The Countdown To SDCC 2026!

George Perez

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George Pérez (June 9, 1954 – May 6, 2022), quite simply, was The Greatest Of All Time. He was was a legendary comic book artist and writer revered for his hyper-detailed, dynamic artwork, unparalleled ability to draw massive ensemble casts without overcrowding, and his dedication to humanizing superheroes. These qualities made him the perfect artist for team books. His work on Justice League, Avengers, Teen Titans, Fantastic Four, Inhumans, Ultraforce and T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents remains a master class on how it needs to be done. No one else but The Pacesetter (George's nickname bestowed upon him by Stan The Man Lee) could have drawn massive company wide crossovers like Crisis on Infinite Earths, War of the Gods, Infinity Gauntlet, Infinite Crisis and Avengers/JLA as well as he did or even at all. Anyone else would have had a nervous breakdown.

But you know, as great as that man's art was (And it was great) that's only one of the reasons he was so revered and loved by his readers. The other reason was his kindness and warm spirit which he used to create lifelong memories for countless fans all over the world. He really was one of the nicest professionals I ever met. At my first con back in 1982 he was the first pro I ever talked to face to face and I was nervous as hell. Me, the tough Navy guy who survived three deployments to Antarctica, was almost too scared to talk to a man who's work I adored since I was in my early teens. I finally screwed up the courage to walk up to the DC table. I sat my copy of Teen Titans 1 down in front of him. I stuttered like an idiot while I asked for his autograph. He just looked at me and gave me that big George Perez smile. He said "Sure thing" and signed it. I muttered "Thank you" and he just smiled again. He asked me if that was my first comic con. Gee, I wonder how he could tell? I said yes and he told me to relax, enjoy myself and have some fun. He was so damn cool.

There are two things I will always remember about George Perez, the artist and man:

1) He was always smiling. Always. Without fail. His glass was always half full and never half empty. That's exactly how he looked at life. His patience, tact and demeanor when dealing with fans was simply incredible. Every professional in this industry could have learned from him.

2) In my 40 plus years of attending SDCC, I never heard anyone say a bad word about George Perez. Never. I've heard everyone else get badmouthed. Hell, I even heard one slime ball "artist" talk smack about Jack Kirby, but that was only once and I believe it came from a place of jealousy. But George? Never. Everyone loved that man and there was a simple reason for that. He had an amazing spirit and a big heart. He was a kind, loving soul.

George Perez was inducted into the Will Eisner Hall of Fame in 2017 and there has never been anyone outside of Jack Kirby and Will Eisner himself more deserving.

I can tell ya right now I loved that man. I truly did. He and Jack Kirby are the reasons I love this art form so much. George passed away on May 6th, 2022 due to complications form pancreatic cancer. We lost a true titan. I doubt if we ever see his like again. But, just like with so many other creators we've lost over the years, his art and his legacy will live on forever.

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Mike
(8 Days Until SDCC 2026!)
 
Well phrased, SD. I agree with you totally. I always loved opening a comic and seeing that he was the artist. Met him once at a convention in Charlotte, NC. Very cordial, took a moment to speak with everyone in the long autograph line. And as you said, smiling through the whole thing.
 
It’s been a long time for the Legion. Bendis almost permanently shit the bed. He almost shit the whole mattress factory.

I’m not sure there’s a better guy to revive the LSH than Josh Williamson.
 
It’s been a long time for the Legion. Bendis almost permanently shit the bed. He almost shit the whole mattress factory.

Yeah, I'm not sure what happened there. Bendis was great at Marvel. His work on Avengers and Ultimate Spider-Man was stellar. Then he moved to DC and I was like "Uh .. what?"

I’m not sure there’s a better guy to revive the LSH than Josh Williamson.

Totally agree. Waid, Snyder, King and Williamson are the main reasons DC is in such a good place right now.
 
It turns out I missed a good many of the Retroboot Legion issues somehow so I’m going to go back and get those. Then work on finishing the original run(s).

Based solely on looks, this latest incarnation doesn’t do it for me. But, to each their own.
 
Based solely on looks, this latest incarnation doesn’t do it for me. But, to each their own.
As far as I’m concerned, there haven’t been any misses with Next Level yet except Lobo. I detest Lobo, so I don’t care if the book is actually good or not. Lobo is awful so I’m just not participating.

With any relaunch like this, we’re only seeing what they want us to see so far. Carefully controlled bits of information to tease the audience and set up the narrative. Knowing Williamson there’s at least one huge swerve in the first issue and a final page that will reset the narrative from what we were expecting. Darkseid will almost certainly play a role and maybe even set up a Great Darkness sequel.
 
Love the thread, SD! It goes without saying, but your long form stories and tidbits have always been one of my favorite frequent readings on the forums.

Since last summer, my passion for DC has slowly been reigniting itself, and these past few months it's gotten completely out of control. As a result, this summer has been almost entirely dedicated to curating and reading a selection of DC Comics alongside my girlfriend (who loves reading more than anyone I know, but is a European that doesn't know even the movie versions of these characters), with a focus on Batman, the weirdos, the creatives behind the books and their evolution, and inducing maximum emotional damage once Crisis on Infinite Earths hits.

A lot of your author coverage has helped affirm a lot of my choices! Appreciate it.

And for anyone curious what we've covered thus far, here's a list, just assume any origin and showcase issues are included by default:
  • Batman: Year One
  • Batman: The Long Halloween
  • Batman: Dark Victory
  • Robin: Year One
  • Secret Origins #20
  • Green Arrow: The Longbow Hunters
  • Green Lantern: Emerald Dawn
  • About 140 selected stories of Detective Comics, Batman, and World's Finest, prior to Batman 204 and Detective Comics 378
  • An assortment of Jay Garrick stories, covering his major villains and supporting cast
  • The Creeper v1
  • The first 9 Deadman stories
  • The Demon v1
  • The Hawk & The Dove v1
  • Aquaman solo run up to 1963, focusing down on catchup here
  • An assorted selection of The Flash, currently in 1962
  • Batman 204-onwards, Detective Comics 378-onwards, Brave and the Bold 79-onwards, and Teen Titans 1-onwards, currently at the start of 1969.
 
Love the thread, SD! It goes without saying, but your long form stories and tidbits have always been one of my favorite frequent readings on the forums.

Thank you very, very much for the kind words! They mean a lot to me, they really do. ❤️

I love your reading list! It's so very, very cool. It's great that you and your lady are reading all those wonderful stories together. As an old Silver Age guy that remembers when characters like Deadman and the Teen Titans were brand new, I find it extremely gratifying that there are fans like yourself that are discovering those stories and enjoying them.

Thank you again! 🙏
 
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Thank you very, very much for the kind words! They mean a lot to me, they really do. ❤️

I love your reading list! It's so very, very cool. It's great that you and your lady are reading all those wonderful stories together. As an old Silver Age guy that remembers when characters like Deadman and the Teen Titans were brand new, I find it extremely gratifying that there are fans like yourself that are discovering those stories and enjoying them.

Thank you again! 🙏

Of course!!

I wouldn't miss these Silver Age stories if it were the death of me! While most of my growing up was firmly built in the 90s, and Post-Crisis, my first DC passion rekindling was actually through Golden and Silve Age Aquaman, Elongated Man, and Detroit Era Justice League. I was 14-15 around then, and had been away from reading DC for a while, focusing more on Marvel for maybe two years.

This is actually my second time reading through Deadman, and for my tastes at least, it's essential reading. When in a heavily curated reading order, it plays almost perfectly as a prelude to what will later come when Adams and O'Neil jump onto Batman.

And on that note, it's also great to just see how these characters have evolved over time. With Batman especially, from that very early gothic period, into the typical formula that nearly ran itself into the ground before its rejuvenation in the New Look era. Not to say there aren't standout issues, though. Both Joe Chill stories, and Catman's poetic crimes were really solid, and characters such as The Cavalier (a lot of the reasoning behind starting here was to see the stories of these very era-specific characters) were just a lot of damn fun.

But New Look was such a breath of fresh air, even with us only having read a hundred and twenty-ish stories before it. And the near end of New Look, after the cancellation of the TV series, keeps ramping the investment up further and further. I know I'm about 30 issues of DC, TBATB, and BM away from Bronze Age, but it's already so enticing.

On Teen Titans, Bob Haney was a hard sell at first. His initial issues we read (I believe Batman & Green Lantern vs Time Commander, and Batman & The Flash vs those guys with the funny sneakers) were fun enough, albeit a tiny bit out of character for Bruce especially. Batman & Eclipso almost made us skip out on TBATB entirely, but I am incredibly glad I am not. His crossover with Deadman brought it back entirely. Besides Adams being on art duty obviously bringing it up quite a few notches, it was such a wonderful weaving of Boston and Bruce's respective origins and the aforementioned Joe Chill stories into a really compelling plot. Bruce being genuinely fascinated by the appearance of the ghost was fucking sick as well. I still feel the dialogue Haney gives everyone is a bit out of whack, but if the plotting is THAT good, I can excuse it. The Creeper issue was a lot of fun as well. I know Aparo will be another lead artist, so I suppose I'm stuck reading everything here.

That style of overly cheesy dialogue and characterization is not at all a problem with Teen Titans, though. It works in its favor, being a team of goofball teens and all, with maybe the biggest smiles I've had reading a "new" comic in a long time. Speedy issues are all a delight (and we are on him joining the team fully now), and I am an Aquaman fan, so Nick Cardy art is always someone I adore the work of as well.

Upcoming after Flash and Aquaman catchup will be New Gods. That'll be my first time as well.
 
As has already been noted in this thread, Star Trek celebrates it's 60th anniversary this year. That's noteworthy for two reasons. One, not everything lasts for 60 years. Remember Space: Above and Beyond? You probably don't and that's exactly my point. And two? Star Trek, whether it's the TV shows, the movies, the cartoons, the prose novels or the comics, is hugely popular with a large segment of fandom. "Trekkies" (Or "Trekkers" if you prefer) is what we've come to be called and that's because of our devotion to this franchise.

So why the devotion? What makes Star Trek so cool? I think Star Trek’s enduring appeal lies in its radical optimism—presenting a hopeful, post-scarcity future where humanity has overcome poverty, war, disease and prejudice. Rather than a grim dystopia, it offers an aspirational vision of space exploration, diplomacy, and the celebration of diversity. I mean, I love movies like Terminator but the harsh, apocalyptic, total end of the world stuff can get depressing. Star Trek presents a rare optimistic vision of humanity's future. Instead of dystopian ruin, it offers a future with hope. It stands out by using sci-fi to tackle complex ethical dilemmas and social issues, inspiring generations through both compelling storytelling and diverse, aspirational characters.

The diversity is key here. When the show first premiered in 1966 America was struggling with the Civil Rights movement. Then Star Trek came along and presented the viewers with an ethnically and culturally diverse cast. An African woman at communications, an Asian man at the helm, a Scotsman in charge of ship's engineering and a man from another planet as the science officer. And this was the big shocker (Yes, a bigger shock than a guy with pointed ears as second in command) there was a young Russian Ensign on board. A Russian. In the mid 1960's America and Russia were in a cold war that was pretty damn scary and getting scarier everyday. And yet here was a future with Russians and Americans working together.

I'm convinced it's that optimism ... that hope that things CAN get better if we get our shit together and work towards common goals for the good of humanity ... that has kept Star Trek alive for 60 years.

Star Trek has always been closely associated with the San Diego Comic Con, at least it certainly has in all the years I've been going. I can't think of a single cast member from any of the movies or TV shows who hasn't been out here at one time or another. Walter Koenig, the actor who played Pavel Chekov, used to wander around the dealer's room back in the 70's and 80's, buying Star Trek novels and comics. He'd stop and sign the occasional autograph. The guy was totally chill. In 2010 I think it was, I bumped into Zachary Quinto at a convenience store on First Avenue. I mean I literally bumped into him. He was going out and I was going in. I started to apologize and I was shocked when I saw it was him. He was awesome and so cool.

I mean, when I look back and think about all the panels, the premieres, the offsite events, the Hall H Presentations, the cosplay and the Trek themed parties then i know there can be no doubt about Star Trek's lasting influence on our culture. And I think that's a great thing.

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Mike
(7 Days Until SDCC 2026!)
 
Of course!!

I wouldn't miss these Silver Age stories if it were the death of me! While most of my growing up was firmly built in the 90s, and Post-Crisis, my first DC passion rekindling was actually through Golden and Silve Age Aquaman, Elongated Man, and Detroit Era Justice League. I was 14-15 around then, and had been away from reading DC for a while, focusing more on Marvel for maybe two years.

This is actually my second time reading through Deadman, and for my tastes at least, it's essential reading. When in a heavily curated reading order, it plays almost perfectly as a prelude to what will later come when Adams and O'Neil jump onto Batman.

And on that note, it's also great to just see how these characters have evolved over time. With Batman especially, from that very early gothic period, into the typical formula that nearly ran itself into the ground before its rejuvenation in the New Look era. Not to say there aren't standout issues, though. Both Joe Chill stories, and Catman's poetic crimes were really solid, and characters such as The Cavalier (a lot of the reasoning behind starting here was to see the stories of these very era-specific characters) were just a lot of damn fun.

But New Look was such a breath of fresh air, even with us only having read a hundred and twenty-ish stories before it. And the near end of New Look, after the cancellation of the TV series, keeps ramping the investment up further and further. I know I'm about 30 issues of DC, TBATB, and BM away from Bronze Age, but it's already so enticing.

On Teen Titans, Bob Haney was a hard sell at first. His initial issues we read (I believe Batman & Green Lantern vs Time Commander, and Batman & The Flash vs those guys with the funny sneakers) were fun enough, albeit a tiny bit out of character for Bruce especially. Batman & Eclipso almost made us skip out on TBATB entirely, but I am incredibly glad I am not. His crossover with Deadman brought it back entirely. Besides Adams being on art duty obviously bringing it up quite a few notches, it was such a wonderful weaving of Boston and Bruce's respective origins and the aforementioned Joe Chill stories into a really compelling plot. Bruce being genuinely fascinated by the appearance of the ghost was fucking sick as well. I still feel the dialogue Haney gives everyone is a bit out of whack, but if the plotting is THAT good, I can excuse it. The Creeper issue was a lot of fun as well. I know Aparo will be another lead artist, so I suppose I'm stuck reading everything here.

That style of overly cheesy dialogue and characterization is not at all a problem with Teen Titans, though. It works in its favor, being a team of goofball teens and all, with maybe the biggest smiles I've had reading a "new" comic in a long time. Speedy issues are all a delight (and we are on him joining the team fully now), and I am an Aquaman fan, so Nick Cardy art is always someone I adore the work of as well.

Upcoming after Flash and Aquaman catchup will be New Gods. That'll be my first time as well.

Wow. That was a great post. I got a big ol' smile on my face from reading that. Thank you!

I predict you're going to really enjoy the New Gods. After you're done, read the Hunger Dogs graphic novel. 15 years after he started it, Kirby was able to put the finishing touches on his epic.

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Enjoy!
 
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