Motown Marvel
Crimson and Clover
- Joined
- Jun 21, 2003
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the only difference between us and sports fans is us comic dorks get laid by women all the time!
amirite?
amirite?
I can't really tell if you're agreeing or being satirical/sarcastic, so I'll take this as an opportunity to expand upon my point -- rather than direct this specifically at you.
If we're just going to speak in generalities, as everything appears on paper, there is no real difference. Yet, that reminds me of my friend the Cowboys fan, and an exchange we had. He told me at the beginning of 2010 that "The Cowboys are the best team on paper" and my prophetic response was "then Tony Romo can have fun playing paper Football in the post-season". The fact is, this doesn't play out in reality the way it does in some purely academic discussion we may have about it. I'd certainly like to say comic nerds warrant the same "respect" sports fans get, but the reality is sports are a more social activity that carries more weight and has a larger societal impact than comic books. I also have a feeling that it's just more primal for humans to worship physical competition, which may explain why sports are so popular and why comics just don't carry the same appeal.
Then again, I've never heard of an alcohol-fueled brawl breaking out at a Con, people fighting damn near to the death over whether one character is cooler than another or rioting and looting to celebrate a comic book-related achievement.
An example of that over the top fanboyism I was talking about in my previous post. Both camps have their psychotic members.Well someone did get stabbed in the eye at Comic-Con last year, but I get your point.
I think there are simply a greater number of sports fans, hell, I'm also a sports fan. Are they different? I dont really think so, I believe that comic fans are more of a minority and probably always will be so there tend to be those negative stereotypes.
Yeah, but if you're going to argue things out of reality, there really is no point is there? You can make anything you want make sense.That's the point.
The question is: Are we (comic fans) really any different from sports fanatics?
The answer is simple. No, we are not. WHAT we're fans of may be different, but the reasons we are fans and the ways we go about expressing this fandom are very similar and come from the same place.
The trees may be different, but it's the same forest.
Religion would fill that role better than comic books. I understand your point about why humans would write comics, but it is not a social activity, and doesn't carry the same weight as the thread topic.myth, story telling and art are very much apart of human heritage and as important as inspiring to be fit or belonging in a tribe. it's inspiring people to be decent, intelligent, brave, knowledgeable, worldly, etc. when you're not seeing much of that in real life people have got to learn it somewhere.
Also, not to be mean, but comic books are a very frivolous waste of time, whereas sports carry some societal weight. The Death of Superman, perhaps comics most monolithic event in terms of public awareness, pales in comparison to the impact of the 'Hail Mary' and the 'Immaculate Reception'.
Religion would fill that role better than comic books. I understand your point about why humans would write comics, but it is not a social activity, and doesn't carry the same weight as the thread topic.
The societal weight isn't 'imagined'. You may disagree that sports should be highly regarded, but the fact is they are. Any informal street poll you took would confirm this. There is no comic equivalent to the Miracle on Ice, or the reverse ALCS sweep of 2004. You can be at odds with reality all you want, but until your city goes and invests 100 million dollars to build a comic book store, you're arguing against a brick wall. There is simply nothing comics can produce that will rival what the sports world produces on a daily basis.Reading comics is no more frivolous than sitting in front of tv watching a game. Any imagined societal weight is only due to the fact that sports are much more popular.
That's not true. I recognize the difference between what categorizes as a religion and what simply remains in the realm of myth, despite being a complete non believer in all of them. Comic books certainly draw from Religion as a basis for many of their stories, but it's false equivalency to act as if the two are one in the same.the verbal form of it was social. it moved on to a new way where the best stories could reach more people, and at times when they had nothing better to do really. and if it was as popular as tv then the watercooler talk could happen about it.
also religion is indistinguishable from myth to none believers of that particular religion.
I know you and I pretty much see eye to eye on this topic, so working off of your very astute post here, I'll make a few additions. I see a lot of people here drawing parrallels like "well, sports fans where jerseys of their favorite player, and I wear Batman T-shirts" or "both know a lot about their players, and [perhaps] collect cards". I think this woefully misses the point posters like myself and amazingfantasy15 are making. What's being demonstrated through these posts is that marketing capitalizes on similar aspects of the market when appealing to their respective fans. Who honestly expects Marvel not to invest in T-Shirt sales? They'd be choking themselves off from a very lucrative market. It would be the proverbial 'cutting off your nose to spite your face'.The difference between comics and sports is one is a social activity and the other is a solo activity. You'll never seeing 100,000 people turn up to see someone write, draw or read a comic.
The difference between comics and sports is one is a social activity and the other is a solo activity. You'll never seeing 100,000 people turn up to see someone write, draw or read a comic.
The societal weight isn't 'imagined'. You may disagree that sports should be highly regarded, but the fact is they are. Any informal street poll you took would confirm this. There is no comic equivalent to the Miracle on Ice, or the reverse ALCS sweep of 2004. You can be at odds with reality all you want, but until your city goes and invests 100 million dollars to build a comic book store, you're arguing against a brick wall. There is simply nothing comics can produce that will rival what the sports world produces on a daily basis.
and where does this put me? As a guy who just got done reading my weekly comics while watching the San Diego Padres baseball game? I would love to go to comic con this year, AND I am stressing out hoping the football lockout gets resolved. weird.
Nothing's weird about liking sports and comics.As far as socially useful goes, which may not be of incredibly personal importance goes, sports is less frivolous than comic books.Heh, well I never said anything about whether sports should be highly regarded or not. That doesn't have anything to do with or change the facts about the frivolity of being a fan of either activity.
As far as socially useful goes, which may not be of incredibly personal importance goes, sports is less frivolous than comic books.
You're suggesting that the number of yards a guy runs in a game has ANY impact on society???
No...athletes can influence society...and so can artists. It is the people behind the game or comic that do that. You assume that an artist is incapable of changing the world in the same way that an athlete can...but I would suggest that artists have changed the world FAR, FAR more than athletes.
Giving superhuman, world changing powers to the idea of throwing a ball through a hoop is all the evidence I need...sports fans are lamer than comics fans.
At least comics fans realize that their interest holds no real world changing power.