I don't see how one can argue that Dan hates the pairing when RYV was his idea and he used MJ a lot when he didn't have to, especially when she was in Iron Man.
I don't see how one can argue that Dan hates the pairing when RYV was his idea and he used MJ a lot when he didn't have to, especially when she was in Iron Man.
The most he used her was during Big Time and Superior, where she was a frequently appearing supporting character. I think she made a total of 13 appearances in his run post-Superior (not counting RYV since thats technically alternate reality). Two cameos in The Parker Luck, then nothing until Power Play where she was a main supporting role, then cameos in the beginning funeral in Clone Conspiracy and beginning of Fall Of Parker, and lastly the final part of Threat Level Red followed by Go Down Swinging.
Doctor Strange: "You are the right person to replace Logan."
X-23: "I know there are people who disapprove... Guys on the Internet mainly."
(All-New Wolverine #4)
As I recall (and feel free to take it with a grain of salt), Slott has an odd opinion on MJ: he's ONLY interested in her when she's married to Peter.
I'd rather read Peter/Mary Jane in the main universe than in an alternative universe.
I wanted them to get back together in the main universe.
I viewed Renew Your Vows as just a mere appeasement.
I never saw it as way to replace main universe Peter/Mary Jane to the point that I'd end up stop desiring them to get back together.
I created a thread about Dick Grayson/Nightwing and Koriand'r/Starfire. It is to acknowledge and honor their iconic and popular relationship.
I created a fan page about Peter Parker/Spider-Man and Mary Jane Watson. This page is for all the Spider-Marriage fans.
I created a thread about Dick Grayson/Nightwing and Koriand'r/Starfire. It is to acknowledge and honor their iconic and popular relationship.
I created a fan page about Peter Parker/Spider-Man and Mary Jane Watson. This page is for all the Spider-Marriage fans.
Okay, that's a bit more fair. I don't think Norah Winters was used much outside of Joe Kelly so there is a precedent for that. Still, if the editorial office gets behind the character or the story writing/impact/reader reaction is great, I feel there's a great chance you'll see those characters again soon enough. (Basically any variant of Gwen Stacy these days, it seems.)
I thought the main writer was Christos Gage?I'm not sure I'm ready to call Mr. Negative just such a character at this point. And bringing up Insomniac's game may not be a point in his favor since Dan Slott was involved in that game's development.
No argument there, it was terrible story telling. But being that it (immediately) preceded the era, it's a bit besides the point for me.I thought the manner in which they broke up Peter/MJ were some of the worst stories Marvel had ever published.
*shakes fist*Me? Troll? Never!
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♪ღ♪░NORAH░WINTERS░FOR░SPIDER-WAIFU░♪ღ♪
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Look at it like this. These characters tend to be defined by their era. We can't talk about, say, the Hobgolbin and not think about the Roger Stern run. Mr. Negative and Brand New Day. That kind of thing.
Basically, creators want to leave their own mark on the book. And there's nothing wrong with that at all. It's just that some times, many of these characters may not be seen again when the next creative team shows up. They're not interested in the last creative's team's characters. They have their own characters they want to write, and their own mark on the book to leave.
We don't exactly see Jill Stacy running around a lot these days, do we? (Not even in Spider-Gwen, where it might make sense to see SG's version of Jill running around.)
Slott was still involved with the project to the point that his name is in the credits. So... *shrug.*I thought the main writer was Christos Gage?
I think that was what they were going for when the issue following the end of OMD was done by an entirely new creative team under an entirely new editor who had no involvement with the previous storyline (beyond being told what would happen in OMD).No argument there, it was terrible story telling. But being that it (immediately) preceded the era, it's a bit besides the point for me.
So... *shrug.*
Me? Troll? Never!*shakes fist*
Honestly, I don't really care which is the main universe or not if I'm liking the series in question. Heck, you ask me, USM is the main Spidey universe as far as comics go.
Since it diverges from the 616, I essentially saw it as a replacement or at least that the RYV Spiders were the same characters we met back in classic ASM. Maybe it was just a bone, but hey, it was worth the ride if you ask me and I've basically given up on ASM outside of the Epic Collections. Besides, having those old back issues lead into Peter and MJ raising a family (either RYV or Spider-Girl-style) is an outcome I prefer over the alternatives anyways.
Doctor Strange: "You are the right person to replace Logan."
X-23: "I know there are people who disapprove... Guys on the Internet mainly."
(All-New Wolverine #4)
Black Cat was such an unabashed rip off of Catwoman that I can understand your point. But, as a younger reader at the time, it was the first romantic interest for Peter that felt exciting and mysterious. At the time, i knew of Gwen from the back-stories and his relationship with MJ on-again, off-again with a few other girlfriends like Cissy Ironwood and Deb Whitman sprinkled throughout the series so it didn't feel Felicia supplanted anyone. It just felt new and fresh and, let's face it, she was strong and sexy to boot; at the time, she was a great complement to Spidey.