Trini January 1, 2018 Share January 1, 2018 Quote Pierce aka Black Lightning was one of DC Comics’ first major African American superheroes, making his debut in 1977. In the books, Jefferson has two daughters, both of whom have followed in his superhero footsteps — Anissa Pierce aka Thunder, who is a member of the Outsiders, and Jennifer Pierce, aka Lightning, recruited by the Justice Society of America. http://deadline.com/2016/09/black-lightning-dc-superhero-series-greg-berlanti-mara-brock-akil-salim-akil-1201811892/ Quote Black Lightning, created by Tony Isabella and Trevor Von Eeden, made his first appearance in 1977’s “Black Lightning” #1. The story follows Jefferson Pierce, a former Olympian, who was secretly born with the ability to create and manipulate electromagnetic fields. Although he had abandoned his hometown in Metropolis’ Suicide Slum after the murder of his father, Pierce returns there with his wife and daughter, taking a job as a high school principal. It is after losing one of his students to the gang violence that threatens the city that Pierce decides to take advantage of his powers. Adopting the identity Black Lightning, he becomes a costumed superhero who goes on to serve as team member of both the Outsiders and the Justice League. http://www.superherohype.com/news/391603-cress-williams-black-lightning Who Is Black Lightning? - #DCTV: Link to comment
Lantern7 January 21, 2018 Share January 21, 2018 I read a trade paperback from the library covering Black Lightning's first adventures. Nice of the show to insert Thomas Randolph's "Justice, Like Lightning" quote in the beginning of the pilot. Also, that poem was used for Marvel's Thunderbolts in the mid-Nineties. Anyway, I think the stories hold up well. I'm wondering if the CW version will take after the original, in the sense that the electric stuff was part of his costume (the belt, I think), and he somehow managed to replicate that on his own. One thing that won't make the transition: Jefferson putting on a wig and talking more "street" as Black Lightning. Link to comment
johntfs January 21, 2018 Share January 21, 2018 1 hour ago, Lantern7 said: One thing that won't make the transition: Jefferson putting on a wig and talking more "street" as Black Lightning. Thank God, or I'd flash to this: Link to comment
Lantern7 January 22, 2018 Share January 22, 2018 The second collection comes out on January 31. Link to comment
Trini March 19, 2018 Author Share March 19, 2018 Batman and Black Lightning team up:'Batman Meets Black Lightning as New Detective Comics Writer Takes Over' Link to comment
Lantern7 March 19, 2018 Share March 19, 2018 (edited) Want something offbeat? How about Black Lightning teaming up with Hong Kong Phooey? Edited March 19, 2018 by Lantern7 1 Link to comment
Trini June 26, 2018 Author Share June 26, 2018 Preview of Detective Comics #983: Quote Detective Comics #983 Written by Bryan Hill “On The Outside” part one! Duke Thomas. Cassandra Cain. They and other young heroes don’t intend to stand down, no matter what Batman thinks is best. Who can Batman trust to guide them? They need a teacher…and Black Lightning fits the bill! Link to comment
Trini October 16, 2018 Author Share October 16, 2018 Black Lightning Kicks Off The Other History of the DC Universe: Quote On January 30, 2019, the brilliant writer behind both of them, John Ridley, returns to DC with the debut issue of THE OTHER HISTORY OF THE DC UNIVERSE, a highly original new series that will be published under DC Black Label. The Other History of the DC Universe isn’t comics as usual. In fact, it’s a largely prose-driven series that will be supplemented with breathtaking illustrations by a rotating team of star artists. The Other History of the DC Universe will look at notable events from DC Universe history through a different perspective, telling the equally vital stories of heroes who have been there throughout the DCU’s past, but come from different disenfranchised groups. The first issue will focus on none other than Black Lightning, with cover and interior illustrations by Alex Dos Diaz. Link to comment
Lantern7 October 18, 2018 Share October 18, 2018 Watching the episode . . . I think the series got itself a Windfall. Link to comment
Lantern7 November 12, 2018 Share November 12, 2018 The many resurrections of Metamorpho in DC Comics. I'm posting this because a few of them involved Dr. Jace. Is her first name "Helga" in Black Lightning? I wasn't paying attention. At least the one we're watching on TV is sinister from the get-go. Also, Erik Larsen's interpetation of Black Lightning's hair. I know, late Eighties, but dude. Link to comment
Lantern7 November 24, 2018 Share November 24, 2018 Wikipedia entry on Looker. Basically, once you hit the word "Vampire," you should stop. The original concept was solid: the plainest of Janes turns into a burning-hot superheroine. I mean, really hot. "Looking like she's going to merge into the mirror as she admired herself" hot. Also notable was her outfit, which . . . Eighties, I guess. Judge for yourself and silently despair. 1 Link to comment
PhoneCop November 26, 2018 Share November 26, 2018 IIRC, Black Lightning's hair was shown to be a wig at least once in the Outsiders comic—Jefferson's civilian look was a shorter cut. I'm not sure what Larsen was going for there, but at least it's not Jheri curls? The whole Manhunters twist with Dr. Jace was pretty sudden, but she was always a clinical if not cold personality, even with the Markovs. I can't believe the random details I recall from 30, 35-year-old comics when I couldn't tell you what I had for lunch on Friday. (Wasn't turkey, though.) Link to comment
Trini February 22, 2019 Author Share February 22, 2019 'Black Lightning's creator traces the rocky road to DC's first standalone black superhero' -- Some parts of his story are 'yikes!' but it's an interesting read on his experience in the industry. Link to comment
Trini August 13, 2020 Author Share August 13, 2020 The Other History of the DC Universe, featuring stories with Black Lightning and Thunder, debuts in November. DC press release: Quote This November, fans who have been awaiting award-winning screenwriter John Ridley’s (12 Years a Slave, Guerrilla, American Crime) The Other History of the DC Universe haven’t much longer to wait, as DC announced today that the five-issue miniseries will debut on Tuesday, November 24. Joining Ridley on this series are artists Giuseppe “Cammo” Camuncoli, Andrea Cucchi, and colorist José Villarrubia, with covers by Camuncoli (with Marco Mastrazzo) and Jamal Campbell (Far Sector, Naomi). <...> This five-issue series reframes iconic moments from DC history, exploring them through the eyes of DC Super Heroes representing traditionally disenfranchised groups. The series centers around the perspectives of Jefferson Pierce, a.k.a. Black Lightning; his daughter Anissa, also known as Thunder; Mal Duncan (Herald) and his wife, Karen Beecher (Bumblebee); Renee Montoya (the Question); and Tatsu Yamashiro (Katana). And an interview with writer John Ridley about the project: Quote When Black Lightning came out, I remember, as a younger person, how that felt to have a series that was led by a man of color, who in his regular identity was a teacher. Like I said, my mom was a teacher. It was a comic book that really, for me, for the first time, I felt like, "Oh, okay, this is for us as much as anybody else. The book, the universe, all of those things, you know, this is for us." If I ever had at an age felt like, "Oh, I want to be a writer, I want to be a creator, I want to be a storyteller, I want to deal in the fantastic," certainly when Black Lightning came out, it was a moment that galvanized that feeling. ... ... So who are you going to go with? Absolutely, yes, Black Lightning, for what he meant to me — what he meant to the DC universe: the first character of color in the DC universe to topline a book. Most definitely, he was the character that I wanted to kick the series off with. ... Rounding out the book is Anissa Pierce, who I thought was a great way to close out the series. Here you have the daughter of a longtime hero, but they see the world differently, and see moments even in Jefferson Pierce's narrative [differently]. When you see her, when you read her story, there are moments that you will see from Jefferson's story that she sees very differently. It’s important seeing Anissa as a young adult appreciating what her father has done, but still needing to have her own voice to be her own person to be her own hero. As a young person, a young woman, a young woman of color, a young woman from a LGBTQ community, I could not think of a better person to really bookend the series. Link to comment
Trini September 4, 2020 Author Share September 4, 2020 (edited) Another interview with John Ridley about The Other History of the DC Universe, etc. Excerpt: Quote Polygon: Black Lightning is a fascinating character, and in a lot of places right now. He’s coming up in The Other History, he’s got his own TV show, and he’s in the current Batman and the Outsiders series, just like he was in the original one. But what I find interesting about Black Lightning is that he kind of skipped a generation of readers. If you ask a millennial to name the most famous Black DC superhero, they’re probably going to say John Stewart/Green Lantern, and if you ask them about a Black superhero who has lightning powers, they’re probably going to say Static. What made him the first focal point that you wanted to go to in The Other History? John Ridley: It’s interesting, you talk about skipping a generation. And I think sometimes that’s the truth, other than obviously, the Trinity — Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman. In general, there are heroes who rise and fall depending on their sales, and depending on what’s going on with the readership. Particularly with characters of color, in fits and starts, there’ve been efforts to both try to elevate some of these heroes, integrate some of these heroes. But in terms of characters that have a lot of cultural density, unfortunately a lot of the characters of color never quite got there. Even Black Panther — certainly when you saw what happened with the film there was this ... people just got behind that character in a way, but he was a character that was around for a long time. Unfortunately, with a lot of characters of color, women, LGBTQ [characters], they become in some ways, like ethnic or gender or [sexual] orientation theater. Rather than people looking at them as Oh, no, these are characters that are just like any other character in the prevailing culture. So for me personally, when I was a kid Black Lightning was the first character of color that I was not only aware of [having], but in the DC Universe, that had his own series. And to have a character that looked like me, to have a character who was a teacher, like the way that my mother was a teacher; to have a character that, in his personal life, was just a teacher trying to make a difference, a street level hero, who initially had a power belt and then had his own powers? It was just a really interesting experience for me to finally have a hero that had something different about him. That was actually, for me, not different. So, for me when it came time to do The Other History; yeah, John Stewart predated Jefferson Pierce, but there were things about Jefferson Pierce that were powerful to me when I first read the comics. There were things about him as a father; as a guy who was, in some ways, maybe a little bit more conservative as a Black man, in terms of some of his values — that made him really interesting. So he felt like the absolute right character with which to begin this story. And also, and I don’t want to jump ahead with some of your questions, but you alluded to treating these characters as though they occupy a real historical space. And so if I was going to try to take The Other History and really treat it as though it were a real document, [as if] it really were these oral histories from these characters, that was the place to start. Yes, I could have gone back a few more years with John Stewart, but for me, emotionally as a storyteller, in terms of the way these stories were going to play out, Jefferson Pierce was the absolute right character with which to begin the series. Edited September 7, 2020 by Trini Link to comment
Trini September 7, 2020 Author Share September 7, 2020 BTW there will be a panel for The Other History of the DC Universe at FanDome on Sept. 12: Quote John Ridley and The Other History of the DC Universe Saturday, Sep 12 - 1:00 PM - Sunday, Sep 13 - 1:00 PM WatchVerse Join Oscar®-winning writer John Ridley and artist Giuseppe Camuncoli for an inside look at the November 2020 miniseries The Other History of the DC Universe, which presents an alternate look at the DC Universe through the eyes of its Super Heroes of color. 20 min Link to comment
Trini June 10, 2021 Author Share June 10, 2021 The Other History of the DC Universe #1, featuring Black Lightning, was nominated for an Eisner Award: Quote The nominees for the 2021 Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards were announced today, and DC has earned 17 nominations! Heralded as “the Oscars of the comics world,” for over three decades the prestigious Eisner Awards have celebrated the industry’s very best releases and talent. Chosen by a highly lauded panel of judges and voted on by industry professionals, the winners will be announced in an online ceremony during Comic-Con@Home on July 23. DC’s titles and creators are represented among the elite with the following nominations: ... Best Single Issue: The Other History of the DC Universe #1, by John Ridley and Giuseppe Camuncoli (DC) https://www.dccomics.com/blog/2021/06/09/dc-garners-seventeen-2021-eisner-award-nominations Link to comment
Trini June 25, 2021 Author Share June 25, 2021 Anissa Pierce featured in part five of The Other History of the DC Universe; preview: https://www.dccomics.com/blog/2021/06/25/the-other-history-of-the-dc-universe-spotlights-the-daughter-of-black-lightning Quote The Groundbreaking Limited Series from Award-Winning Writer John Ridley and Artists Giuseppe Camuncoli and Andrea Cucchi Spotlights Thunder in its Final Issue! Since its 2020 debut, the five-issue limited series The Other History of the DC Universe has received critical and fan acclaim for its examination of the DC Universe through the eyes of super heroes outside the prevailing culture, and against the backdrop of real-world events. The first issue of this unique series focused on Jefferson Pierce, a.k.a. Black Lightning as he finds his path to heroism as Olympic gold medalist, teacher, neighborhood activist and finally, super hero. It’s only fitting that The Other History of the DC Universe conclude with a spotlight of his super-powered offspring, Thunder. Being a superhero runs in Anissa Pierce’s family. It’s been a part of her life in one way or another since her father, Jefferson Pierce, first started to fight crime as Black Lightning. Despite what her parents tell her, despite what the world tells her, Anissa knows that she has the same calling as her father. But as Anissa takes on the mantle of Thunder, she must grapple with a very different world than the one that her father first patrolled. Written by JOHN RIDLEY Art by GIUSEPPE CAMUNCOLI and ANDREA CUCCHI Cover by GIUSEPPE CAMUNCOLI and MARCO MASTRAZZO Variant cover by JAMAL CAMPBELL 48 Pages/$6.99 The final issue of this one-of-a-kind series arrives in comic book stores and on participating digital platforms on Tuesday, July 27, 2021. The complete five-issue series will also be available as a hardcover collected edition on Tuesday, November 9, 2021. Link to comment
Trini February 15, 2022 Author Share February 15, 2022 'Standing Up: Five of DC's Boldest Black Female Heroes and Storylines' Quote Thunder Storyline: 2021’s The Other History of the DC Universe #5 The daughter of Black Lightning, Anissa Pierce made a promise to her father that upon graduating college, she would use her inherited electric superpowers to fight crime. That promise was kept the night of her graduation, and soon after, she joined with the newest incarnation of her father’s old group, the Outsiders. Of course, things would only get more complicated from then on, and Anissa suffered near-death experiences, heartache, love and loss throughout her time on the team. These events can be found across the two Outsiders titles, but to specifically get into her head, one need look no further than the recent The Other History of the DC Universe #5, which features Anissa’s perspective on her life and career. The Other History of the DC Universe hones in on the intersectionality of Anissa’s identity as a woman, Black woman and eventually, a queer woman. With a superhero for a father, Anissa had troubled understandings of both superheroes and the police. Her father, a strict teacher who taught respectability politics, lived as both an ideal to strive for and a cautionary example to avoid when operating as a Black hero in public. Working with the government on the Outsiders caused its share of problems, but the personality clashes of several members, specifically Grace Choi, was a source of tension. Yet it was Grace with whom Anissa fell in love. Of the six characters presented in The Other History of the DC Universe, Anissa Pierce is the youngest, both in character age and creation. Her short but volatile career forced her to grow up in difficult circumstances, but also adds to the examples that make her a compelling and memorable standout in the DC roster of heroes. Link to comment
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