56:42,110 --> 00:56:44,112
<i>so that's really</i>
<i>where our power comes from,</i>

1007
00:56:44,196 --> 00:56:46,532
<i>and I think that's what makes</i>
<i>the Marvel Universe</i>

1008
00:56:46,615 --> 00:56:47,991
<i>all the more interesting.</i>

1009
00:56:48,742 --> 00:56:52,579
We got <i>Captain Marvel #6,</i> legacy 140.

1010
00:56:52,663 --> 00:56:54,039
It's <i>The War of Realms</i> tie-in.

1011
00:56:54,122 --> 00:56:56,208
JENKINS: <i>So what happens next,</i>
<i>none of us know.</i>

1012
00:56:56,291 --> 00:56:59,086
I think, though,
the possibility is really exciting

1013
00:56:59,169 --> 00:57:03,048
<i>as we try to find our way through</i>
<i>a demographic transition,</i>

1014
00:57:03,131 --> 00:57:05,551
<i>where, by the end of the next decade,</i>

1015
00:57:05,634 --> 00:57:08,303
<i>America will be</i>
<i>a majority minority culture.</i>

1016
00:57:08,929 --> 00:57:10,389
<i>And how do we live in that world?</i>

1017
00:57:10,472 --> 00:57:15,143
<i>How do we live with each other, I think,</i>
<i>is shaped by the stories we consume.</i>

1018
00:57:16,019 --> 00:57:21,233
I always tell fans of these comic books,
a lot of us think that these heroes,

1019
00:57:21,316 --> 00:57:24,736
<i>and these characters,</i>
<i>and these villains was made for you.</i>

1020
00:57:24,820 --> 00:57:27,739
I said, "No, they're made
because you exist, they exist."

1021
00:57:28,615 --> 00:57:31,034
QUESADA: <i>The real world is our canvas.</i>

1022
00:57:31,118 --> 00:57:35,581
<i>If we stop looking out our window</i>
<i>and noticing what the real world is doing,</i>

1023
00:57:35,664 --> 00:57:39,626
then inevitably our books fail,
and our stories fail.

1024
00:57:39,710 --> 00:57:43,422
HUDLIN: <i>I don't think comics</i>
<i>have an obligation for representation.</i>

1025
00:57:43,505 --> 00:57:45,299
I just think you're a damn fool

1026
00:57:45,382 --> 00:57:49,094
if you don't have representation
as a piece of business,

1027
00:57:49,178 --> 00:57:53,223
<i>as a piece of storytelling.</i>
<i>There's every reason to do it.</i>

1028
00:57:54,057 --> 00:57:56,018
COWAN: <i>It has potential</i>
<i>of being pretty wonderful</i>

1029
00:57:56,101 --> 00:58:00,147
<i>what's happened to</i> Black Panther,
<i>and Hollywood's awareness of inclusion</i>

1030
00:58:00,230 --> 00:58:01,982
<i>and what diversity means.</i>

1031
00:58:02,065 --> 00:58:05,194
I look at it in wonderment
and amazement and I'm like,

1032
00:58:05,277 --> 00:58:06,737
"Oh, this is great."

1033
00:58:06,820 --> 00:58:09,698
<i>The other half of me</i>
<i>looks at it with a squinty eye.</i>

1034
00:58:09,781 --> 00:58:11,533
<i>Because I've been through this before.</i>

1035
00:58:12,284 --> 00:58:16,580
And the door shut
almost as fast as it had opened up.

1036
00:58:17,539 --> 00:58:20,334
<i>But no matter what,</i>
<i>we'll still do what we do.</i>

1037
00:58:21,168 --> 00:58:23,170
<i>We'll still keep doing</i>
<i>these kinda characters</i>

1038
00:58:23,253 --> 00:58:24,880
<i>and telling these kinda stories,</i>

1039
00:58:26,423 --> 00:58:28,133
because it's too important not to.

1040
00:58:29,051 --> 00:58:33,138
AMANAT: <i>With comic book stories in general</i>
<i>and superhero stories specifically,</i>

1041
00:58:33,222 --> 00:58:38,227
<i>there is something so aspirational</i>
<i>and amazing about what the human spirit is</i>

1042
00:58:38,310 --> 00:58:39,770
<i>and what it can become,</i>

1043
00:58:39,853 --> 00:58:42,481
it's that it encourages us
to look within ourselves

1044
00:58:42,564 --> 00:58:43,857
and find what is great.

1045
00:58:43,941 --> 00:58:46,735
<i>We'll dig through all that grit</i>
<i>and that uncertainty,</i>

1046
00:58:46,818 --> 00:58:49,821
<i>and find what it is that makes us unique,</i>

1047
00:58:49,905 --> 00:58:53,825
<i>and what it is that makes us powerful,</i>
<i>and bring that to the forefront.</i>

1048
00:58:54,785 --> 00:58:59,206
In a lot of these superhero stories,
the aspiration is the hero. You know?

1049
00:58:59,289 --> 00:59:03,418
And what always spoke to me about Marvel
was that the aspiration was the human.

1050
00:59:04,461 --> 00:59:07,631
<i>And that's what's really exciting to me,</i>
<i>where we are right now.</i>

1051
00:59:08,382 --> 00:59:10,467
Who are you?
Who do you want yourself to be?

1052
00:59:12,803 --> 00:59:17,057
NARRATOR: <i>Open bulletins,</i>
<i>Stan's Soapbox, February, 1980.</i>

1053
00:59:17,933 --> 00:59:20,769
<i>"Bear with me, gang.</i>
<i>It's philosophy time again!</i>

1054
00:59:20,853 --> 00:59:24,606
<i>"Human nature doesn't change.</i>
<i>It's the environment.</i>

1055
00:59:26,024 --> 00:59:28,986
<i>"What's happened to us is,</i>
<i>the world has been wildly changing,</i>

1056
00:59:29,069 --> 00:59:32,114
<i>"producing new sets of rules</i>
<i>each time you blink your eye.</i>

1057
00:59:33,907 --> 00:59:35,742
<i>"None of us is different from each other.</i>

1058
00:59:35,826 --> 00:59:38,787
<i>"We all want</i>
<i>essentially the same things out of life.</i>

1059
00:59:40,581 --> 00:59:44,293
<i>"A measure of security, some fun,</i>
<i>some romance, friendship,</i>

1060
00:59:44,376 --> 00:59:46,295
<i>"and respect of our contemporaries.</i>

1061
00:59:47,129 --> 00:59:49,798
<i>"That goes for Indians, Chinese, Russians,</i>

1062
00:59:49,882 --> 00:59:53,218
<i>"Jews, Arabs, Catholics, Protestants,</i>

1063
00:59:53,302 --> 00:59:56,388
<i>"Blacks, Browns, whites,</i>
<i>and green-skinned Hulks.</i>

1064
00:59:57,139 --> 01:00:00,559
<i>"So why don't we all stop wasting time</i>
<i>hating the other guys?</i>

1065
01:00:00,642 --> 01:00:04,563
<i>"Just look in the mirror, mister.</i>
<i>That other guy is you.</i>

1066
01:00:05,439 --> 01:00:07,608
<i>"Excelsior! Stan."</i>



