Quote Originally Posted by Neowing View Post
The Lois relationship is also very boring, Lana and Clark's love (Smallville) was awesome and it was a breath of fresh air.
I'm sorry, but it's very rare to see anyone sing the praises of Clark and Lana's relationship on Smallville, especially by describing it as a breath of fresh air. When it was still a sweet and compelling relationship, it was still very much in the mold of traditional stories told about Clark's first love in high school. As it continued, however, it became twisted and stale. It was the very antithesis of a breath of fresh air.

Lois has no personality at all aside from I'm a brave independent women, where is the depth?
How do you define depth? Lois is a dynamic and three-dimensional character because she is a brave, independent woman who also hides the fact that she's lonely and is afraid to be seen as vulnerable. Because of her intelligence, beauty, and charm, she attracts powerful men, but she is perhaps most interested in speaking truth to power. What Lois loves is power that comes with humility -- restrained strength. Lois grew up on military bases around the world, so she never had a stable home and had to become someone who adapted to new people and places quickly. Her father is a high ranking general who is both overprotective and demanding. Lois's relationship with her father is a microcosm of her relationship with all entrenched systems of power: military, politics, and business. Lois is mercurial and protean. She knows how to manipulate individuals at all ranks in society to reveal their secrets. She's just as much at home digging for answers in the middle of a desert as an embedded journalist as she is schmoozing with the rich and powerful at a cocktail party. She uses humor and bravado as a way to keep people from getting to close to her, and she's given up a lot in order to service her ambition and her ideals. She's a cynic who longs to find something to believe in. Countless writers have created a rich, complex, and layered character in Lois.

Superman's world really needs a shake up and changes because It's been the same like forever.
Myths and icons don't endure by changing the fundamentals. You can play around with the details and explore different sides of the same story but to discard intrinsic character traits and character dynamics is a surefire way to dilute the power of Superman's myth. It sounds like what you want is a Superman story that bears little resemblance to a Superman story save a few select elements you deem worthy of continuing.

Quote Originally Posted by Neowing View Post
I was thinking that Clark as a cop would get criminal news faster and than save the day as Superman.
Clark isn't a journalist because it makes it easier to get the scoop on crime as it is happening. He's a journalist because he loves writing; because he loves how writing can be just as powerful an instrument of change as saving the day with superpowers.