I'm not trying to justify anything. ThePhantasm did nothing wrong critiquing the way you post. Nor did I for agreeing with him. I said I believe you are most likely trying to be friendly posting that way but it's not necessary and comes across as very false. That's not a personal insult. Your posting style was criticized, not you, your family, or your best friend. So don't try and play the victim.
It's no different to critiquing someone for posting in huge chunks of text rather than using paragraphs.
The reason it is not as iconic as Elfman's is because it's just a Saturday morning cartoon. It can't compete with a cultural phenomenon movie for iconic status like that. That's why it's not referent. Something being more famous doesn't make it better.
You listened to the MOTP score and you don't think it's better than Elfman's. So what? I already knew that. Is this suppose to be some new revelation that proves something?
Find me some examples pre 2002 where it was referenced in pop culture like it is since Raimi's movies came out.
Hi there, The Joker.

There's plenty of Saturday morning cartoons whose themes are highly recognizable, even to people who haven't seen those shows. GI Joe, He-Man and the Masters of the Universe, Thundercats, Transformers, The Flintstones, The Smurfs, Inspector Gadget, Scooby Doo, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. BTAS is not one of them. Walker's score seems to be too close to Elfman's to be its own thing. But being a Saturday morning cartoon doesn't stop a composer to make a highly recognizable iconic theme.
You think BTAS is infinitely superior to Burton's movies, then why wasn't its impact bigger when Mask of the Phantasm was released theatrically? Your opinion seems to be in a minority here.
About Spider-man theme: before 2002, plenty of musicians and video games took the 1967 Spider-man theme. Michael Bublé in 2001, Brian May reinterpreted the theme for the 1995 BBC Radio 1 serial, Moxy Früvous in the 1993 album Bargainville, the Mr. T Experience on their 1989 album Big Black Bugs Bleed Blue Blood, Gilman Street punk band Stikky on their 1988 EP Cuddle, the Ramones in 1995, Nintendo of America also parodied the song in a Bomberman 64 commercial during the 1997 holiday season, Jazz Trumpeter Woody Shaw recorded the theme in 1983, Big John Bates covered the song in 2001.In the 1992 video game Spider-Man and the X-Men in Arcade's Revenge for the Super Nintendo and Sega Genesis, a distinct musical reference to the first line of the song can be heard at the 1:50 mark in the music for the levels featuring Spider-Man. Nintendo of America also parodied the song in a Bomberman 64 commercial during the 1997 holiday season. On the syndicated radio program, The John Boy and Billy Big Show, a recurring segment called Married Man uses a parody of the Spider-Man theme as its theme song. But the biggest one: Sam Raimi. Why would he include the old theme if it was just a Saturday morning cartoon one? Raimi chose it because the impact of the theme was bigger than any other, no matter if it was "just" a cartoon and the 1994 series was more popular.
Not bad for a Saturday morning cartoon, huh? Certainly bigger than Walker's theme impact. Not even Elfman's new Spider-man theme could beat that, so it's not like a hugely successful franchise that's more famous than a Saturday morning cartoon is enough to make a theme iconic.
Ah, yes. I heard the Mask of the Phantasm score. You never know. I might as well have found something of the quality of some of Elfman's egergy and icon nature, sadly I didn't. But I still don't know what your opinion that Walker topped Elfman is based on?

Cheers.
BTAS used the Elfman theme in the opening and closing credits for several seasons. It was late in the game that they decided to allow Shirley Walker's theme to shine (again, roughly after MOTP). So the popularity of the series "spawning" a theme that would be a referent for Batman had nothing to do with it, since for a long while they were contractually obligated to use the Elfman theme anyways.
Hi, ThePhantasm. Mask of the Phantasm was a huge chance for everyone involved in BTAS, Walker included. Not many cartoons have a shot at the big screen. Then they had another chance with The New Batman Adventures (five years after Elfman's theme had stopped being the official Batman movies theme). But it didn't have the impact Elfman's theme had, even when Zimmer took over for a whole new trilogy that's currently considered more successful. I think it was Zimmer himself who said once that people kept asking him to make a more Elfman-esque thme for Nolan movies. That's a testamet of Elfman's theme influence. And that's saying nothing bad about Walker.
Hey, you didn't start your reply to me with "Hi theShape" and that really hurt my feelings.
Hey, theShape.

Your feelings were hurt because you're a shiny little butterfly in a cruel dark world.

Never change. I'm sorry I didn't put a smiley face to you.
How? She built her entire BTAS, and MOTP score off Elfman's Batman '89 template. Anyway, If I were to rank them:
Hello, WingedAvenger.

That's what I've been saying for a while. I thought it was fairly obvious. Cheers.