Gail Simone's Blog, page 920

September 19, 2012

nate-b:

Captain Marvel/Carol Danvers - OMG_DJ_Judy
Full circle...





nate-b:



Captain Marvel/Carol Danvers - OMG_DJ_Judy


Full circle right here. Judy has taken photos of my cosplay and now I can finally say I returned the favor at this past DragonCon. And in my humble opinion this is as perfect as one can get to the source. Looks EXACTLY like Carol Danvers. So uncanny. 





That is absolutely fantastic.

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Published on September 19, 2012 11:02

Hello Gail, sorry to bother you, I just wanted to take a quick minute to ask you about your thoughts on lazy editing. By this, I mean editors letting a book out with things like easy to spot typos. I just finished reading Batwoman #0, and it twice mentione

Well…truthfully, there just AREN’T many ‘lazy editors,’ as far as I can see. I haven’t had any, certainly. Editing is more than just checking copy, it’s a huge, complex juggling act and if one of the jugglers, say, me, is late, the editor has to juggle even harder. They check art, they keep artists working, they approve sketches and outlines and springboards and layouts and solicits and lettering and coloring and they have to keep late writers on deadline and they have to be the voice of mediation between the publishers and the creators and they have deal with office politics nonsense and they have to coordinate crossovers and that’s really just the start. It’s a difficult, difficult, and uncertain job, and most are underpaid and EVERYONE has a complaint and the editor gets blamed for all of it.


Sometimes the writer is late, so the artist is late, so the lettering is done at the very last minute. When that happens, the editor gets blamed for the mistakes because they’re the editor…but when has a writer ever came forward and said, that was my fault, I typed it wrong and made the issue late?


I get depressed by typos and errors in comics as much as anyone, but I have never yet met a lazy editor.

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Published on September 19, 2012 10:54

Hello Gail, sorry to bother you, I just wanted to take a quick minute to ask you about your thoughts on lazy editing. By this, I mean editors letting a book out with things like easy to spot typos. I just finished reading Batwoman #0, and it twice mentione

Well…truthfully, there just AREN’T many ‘lazy editors,’ as far as I can see. I haven’t had any, certainly. Editing is more than just checking copy, it’s a huge, complex juggling act and if one of the jugglers, say, me, is late, the editor has to juggle even harder. They check art, they keep artists working, they approve sketches and outlines and springboards and layouts and solicits and lettering and coloring and they have to keep late writers on deadline and they have to be the voice of mediation between the publishers and the creators and they have deal with office politics nonsense and they have to coordinate crossovers and that’s really just the start. It’s a difficult, difficult, and uncertain job, and most are underpaid and EVERYONE has a complaint and the editor gets blamed for all of it.


Sometimes the writer is late, so the artist is late, so the lettering is done at the very last minute. When that happens, the editor gets blamed for the mistakes because they’re the editor…but when has a writer ever came forward and said, that was my fault, I typed it wrong and made the issue late?


I get depressed by typos and errors in comics as much as anyone, but I have never yet met a lazy editor.

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Published on September 19, 2012 10:54

That anon doesn't know what they're talking about, by the way. "Female" is used to refer to trans men only by highly transphobic radfems, bio-essentialists and so on, and it is by no means considered acceptable because it's still misgendering and still cau

Thank you, I did know that calling a trans man ‘female’ is not appropriate (and is in fact routinely used as an insult). To be honest, I thought the anon poster was referring to themself, in which case I didn’t feel it was appropriate to monitor their language about how they chose to identify, if that makes sense?



And thank you!

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Published on September 19, 2012 10:48

That anon doesn't know what they're talking about, by the way. "Female" is used to refer to trans men only by highly transphobic radfems, bio-essentialists and so on, and it is by no means considered acceptable because it's still misgendering and still cau

Thank you, I did know that calling a trans man ‘female’ is not appropriate (and is in fact routinely used as an insult). To be honest, I thought the anon poster was referring to themself, in which case I didn’t feel it was appropriate to monitor their language about how they chose to identify, if that makes sense?



And thank you!

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Published on September 19, 2012 10:48

GAIL-SAN GAIL-SAN HOW DO I BREAK IN TO CO--but seriously, I just want to thank you for being the most patient and level-headed person I've ever seen on the internet. It's really impressive.

Oh, jeez, thank you, but man, I WISH I were patient and level-headed.


I’ve thrown tantrums on the net, I’ve been dismissive when proven wrong, I’ve been a complete and utter twit too many times to count. I had a ridiculous feud at Scans Daily that in retrospect was my fault, I’ve had blow-ups on Tumblr when I should have just shut up and listened, I have pretty much filled up every space on the clueless jerk bingo card at one time or another (or many times or another).


But I do find that Tumblr has been really really good for me to learn to try not to repeat mistakes. I think it’s helped me learn tremendously, not from participating in discussions, it’s not about me, but from reading people’s true, raw, unfiltered experiences.


That’s really why I stay on Tumblr and why I read it every day. The media clearly isn’t going to represent these voices fairly. But that just makes their opinions more valuable.  It’s hard to read some of this stuff and confront your own privilege a little bit, and realize how you’re still ignorant of so much. But it does make you a little less prone to be smug and condescending about topics in which you are a tourist at best.


I’m pretty thankful for Tumblr for that reason…I would have little exposure to many of these people otherwise and their voices have meant a great deal to me. I hope they make me a little smarter and kinder. But I still manage to screw up pretty regularly.


I appreciate the kind thought, though!

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Published on September 19, 2012 10:41

Hi Gail, do you think any mainstream characters will ever come out as trans? Many trans folks don't talk about our gender identity for a good part of our lives, so it sorta seems credible to me that trans characters are already in the comics, but aren't re

I have talked about this a lot, I am currently writing a trans character that has not come out. I do know there are lots of trans-LIKE characters that seem to have been repurposed a little bit by readers and pros alike, but I’m not sure of how many of those are trans in canon.


It’s something I am definitely working on, just want to get it right.

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Published on September 19, 2012 10:32

Hi Gail, do you think any mainstream characters will ever come out as trans? Many trans folks don't talk about our gender identity for a good part of our lives, so it sorta seems credible to me that trans characters are already in the comics, but aren't re

I have talked about this a lot, I am currently writing a trans character that has not come out. I do know there are lots of trans-LIKE characters that seem to have been repurposed a little bit by readers and pros alike, but I’m not sure of how many of those are trans in canon.


It’s something I am definitely working on, just want to get it right.

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Published on September 19, 2012 10:32

11 Lies The Right Spreads About Muslims

11 Lies The Right Spreads About Muslims:

tomhiddlestonswife:



1. Muslims Are Ticking Time Bombs


Though Congressman Peter King (R-NY) likes to show off his political stripes by countering the supposed threat of violent Muslims, the reality is that Muslim support for violence isn’t all that great. 

In fact, Gallup polling data shows that Muslims, more than any other faith group in the United States, reject attacks against civilians (78%). The same data also shows that nearly all Muslims (92%) have no sympathy for al-Qaeda or other terrorist groups. According to scholar Charles Kurzman, global terrorists have only succeeded in recruiting less than 1 in 15,000 Muslims in the past 25 years, and fewer than 1 in 100,000 since 2001. 

That’s hardly the monstrous threat of which the right warns.


2. Muslims Are Un-American


Contrary to popular belief, Muslims are integrated politically, economically, and educationally into the social tapestry of America. Pew Research data shows that while more than 60 percent of U.S. Muslims are immigrants, of those, more than 70% are American citizens. 

Additionally, Muslims’ income levels are at, or above, the income levels of the rest of the U.S. population and, according to a 2009 Gallup poll, Muslims have the second-highest level of education among religious groups in the U.S. Gallup also reports that American Muslims are equally as likely to identify with their national identity as they are their religious identity. 


3. “Creeping Sharia” Is A Threat to the Constitution


In 2010, when the hue and cry over the “Ground Zero Mosque” reached a fevered pitch, the Public Religion Research Institute found that 30 percent of Americans believe that Muslims want to establish Sharia law in the United States. Among Fox News viewers, that number shot upwards to 52 percent. 

But what do Muslims think? Quite the opposite, actually. In fact, a study by the Institute for Social Policy and Understanding shows that Muslims are just as unwilling to accept Sharia law as non-Muslims. When asked if American courts should apply Islamic law to non-Muslims, all of the 313 respondents answered no. Only 3 people said they wanted Islamic considerations for civil matters of marriage and inheritance.


For all the fuss that’s been made over “creeping Sharia,” it sure seems to be creeping mighty slowly: not one American court has ever given it priority over the Constitution.


4. Muslims Are Subverting America Through “Stealth Jihad”


Monsters are scary. Especially the kind that sneak up behind you in the dark on their tiptoes. It’s that kind of cartoonish fear mongering that hate group leaders like Robert Spencer advance, pointing to the “radical subversion of America” in such things as Campbell’s soup, which offers halal lines of its tasty bisques, fireworks, and high school proms. 

Like “creeping Sharia,” the term “stealth jihad” operates on the premise of a hidden threat. The real threat, though, is individuals like Spencer whose anti-Muslim writings inspired Norway killer Anders Breivik to massacre 77 youth. 

It is also the recent spike in the number of right-wing hate groups whose members have carried out 56% of all terrorist attacks in the U.S. since 1995.


5. Muslims Are Demographic Rabbits


Islamophobes can’t decide how Muslims are supposedly taking over the United States. They often say it’s slowly and stealthily, but then, in the same breath, proclaim that Muslims are breeding like rabbits, spreading their influence throughout the West a dozen newborn babies at the time. 

Neither story is true. As Doug Sanders points out in his new book,The Myth of the Muslim Tide, conspiracy theories about mass Muslim migration are deflated by actual data. In 2010, the American Muslim population was estimated at 2.6 million. By the year 2030, it would be 6.2 million, or an underwhelming 2.7 percent of the entire populace. 

That’s on par with Jews and Episcopalians.


6. Muslims Hate Israel and Jews


Though blogger Pamela Geller’s racist bus advertisements in Manhattan and San Francisco would have you believe otherwise, Gallup polling from 2008 to 2011 shows that animosity between Muslims and Jews isn’t all that it’s hyped up to be. 

Eighty-one percent of Muslim Americans support a future in which Israel and Palestine coexist alongside one another peacefully. That’s three points higher than Jewish Americans, 78% of whom report feeling the same way. In August of last year, Pew reported similar findings, suggesting that 62% of American Muslims support the existence of the state of Israel and believe that Middle East peace is possible. 

But bigots like Geller don’t normally care for data or facts.


7. Muslims Hate Christians


Pitting the majority against the minority is the modus operandi of racism and prejudice. Suggesting that Muslims, a minority group, hate Christians, who comprise the majority, is an example of this. But the facts tell us otherwise. 

Get this — in a ComRes study for the BBC in London, nearly 80% of Muslims said that Christianity should guide Britain. That number was higher than Christians themselves, only 70% of whom said the same thing. 

In the U.S., the two faith groups have worked closely for years. Recently, Christians came to the aid of their Muslim neighbors after vicious mosque attacks. And, to the everlasting discredit of Islamophobes, Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood President Mohamed Morsi recently appointed a Christian woman as one of his top advisors. 


Never mind the fact that Muslims recognize and love Jesus and have an entire chapter of the Quran devoted to his mother, Mary.


8. Muslim Women Are Oppressed


If Muslim women are oppressed, they don’t seem to know it. 

A 2005 Gallup survey shows that Muslim women are more educated than women in every other religious group except Jews, with 43% of them holding an undergraduate or postgraduate degree. That’s compared to 29% of American women overall. 

Also, Muslim American women are as likely as Muslim men to work outside the home and, compared to women of other faiths, their incomes are more equal to men. Additionally, they attend mosques as frequently as Muslim men. 

According to scholar Doug Sanders, 90% of Muslims in the U.S. say that women should have the right to work outside the home


9. Your Neighbor Is A Member of the Muslim Brotherhood


Michele Bachmann’s map showing the Muslim Brotherhood’s alleged infiltration of the government looked more like a maze in the Sunday newspaper than any bonafide piece of evidence. 

That’s because the Muslim Brotherhood does not exist in the United States. In fact, since 1979, the only relationship Washington has had with Egypt has been with those people who are most opposed to the Brotherhood: the military. Former Assistant Secretary for the Near East, Richard Murphy, said that he was not aware of a single connection between the Brotherhood and the CIA during his tenure at the State Department. 

And that would seem about right, especially since Bachmann couldn’t provide proof that her claims were based on anything other than delusional speculation.


10. Barack Obama is STILL a Muslim


In addition to his birth certificate, maybe the Commander in Chief should obtain some sort of religious identity card. Folks on the right who believe that he’s a foreigner (and who also endorse voter identity cards) would just love that. 

According to Pew, 17 percent of registered voters believe that Obama is a Muslim. And frighteningly, nearly half of all Republican voters in Mississippi and Alabama believe the same thing (one in four of them also believe that his parents’ interracial marriage should have been illegal). 

Despite the fact that he has publicly professed his Christian faith, and regularly attends church services, some bigots like disgraced country music star Hank Williams Jr., just can’t stop mixing their hatred of blacks with their hatred of Muslims.


11. American Muslims Are Puppets of Foreign Money


When a mosque in Joplin, Missouri was recently burned to the ground by right-wing extremists, a campaign to rebuild it brought in more than $400 thousand, the plurality of which came from online donations from American citizens. 

In fact, most mosques in the United States are supported by their local congregations who give regular donations much like Christian gives tithes, to fund projects, pay clergy, and maintain the premises. 

While Islamophobes like to shriek about “foreign influence” inside America, it’s actually the United States government that funds mosques, churches, and synagogue construction projects overseas as part of its cultural preservation initiative.


Started by President Clinton in late 2000, the first funds were announced and dispersed by President George W. Bush in 2001. How will the far right spin that dose of reality?




Reblogging because TRUE.

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Published on September 19, 2012 10:29

APE IN A CAPE: Brutal Tips On Breaking Into Comics (Warning: LONG!)

APE IN A CAPE: Brutal Tips On Breaking Into Comics (Warning: LONG!):

antonyjohnston:



I’m not going to reproduce the whole thing here. Suffice to say, click the link. Gail tells the unvarnished truth, and if you’re not ready to hear it, you’re not ready to work in mainstream comics.



Reblogging this because a) apparently some people had problems with my link, and b) because I didn’t know the fabulously talented Antony Johnston had commented on it!

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Published on September 19, 2012 10:19

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