Episode Description
In which the New Mutants learn that they are not, in fact, immortal; Louise Simonson finds her stride; the Ani-Mator makes Cameron Hodge look downright reasonable; hating humans is Magneto’s security blanket; Doug Ramsey dies; and we continue our coverage of the Fall of the Mutants.
X-plained[]
- Sugar Man
- New Mutants #59-61
- Bird Brain
- The Ani-Mator
- The Ani-Mates
- Stylistic whiplash
- Why you always leave a note
- The death of Doug Ramsey
- Black Condor’s amazing origin story
- Interpersonal dynamics in New Mutants
- Parsing ongoing series
- Why Doug died
- 616 characters we’d trade for their Battleworld counterparts
- Storytelling trends and the decline of though balloons
Listener Questions[]
- If you could have any iteration of an X-character from Battleworld replace the usual 616 version, what would you choose?
- So I was reading The Mutant Massacre and some of the X-Factor stuff that followed (the Archangel arc) , and noticed they were using thought bubbles as a storytelling device quite often. As someone who didn't get into comics until the mid-2000s, I've only ever really seen this used in older comics I've sought out. I was wondering if you knew when this device started to get phased out in favor of either narration captions by a single character or no inner monologue at all, which seems quite common now? I actually quite like how it's used in X-Factor, as it allows me as a reader to see how all the characters are being emotionally affected by all the terrible things they encounter.