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Boosterrific.com: The Complete, Annotated Adventures of Booster Gold
Boosterrific.com: The Complete, Annotated Adventures of Booster Gold

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Thursday, March 17, 2011

Booster Gold Versus T.O. Morrow

I know that I may have seemed especially negative as of late (sorry, it's been a bad few weeks personally), but don't blame the messenger for what I am about to show you, blame the math. At this rate, Booster Gold Volume 2, #50 is looking like a double-sized final issue.

Booster Gold projected sales through September 2011

Disclaimer: I'm not T.O. Morrow. I can't say that I looked into the future and saw the actual sales figures for issues 42-47. (Sales data for issue 42 won't be available until next month, and of course there's no telling what can happen during Flashpoint.) I can only say that the slope of that white projected sales line is pretty well defined by recent sales trends.

It might be time to start buying two copies of each issue if you want to keep Booster Gold alive.

Comments (3) | Add a Comment | Tags: doom graph sales

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

New Release: DC Universe Legacies #10

I can't promise it, but I strongly suspect that we will see Booster Gold in this week's DC Universe: Legacies #10. That's an educated guess based on the fact that Booster has made an appearance in the last four issues. Buy it and make Skeets happy.

Comments (3) | Add a Comment | Tags: new releases

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Gold Exchange: Booster Gold #42

Russ Burlingame's posted his latest "Gold Exchange" column with J.M. DeMatteis at Comic Related late last week. If you haven't read it, you can find that article here. Spoiler warning: don't read it if you haven't yet read Booster Gold #42.

GX: Is there any reason to think that Rip intentionally misled Michael about Nishtikeit's bio-agent?

JMD: In my version of events, yes, Rip intentionally misled Booster, knowing what was coming.

Something about this issue still feels out of place, as though this story didn't really belong in this series at this time. The characters seem like warped versions of their recent selves: motivations, reactions, attitudes... no one is quite right. It's enlightening to read what DeMatteis hoped to accomplish in this story. Whether he achieved it or not is a different question altogether.

Comments (0) | Add a Comment | Tags: comicrelated.com j.m. dematteis russ burlingame

Monday, March 14, 2011

Booster Gold is 23 Says Dan Jurgens

I know that the Dan Jurgens interview at CBR was linked in the forum last week (if you haven't read it, you can find it here), but I'd like to revisit it a bit for one key fact: Booster's age.

CBR: What is the core concept to Booster Gold that you want people to retain in their iterations of the character from now to future generations to come?

DJ: ...[H]e is young -- in my head he's 23 years old, and in some ways more immature than that!

Twenty-Three? In recent issues of Booster Gold it was suggested that Booster was 30-35 before he served a five-year prison term. Ignoring that fact for a minute, Booster was only 20 years old when he returned to the 20th century from the 25th: are we to assume that his entire super hero career has lasted only 3 years so far?

Since arriving in the 20th century, Booster Gold has founded and lost a major business conglomerate and spent considerable time in the Justice League. He has cultivated a deep friendship and business partnership with Ted Kord, who has now been dead for some time. He has developed from an outsider to a laughingstock to a true hero to a leader. All this in less time than it takes to earn a college degree?

It's one thing for a character like Superman or Batman, paragons of their archetype with little need for character growth, to have accomplished a near infinite number of adventures in a relatively short span of time. But it strains credibility to imagine that Booster has matured so drastically in such a short period.

I'm not arguing that Booster should be 40 years old, but 23 is probably a little too young for such an accomplished hero.

Comments (7) | Add a Comment | Tags: age comicbookresources.com dan jurgens

Friday, March 11, 2011

The Place to Buy Comics in Metropolis

Say what you will about DC Universe Online, but someone in the Sony Online Entertainment art department is a real comic book fan.

Blaze Comics

Blaze was the comic book publisher of the Booster Gold comic-within-a-comic in the first volume of Booster Gold. I'm surprised that they stayed in business after their most acclaimed creators, Benny and Marty, were killed to get the secrets that they knew about their star subject, Booster Gold.

Come to think of it, if super-villains will kill to get the secrets possessed by comic book creators of a single hero, what would they do to game programmers who developed an entire world?

Comments (1) | Add a Comment | Tags: blaze comics dc universe online video games


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