Tag Archives: john mccain

Obama and McCain Both Want to be Batman, What Does that Say About Them?

The St. Louis Dispatch runs an excellent commentary about about Entertainment Weekly’s recent interview with Presidential candidates Barack Obama and John McCain.  In the EW interview both candidates chose Batman as the super hero they’d most like to be.

In it the author Jonathan Keim dissects what makes Batman tick.  He is in fact a vigilante who works outside of the law.  He would be the first to ignore the Constitution and the rights it entails, but also does have a moral code and line of which he won’t cross.  McCain sites Batman’s fight for justice against the odds while Obama mentions his humanness (he also likes Spiderman for the same reason).  Both candidates admire a character for two different reasons.

Is this the comic book hero to admire though?  As mentioned above, he works outside the law in an almost Machiavellian way.  His is the law and enforcement we know exists but choose to ignore until it affects us.  President Bush’s expansion of FISA, and the trampling of our Constitutional rights and due process are the real world equivalent of a masked vigilante.  Both candidates endorse the FISA program.

Is there a better super hero to admire?  One with god like powers who chooses not to abuse them?  One that follows the law?  One who shows human frailties?  Green Lantern might be a better choice, maybe Superman.

My choice would be Captain America, a man who defends his country when needed and questions it when it’s wrong.  A person who served his nation and inspired people not just in comics, but the real world, to serve as well.  And in the comics world, stood up against it’s equivalent of FISA and National ID cards.  Spiderman didn’t even do that.

Maybe the real answer from the candidates required even less thought and was whatever comic book movie was playing in the theater that month….

Are Obama and McCain Skrulls? Can We Trust Them?

From Secret Invasion #5, this spread depicts the Skrulls informing Earth that they’ve been invaded for their own good.  Marvel made sure to include some of the important politicos of our time, Barack Obama, John McCain, and even Steven Colbert (notice the Colbert ’08 sign in the center).

IGN asked Marvel’s Executive Editor Tom Brevoort about this:


IGN Comics: There’s generally been a trend in comics not to show politicians for fear of dating comics to a particular era. Yet the double-page spread shows many real life people, including Barack Obama and John McCain. Any particular reason for this or was that simply the preference of Brian Bendis and Leinil Yu?

Brevoort: I certainly understand the concerns about not wanting the work to date, but at the same time, if you’re trying to tell a story set in the here-and-now, and one with some relevance to the world the readers live in, you’ve got to represent that world accurately, as it is.  Those specific character choices were Leinil’s—Brian’s script was more general.

Have fun looking at the spread and all of the individuals depicted!

Which Superhero Would You Be?

Entertainment Weekly hits the Republican and Democratic Presidential candidates with the hard thought provoking question, “which superhero would you be”. Overall, a nice q&a for both candidates about their pop culture habits, and some answers I wouldn’t expect.

If you could be any superhero, which superhero would you be?

Barack Obama: I was always into the Spider-Man/Batman model. The guys who have too many powers, like Superman, that always made me think they weren’t really earning their superhero status. It’s a little too easy. Whereas Spider-Man and Batman, they have some inner turmoil. They get knocked around a little bit.

John McCain: Batman. He does justice sometimes against insurmountable odds. And he doesn’t make his good works known to a lot of people, so a lot of people think he’s just a rich playboy.

IDW Covers the Presidential Candidates

At Comic-Con 08 comic publisher IDW announced they’ll be publishing biographies of the Democratic and Republican Presidential nominees. Two one-shots will focus on the lives of the two candidates leading up to their clinching their respective nominations (possibly leaving the general election up for future issues?).

The New York Time’s blog, The Caucus, reports Barack Obama’s comic will be written by Jeff Mariotte while John McCain’s issue will be written by Andy Helfer. The covers are drawn by Gen13 artist J. Scott Campbell.

As ComicBookResources.com correctly points out biography comics aren’t a new phenomenon as comics in the past have covered Ronald Reagan, Pope John Paul II, Malcom X, and many more.

The comics will go on sale October 1, and will be available online at presidentialcomics.com.

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