Dave, Charlotte and Zack talk the most historically Marvel and DC Comics superhero titles, play a round of Zack’s Facts superhero trivia, and learn all about French comics from Charlotte!
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
A Comic Book Reading Order Guide For Beginners & Fans
Dave, Charlotte and Zack talk the most historically Marvel and DC Comics superhero titles, play a round of Zack’s Facts superhero trivia, and learn all about French comics from Charlotte!
Podcast: Play in new window | Download

The DC Universe remains a strange setting and object. A tattered together tapestry that feels more like an archipelago than a unified land mass like the Marvel Universe. It’s a strange beast. It’s an assembly from the various acquisitions and power grabs that united a disparate number of publishers under one banner. The DCU is a place of paper and ink that defies and slips out of any attempts to create a ‘clean’ and contradiction-free tapestry. It’s a setting where ‘continuity’ and ‘canon’ feel like loaded and dangerous words, as the crisis-afflicted setting resists any certainty those imply. It feels like a taped-together mess that barely holds, and yet when it does, it can be magnificent. Astonishing tales can be woven from its tendrils of impossible absurdity. It’s a reality operating on vibrations, wherein Superman sings to save existence.
There’s something broken and yet beautiful about it.

X-Men: Red #10 credits:
Al Ewing writes; Stefano Caselli and Jacopo Camagni draw; Federico Blee colors; Ariana Maher letters; cover by Russell Dauterman and Chris Sotomayor (note the one nonmutant there, Ewing’s fave toy soldier, Nova!)
Spoilers ahoy…
On my weekly livestream, Casual Krakoa Live, I review the week’s X-Men comics, and answer big questions about what’s going on with Marvel’s merry mutants! You can listen or watch below:
This week we’re talking new comics! Plus, who should write Uncanny X-Men, what’s up with Marvel’s 2023 Free Comic Book Day, and is Dave TOO obsessed with Midnight Suns?
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
[Read more…] about X-Men #18, Legion of X #9, & Dark Web Tie-Ins | Comic Book Herald Live!
It is often said that Watchmen is the most influential comic ever to be released. That comics wouldn’t be where they are without it, for good and for ill. But how did we get here, exactly? More to the point, just what influence did Watchmen provide to the larger world of comics? What, ultimately, is the legacy of Watchmen? Who watched the Watchmen?
The simple version: our topic series has The Question as one of its main characters exposing an apocalyptic conspiracy aimed at the superhero community, prominently features Captain Atom, partially climaxes in a false flag disaster engineered by the world’s smartest man posing as hero, and ends on the question “Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?” (even if the response offers up the fig leaf translation “Who guards the guardians?”). By that metric alone, the widely beloved ‘Cadmus arc’ of Justice League Unlimited is indisputably A Watchmen. Plus Alan Moore liked the one episode. Case closed.
The more significant answer is that to a substantial cross-generational section of the pop culture viewership, the Cadmus arc is Superhero TV Watchmen.
[Read more…] about Who Watched the Watchmen? Justice League Unlimited