That just made my day.

That just made my day.
And from a narrative point of view, all the secret identity stuff wasn't more sustainable. In the Pre-Crisis stories he constantly humiliated Lois and made her doubt her sanity while she tried to figure out if Superman and Clark were the same person. Readers were no longer just pre-teens who thought the girls have cooties. All the concept was now simply offensive.
It's still pretty important in the DC universe. They've made the importance of secret identities and the consequences of the true identity of a hero a major point in several stories in the last decade. Now, not all of these stories were good, but that is another debate.
I think for the characters it still is important. Imagine if Batman's secret identity was public knowledge, it would take a lot of the mystique of the character away, even for readers.
Superman recently revealed his identity to the public in the comics, and already there are ramifications to that step. I fully expect that development to be retconned with the end of Bendis' run at the latest.
Over at Marvel, Spider-Man's identity being a secret is also a pretty important part of the character, the comics showed the personal catastrophe this would have in the aftermath of Civil War, and it was retconned pretty quickly (and with that intention from the very start, so it was more of a semi-reset button than a retcon.
Now, with the reality of governments and big tech using technology to learn (not necessarily publicly reveal, mind you) the true identity of superheroes, this has been used as story points, as well. Amanda Waller has been shown in "Justice League Unlimited" and the "Suicide Squad" movie to know the true identity of Batman, but keeping it to herself.
But even there, there are narrative ways to work around that, mostly organized heroes with their own resources
Even in reality, facial recognition is far from foolproof, even without masks. There are simply too many people that have similar facial structure. That's something that always bugged me about the "Superman only uses glasses as a disguise" complaint. So Clark Kent and Superman look alike, so what, so must dozens of other men in Metropolis alone.
Aside from that, Justice League-distributed (or Avengers-, in case of Marvel) tech could be used to narratively counter that technology. Special masks simulating different facial structure, apps to fool trackers in other apps for their smartphones, (you want to track me via my phone? What if my phone gives you the wrong GPS signal), and that's not even the usefulness of shapeshifting heroes in the community. At the end of the "Death & Return of Superman" saga in the comics, Matrix-Supergirl pretended to be Superman to publicly find a surviving Clark Kent under the rubble left from the Doomsday battle (or she pretended to be Clark, I can't remember right now). Something like that would throw off a lot of intelligence services, whether state or private.
That's a good point that secret identities don't scale to the facial recognition era. They'd have to get masks that cover their entire face.
Well, she was an independent and working woman. In the fifties. It was something which was highly frowned upon.Lois in general got the short end of the stick during the Silver Age and even the Bronze. The writers for some reason portrayed her as a nutcase. Maybe it was because they needed her to "deserve" the sick games Superman played with her.
Well, she was an independent and working woman. In the fifties. It was something which was highly frowned upon.
Intrepid girl reporter is a bit of trope in the 30s and 40s especially.Well, she was an independent and working woman. In the fifties. It was something which was highly frowned upon.
Intrepid girl reporter is a bit of trope in the 30s and 40s especially.
An independent professional working woman in the 30's or 40's was quaint, and rare, and not a culture onto herself. Sometime shortly after the war, and the ratcheting up of female labor that it entailed, however, the men began to realize that they couldn't force the genie of women in the workplace back into the bottle: assertive women and feminism were suddenly things that needed to be demonized in the media to keep people (mostly young girls) from getting too many "crazy" ideas. (Just to be clear, I'm very much a feminist: I'm speaking from the perspective of many in the times we're talking about.)Ironically she was treated better in the 30s and 40s. From the 50s onwards she was this nutbag.
It's not a trope, it's something that feels nice if done properly, and always good fun for people with "daddy issues", too.A grown woman being taken across the knee and spanked, often by a husband or boyfriend,is one too. One that seems to have lasted well in to the 20th Century and possibly beyond. I'm sure there's some wacky psychology involved in that!
I was speaking of it's use in fiction. IRL, what ever works for your and you partner.It's not a trope, it's something that feels nice if done properly, and always good fun for people with "daddy issues", too.
Um... not that I'd know anything about any of that.![]()
You're overthinking it.While I can understand a desire for privacy, the effort he put to protect his secret identity at a certain point became ridiculous. He used robots, people under hypnosis, his friend Batman disguised as Clark Kent and so on to be sure that Lois didn't discover his secret. He couldn't use all this time and energy to, you know, help other people..?
They are. It makes "Bring a date" night at Legion of Doom gatherings really awkward (and usually very destructive for Metropolis).Which is a fantastic argument against secret identities, not that every Supervillain is in love with Lois Lane, or are they?
They are. It makes "Bring a date" night at Legion of Doom gatherings really awkward (and usually very destructive for Metropolis).
He couldn't use all this time and energy to, you know, help other people..?
If there were not secret identities for superheroes then the heroes would either get bullied by the government or shown as being very subservient to the government (or really renegades) and also without much of a different personal life, none of which are good depictions to have, let alone for every hero.
It did for some 6 months, it eventually didn't because his identity was discovered and him not doing so from the general public wouldn't have made them more safe.
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