Helping Comic Book Geeks Understand Objectification
it made me laugh.
Be careful with this one – we don’t want Supes to come off as too powerful, too imposing.
Maybe have him lean a bit, off balance, the better to show off his *well filled* briefs.
He's fiddling with the waist line, such a **** *heh* tease.
He knows he’s got what we want, and if we turn the cover, he’ll let us have it.
Hal’s flying away from us through a generic starfield, nothing interesting to see except him.
Have him wriggle around, giving us a good shot of his package.
Add some details, something fancy for the fanboys to drool over,
but don’t let it draw attention away from the point of the cover –
that Kyle has nothing, NOTHING, on my boy Hal.
Well, we’ve done just about every variation on the theme by now, so let’s go back to the basics:
Black on black, a full cover shot of Batman’s ***. Add in the utility belt for colour – give it that Sin City look.
Show me thick, powerful legs under that latex or whatever the hell he wears. Clenched butt muscles.
Make it obvious this is no BatGIRL we’re talking about.
Cinthia- That was too funny for words! Loved it! Anyway - here's my contribution....- "Travelling Clothes" -1989 - Photo by Javier Vallhonrat - Source: The Fashion Book - Phaidon 1998 - Scanned by Me
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