Kevin Feige gives more hints Marvel movies could take the SJW direction of the comics
Kevin Feige on diversity: 'It's something that is necessary to continue to tell stories. You don't want to look around the room and see everybody looks like you. It is detrimental to the project'— Digital LA (@DigitalLA) June 9, 2018
He adds: There are more women on the track to leadership at Marvel #ProducedBy2018
Audience question: Marvel has had men directors for its past 20 some movies. Can the next 20 feature women to balance?— Digital LA (@DigitalLA) June 9, 2018
KF: I can't promise you that all 20 future Marvel movies will have women directors, but a lot of them will @producersguild #ProducedBy2018 #ProducedBy
Which misses the point talent is what matters, not diversity of race and gender. But, it gets worse as he apparently repeated the same troubling comments during his recent BBC interview:
On Miss Marvel after Capitan Marvel: We wanted to get Captain Marvel out there first so that there is something for a young Muslim girl to get inspired by - Kevin Feige @producersguild #ProducedBy2018 #ProducedBy pic.twitter.com/VScZpAFRjP— Digital LA (@DigitalLA) June 9, 2018
So, how come no interest in what a Judeo/Christian girl might be inspired by? Does he also know religion's not the same as race or ethnicity? Also, interesting they use a picture of Carol Danvers as Capt. Marvel from before the stories where she was denigrated and made to look more masculine. Anybody who cherishes Carol as the lady she truly was who finds out the terrible misdeeds done to her by crude artists and editors could wind up feeling very discouraged.
And then:
What next after Avengers IW2? Kevin Feige says he is working on:— Digital LA (@DigitalLA) June 9, 2018
- Continuing stories of characters you're familiar with
- Different incarnations of characters you know
- Introducing completely new characters you never heard of before (unless ur a comics fan) #ProducedBy2018
The takeaway from this is that the filming studio plans to mimic Marvel's social justice pandering by replacing some of the flagship protagonists with the "diverse" jokes of characters they conceived in the past few years. Why should anyone care about those either?
This suggests Feige and the movie division may be planning to go the SJW route more than we think, as Disney already did with Star Wars under Kathleen Kennedy's oversight, and I've got a feeling this could mark the moment where their film fortunes begin to dwindle. Why do they think the audience is suddenly going to embrace any social justice tactics they may have in mind? If it's not working with Star Wars by now, it won't work with their productions either, and it's not working with Marvel's continued SJW-pandering in the comics even now. That Marvel's still going this route underscores the fact that the fight against SJW propaganda is not over, and their antics are going to cost them big time sooner or later.
Labels: Avengers, islam and jihad, marvel comics, msm propaganda, politics
The SJWs want to destroy Marvel's successful movie franchise, just as they have ruined Star Wars. Just as they have ruined the Boy Scouts. Just as they ruin everything they touch.
Posted by Anonymous | 7:11 AM
At least Feige finally admits why the mad, if not haphazard, rush to introduce Captain Marvel in the films: to set up Miss Marvel. They'd rather have Miss Marvel, anyway, so why not skip the middleman? The Marvel films already went there with a Idris Elba!Norse God and a mulatto Valkyrie, so what's tradition at this point?
It's one thing to put out a niche comic that doesn't sell (e.g., Ms. Marvel and the recently resurrected Iceman), it's another to put out a comic film that is also meant to appeal to casual fans and normies. How many of those fans really want to see Kamala Khan? Good luck with that, Marvel Studios.
At least we had a mostly good 10 years of MCU films avoiding just enough of this. The full SJW convergence is long overdue.
Posted by Killer Moth | 10:31 AM
Kamala's fan-girl hero worship of Carol Danvers, and their later friendship, was an important element of her character in the comic book. Keeping that in the films means that they are hewing close to the comic book storyline and showing respect for the character.
Ms Marvel has made the New York Times best seller lists with the first three volumes of her trade paperbacks; that suggests the casual fans like her more than the pull list people.
Posted by Anonymous | 4:24 PM
This is "equality in outcome" and not equality of opportunity. This effectively means that Marvel et al will be putting under qualified women into slots they haven't earned and who will invariably fail - or be subsidized by the company to spread SJWism through their propagandistic comics. It also means that fewer actually talented people - actually talented WOMEN included in that - will be getting their work out there because the "diversity" slots will have been filled by the blue hairs.
Posted by Anonymous | 11:46 AM
"Ms Marvel has made the New York Times best seller lists with the first three volumes of her trade paperbacks; that suggests the casual fans like her more than the pull list people."
The New York Times Best Sellers List doesn't mean much if isn't based purely on sales. A lot of what makes it onto that list is based on what critics like.
If comics companies are making so much money at these Scholastic book fairs, then why haven't they released many more original graphic novels in that market?
There's something fishy about Ms Marvel being sold at comic shops at a loss before they break even at Scholastic book fairs. Marvel and a large number of comic book publishers want to turn their properties into "lifestyle brands", as Sana Amanat put it. Does that mean that they will make a product at a loss, if it promotes a certain ideology, I mean, "lifestyle" their parent companies are also pushing?
The majority of offerings for Scholastic graphic novels are aimed primarily at females.
Diversity almost always refers,these days, to women, women of color, and lgbt groups.
The girls first and girls only bias in children's publishing is so pervasive that insiders often quip that "boys don't read" while at the same time are frustrated that boys don't want to read books about girls and lgbt people.
"Lifestyle brand"= propaganda
Posted by Anonymous | 2:44 PM
"This also means that fewer actually talented people - actually talented WOMEN included in that - will be getting their work out there because the "diversity" slots will have been filled by the blue "
Given that so many people in the social circle of people who work in the media, arts, or publishing are far-left liberals, more diversity means it will be easier for them to hire their unemployable friends and family members.
A lack of open submissions and cutthroat competition means more nepotism.
It's easy for everyone to look over your connections and your "white privilege" when you can tout how non-white, female-I mean. feminist or gay you are, as if those things make you less privileged if you come from an affluent background.
Posted by Anonymous | 3:20 PM
Jk Rowling was published under initials rather than using her first name because publishers thought that boys would not want to read a book written by a girl. That kind of perception biases publishing; it is not always a girls-first thing.
Posted by Anonymous | 8:46 PM
"Jk Rowling was published under initials rather than using her first name because publishers thought that boys would not want to read a book written by a girl. "
This was meaningless since Harry Potter was not aimed at boys. The publisher thought the series could appeal to everyone and did not want the author's name to give readers the impression that the first HP book was "Girls' Fantasy" or "Boys' Fantasy". Nice try, though, making it look like the publishers were trying to sell a woman's writing to an all-male audience.
Posted by Anonymous | 11:59 PM
The Harry Potter publishers worked on the theory that girls would read books by men or wmoemn, but boys would not read a book by a girl. So they de-gendered her name to appeal to boys.
If nothing else, it shows that there is nto really a girls first and girls only bias in publishing.
Posted by Anonymous | 7:29 AM