Yara is going to debut as Wonder Woman in Future State, so it makes me wonder how the character came to the attention of Dailyn Rodriguez and how she came up with the premise for this 'Wonder Girl' series.
I guess now we know why the character was killed off in the TITANS series (which was too bad because I very much enjoyed the actress they had for the character; and the characterization.)
I wonder who approached who?There would have to have been some kind of direct contact between Joelle and Dailyn given how long the development process is for both TV and comics.
I guess now we know why the character was killed off in the TITANS series (which was too bad because I very much enjoyed the actress they had for the character; and the characterization.)
Even if she wasn't coming back, I doubt this series would have any impact on Titans' Donna Troy since it's a totally different character.
The same idea underlay years of litigation between DC and Jerry Siegel, on the premise that Superboy (the “Superman when he was a boy” version) was a character distinct from Superman. Legal issues and my sympathy for Siegel aside, the notion never made a lot of sense to me — they’re both the same person, Clark Kent, just at different points in his life.From a legal standpoint, it seems, character is defined based on the superhero name rather than the civilian identity. For instance, if you look at the creator credits in the end titles of Young Justice, they say "Nightwing created by Marv Wolfman and George Perez," even though Nightwing is Dick Grayson, a character created by Bill Finger, Jerry Robinson, and (nominally) Bob Kane. So DC might consider any "Wonder Girl" to be functionally the same character.
Sorry, but the Caitlin Snow situation showed that WB/DC applying creator credits for characters are hard fought battles by the creators, so they are no measure for what they consider legally the same character.
According to DC, Sterling Gates and Derlis Santacruz didn’t create Caitlin Snow. Don Newton and I didn’t create Jason Todd. Ric Estrada and I didn’t create Power Girl. Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster didn’t create Superboy. Bob Kanigher and Carmine Infantino didn’t create Barry Allen.
I did not know that, I always assumed it was based on the character's civilian identity. So if I were to become a DC writer and introduce a character who stuck around and took a superhero name in a different person's run, the "created by" credit would go to the person who gave them the superhero name, rather than me?
Would the fact that Yara Flora is being introduced as Wonder Woman, and then becoming Wonder Girl later make a difference?
Except they also didn't acknowledge Conway and Milgrom, the creators of the original Killer Frost, as the creators of Caitlin Snow. It was really a way of getting out of paying royalties to eitther party.In fact, that fits exactly with what I said. DC doesn't consider Caitlin Snow an original creation because they define her as a derivative character based on Killer Frost.
Except they also didn't acknowledge Conway and Milgrom, the creators of the original Killer Frost, as the creators of Caitlin Snow. It was really a way of getting out of paying royalties to eitther party.
Testy ....Yes, I know, I can read
Surprisingly so. (Or is it?)Testy ....
Yes, she was supposed to be the new Wonder Woman for real, but now it's just for two months, so they got sold a bit of a lemon.
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