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[QUOTE=Ezyo1000;2593873][B]I honestly don't care how busy he is, of he is going to be apart of anything with BP in the title then there needs to be some quality positive BP showings, what we have seen thus far doesn't cut it[/B][/QUOTE]
That's kind of a separate issue. The discussion was whether or not he had seen Luke Cage on Netflix and that he hasn't because he was busy. It has nothing to do with Black Panther. In fact, he likely was writing the next 12 issues of Black Panther instead of watching it.
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Is T'Challa going to have a big part in Secret Empire or is he going to be regulated to appearing on only 1-2 panels?
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[QUOTE=Lord Morph;2593907]Is T'Challa going to have a big part in Secret Empire or is he going to be regulated to appearing on only 1-2 panels?[/QUOTE]
i doubt it.
Looks like he is showing up in fighting back the teased massive chitauri invasion. Which is fine I guess.
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[QUOTE=MindofShadow;2593937]i doubt it.
Looks like he is showing up in fighting back the teased massive chitauri invasion. Which is fine I guess.[/QUOTE]
It would still be nice if we got a Tie-In issue though. Preferably a "See Wakanda and Die II"
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[QUOTE=mbeezy561;2593959]It would still be nice if we got a Tie-In issue though. Preferably a "See Wakanda and Die II"[/QUOTE]
Yes it will be good to see Shuri and the MA defeat the entire army by themselves....
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[QUOTE=mbeezy561;2593959]It would still be nice if we got a Tie-In issue though. Preferably a "See Wakanda and Die II"[/QUOTE]
I don't think Coates is down for crossovers.
T'challa was in Captain Marvel tie ins, Ultimates tie ins, and obviously in CW... nothin in his solo.
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[QUOTE=mbeezy561;2593959]It would still be nice if we got a Tie-In issue though. Preferably a "See Wakanda and Die II"[/QUOTE]
Just my feeling on it ... but I don't think this event will be that big in that I don't think we'll get a thousand tie in from every book in the line. That said I hope we get one.
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[QUOTE=Mike_Murdock;2593897]That's kind of a separate issue. The discussion was whether or not he had seen Luke Cage on Netflix and that he hasn't because he was busy. It has nothing to do with Black Panther. In fact, he likely was writing the next 12 issues of Black Panther instead of watching it.[/QUOTE]
[B]I know what the topic of conversation was, I'm still stating it doesn't matter really Because it doesn't change the fact of what he is producing for BP isn't good[/B]
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[QUOTE=Beware Of Geek;2593963]Yes it will be good to see Shuri and the MA defeat the entire army by themselves....[/QUOTE]
[IMG]http://s4.imgload.info/4csmjbjx36ms4d5.gif[/IMG]
[B]This would very likely be the case[/B]
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CBR did an interesting article on [url=http://www.cbr.com/ta-nehisi-coates-power-leadership-black-panther-barack-obama/]Coates's writing in Black Panther and in non-fiction and how they parallel each other[/url]. Whether you agree or disagree with it, I do think it's an interesting read:
[quote]Coates spent most of the last year invested in telling the story of a heroic but overmatched head of state during a time of national distress. It was high-concept work that examined leadership, injustice, unforeseen aggressions, and the messiness of the world. In fact, he told two such stories — one a fiction, the other not.
In his year-long “Black Panther” story, “A Nation Under Our Feet,” Coates takes Marvel readers on a journey exploring the worst time of T’Challa’s kingship. Following a series of devastations, the people of Wakanda lose faith in the regal Black Panther, who suddenly faces insurrection all around him, and must sort out how to lead a people who reject him.
In his December “Atlantic cover story, “My President Was Black,” Coates profiles the final days of the Barack Obama presidency through the prism of the nation’s fraught racial dynamics, which became only more fraught by the election of Obama’s White House successor. The piece inspects the most transformational politician of a generation at a time when the meaning of his legacy is seen as at its most compromised. Like the “Black Panther” story, it is set at a time of civic uncertainty and political disruption, and offers a hard look at the ability of even the greatest men to challenge historic power dynamics.
Of course, the stories have different functions. One is a work of journalism, of reportage. The other is storytelling, playtime. But while one is the story of a never-colonized, hyper-advanced African nation, and the other of a country built on the concepts of freedom under the law that has rarely wholly delivered on those promises, they have more in common than just their author. Each explores oppression, and its impact on collective consciousness. Each pays deep tribute to the power to inspire, whether inspiring for good or ill. And each confronts underlying realities that no single figure can wipe away the smear of inequality.[/quote]
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[QUOTE=MindofShadow;2593717]I mean, I know we are reading way too much into it because that is what we do.
But how does a dude who is all about race... is into comic books... lived? in Harlem... is writing a new comic book that is based in Harlem... obviously found time to watch JJ.... loves him some black music...
miss Luke Cage? Like... not even sample Luke Cage? The same Luke Cage that was so "black" that it even made black people pause and go, "yooooooooooooooooo this is BLACK" lol?
I am not saying he HAS to like it... but not even to see what people were talking about? One of the most popular shows ever on Netflix...
You have to watch to at least see Diamondback smile and say he is going ot murderize everyone lolol[/QUOTE]
Lol. It doesn't matter. The shark jumping is just too much. Seriously, I have never read a comment about a writer's relationship with their father affecting their work. Except Remember, because he has stated that it has.
Also after Cottonmouth died, the show died with it:)
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He has a pretty specific tone across anything ive read from him.
Has me curious about The Crew though.
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[QUOTE=HUTHAIFA;2594196]
Also after Cottonmouth died, the show died with it:)[/QUOTE]
Diamondback is life.
Cottonmouth was inept as hell. Although he did finally get smart write before he died.
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[QUOTE=MindofShadow;2594200]Diamondback is life.
Cottonmouth was inept as hell. Although he did finally get smart write before he died.[/QUOTE]
Diamondback reminded me of the old Cage villain called Hardcore.
Cottonmouth was like the MU Nino Brown:)
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I was wrong earlier btw
the Tales of Suspense story is actually 97-99, Cap 100. issue 97 catches the first part of the story (tchalla gets kncoked out hahhaha)