BTW, #10 is now April 9, with #11 still listed for the 16th, but that will clearly change.
Note to all of us - including myself! - There is a thread dedicated to a lot of what we've all been recently hashing out regarding our views on the tardiness of JSA:
https://community.cbr.com/showthread...ren-ship-dates
Let's return this particular thread here , pros and cons, to what it was originally intended for: Thoughts about issue 8 of Justice Society of America.
Right.
In reverse order… JSA, Shazam, Doomsday Clock, Three Jokers.
Aren’t those his 4 most recent DC projects, with one notable exception at the bottom of this post?
I remember that Three Jokers began way later than it was supposed to but can’t remember if each issue was delayed. I think they were but I don’t want to blame him for that when I’m not sure.
Shazam was definitely and consistently late and Doomsday Clock and JSA were/have been massively, damagingly, laughably late.
Which other writer is that unlucky with editorial, or ever has been? If you guessed none, you are correct. That was pretty obvious though.
I’m well past done giving him the benefit of the doubt because it’s absurd. I have a hard time understanding why anyone is.
He wasn’t reliably unreliable before he made film and TV his priority. Speaking of which, here’s that one comics exception…
He was on time for the recent Stargirl mini. Why? Could it be because he very understandably cares more about her than any other character. Of course he does; he created her to honor a sister he tragically lost when she was way too young. Not ever gonna give him guff about that but it does underline every point above.
When he cares that deeply about a character, he’s on time. When he’s writing anything else, he is chronically, ridiculously late.
How is anyone still trying to pin these delays on anyone but him?
I think 3 Jokers didn't have any major delays AFTER #1 was released. It was a monthly mini series and started on August and ended on November. I think this happened because they didn't want to release #1 until Jason Fabok was almost done with the art for #3. It came out 4 years after it was originally announced, though.
There was also Flashpoint Beyond, which like Stargirl, usually had minor delays of 1 or 2 weeks with each issue. I think only the last one was delayed almost by a month. Also, this was originally announced as a biweekly series, lasting for only 3 months, but was turned into a monthly miniseries, supposedly because it didn't have enough orders.
Flashpoint Beyond had three writers.
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