‘DC Super Hero Girls: Hero of the Year’ Movie on the Way

Where can you find the most powerful and prominent Super Teens in the galaxy? Super Hero High of course! Wonder Woman, Supergirl, Batgirl, Harley Quinn, Bumblebee, Poison Ivy and Katana band together to navigate the twists and turns of high school in DC Super Hero Girls: Hero of the Year. Produced by Warner Bros. Animation and DC Entertainment, the film will be distributed by Warner Bros. Home Entertainment  on August 9 on Digital HD and August 23, 2016 on DVD.

DC Super Hero Girls - Hero of the Year
DC Super Hero Girls – Hero of the Year

These young Super Heroes discover unique abilities, develop powers, and combat an abundance of overwhelming, exciting and awkward moments to master the fundamentals of being a hero – one day at a time! The group includes:
Wonder Woman was raised on Themyscira, a paradise island overflowing with female leaders. This natural born leader has super strength, the power of flight and a magic lasso that forces anyone to tell the truth.

  • Batgirl is crazy smart – she was accepted to Super Hero High based on her brainpower alone (she wasn’t born with super powers). But this crime-fighting sleuth may be the most influential of all! Her unparalleled intellect, expert martial arts skills, photographic memory and legendary detective skills are a formula for an incredible Super Hero.
  • Supergirl is the most powerful teen on earth, but also incredibly clumsy. She has super strength, super hearing and super speed but will need to be sure she doesn’t trip over her own two feet en route to saving the world.
  • Harley Quinn is the resident class clown who lives for jokes and over-the-top pranks. Nonetheless, this quick-witted gymnast is sneaky and full of surprises.
  • Bumblebee has the ability to shrink, allowing her to sneak around without being spotted. She makes sure her team is never surprised by any villains or enemies up to no good.
  • Poison Ivy, got caught up in a botched lab experiment, and now has the ability to control and summon plants. She’s gradually adapting to her amazing new powers and blossoming into her new life.
  • Katana is an artist with an edge – this fearless martial arts fashionista is up for any crime-fighting test and is never without her sword.

Together, these seven fearless Super Heroes prove that we all have the power to make the world a better place – even while school is in session!

Comic Book Men

‘Comic Book Men’ Needs Women

Comic Book Men, the AMC television show set inside Kevin Smith’s Secret Stash comic book store is looking for people with valuable, rare or unusual comic books or pop culture memorabilia that they would like to sell. Specifically, they are looking for women to be on the show. As the producer who contacted me said:

As a female producer, it’s extremely important to me that enough badass fangirls get the screen time they deserve.

So if you have a cool item and you want to be on the show, download the flier and apply today. Let us know if you get on and we’ll set our DVRs.

Comic Book Men Casting Flier

Is Fame Going to Harley’s Head in This Exclusive Clip from the Next DC Super Hero Girls

Check out this exclusive clip from the next episode of DC Super Hero Girls web series — “Quinn-tessential Harley!” Harley’s web videos have gone viral, and it looks like the fame has gone to her head.

We have a few stills from the episode and synopsis of the plot below

Plot Synopsis: “When Harley’s web videos go viral she deals with the unexpected consequences of fame.”

The full episode will be live on the DC Super Hero Girls website and YouTube channel at 10:00 AM on June 2, 2016.

"Quinn-Tessential Harley" - DC Super Hero Girls (S01E04)
“Quinn-Tessential Harley” – DC Super Hero Girls (S01E04)
"Quinn-Tessential Harley" - DC Super Hero Girls (S01E04)
“Quinn-Tessential Harley” – DC Super Hero Girls (S01E04)

Whatever Happened to the Buffy the Vampire Slayer Cartoon?

Buffy the Vampire Slayer lasted seven brilliant seasons and proved once and for all that female-led action series could work on television. The show was a ground-breaking cultural landmark, and paved the way for a spate of well-realized female protagonists that followed.

With its pop-culture soaked storylines. witty dialog and over-the-top action sequences, Buffy almost seemed like a live-action cartoon at times. That’s why it was no surprise when Joss Whedon took the show and converted into a comic book for season eight. It just seemed natural.

Buffy: The Animated Series
Buffy: The Animated Series

But what most people don’t know, was that in 2002, 20th Century Fox greenlit a Buffy animated series co-produced by Joss Whedon and Jeff Loeb.  The series was initially planned for the “Fox Kids” block of Saturday morning cartoons, possibly launching as early as 2003.

Buffy: The Animated Series ran into trouble almost immediately when Fox Kids stopped production, leaving the cartoon without a home. Fox shopped the show to other networks, but could find no takers and production halted.

In 2004, Fox decided to try developing the show a second time. Most of the cast from the original television show was available to reprise their voices. So a four-minute teaser pilot was created to shop the series to other networks. Once again it found no takers, a result Loeb attributed to the fact that it might be too adult to air with kids programming but animation for adults had only succeeded via slapstick comedy.

In a 2003, Whedon explained the difficulties and frustrations of trying to get the series developed in an interview with The Hollywood Reporter:

We just couldn’t find a home for (it). We had a great animation director, great visuals, six or seven hilarious scripts from our own staff—and nobody wanted it. I was completely baffled. I felt like I was sitting there with bags of money and nobody would take them from me. It was a question of people either not wanting it or not being able to put up the money because it was not a cheap show. One thing I was very hard-line about was, I didn’t want people to see it if it looked like crap. I wanted it to be on a level with Animaniacs or Batman: The Animated Series. And that’s a little pricier. But I just don’t think it’s worth doing unless it’s beautiful to look at as well as fun.

Although the show was never picked up, the designs are all finished and 13 scripts were completely written. Best of all, the four-minute teaser created to sell the show to other networks was leaked to the Internet.

This would have been cool enough, but 10 years later, cartoonist and animator Stephen Byrne took another stab at opening credits for a Buffy animated series as a passion project. No offense to the studio-backed version, I think his character designs might be even better.

Once again, it is clear that a Buffy cartoon would be absolutely awesome and there is no reason why the universe is keeping one from us other than malice and spite. Buffy is due for a revival, and this would be a great way to bring the show back without drawing direct comparisons to the cherished original.

“Girls Can Sell Toys,” According to ‘Jessica Jones’ Krysten Ritter

Jessica Jones’ Krysten Ritter stopped by Late Night with Stephen Colbert this week. While he praised Jessica Jones as a trailblazer for being the first female superhero in  the Marvel Cinematic Universe, talk quickly turned to the general lack of female representation in the MCU — which Colbert labelled “a sausagefest.”

Colbert brought up the recent Iron Man 3 controversy as an example of this, which shocked Ritter who had not heard that Marvel Studios executives were making decisions based on the idea that female action figures would not sell.

“Girls can sell toys!” she exclaimed indignantly. Colbert followed up by asking if there was an action figures for the decidedly adult Jessica Jones.

“I don’t know if there is yet, but there should be; and I bet it would sell huge; and I’m going to make some phone calls after this,” said a laughing Ritter.

Children Demonstrate the Deep-Rooted Nature of Gender Bias

When I was a child, there was a riddle:

A father and a son are in a horrible accident. The father dies, and the son is rushed to the hospital. The surgeon rushes in, but suddenly stops, saying, “I can’t operate on this boy, he’s my son.” How is this possible?

30 years ago, this routinely stumped children, because they could not imagine a world where a woman was an accomplished surgeon. It served as both a parlour trick and a cultural marker the showed how far we still had to go in the quest for gender equality.

The premise of that riddle has been brilliantly updated by the MullenLowe Group, in the above video, an ad for Inspiring the Future, a nonprofit that connects people from the business world with public schools and universities. I was hoping that by now, gender barriers had fallen in the  minds of children.

Sadly, the new riddle seems to be, “Will we ever be able to protect our children from these damaging stereotypes?”

CBS Passes on ‘Nancy Drew’ Pilot Because Show Was ‘Too Female’

Sarah Shahi
Sarah Shahi

CBS decided to pass on proposed cop drama Drew this week. That alone is not news. Only a fraction of the shows ordered to pilot make it to series. What is making headlines is the reason CBS executives gave for passing on the series. According to Deadline‘s Nellie Andreeva, the network actually passed on the show because they thought too many women would watch it.

Per the article:

I hear the pilot tested well but skewed too female for CBS’ schedule.

(our emphasis)

Wow.

Drew stars Person of Interest star Sarah Shahi as former famed teenage sleuth Nancy Drew — now in her 30s and working as a detective for the NYPD. She uses her uncanny skills of observation to solve crimes that baffle other detectives and navigates the complexities of modern life.

#toofemale t-shirt - courtesy of Women You Should Know
#toofemale t-shirt – courtesy of Women You Should Know

The series also stars Anthony Edwards, Felix Solis and Rob McClure. Producers are currently shopping the pilot to other networks who may not have such an aversion to girl cooties.

CBS also dropped the female-led Supergirl from its schedule last week, but that quickly found a home at sister network the CW.

As the news spread across the Internet, feminist website Women You Should Know quickly made a hilarious “#toofemale” t-shirt that you can order from Society 6.

If CBS doesn’t want women to watch their network, they should be very careful. It looks like they may get their wish.

 

CW Orders Full Season of Archie Series “Riverdale”

According to a press release from Archie Comics, Riverdale, featuring darker versions of Archie, Betty, Jughead, Veronica and Reggie, is coming to the CW this fall.

The pilot is written by Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa, Chief Creative Officer of Archie Comics, which has scored big with both readers and critics with adult-oriented takes on the popular characters, including the horror-themed Afterlife with Archie also written bu Aguirre-Sacasa. The official network description for Riverdale calls it “a surprising and subversive take on Archie, Betty, Veronica, and their friends.” The show exposes “the surrealism of small town life — the darkness and weirdness bubbling beneath Riverdale’s wholesome façade.”

Riverdale is produced by comics-to-screen mega-producer Greg Berlanti, who also produces  Arrow, The Flash, Legends of Tomorrow and the just acquired Supergirl for the network. Add in iZombie, and that makes six different comics-based shows on the CW.

The show features K.J. Apa as Archie,  Camila Mendes as Veronica, Cole Sprouse as Jughead, and Lili Reinhart as Betty.

Archie Comics Publisher and CEO Jon Goldwater said in a statement: “This is a historic moment for Archie Comics — and I couldn’t be more proud. It’s a culmination of my time here, and I’m eager to see Greg Berlanti, Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa, The CW, Warner Brothers Studios, and the cast bring Riverdale to viewers every week. My promise to fans? You ain’t seen nothing yet.”