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DC at it again with denying royalties...

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  • Blue Meanie
    Talkative Member
    • Jun 23, 2001
    • 8706

    DC at it again with denying royalties...

    This is why I love Back Issue on Facebook...I would have never seen or known about the BS that DC is pulling. They are denying royalty payments/compensation to one of the big writers/creators for DC back in the 70's/80's. Check it out:

    http://www.theouthousers.com/index.p...nd-credit.html


    After reading this it sort of reminds me of the conversation I had with Martin Nodell and his son about whether he was getting paid for DC starting to use the original GA Green Lantern again, this was back in '01, and they told me that DC was going to change the name of the character or had changed the name of the character to Sentinel. The only way that Martin got paid was when they reprinted the All Star stories in archive form. It's absolutely disgusting how these BILLION DOLLAR corporations can get away with this BS.
    "When not too many people can see we're all the same
    And because of all their tears,
    Their eyes can't hope to see
    The beauty that surrounds them
    Isn't it a pity".

    - "Isn't It A Pity"
    By George Harrison


    My Good Buyers/Sellers/Traders list:
    Good Traders List - Page 80 - Mego Talk
  • Starroid Raiders Dagon
    Persistent Member
    • Apr 28, 2013
    • 2165

    #2
    Well, I'm far from an expert on anything in the legal realm, so I doubt I could add anything intelligent to the conversation. I do like that the new "rules" seem to not assign creator rights to derivative characters, so there should be no incentive to create an army of Flash characters that take away from the original character. But, I dont think a name, race, hair colour change should eliminate the original creators' rights like the Killer Frost example, and current creators should be aware of that.

    Comment

    • Earth 2 Chris
      Verbose Member
      • Mar 7, 2004
      • 32929

      #3
      The DC that existed for 75 years essentially ended when Levitz "retired" and Dianne Nelson took over. It wasn't just the name that changed. Essentially, they no longer want to honor commitments made by the old administration, and they are using a lot of mind-numbing double-talk to do it. Typical.

      Chris
      sigpic

      Comment

      • johnnystorm
        Hot Child in the City
        • Jul 3, 2008
        • 4293

        #4
        And now we see the real reason for the Nu52... Nothing created before it existed, therefore it's all Warner property.
        Sometimes we have the crappiest hobby.

        Comment

        • johnnystorm
          Hot Child in the City
          • Jul 3, 2008
          • 4293

          #5
          Warner -DC should change their corporate mascot to this guy:



          Plus it's ok lawyers, you own this one outright, no scheming necessary!

          Comment

          • enyawd72
            Maker of Monsters!
            • Oct 1, 2009
            • 7904

            #6
            DC = Despicable Comics

            Comment

            • huedell
              Museum Ball Eater
              • Dec 31, 2003
              • 11069

              #7
              Originally posted by Blue Meanie
              After reading this it sort of reminds me of the conversation I had with Martin Nodell and his son about whether he was getting paid for DC starting to use the original GA Green Lantern again, this was back in '01, and they told me that DC was going to change the name of the character or had changed the name of the character to Sentinel. The only way that Martin got paid was when they reprinted the All Star stories in archive form. It's absolutely disgusting how these BILLION DOLLAR corporations can get away with this BS.
              I find it equally troubling how writers who were supposed to work freelance but have been re-defining their rights/roles constantly throughout comicbook history have made this whole process just as difficult (or moreso than the big 2).

              Originally posted by Earth 2 Chris
              The DC that existed for 75 years essentially ended when Levitz "retired" and Dianne Nelson took over. It wasn't just the name that changed. Essentially, they no longer want to honor commitments made by the old administration, and they are using a lot of mind-numbing double-talk to do it. Typical.
              Yep. It is indeed typical. It's how these big companies remain big companies. Lawyers that know the law. But make no mistake, there's TWO sides to this fight that everybody looks at as "David vs. Goliath". The thing is though, David didn't ask Goliath for a career-boost opportunity and sign his life away in the process (so to speak).
              Last edited by huedell; Apr 29, '15, 9:59 AM.
              "No. No no no no no no. You done got me talkin' politics. I didn't wanna'. Like I said y'all, I'm just happy to be alive. I think I'll scoot over here right by this winda', let this beautiful carriage rock me to sleep, and dream about how lucky I am." - Chris Mannix

              Comment

              • emeraldknight47
                Talkative Member
                • Jun 20, 2011
                • 5212

                #8
                Originally posted by enyawd72
                DC = Despicable Comics
                DC = Despisable Corporation, too!
                sigpic Oh then, what's this? Big flashy lighty thing, that's what brought me here! Big flashy lighty things have got me written all over them. Not actually. But give me time. And a crayon.

                Comment

                • Earth 2 Chris
                  Verbose Member
                  • Mar 7, 2004
                  • 32929

                  #9
                  Yep. It is indeed typical. It's how these big companies remain big companies. Lawyers that know the law. But make no mistake, there's TWO sides to this fight that everybody looks at as "David vs. Goliath". The thing is though, David didn't ask Goliath for a career-boost opportunity and sign his life away in the process (so to speak).
                  I doubt Conway and others would be griping if DC weren't changing the rules of their participation program midstream. It was an incentive offered to creators, and benefited both parties. DC got exciting new characters, creators got some money out of their use in other media. Now it only benefits one.

                  Chris
                  sigpic

                  Comment

                  • The Toyroom
                    The Packaging King
                    • Dec 31, 2004
                    • 16653

                    #10
                    Alan Brennert ran into the same problem with Barbara Kean on "Gotham"...
                    Think OUTSIDE the Box! For the BEST in Repro & Custom Packaging!

                    Comment

                    • Earth 2 Chris
                      Verbose Member
                      • Mar 7, 2004
                      • 32929

                      #11
                      ^Yes. I'm a HUGE Brennert fan, and they pulled the "derivative character" bit on him. But as much as I love Brennert, he's only written a handful of DC tales. They are some of my favorite stories of all time, but Conway wrote a metric TON of DC Comics, and introduced a boatload of characters. The Flash show is mining a good chunk of them, mostly through the Firestorm connection.

                      Chris
                      sigpic

                      Comment

                      • knight errant00
                        8 Inch Action Figure
                        • Nov 15, 2005
                        • 1773

                        #12
                        Originally posted by huedell
                        I find it equally troubling how writers who were supposed to work freelance but have been re-defining their rights/roles constantly throughout comicbook history have made this whole process just as difficult (or moreso than the big 2). But make no mistake, there's TWO sides to this fight that everybody looks at as "David vs. Goliath". The thing is though, David didn't ask Goliath for a career-boost opportunity and sign his life away in the process (so to speak).
                        Yes and no. I agree on some of the creators from the Golden Age who had pretty one-sided contracts and signed away rights and the big companies ended up being embarrassed later by the fans into throwing them a bone or two. They signed what they signed, and got paid for the work.

                        But this . . . the company's just redefining the terms of the contract after decades and pulling a pretty sleazy trick -- what these rules essentially say is that they can hire me to create a character, then hire you to mod it (change the cape color, chest emblem, and secret ID), then not pay you for use of the character because it's derivative of mine, and not pay me for use of the character because it isn't the one I created.

                        If the corp wants to come back and renegotiate with creators, that's fine (and they'd better be ready for the creators to walk away with the characters as in any renegotiation) , but this, this is just dishonest and borderline fraudulent.
                        Last edited by knight errant00; Apr 29, '15, 8:32 PM.

                        Comment

                        • Earth 2 Chris
                          Verbose Member
                          • Mar 7, 2004
                          • 32929

                          #13
                          ^Exactly. This and Golden Age creators fighting for ownership are two different things. Creators WERE being compensated for use of these characters, per contract, and now they are not, due to some legalese mumbo jumbo.

                          Chris
                          sigpic

                          Comment

                          • hedrap
                            Permanent Member
                            • Feb 10, 2009
                            • 4825

                            #14
                            Bleeding Cool suggests it was due to the Coastal move of the offices. That makes sense to me as royalties, credits and ownership are the real Battle: Los Angeles stories.

                            Comment

                            • huedell
                              Museum Ball Eater
                              • Dec 31, 2003
                              • 11069

                              #15
                              Originally posted by knight errant00
                              Yes and no. I agree on some of the creators from the Golden Age who had pretty one-sided contracts and signed away rights and the big companies ended up being embarrassed later by the fans into throwing them a bone or two. They signed what they signed, and got paid for the work.

                              But this . . . the company's just redefining the terms of the contract after decades and pulling a pretty sleazy trick -- what these rules essentially say is that they can hire me to create a character, then hire you to mod it (change the cape color, chest emblem, and secret ID), then not pay you for use of the character because it's derivative of mine, and not pay me for use of the character because it isn't the one I created.

                              If the corp wants to come back and renegotiate with creators, that's fine (and they'd better be ready for the creators to walk away with the characters as in any renegotiation) , but this, this is just dishonest and borderline fraudulent.
                              If that's what's truly going on, then I also feel it's a bad (shady) thing---I mean, I can hardly follow the "jumbo"---let alone the "mumbo"
                              "No. No no no no no no. You done got me talkin' politics. I didn't wanna'. Like I said y'all, I'm just happy to be alive. I think I'll scoot over here right by this winda', let this beautiful carriage rock me to sleep, and dream about how lucky I am." - Chris Mannix

                              Comment

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