In your face Quesada!t:
I don't think Slott's writing matters at all in regard to the Marriage debate. His stories could have/would have been just as good if Peter were married. That's the whole problem... the marriage has nothing to do with quality of books, it's the writer that makes it good regardless.
I'm not surprised by the results... most people that read or have read Spider-Man grew up with a married one, so the votes will go that way...
However, it'd be interesting to see how many people voted "married" that have read little to no stories post-OMD... if you take those peopel out of the equation...
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I don't think Slott's writing matters at all in regard to the Marriage debate. His stories could have/would have been just as good if Peter were married. That's the whole problem... the marriage has nothing to do with quality of books, it's the writer that makes it good regardless.
That's a much smaller difference in the percentages than I was expecting--closer to the results from the 2009 poll the writer mentions. By that measure, it seems like the post-"OMD" stories are doing something right, since they seem to be changing a lot of people's minds. So... in all of us marriage fans' faces, I guess.In your face Quesada!t:
And the writing done between 1987 to OMD doesn't matter either. If they weren't married those same stories could have been told too. So, really all it boils down to is good writing and not whether the main character is married or not.
Because I hated the Mary Jane character ever since I started reading Spider-Man back in 1992/1993. Didn't really start liking her until recently, during Slott's run. So...it is all about writing. Not whether they are married or not.![]()
And you should also ask how many people voted "single" who have read little to no stories post-OMD, to be fair and honest, if you seek to eliminate the "married" voters from the equation.
Well said. Was it sad to see the marriage go? Absoloutely, but Since BND (yes, as far back as that), ASM has been a "winning" streak, if you ask me. It's been so much fun the past few years and the stories are just fantastic overall. I look foward to what 2012 has in store for Spidey withI looked at One More Day as Spider-Man's really crappy version of Crisis on Infinite Earths. It was basically a soft reboot. You don't have to like it but, honestly, right now...since the beginning of Dan Slott's Big Time run...you, and a lot of the other haters of Spider-Man because of OMD, are REALLY hurting themselves by ripping themselves off by really awesome Spider-Man stories.
Didn't he already return as a decrepit near-corpse in a cocoon with his arms doing all the work?
Didn't he already return as a decrepit near-corpse in a cocoon with his arms doing all the work?
Well, Ock's been building towards something big since his return in ASM issue 600. It's going to come full circle in 2012.
I doubt if they had killed her or they divorced a lot of the fans would still feel the same way. I think breaking up Peter and Mary Jane put a lot of sour into a lot of peoples mouth's so no matter how it was done it still would have had the same outcome with certain fans.
You don't have to like it but, honestly, right now...since the beginning of Dan Slott's Big Time run...you, and a lot of the other haters of Spider-Man because of OMD, are REALLY hurting themselves by ripping themselves off by really awesome Spider-Man stories.
Sure... I'd take that anytime...
Then you could eliminate the thousands of "married" voters who have barely read Spider-Man since OMD versus the 10 or 20 "single" voters that have barely read Spider-Man since OMD...
You have a lot of posters on this very board that admit to either never reading Spider-Man since OMD or have barely read it... TheCorpulent1 & random havoc being two of the former and JewHobbit being the latter... and that's off the top of my head...
An WHY oh WHY would someone vote that they prefer "single" anthen STOP reading Spider-Man since BND began... that just doesn't make any sense...
However, like I said initially... I'll take those eliminated voters anytime...
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Themanofbat said:I'm so &^%$#E&^$E^&%ing tired about these "man-child" comments... most of which came from stories in 2008, BND's first year.... I don't really believe you really see that in ASM anymore... now in Bendis' Avengers' books, that's a different story... in fact, I'd like for anyone to show me "5 man child" references in the last 2 years... should be simple enough if that's how Peter is now portrayed...
Show me... I dare you.
And if I'm wrong, I will eat whatever crow comes my way.
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I barely remember what I've read of Big Time but a few off the top of my head:
1) Fart jokes
2) Inability to trust and commit himself to Carlie (which is why she left him)
3) Broke and looking to bum a place to stay (yes, this was remodied but don't act like it's the last time it'll happen... Spectre of Spider-Man and all that)
4) A naive belief that he can enforce the "no one dies" rule after Martha died (come on, that's childish)
Well, that's all I can think of but that's pretty good being that it was only 6 months worth and all from memory. Anyone else got one from the other year and a half I didn't read?
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1) Fart jokes as Spider-Man or Peter Parker? Big difference.
2) C'mon... you expect Peter to just "give away" his identity whenever he gets "serious" with a woman? If anything, Peter's past is plenty of reasons to keep his identity secret...
and as far as unwilling to commit to a relationship, remember, he's coming off a long 5 years with one woman, so maybe he's nervous about jumping back on the horse (no pun intended)... and how is that acting like a man-child? If having anxieties or being neurotic is somehow aking to being a man-child, then I've got news for ya Bub... we'reAeLL man-children.
3) I did say in the last 2 years, so I guess Peter was broke last year.. .though I have no recollection of him looking for a place to stay...![]()
4)What you may think of as "childish", it's part of Peter being angry that somebody he knew and cared for died because he's Spider-Man... yes, perhaps the promise is one that he can never possibly keep, but why is it childish to make such a promise when he's GRIEVING?!?!?!?
I barely remember what I've read of Big Time but a few off the top of my head:
1) Fart jokes
2) Inability to trust and commit himself to Carlie (which is why she left him)
3) Broke and looking to bum a place to stay (yes, this was remodied but don't act like it's the last time it'll happen... Spectre of Spider-Man and all that)
4) A naive belief that he can enforce the "no one dies" rule after Martha died (come on, that's childish)
Well, that's all I can think of but that's pretty good being that it was only 6 months worth and all from memory. Anyone else got one from the other year and a half I didn't read?
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I'm so &^%$#E&^$E^&%ing tired about these "man-child" comments... most of which came from stories in 2008, BND's first year.... I don't really believe you really see that in ASM anymore... now in Bendis' Avengers' books, that's a different story... in fact, I'd like for anyone to show me "5 man child" references in the last 2 years... should be simple enough if that's how Peter is now portrayed...
Show me... I dare you.
And if I'm wrong, I will eat whatever crow comes my way.
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Then he's being unresponsible in bringing her into the dangers of his life without preparing her... which is also childish.
But the thing is, i come from the era of J.M. Dematteis and his interpretation of Spiderman which was a more mature interpretation i think. And JMS had a similar style to Dematteis' so, I think i was just too used to this kind of spider-man.