Here's another question. Which writer and which artist would you like to see do;
1) Green Lantern / Space Ghost miniseries
2) Team Titans
3) Blue and Gold
4) Doctor Fate
5) Lobo
6) Orion
Here's another question. Which writer and which artist would you like to see do;
1) Green Lantern / Space Ghost miniseries
2) Team Titans
3) Blue and Gold
4) Doctor Fate
5) Lobo
6) Orion
Hmm, DP III: The Marsupials would be better.
Or better yet, : Dream Warriors.
Sure it would be neat, but I'm thinking the next one will have a pulp heroes theme. If the theme becomes more animalistic though...
Also, I'll probably use The Dream Master for the fourth one, and I don't want to use more than one titles of a franchise.
I'm actually excited about Morrison on GL
Giffen on blue and gold
I don't really read the others
I'm only going to voice my opinions on number four.
Writer- Peter J. Tomasi
Illustrator- Gary Frank
4. Tynion & Bucchalo
5. Humphries or Tom Taylor& Ferreyra
6. Vendietti & Gleason
I’m not knowledgeable on the rest, therefore I don’t think I shall voice my opinion on the matter
@Flash
When you get to #5 call it Empire Strikes Back and choose characters whose series has a darker tone.
1) Jeff Parker is the main guy at DC with a passion for both DC characters and the more nostalgia-based properties like Hanna-Barbera and Batman '66. As u enjoyed his Aquaman run, I think he could do fine on a DC/HB crossover title.
Paul Pelletier should pencil, his classical-hero-comics style lends itself well to this sort of thing. That or Evan "Doc" Shaner.
3) I'd actually put Gail Simone on Blue and Gold. She's proving with Plastic Man that she has some comedy writing chops, and Giffen's last SEVERAL projects haven't quite lived up to the hype (Blue Beetle Rebirth, Larfleeze, Threshold, etc were all entertaining but not as good as his reputation).
For the penciller Scot Kollins. He does well on these lighter sorts of tales. While I realize he's usually part of a package with Giffen, I'd split them up here.
4) For Dr. Fate, let's get Riley Rossmo in there on pencils. The darker, supernatural themes are easy for him to pull off (see his Constantine run), and he's only gotten better over the last few years.
For the writing, forgive me, but Scott Snyder. He is an excellent horror writer, and I want him back on a supernatural title asap. He's proven he can handle supernatural characters well with his Swamp Thing run, and I'd be interested to see how he'd play with the Egyptian mythology. Swamp Thing, American Vampire, and probably his best work, Severed, are all proof he needs to be doing a supernatural title of some kind. Get him away from the traditional heroes, he's a niche guy.
I'd read Scott Snyder Doctor Fate. Although that's not saying much as I'd read anything by him.