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Don't forget to subscribe to the channel and like the video! Thinking Critical Comic Book Podcast is live on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Podbean, Spotify, Amazon Music/Audible, TuneIn + Alexa, iHeartRadio, PlayerFM and Listen Notes. Link: thinkingcriticalcomicbooks.podbean.com Support Thinking Critical at Ko-fi. Monthly subscriptions receive bonus content and early access to some channel content. Ko-fi.com/thinkingcritical Thank you for supporting the channel! Thinking Critical Discord: / discord Twitch Channel / thinking_critical_yt Dark Horse promises ‘It’s not just straight white boy comics anymore’ https://www.polygon.com/sdcc/22592007... Billed as a look at the future for one of the industry’s leading independent publishers, the 35 Years of Dark Horse: Past and Present panel at San Diego Comic-Con 2021 proved to be just as much a celebration of the medium and its evolution in the three and a half decades past. Hosted by Dark Horse publicity maven Kate Jay, the panel was made up of writers Roye Okupe, Cullen Bunn, Christopher Golden, and Faith Erin Hicks, as well as one of the most important figures in mainstream U.S. comics, editor Karen Berger, whose Berger Books imprint launched at the publisher in 2019. Berger held court about her history in the industry, explaining that she was initially hired at DC Comics thanks to an interview set up in the early 1980s by a friend — writer J.M. DeMatteis — even though she wouldn’t have classified herself as a comic book fan. After working on a number of titles, including DC’s horror anthologies, she explained, “I fell in love with the medium, I love the collaborative aspect of creating comics,” although she said that her lack of early fandom was what allowed her to become the editor that she did. “I gravitated toward comics that weren’t male power fantasies,” she said, adding, “I was able to look at the medium and ask, ‘why aren’t we doing stories about real life?’” The result of this line of thought proved to be DC’s much-missed Vertigo line, which Berger founded in 1993 and headed up until 2013. As the creators discussed the future of comics, all agreed that an increased focus on diversity — in terms of characters and creators — was what excited them all the most. As Berger put it, “it’s not just straight white boy comics anymore.” #comicbooks #karenberger #darkhorse Contact Thinking Critical: Twitter: / wes_from_tc Email [email protected]