
Tuesday, May 6, 2025
My Mistake: Call Her by Her Name
I have an apology to make: Boosterrific.com has had some data about Booster Gold wrong for years. Specifically, I have failed to identify Booster's mother's first name as "Ellen."
Mrs. Carter has never been named in any story, so I had always acted as though she had never been given a name. But somehow I totally overlooked the "Known Relatives" section of the loose-leaf format Who's Who in the DC Universe #2, which clearly says "Ellen."
I cannot explain why I've overlooked that all these years. I've certainly had this volume since, well, probably since it came out in 1990. (I didn't buy all every loose-leaf Who's Who at the time; some I picked up some later. Maybe this was one of the latter.) Its text is attributed to the character's creator Dan Jurgens, who I would certainly trust to give her a name.
I can only guess that once upon a time I decided that Who's Who entries weren't canon. That seems an antiquated notion in this modern era of "everything is in continuity somewhere." In any event, it's well past time I recognized it throughout Boosterrific.com.
Big thanks to Pigeon for drawing my attention to this mistake so that I could correct it.
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Monday, May 5, 2025
Sign of the Apokolips
It's been a few weeks now, but do you recall the last page of Summer of Superman Special?
Here, let me refresh your memory:
Pay careful attention to that big glowing symbol on the wall over the head of our chained hero. That is omega, the final letter of the Greek alphabet. As the last letter in its alphabet, omega is often used symbolically to represent the last element in a set, as in "the ultimate," or "the end." Naturally, this has led omega to become associated with death, the end of life itself.
Omega's symbolic relationship with death is why it was adopted by the New God now widely known as Darkseid. Darkseid came to power by stealing the Omega Force and using the Omega Effect power it grants (via his Omega Beams) to take total control of Apokolips and aid his relentless quest to discover the Anti-Life Equation.
In the DCU, wherever an omega appears, Darkseid and death aren't too far behind, as teased in this panel from this weekend's Free Comic Book Day DC All In 2025 FCBD Special Edition #1:
Between the contemporary Absolute Universe and the Dark Legion of the future, it sure seems that Darkseid and Omega Energy are corrupting the entire Multiverse. And the symbols of their evil influence are everywhere!
Even, it seems, on the Sunday broadcast of the CBS Nightly News:
CBS Weekend News, Season 2025, Episode 118, CBS, May 4, 2025
Darkseid over present-day America? That would explain a few things.
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Friday, May 2, 2025
Character Spotlight on Jon "Jonar" Carter
Every family has its bad seeds. While many might suggest that Booster Gold is the problem child in his own family, the real black sheep of the Carter clan is actually Booster's father, the good-for nothing Jon Carter.
In the very first telling of Booster's origin (by Skeets to Superman in Booster Gold Volume 1 #6), Booster's father is mentioned only in passing. Booster later confirms his father's absence from his 25th-century life while relating the story to his friends in Booster Gold Volume 1 #13: "You see, my old man was a compulsive gambler. He lost everything we had a couple of times over and finally took off when I was four."
Booster led everyone to believe that his father wasn't particularly important in his life after the year 2446 other than for setting the example on how gambling can destroy families (thus making young Booster's turn to gambling even more tragic).
The truth is actually much worse.
As it turns out, before Jon "Jonar" Carter* abandoned his family, he was actually quite abusive to his wife, to the point where Mrs. Carter required hospitalization on multiple occasions (Action Comics #995). It is no surprise that after he left, his mother swore off relationships, declaring that she was "fine without a man!" in Secret Origins #35.
Despite this history of abuse, young Michael Jon "Booster" Carter always craved the approval of his absentee father. After achieving early success as a quarterback at Gotham University, Booster sought his father out. But approval was not forthcoming.
Instead, Mr. Carter manipulated his son into a deepening spiral of illegal activity for his own personal gain.
Despite the warnings of his twin sister, Michelle, Booster was unwilling or unable to extract himself from this bad situation. In 2462, he was caught, expelled, and ostracized, leading him to exercise more of his trademark questionable judgement by stealing a time machine and running away into the past.
Rather than stand by his son, Mr. Carter turned state's evidence against his former gambling associates, even going so far as trying to sell out his own son (as Booster would only discover many years later after a time travel accident in the aforementioned Action Comics #995).
Rather than serve out a ten-year prison term for his own bad behavior, Mr. Carter jumped at the chance to join Black Beetle and Mister Mind in their time-manipulating scheme to seek revenge on Booster and Rip Hunter, who had prevented Mister Mind from taking over reality in 52. Despite the fact that Mr. Carter was little more than a small-time crook, the supervillains needed his Carter family DNA to access the powers of the of the Supernova costume created by Hunter.
It was while masquerading as Supernova that father and son would once again cross paths in Booster Gold Volume 2 #2 before the mask came off in Booster Gold Volume 2 #4.
Once the truth was revealed, Booster cut off his father's own ear to excise the Venusian worm in his brain and free him from the villains' control (Booster Gold Volume 2 #10). Shortly afterwards, Ted Kord sacrificed himself to correct an unstable alternate timeline. Mr. Carter hasn't been seen since.
Understandably, Booster has been in no hurry to re-establish a connection.
Action Comics #995
Good riddance to bad rubbish.
* In four decades of Booster Gold comics, the elder Mr. Carter is identified by name only once: as "Jon" in 2008's Booster Gold Volume 2 #10. In a response to the 2010 Boosterrific.com post "Dan Jurgens on the Creation of Booster Gold," Booster booster Erin of exploringthetimelab.blogspot.com pointed out that Geoff Johns writing as Skeets in an article on the Newsarama website (presumably in 2008) explained "'Jon' is a 25th century shortening for Jonar which means 'he who tried and failed.'" I have never been able to track down the original article, and the name "Jonar" has never appeared in print in an official DC publication. But I believe Erin and a significant portion of the fanbase seems to accept this as a fact, so Boosterrific.com has adopted "Jonar" as a convenient shorthand to differentiate father and son who share the name "Jon."
Other People in Booster Gold's Neighborhood:
Booster Gold's secretary, Trixie Collins
Booster Gold's 20th-century ancestor, Daniel Carter
The brilliant scientist who created Goldstar, Jack Soo
Booster Gold's "daughter," Rani
Booster Gold's business manager, Dirk Davis
Booster Gold's sidekick, Skeets
Vice President of Booster Gold International, Mackenzie Garrison
Booster Gold's boss (and son), Rip Hunter
Booster Gold's twin sister, Michelle Carter
The voice of Booster Gold's conscience, Nurse Devlin
Booster Gold's first love interest, Monica Lake
The mad scientist who hacked Skeets, Doctor Shocker
Booster Gold's first foe, Blackguard
Booster Gold's mother, Ma Carter
The bomber who almost killed Booster Gold, Mister Twister
Creators of the Blaze Comics' Booster Gold comic book, Benny and Marty
The first villain to defeat Booster Gold, Mindancer
Booster Gold's cats, Jack and Jill
Comments (1) | Add a Comment | Tags: erin starlight exploringthetimelab.blogspot.com jon carter jonar people in his neighborhood superman supernova supporting characters
Wednesday, April 30, 2025
New Release: All In Saga (and Lex Luthor)
Today at your Local Comic Shop, you can pick up a reprint collection of Booster Gold's last appearance in the mainstream DC Universe in the All In Saga trade paperback.
And while you're there, in case you missed it, you may want to know that Booster also appeared in a couple of panels in the Black Label Superman: Last Days of Lex Luthor #3 that came out last week. (Thanks to clonegeek for that spot.)
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Monday, April 28, 2025
Teen Titans and the Easter Bunny
In 1985, DC Comics decided that their continuity had become so complex and discouraging to new readers that they had a Crisis on Infinite Earths to scrap everything and start over. DC has spent the past few decades rolling that back, but I'm starting to think that they had a point. Case in point:
Per Booster booster Jade Knight:
Our guy's really on a roll right now. One of the most recent episodes of Teen Titans Go! sees him on an assembly line being forced to lay eggs alongside his pal Ted Kord and other members of the DCU (S9 E8: "Teen Titans and the Easter Factory"). Yes, you heard that right.
I'm not a regular Cartoon Network Teen Titans Go! viewer, but watching the episode to grab that screenshot made it clear that the cartoon Teen Titans had some serious backstory with the Easter Bunny. So I looked it up on teen-titans-go.fandom.com.
The Easter Bunny was introduced in season 3 ("The Teen Titans Go! Easter Holiday Classic") as a captive of a rogue Santa Claus plotting to take over all the holidays. The Titans were repulsed by the Easter Bunny's half-man, half-rabbit appearance and especially the fact that a half-man/half-rabbit lays eggs. Despite their misgivings, the team still aided him again in season 4 ("Easter Creeps") to save Easter from the Tooth Fairy. In season 5 ("Booty Eggs"), the Titans decide the Easter Bunny is too creepy to tolerate any longer and work to replace him themselves. (When you think about it, this pretty much the same plan as hatched by Santa Claus and the Tooth Fairy in the earlier episodes, but Teen Titans Go! episodes are better when you don't think too much.) The Titans are forced to realize they aren't cut out to run Easter and cede oversight back to the Easter Bunny.
In season 7, the pattern repeats itself when the Titans have to help the Easter Bunny defend Easter from Marshmallow Ducky ("Feed Me"), and Beast Boy foils Santa Claus's latest attempt to take over all holidays from the Godfather-inspired Holiday Mob ("A Holiday Story").
In season 8 ("Easter Annihilation"), inspired by Aliens, the Easter Bunny finally becomes a fully fledged supervillain when he decides that every day should be Easter. His plan? "Since Easter is based on the lunar calendar, I'm going turn the moon into an Easter Egg so every day will be Easter!" (Like I said, don't think about it.)
Anyway, all that history informs the latest Easter Bunny episode in which the Easter Bunny's latest plan for world domination is to impersonate Willy Wonka's famous chocolate factory and capture all the heroes and villains of the DCU to lay eggs until there are enough for everyone in the world. (Don't. Think.)
I think I'll have a crisis myself if I have to watch any more Teen Titans Go! Easter episodes.
Thanks to Jade Knight for keeping us informed.
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