Monday, January 24, 2022

Bleeding Fool

Bleeding Fool


Facebook and Reddit Just Censored Mike Baron’s Pro-Cop Graphic Novel

Posted: 24 Jan 2022 07:10 AM PST

 

Mike Baron is an Eisner award winning comic book writer and novelist, and was the longest running writer on The Punisher for Marvel Comics, crafting the popular vigilante’s stories for over 5 years. But in today’s culture, the biggest comicbook publisher in the world is trying to soften the Punisher’s image, while Baron’s newest works are being censored on some of the internet’s biggest forums and social media platforms by thin-skinned, dishonest, anonymous moderators who simply don’t agree with Baron’s support for police, or his conservative viewpoints.

 

Baron’s latest work, and the comic that’s being censored is called Thin Blue Line, a 64 page graphic novel whose protagonist is a Hispanic single mother known as Officer Valeria Baca, a well-meaning cop that has to deal with protecting her city’s mayor during a harrowing night of mayhem and madness as agent provocateurs exploit a police shooting to start rioting and pillaging her community. Over the course of the story, she deals with violent gangs, left wing rioters, right wing militia, and corruption at the highest levels of governance. Basically it’s a story ripped right from today’s headlines.

 

 

When Mike and his team went the traditional route to get the book published, they were met with extreme prejudice and outright obscene rejections from indie publishers and comic book media outlets. So Baron returned to crowdfunding where he has experienced success before, notably with his humorous Florida Man comic. The Thin Blue Line creative team launched an Indiegogo campaign which was boosted by YouTube appearances on CG Kings with other livestreams that quickly brought some much-needed attention to the project. But what really elevated the campaign was Baron’s recent appearance on January 9th when he was interviewed on FOX News Sunday on the occasion of National Law Enforcement Appreciation Day.

 

YouTube Video

 

Following the interview, Thin Blue Line’s fundraising soared on Indiegogo, and its newly launched companion campaign on Kickstarter did so well it quickly became the number one graphic novel on the platform, and remained in that position for several days after. In order to take advantage of the publicity and momentum, the creative team began sharing posts on social media and forums linking to the FOX News interview and other supportive articles about the book from Law Enforcement Today, Bounding Into Comics, Just the News, and The Federalist.

 

 

But remarkably, much like a similar promotional post about his Florida Man graphic novel were banned from Reddit back in 2020, cross-posting a link to an article about Thin Blue Line from the Geeks & Gamers subreddit was also met with a ban from an anonymous moderator. Their reasoning? “Misinformation and racism.” 

 

 

The comics subreddit has over 1.7 Million subscribers, and is the biggest comics-related forum on the web. According to the subreddit’s own community guidelines, crossposting a link to Baron’s interview about his comic did not break any rule

 

 

The campaign manager reached out to the subreddit’s moderation for clarification on what they had determined was the “misinformation” or “racism” in the link, but rather than responding to the query, the moderators then had the audacity to ban them from even communicating with the moderators for 28 days. 

 

 

This censorship follows a similar back and forth the team experienced with Facebook Meta. Over the weekend, the social media giant rejected their advertisements for the book. Facebook’s approval team would not permit the ad below because they determined it was about “sensitive social issues that could influence public opinion.” When the creative team tried to appeal Facebook’s decision, it was rejected it a second time. 

 

 

 

The creative team elevated their appeal yesterday, with the campaign manager (BF’s own editor in chief Chris Braly) sending in several requested documents required by the platform to create an official disclaimer for their advertising, which Facebook says is now required for all “political advertising”. The process can take several days, but their crowdfunding campaigns are scheduled to end in just over a week, so time is of the essence in their decision.

 

So far, the team has not posted anything about this on their Facebook page at the time of this report.

 

 

This chilling trend of stifling free expression of conservatives is nothing new. More and more companies and influencers are being censored, banned, and kicked off platforms for thought-crimes, while the platforms’ users are getting a warped idea of the world because the information that they interact with is being curated by radicals. The moderators that control the content are controlling reality, and that's what these tech companies and their minions have control over. How can conservatives combat this? 

 

For more on this story, check out Bounding Into Comics’ reporting here. And you can also check out the campaigns for the banned Thin Blue Line at either Kickstarter or Indiegogo before they end in the next ten days.

The post Facebook and Reddit Just Censored Mike Baron’s Pro-Cop Graphic Novel appeared first on Bleeding Fool.

Gender Swapping Zorro & The Rocketeer is a Tired, Unoriginal Stunt

Posted: 24 Jan 2022 06:15 AM PST

 

Warner Todd Huston at Breitbart announced the pretentious CW network is remaking the classic Zorro tales (which were to some extent an influence for Batman) by changing the protagonist from male to female:

 

Filmmaker Robert Rodriguez is developing an updated, gender-swapped version of the classic old southwest vigilante tale Zorro for the CW network.

[…] Created in 1919 by American writer Johnston McCulley, until now, the story has always featured a man in the eponymous role of Zorro, i.e. "The Fox." But along with writer-director Rebecca Rodriguez and Sean Tretta, Robert Rodriguez is planning a new, female-led Zorro in association with Howard T. Owens' Propagate, CBS Studios, and the CW Network, according to Variety.

 

Now, here’s where the new take on McCulley’s tale seems to really differ from the original premise:

 

This Rodriguez iteration features "a young Latinx woman seeking vengeance for her father's murder joins a secret society and adopts the outlaw persona of Zorro."

 

No matter what the secondary status of women at the time in the 19th century, it’s still odd they want to make it look like, in contrast to Don Diego de la Vega, this new female protagonist isn’t well off financially, to the point she’d join a secret society, whereas in the live action film and TV programs I’d seen years before based on the tale, Vega usually worked independently (IIRC, he had a mute servant at his estate providing assistance), without being part of secret societies. So what good is this as a result? It reeks of another product that can’t seem to decide whether it wants to take a surreal approach, or a more “realistic” one. And why do they keep using a slang that’s not popular for promotion?

 

The report also notes:

 

There are also several other gender-swapped films in the planning stages, including a female Thor currently set to star Natalie Portman, who is finally coming back to the Marvel movie scene after refusing to reprise her Jane Foster role in the past few films. Disney has also been looking to re-boot the 1991 film, The Rocketeer, but starring a black female lead instead of the white male of the original movie and the comic book upon which it was based. Also there are plans for a remake of 1984's Splash, as well, but instead of a man meeting a mermaid, the film is to feature a woman meeting a merman.

 

According to Midwest Film Journal, the new Rocketeer-based project may be about a Black lady pilot trying to defend the device during the Cold War, but it wouldn’t shock me one bit if any such production turns out to be flooded with political correctness to the point where even that much wouldn’t work (besides, how many films and TV shows today make a convincing case against communism?). Something tells me the 1991 adaptation of the late David Stevens’ comic wouldn’t be made today, based on his doing cheesecake artwork (he once lamented in a TwoMorrows interview that Disney Corp. dumbed down everything because all they really cared about was toy merchandise sales), and most modern artists don’t admire his style these days, which is the saddest takeaway as it is.

 

 

It’s vital to note the CW network, according to the Wall Street Journal, as reported by Bounding Into Comics, is now on the verge of being sold off because of its collapsing ratings, as the superhero fare they’ve produced is clearly not delivering anymore. So, what good does it do to produce a gender-swapped Zorro if chances are it’ll be as PC as anything else they’ve broadcast to date?

 

 

Originally published here.

 

The post Gender Swapping Zorro & The Rocketeer is a Tired, Unoriginal Stunt appeared first on Bleeding Fool.

Lucasfilm Quietly Drops Previously Announced Anti-Cop Film Project

Posted: 24 Jan 2022 04:45 AM PST

 

It was recently reported by Deadline that Paramount Pictures has acquired the rights to develop a trilogy of films based on Tomi Adeyemi's bestselling novel Children of Blood and Bone. As Itchy Bacca reported back in late 2020, Lucasfilm had the rights and was developing the anti-police fantasy film project.

 

Disney decided to let the rights lapse, leading to a bidding war between studios like Universal, Amazon, and Netflix, but Paramount won out. The offer included a seven-figure screenwriting guarantee for Adeyemi, as well as a guaranteed theatrical release. Adeyemi will also be writing the screenplay and executive producing the film, giving her immense creative control over the adaptation of her book.

 

When Itchy reviewed the Adeyemi's Twitter feed, he found several troubling posts that support the idea that the writer is a cop-hating racist.

 

 

He also found that she seems to have a problem with police.

 

 

 

While those are the author's personal feelings, reviews of Tomi's book on Amazon reveal how anti-cop the books actually are.

 

 

 

 

 

 

It's unclear why exactly Lucasfilm let the rights to this project lapse, especially given the considerable interest it has drawn from other interested studios, but I would guess that production delays and other factors related to the Covid-19 pandemic could easily be to blame. Plus, I wouldn't be surprised if Adeyemi's involvement was a significant factor as well, given that she'll now be writing and executive producing the movie. Regardless, this is one less project in the works at Lucasfilm, and it was a rare non-Star Wars one at that. With Indiana Jones 5 and the Willow series coming there are other non-Star Wars projects in the works from the studio, but it remains (and will always be) mostly focused on its premier franchise.

The post Lucasfilm Quietly Drops Previously Announced Anti-Cop Film Project appeared first on Bleeding Fool.

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