And that is why he said what he said, because anything else woudl have incriminated it.
Because he was proud of the work on an artistic basis? Because he believed editorial sabotaged them to an extent?
Heck, because it was the truth?
Saying that DC wasn't satisfied with sales on GL is obviously true. Saying that these sales wouldn't have been perfectly fine for a title like Jonah Hex, with different expectations, is something else.
It is obvious that you do not know what you are talking about. There is a saying that goes "if it ain't broke don't fix it". Why would DC allow such a drastic change to the Green Lantern franchise if its sales were a solid seller (you ever ask yourself that question)? From what I remember his sales were pretty poor (as were the sales of the titles of some of the other popular DC characters - expecially Superman).
This article by comic book collector, Dave Geiber vindicates what I have been posting: the fact that Green Lantern's sales were slumping in the 1990's which is what influenced the decision made by editor, Kevin Dooley to make the changes that he did. It is pretty much what I read back then in other articles, so you can't tell me that myth about his sales being solid.
That article has no numbers. That article proves nothing.
Heck, nobody disputes that GL wasn't a best seller at the time. But nobody has ever suggested that if Hal Jordan wasn't replaced that the book would have been cancelled either.
And, you remember wrong in regards to Superman. The Death of Superman and followup moved a ton of comics. 1993 was a record year for comics at the time and Superman was a big part of it. Also Knightfall. And the Clone Saga.
Everything I've read indicated that GL was a solid mid-tier title. Probably the weakest of the Big 5 at the time, but also able to support multiple books, GL, Guy Gardner, Mosaic, GL Quarterly, a couple of Emerald Dawn mini-series, which must have been popular as it created the demand for a sequel, and feed out supporting characters to other titles. If GL was so unpopular, as you claim, how come there were so many series and sequels?
But, DC had revamped Superman, Batman, Flash, Wonder Woman, Green Arrow, and Hawkman in the 1980s. All with some success. GL was the next logical title for that makeover with the goals of higher sales. (And Marvel would bring over Liefeld, Lee, and others from Image in a few years to revamp FF, Captain America, Iron Man, etc.)
And, the results are mixed. Emerald Twilight was a sales success and that carried over to Kyle Rayner for a while, but GL was never the success in that period that Batman, Spawn, Wolverine, and Spider-Man were enjoying. (Or the long term critical success of Sandman or Starman, books that are still in print.) Or the sales success that GL is now. And the rest of the GL line collapsed without the Corps mythos. Again, is one relatively good selling title better than 4 mid-tier titles? You don't get off easy either dodging that question.
OTOH, the GL Rebirth revamp has lead to GL being near the top of the sales charts. Has spun off titles and mini-series, also at the top of the charts. And seems to be directly leading into a movie version. Restoring the Corps and Hal Jordan was more successful than Emerald Twilight ever was. So, was destroying Hal Jordan and the Corps a good thing, or something that while attention grabbing was not in the long term interests of sales? Because restoring Hal Jordan and the Corps is a total success.
No, no, you are not gettng off that easy. You started this discussion by saying that nobody liked the idea of turning heroes into murdering psychopaths (a matter of opinion) and I was just showing you that this was done in an overall strategy to boost sales and target a new demographic. That is not irrelevant. If you would notice by the way, "Emerald Twilight" is still selling in paperback (something you wouldn't expect to see if it was as bad as you are trying to advertise). You should also notice that even with the improved sales of the comic today, Green Lantern has never separated itself from the fact that Hal Jordan once went rogue either.
Sure boosting sales was the goal. That doesn't mean that because an editorial direction is implemented, it's good long term. Or successful.
Emerald Twilight is still canon. And what helps it is that GL is popular these days. Emerald Twilight is riding the coattails, not driving sales on GL. Rebirth, Sinestro Corps War and Blackest Night are driving sales. Heck, I might just as well point out that the Hal Jordan tpbs are selling, and Emerald Twilight is a Hal Jordan story, rather than the Kyle Rayner tpbs.
Heck, people are still buying Dark Knight Strikes Again.
And, I'm sorry, but if people actually liked the idea of turning heroes into murdering psychopaths, it would happen more often and it would stick. When has it ever stuck instead of being ultimately rejected? Anybody think the idea of turning Bruce Wayne into a murdering psychopath is good and logical? Or Clark Kent? Or Barry Allen? Or Peter Parker? Or Steve Rogers? Or Wonder Woman? People like their heroes to remain heroes. Even Hal Jordan's time as a villain was relatively short lived until he was "redeemed" in Final Night and sent off to be The Spectre for awhile. At best, it's a short term stunt, which leads to retconning/"redemption" of the hero, not a viable long term direction.
Let me summarize my points again.
GL wasn't a hot seller in 1993, but neither was it near cancellation. Was it in need of a shakeup to boost sales? Yes.
Emerald Twilight did boost sales on GL. But it killed the rest of the GL line. And Hal Jordan had an extremely short term shelf life as a villain. Was it an overall win? Perhaps, but long term GL settled right back into being a mid-tier seller.
GL Rebirth has been an amazingly successful revamp undoing much of Emerald Twilight. Top of the charts. Multiple titles. It's no wonder that this version of GL is what is getting a movie made.
So, was Emerald Twilight necessary? Yes, whether that exact story or another shakeup. Was it good? That's subjective, but I'd say the good work done with Kyle is separate than the plot points of turning Hal Jordan into a murdering psychopath. And Hal Jordan, murdering psychopath didn't seem to sell a single book past Emerald Twilight.