An open letter to fans, from
Batwoman writers
W. Hayden Blackman and
J.H. Williams III announcing their departure from the title:
"Dear Batwoman readers -
From the moment DC asked us to write Batwoman — a dream project for
both of us — we were committed to the unofficial tagline “No Status
Quo.” We felt that the series and characters should always be moving
forward, to keep changing and evolving. In order to live up to our
mantra and ensure that each arc took Batwoman in new directions, we
carefully planned plotlines and story beats for at least the first five
arcs well before we ever wrote a single issue. We’ve been executing on
that plan ever since, making changes whenever we’ve come up with a
better idea, but in general remaining consistent to our core vision.
Unfortunately, in recent months, DC has asked us to alter or
completely discard many long-standing storylines in ways that we feel
compromise the character and the series. We were told to ditch plans for
Killer Croc’s origins; forced to drastically alter the original ending
of our current arc, which would have defined Batwoman’s heroic future in
bold new ways; and, most crushingly, prohibited from ever showing Kate
and Maggie actually getting married. All of these editorial decisions
came at the last minute, and always after a year or more of planning and
plotting on our end.
We’ve always understood that, as much as we love the character,
Batwoman ultimately belongs to DC. However, the eleventh-hour nature of
these changes left us frustrated and angry — because they prevent us
from telling the best stories we can. So, after a lot of soul-searching,
we’ve decided to leave the book after Issue 26.
We’re both heartbroken over leaving, but we feel strongly that you
all deserve stories that push the character and the series forward. We
can’t reliably do our best work if our plans are scrapped at the last
minute, so we’re stepping aside. We are committed to bringing our run to
a satisfying conclusion and we think that Issue 26 will leave a lasting
impression.
We are extremely thankful for the opportunity to work on Batwoman.
It’s been one of the most challenging and rewarding projects of our
careers. We’ll always be grateful to everyone who helped us realize 26
issues: Mike Siglain, who brought us onto the project originally; Greg
Rucka for inspirationally setting the stage; our amazing artists Amy
Reeder, Trevor McCarthy, Pere Perez, Rob Hunter, Walden Wong, Sandu
Florea, Richard Friend, Francesco Francavilla, Guy Major, Dave Stewart,
and Todd Klein; Larry Ganem, for listening in tough times; and editors
Mike Marts, Harvey Richards, Rickey Purdin, and Darren Shan.
And most of all, a huge thank you to everyone who read the book.
Hearing your voices, your reactions, your enthusiasm every month was
such a joy, so humbling, so rewarding. You guys rock! Because so many of
you embraced the series, we were able to complete four arcs, and your
passion for Batwoman encouraged us to push ourselves to do our best work
with each and every issue.
Thank you for loving Batwoman as much as we do.
Goodbye for now,
Haden & J H"
1 comment:
And this was only the beginning. After the harsh response to this announcement, DC had to act fast in order to not come off as homophobic by saying something more mainstream. Like it's not gay marriages that are off limits, it's ALL MARRIAGES! Dan Didio explains this justification by saying, and I quote,
“Heroes shouldn’t have happy personal lives. They are committed to being that person and committed to defending others at the sacrifice of their own personal interests."
And it gets better. During the panel where he said these words, he started out by saying he supports Batwoman 100% and that they know her orientation is a part of her character. He's so committed to her in fact that,
"People in the Bat family their personal lives basically suck. Dick Grayson, rest in peace—oops shouldn’t have said that,—Bruce Wayne, Tim Drake, Barbara Gordon and Kathy Kane."
.....he gets her name wrong. And no, Kate Kane is not a short version of Kathy Kane, because in previous comics showing Kate Kane's Batwoman, she encounters the earlier version of Batwoman who she appropriately identifies as Kathy Kane. Seriously, here is the panel.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=3Gjmbx3h_s8#t=219
And it still gets worse. When the writers of Batwoman announced that issue #26 would be their last since that's where they were going to close their arc, DC apparently thought that was too good for them and they are now off at issue #23, so all the stuff they had planned for after #23 will also be getting shelved. Will the confrontation with Batman happen? Probably, but probably done in a way to glorify Batman at Batwoman's expense.
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