Creating Characters With Stan Lee 28
GameDailyBiz has an interview with Stan Lee that touches on a talk he gave at the 2005 D.I.C.E. Summit entitled "Superheroes - Creating Characters for the Ages". From the article: "I submitted the idea of Spider-Man to my publisher and he hated it. I said my hero was a teenager -- the publisher said a teenager could not be a hero but only be a sidekick. I said he was insecure and had personal problems -- my publisher said a hero does not have personal problems... The lesson to be learned, don't listen to experts because they don't know what they're talking about and just get you down."
A hero (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:A hero (Score:3)
Rob
Re:A hero (Score:2)
Re:A hero (Score:3, Informative)
I
I read that as the publisher being insecure... (Score:2)
Interesting article (Score:2)
Rob
Re:Interesting article (Score:2)
oblig penny arcade ref (Score:1, Funny)
Re:oblig penny arcade ref (Score:1)
It's managers in general that are clueless (Score:5, Insightful)
Lee is wrong to attribute this cluelessness to "experts". Real experts know what they're talking about but are almost never seen in the roles being discussed, which are effectively managerial positions.
Some experts move to management of course, but as soon as they do that they start to become "past experts", and then they very rapidly become no longer experts at all even when they think they are. When you don't *DO* stuff yourself, you lose touch with the real doer's world and start talking hypotheticals.
And that's the upside of the problem. On the more common downside, management came up through the ranks without ever doing anything that required training a clue beyond how to run a spreadsheet.
The archetypal PHB is an pretty accurate portrayal that all of us easily recognize in our companies, and even the cartoon versions taken to extremes for a laugh still have a considerable amount of truth in them.
Lee was talking to management. Surprise, surprise, they got it totally ass about face.
Re:It's managers in general that are clueless (Score:2)
What's really challenging about it all is that if you're just some guy trying to get involved in an industry, there's all manner of people who already have claimed their stake there, and you've got to deal with them. And it's hard knowing who got there cause they're good, who got there cause they're lucky, and who got there because their uncle is a big
Re:It's managers in general that are clueless (Score:2)
Re:Don't Listen To Stann Lee!... (Score:2)
Not enough depth (Score:1)
Pretty much all games these days have an extra dimension to think in.
Re:Not enough depth (Score:2)
Re:Not enough depth (Score:1)
tbh, most game characters have even less depth than the average comic character.
Re:Not enough depth (Score:1)
ob simpsons quote (Score:3, Funny)
Didn't Stan Lee say this Spider-Man history... (Score:2)
Re:Didn't Stan Lee say this Spider-Man history... (Score:1, Insightful)
okay... (Score:3, Funny)
The real lesson (Score:1)
-Jeff