The BID Poll Revisited, Part 3
Originally published January 25, 2002, in Comics Buyer’s Guide #1471
We’re continuing with the poll of ten years ago which ran in BID and endeavored to get a feel for what the readership saw as the state of the industry ten years hence… that is to say, now. The year 2002, which at the time seemed so far in the future as to be ludicrous. Well, no one’s laughing all that much.
Moving on:
The following person will be the editor-in-chief of DC Comics (should there still be a DC Comics)
Mike Carlin 37 16.89%
Paul Levitz 36 16.44%
Jim Shooter 30 13.70%
Peter David 17 7.76%
John Byrne 10 4.57%
Tom DeFalco 9 4.11%
Who cares? 7 3.20%
Rob Liefeld 6 2.74%
Joey Cavalieri 6 2.74%
Chris Claremont 5 2.28%
Mark Gruenwald 5 2.28%
Bob Harras 5 2.28%
Todd McFarlane 3 1.37%
Frank Miller 2 0.91%
Denny O’Neil 2 0.91%
Well, this was a slam dunk for the readership. Not only that, but it’s a fairly intriguing comparison to the Marvel list. Because of the fourteen possibilities on the Marvel list, as noted in the previous column, none remains in an editorial capacity. Not so with DC. In addition to Carlin still in place as the EIC, Paul Levitz is still there doing that job that only he can do… namely, answering the phone by saying, “Paul Levitz.” Joey Cavalieri is still in place, Denny O’Neil’s departure as full-time editor is only a very recent development, and Frank Miller may not be an editor, but if he walked in tomorrow and said he wanted his own line, they’d probably give it to him.
The following person will be revealed to be the Anti-Christ:
Rob Liefeld 78 35.62%
Todd McFarlane 20 9.13%
Tom DeFalco 14 6.39%
Peter David 12 5.48%
Jim Shooter 11 5.02%
John Byrne 10 4.57%
Bill Clinton 6 2.74%
Respondent 3 1.37%
Fabian Nicieza 2 0.91%
Gary Groth 2 0.91%
Tony Isabella 2 0.91%
Ross Perot 2 0.91%
Remember when Ross Perot was interesting enough to warrant being considered the anti-Christ? Those were fun days.
I’ve always regretted this question slightly, because Liefeld—a devout Christian—found it personally upsetting. So I felt kind of bad that he not only won, but did so by such a huge margin. That aside, it’s interesting that most of the top bad boys of ten years ago remain controversial, loud-mouthed annoying boors… except for DeFalco, who seems to have lost the hostile vibes he accrued during his editorial tenure, and of course me, because everyone adores me and I haven’t an enemy in the world.
I should note, though, that of the people on the list, the only one with the stones to bad mouth Neil Gaiman instead of keeping his word is Todd McFarlane. Does that fill the bill? Dunno… we might have to wait another ten years or so to be sure of this one, but keep those inverted crosses handy.
The following title(s) will probably be just about hitting the stands.
Youngblood #4 108 49.32%
An X-Men title that doesn’t exist yet 103 47.03%
Cerebus #300 68 31.05%
Ms. Mystic #8 36 16.44%
Tom DeFalco’s Two Fisted Adventures #6 6 2.74%
Well, let’s see. Youngblood #4, Volume 1, came out in October of 1993. However, the series is currently up to Volume 3, and there’s no #4 of that run as of yet. The X-title that doesn’t exist? The following mutant titles (culled from the December Diamond list) weren’t around ten years ago: Origin, Ultimate X-Men, X-Treme X-Men, X-Treme X-Men Savage Land, Nightcrawler, Iceman, Elektra and Wolverine Redeemer, Cable, X-Men Evolution. Cerebus #300 is about two years down the line, and man, what an achievement that’ll be. Ms. Mystic #8 has not yet, I believe, surfaced. As for Tom DeFalco’s Two Fisted Adventures, hey… scoff if you will, but they did indeed do that series. They just called it the MC2 line, that’s all.
The standard Marvel comic book is 32 pages for $1.25. Ten years from now, should there still be Marvel Comics, the standard one will be:
32 pages 99 45.21%
24 pages 53 24.20%
16 pages 38 17.35%
48 pages 20 9.13%
64 pages 3 1.37%
A disc 3 1.37%
And will cost:
$2.50 80 36.53%
$3.95 40 18.26%
1500 yen 16 7.31%
$1.75 12 5.48%
$2.95 4 1.83%
$4.95 4 1.83%
$5.00 4 1.83%
$2.00 4 1.83%
$10.00 3 1.37%
$1.00 2 0.91%
$1.25 2 0.91%
$1.50 2 0.91%
$3.75 2 0.91%
Well, now how about that. No one got it right. No, not even the folks who thought the average book would be 1500 yen (which is about eleven and a half bucks American, in case you were wondering.) A good chunk of you intuited that the 32 page package would remain the format of choice, but you foresaw an increase of 100 percent in cover price, and that hasn’t happened. Not exactly, at any rate. These days prices are all over the map, true. But the average—or I guess we should say “typical”—Marvel Comic goes for $2.25. Only a couple of ongoing monthlies have reached the rarefied heights of $2.50, including Captain Marvel (which couldn’t possibly have any correlation with the staggeringly difficult uphill climb sales on this book have had, right?)
We’ll wrap up this view from the past of the future of the past next week.
(Peter David can be written to at P.O. Box 239, Bayport, NY 11705.)
Peter David's Blog
- Peter David's profile
- 1356 followers
