On Sun, May 31, 2009 at 8:12 AM, Udhay Shankar N <ud...@pobox.com> wrote:
> Thaths wrote, [on 5/31/2009 8:32 PM]:
>>> http://popwatch.ew.com/popwatch/2009/05/comic-book-shoc.html
>> As it says on the cover: Part 1 of 6. Pre-pubescent American girls
>> will never ever accept this sort of ending. I think this is a nice
>> manufactured controversy by the publishers to increase sales.
> Obviously. Like the death of Superman, and now Batman. And the deaths of
> various characters in various TV series, all of which were eventually
> revealed to be a dream, or mistaken identity, or...

And how right we both were... and about so many things

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/06/books/06archie.html?_r=1

<Choice quotes below. Full text of article further below.>
The wedding story was written by Michael E. Uslan and illustrated by
Stan Goldberg, a longtime “Archie” artist. The first half was called
“Archie Marries Veronica,” but issue No. 603, on sale next month, is
called “Archie Marries Betty.”
...
This alternative future will be a relief to the fans who reacted
negatively to the marriage to Veronica. “The polls that I’ve seen ran
about 80/20, Betty over Veronica, with Jughead continually coming in a
strong third,” said Mr. Uslan, a comic-book historian, a longtime
“Archie” fan and a producer of the big-screen “Batman” films. Mr.
Uslan said his inspiration for the story included a film (“Sliding
Doors”), a poem (Robert Frost’s “Road Not Taken”) and a song (“Both
Sides, Now”).
...
Until the wedding story began to unfold, the core readers of “Archie”
were female, between the ages of 7 and 17, Mr. Goldwater said.
...
He estimated that the first part of the story line sold hundreds of
thousands of copies. ICV2.com, a Web site that covers the comic-book
industry, estimated comic-store sales of No. 600 at just over 54,000.
(By contrast, “Archie” No. 597 sold around 2,500 copies.) Those
numbers do not account for newsstand, supermarket and international
sales of “Archie.”
...
The response in India was especially enthusiastic, and so “Archie”
will now be printed in five languages there. Archie Comic Publications
plans to open its first international office in New Delhi next year
and is also preparing some exclusive comics for that market that will
include Indian characters.


<Full article follows>
Archie’s Destiny, as Shaped by Robert Frost

By GEORGE GENE GUSTINES
Is Archie Andrews a bigamist?

That perennially teenage redhead from Riverdale made headlines around
the world when word leaked, back in May, that he would propose to his
longtime love interest, Veronica Lodge, in issue No. 600 of the comic
that bears his name. But that issue, published in August, was only
Part 1 of a six-part story. Although Archie did marry Veronica, things
will take a turn in November, when Archie proposes to the lady in
waiting, Betty Cooper. That’s just the latest twist in the romantic
triangle that has thrust this nearly 70-year-old character, and his
parent company, into the media spotlight.

Archie, who first appeared in December 1941, has followed the course
of other comic-book characters: spinoff titles, a radio program, a
newspaper strip and a Saturday morning cartoon series. But as comic
books became graphic novels, Archie was talked about less and less. In
2007 the publishers of Archie Comic Publications introduced what they
called a “New Look” for the Archie gang, which was less cartoony, but
that experiment will end this year.

The wedding, which began as a way to celebrate the 600th issue, has
become a game changer for the company. “What the story has done is to
introduce Archie on a global level,” said Jon Goldwater, co-chief
executive of Archie Comic Publications. The company plans to roll out
new titles for international markets, pursue film and TV opportunities
and release a series of deluxe collected editions.

The wedding story was written by Michael E. Uslan and illustrated by
Stan Goldberg, a longtime “Archie” artist. The first half was called
“Archie Marries Veronica,” but issue No. 603, on sale next month, is
called “Archie Marries Betty.” The end of bachelorhood began in issue
No. 600, in which Archie found himself on a road named Memory Lane,
which he has often traveled. This time he walked a different direction
and encountered a fork in the road. He chose the left path, which
allowed him to see his future with Veronica and their twins, and
himself working for her tycoon father.

At the end of the October issue, No. 602, Archie goes for an evening
stroll and encounters the fork again. In the November issue Archie
will find himself back in Riverdale High, this time envisioning a
future with Betty as his wife. (A set of twins factors into this
destiny as well.)

This alternative future will be a relief to the fans who reacted
negatively to the marriage to Veronica. “The polls that I’ve seen ran
about 80/20, Betty over Veronica, with Jughead continually coming in a
strong third,” said Mr. Uslan, a comic-book historian, a longtime
“Archie” fan and a producer of the big-screen “Batman” films. Mr.
Uslan said his inspiration for the story included a film (“Sliding
Doors”), a poem (Robert Frost’s “Road Not Taken”) and a song (“Both
Sides, Now”).

Mr. Uslan’s relationship with Archie began in his childhood. “My mom
told me I learned to read from ‘Archie’ comics and ‘Casper,’ ” said
Mr. Uslan, now 58. Assembling the 1980 publication “The Best of
Archie” required Mr. Uslan and his colleague Jeffrey Mendel to read
every “Archie” comic ever published.

At that time Mr. Uslan met Victor Gorelick, then an editor and now
co-president and editor in chief of Archie Comic Publications. Last
October, nearly 30 years and a career away from “Archie,” Mr. Uslan
approached Mr. Gorelick about writing a milestone story. With the
comic nearing issue No. 600, and the 70th anniversary fast
approaching, the timing seemed right.

“The story arc is all about choices and consequences,” Mr. Uslan said.
“These choices don’t impact just the people getting married; they have
a butterfly effect and alter the lives of friends and family as well.”
The future is filled with the good (Moose, the often angry football
goon, discovers inner peace, thanks to yoga) and the bad (references
abound to the recession, layoffs, cutbacks and stock market losses).
But it still boils down to the girl-next-door Betty versus the
rich-and-worldly Veronica.

“Quite honestly, we thought it would have a good reaction, but this
has been overwhelming,” Mr. Goldwater said. “It has gone way, way, way
bigger than we had ever imagined.”

Until the wedding story began to unfold, the core readers of “Archie”
were female, between the ages of 7 and 17, Mr. Goldwater said. But the
new story line has multigenerational appeal, he added, with feedback
from readers indicating that the comic had been shared among parents
and children.

He estimated that the first part of the story line sold hundreds of
thousands of copies. ICV2.com, a Web site that covers the comic-book
industry, estimated comic-store sales of No. 600 at just over 54,000.
(By contrast, “Archie” No. 597 sold around 2,500 copies.) Those
numbers do not account for newsstand, supermarket and international
sales of “Archie.”

“This has really pushed ‘Archie’ into the consciousness of everyone’s
mind,” Mr. Goldwater said. The plotline was mentioned on everything
from the BBC to the “Late Show With David Letterman” to “The Rachel
Maddow Show” and in newspapers worldwide. The response in India was
especially enthusiastic, and so “Archie” will now be printed in five
languages there. Archie Comic Publications plans to open its first
international office in New Delhi next year and is also preparing some
exclusive comics for that market that will include Indian characters.

Archie and his gang may even make their way into feature films or new
animated series. The publisher recently signed with Creative Artists
Agency to represent the gang in Hollywood. On the print side, the
publisher is joining with the fellow comic-book publishers IDW and
Dark Horse for several collected editions, in softcover and hardcover.
IDW will reprint “Archie” newspaper strips, as well as best-of volumes
devoted to the work of longtime “Archie” artists like Dan DeCarlo and
Mr. Goldberg. Starting next year, Dark Horse will publish archive
editions of “Archie” that begin with his first appearance in Pep
Comics No. 22 in December 1941.

The longevity of “Archie” is something that Mr. Uslan saw reflected in
the reaction to the story. “Archie has had a place in people’s lives
for generations and generations,” he said. “People are shocked at how
much these characters still mean to them.”

And what of Archie? Is he destined to settle down with Betty or Veronica?

“I have written his final fate in one of these two futures,” Mr. Uslan
said. “Now, back in high school, it’s up to the three of them.
Everything they say, don’t say, every action they take and fail to
take, is going to add up to determine which of these two roads are
taken. And one of them will be.”


-- 
Homer: Look at these low, low prices on famous brand-name electronics!
Bart:  Don't be a sap, Dad. These are just crappy knockoffs.
Homer: Pfft. I know a genuine Panaphonics when I see it. And look, there's
       a Magnetbox and Sorny.

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