Wall Banger/Comic Books: Difference between revisions

Adding new entry in the most neutral tone I could possibly muster.
m (Took out the addition of Batman Urban Legends because of inaccuracy; Tim Drake isn't gay, he's /bisexual/, which renders the complaint about "his previous relationships with girls being thrown out the window" moot.)
(Adding new entry in the most neutral tone I could possibly muster.)
 
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* If you ask someone who voted for Jason Todd to die why they voted that way, they'll usually cite his actions in Jim Starlin's "The Diplomat's Son" from Batman #424. Problem is, that story is a blatant [[Idiot Plot]]. The story opens with Jason beating down a rapist and turning him over to the police, only to discover that he's the titular diplomat's son. Yes, this is one of those stories where "diplomatic immunity" means [[Diplomatic Impunity|"diplomats can commit any atrocity they like and law enforcement is powerless to stop them,"]] so he walks. Seriously, ask any FBI agent and they could list a dozen different ways they could legally nail him. As for the rape victim, she is left alone in her apartment, with no police protection or counseling of any kind. I'm sure this won't lead to any negative outcome—oh look, the rapist just gave her a phone call threatening to come after her again and [[Driven to Suicide|she hanged herself.]] This leads to Robin confronting the rapist on a balcony, where he falls to his death and it's strongly implied that Robin pushed him. That's right, Jason Todd (allegedly) broke the [[Thou Shalt Not Kill]] rule against a [[Complete Monster]] who got away with his crimes due to a legal technicality that ''[[Conviction by Counterfactual Clue|doesn't actually exist,]]'' and that's why people wanted him to die.<ref>Nowadays it seems that fans who wanted Jason dead were actually a [[Vocal Minority]], with one person having made dozens of calls for his death and many others who wanted him to live being children at the time, so they weren't allowed to make the not-so-cheap call.</ref>
* Chuck Austen's ''Godfall: Preus Returns'' makes his "vaporizing Communion wafers" story look downright respectful by comparison. How bad is it? There is a scene with the titular racist Kryptonian ''kills women by having sex with them, and continues to do so''.
* Under writer Chuck Dixon in [[Robin Series|his own series]], Peter David's [[Young Justice (comics)|Young Justice]], and Geoff Johns' [[Teen Titants(Comic Book)|Teen Titans]], Tim Drake's Robin exhibited constant attraction to women and none for men. A lot of years and several writers later, with the character losing his focus in favour of Damian Wayne's Robin in the wider DC Universe, the character is revealed to be bisexual at the end of ''Batman: Urban Legends'' Issue 9. Many fans noticed how continuity-breaking this was with previous appearances of the character which didn't even seemed to hint at it, and Chuck Dixon himself said he never wrote the character as bi.
 
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