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Topic: Longevity in the comic business Post ReplyPost New Topic
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Jean Voulis
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Joined: 05 February 2025
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Posted: 26 April 2025 at 6:59pm | IP Logged | 1 post reply

A topic that has interested me of late is longevity of certain creators in the comic business - and in contrast other creators who have some high profile time but then fade away.

CB Cebulski current EIC of Marvel (and big JB fan) is quoted as saying when people ask him about breaking into the industry - they should also think about how to STAY in the industry.

JB - any thoughts on how you have stayed in for decades?
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John Byrne
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Joined: 11 May 2005
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Posted: 26 April 2025 at 9:11pm | IP Logged | 2 post reply

Just keep moving!
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Jean Voulis
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Posted: 26 April 2025 at 9:18pm | IP Logged | 3 post reply

Thanks JB ! Succinct and to the point!

Anyone else in the forum want to chime in?

Reading creator interviews I see that it is sometimes politics and/or your network. The great Roger Stern stated after being fired from Avengers no editors would return his calls. And after a while he did not know any of the new editors (until years later Marvel hired an editor or two that was a fan). Like any job I guess it depends on who you know and not just talent.


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Jean Voulis
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Posted: 26 April 2025 at 9:38pm | IP Logged | 4 post reply

One creator that came to mind is DG Chichester - started as an editor at EPIC under the great Archie Goodwin at Epic comics in the 80s and then moved on to write Daredevil (including landmark issue 300), a wolverine one shot with Bill Sienkewicz, a punisher/cap mini with Klaus Janson, a blade series, the Terror series with Jorge Zaffino, the Batman/DD one shot and more.

and then nothing..! I heard he moved into advertising (and recently wrote a DD mini for Marvel set in that era) and he has a newsletter where he talks about some new creator owned comics.

I just find it fascinating how someone like him collaborated with giants of the industry, had good sales on decent runs at Marvel, and then was gone from the industry.

Any more examples forum members can think of? I have a few more..
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Eric Jansen
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Posted: 27 April 2025 at 5:41am | IP Logged | 5 post reply

I've seen a number of great artists I grew up on at comic cons who I had assumed had retired or moved on to Hollywood or related industries.  And then when I talk to them (I think I should refrain from naming names), it seems that they would LOVE if a modern editor contacted them for a regular gig!

I mean, I'm talking about some great artists--better than most of the artists working at the Big Two today.  Same thing with writers--most of the best writers from the 70's and 80's (who did work the studios are mining for billion-dollar movies!).  Maybe there's a reason comics sell 20,000 copies today instead of 400,000--other than distribution changes and special effects movies and TV shows.

It seems you either are forgotten or become a legend.  There is no middle ground.
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Rodrigo castellanos
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Posted: 27 April 2025 at 6:01am | IP Logged | 6 post reply

Travis Charest comes to mind.

I was a big, big fan of his work (mainly on WILDCATS) and thought he was going to be an era-defining artist.

But he was slow and couldn't handle a monthly series. So he moved on to European comics and took on a Metabarons series for years that he couldn't finish and then he just vanished.

I googled him recently to see what he was up to and it's mostly private commissions, which he said in an interview are much more profitable to him than mainstream comic work.


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Jean Voulis
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Posted: 27 April 2025 at 1:25pm | IP Logged | 7 post reply

Daniel Way is another writer I miss - he would do long runs on titles (relatively speaking these days): 50+ issues of Wolverine (half of that run was pencilled by the late great Steve Dillon), 20 issues of Ghost Rider (with TEX), 50+ issues of Deadpool..and then not much.

I guess politics does play a part in it.

My go to example though is Roger Stern - I remember him talking about potential stories in his cancelled anthology Marvel Universe series that would be amazing to see (and sound timeless and could be published today) - we really lost out as readers. 

Stuff like the ancient one's first fight with Dormammu, Tut the cave boy discovers Attilan, etc..Stern really knows how to tie continuity in a fun way to his stories..but no one calls him (and many other as Eric pointed out)..it's a shame.
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