Follow TV Tropes

Following

History Trivia / BratPack

Go To

OR

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* InspirationForTheWork: Rick Veitch was influenced by the publicity stunt for ''ComicBook/BatmanADeathInTheFamily'' in which readers voted to kill off Jason Todd, as well as long-standing FridgeHorror criticisms of the superhero genre. The subplot about royalties was apparently a response to the speculative market craziness that would ultimately result in UsefulNotes/TheGreatComicsCrashOf1996.

to:

* InspirationForTheWork: Rick Veitch was influenced by the publicity stunt for ''ComicBook/BatmanADeathInTheFamily'' in which readers voted to kill off Jason Todd, as well as long-standing FridgeHorror criticisms of the superhero genre. The subplot about royalties was apparently a response to the speculative market craziness that would ultimately result in UsefulNotes/TheGreatComicsCrashOf1996.MediaNotes/TheGreatComicsCrashOf1996.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* InspirationForTheWork: Rick Veitch was influenced by the publicity stunt for ''ComicBook/ADeathInTheFamily'' in which readers voted to kill off Jason Todd, as well as long-standing FridgeHorror criticisms of the superhero genre. The subplot about royalties was apparently a response to the speculative market craziness that would ultimately result in UsefulNotes/TheGreatComicsCrashOf1996.

to:

* InspirationForTheWork: Rick Veitch was influenced by the publicity stunt for ''ComicBook/ADeathInTheFamily'' ''ComicBook/BatmanADeathInTheFamily'' in which readers voted to kill off Jason Todd, as well as long-standing FridgeHorror criticisms of the superhero genre. The subplot about royalties was apparently a response to the speculative market craziness that would ultimately result in UsefulNotes/TheGreatComicsCrashOf1996.

Changed: 387

Removed: 177

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* UnintentionalPeriodPiece: Being a deconstruction the superhero genre focusing on [[KidSidekick kid sidekicks]] ended up dating the comic due to kid sidekicks in the superhero genre largely falling out of practice with most most sidekicks growing up and many going on to carry their own books, with kid sidekicks still appearing in superhero stories being the exception to the rule.
** The book is further dated by three of the specific sidekicks it parodies - Jason Todd, Donna Troy, and Roy Harper, who've all long since passed on their mantles to new teens.

to:

* UnintentionalPeriodPiece: Being a deconstruction the superhero genre focusing on [[KidSidekick kid sidekicks]] ended up dating the comic due to kid sidekicks in the superhero genre largely falling out of practice with most most sidekicks growing up and many going on to carry their own books, with kid sidekicks still appearing in superhero stories being the exception to the rule.
** The book is further dated by three of the specific sidekicks it parodies - Jason Todd, Donna Troy, and Roy Harper, who've all long since passed on their mantles to new teens.
----
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
added trivia


* UnintentionalPeriodPiece: Being a deconstruction the superhero genre focusing on [[KidSidekick kid sidekicks]] ended up dating the comic due to kid sidekicks in the superhero genre largely falling out of practice with most most sidekicks growing up and many going on to carry their own books, with kid sidekicks still appearing in superhero stories being the exception to the rule.

to:

* UnintentionalPeriodPiece: Being a deconstruction the superhero genre focusing on [[KidSidekick kid sidekicks]] ended up dating the comic due to kid sidekicks in the superhero genre largely falling out of practice with most most sidekicks growing up and many going on to carry their own books, with kid sidekicks still appearing in superhero stories being the exception to the rule.rule.
** The book is further dated by three of the specific sidekicks it parodies - Jason Todd, Donna Troy, and Roy Harper, who've all long since passed on their mantles to new teens.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* InspirationForTheWork: Rick Veitch was influenced by the publicity stunt for ''ComicBook/ADeathInTheFamily'' in which readers voted to kill off Jason Todd, as well as long-standing FridgeHorror criticisms of the superhero genre.

to:

* InspirationForTheWork: Rick Veitch was influenced by the publicity stunt for ''ComicBook/ADeathInTheFamily'' in which readers voted to kill off Jason Todd, as well as long-standing FridgeHorror criticisms of the superhero genre. The subplot about royalties was apparently a response to the speculative market craziness that would ultimately result in UsefulNotes/TheGreatComicsCrashOf1996.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* InspirationForTheWork: Rick Veitch was influenced by the publicity stunt for ''ComicBook/ADeathInTheFamily'' in which readers voted to kill off Jason Todd, as well as long-standing FridgeHorror criticisms of the superhero genre.

to:

* InspirationForTheWork: Rick Veitch was influenced by the publicity stunt for ''ComicBook/ADeathInTheFamily'' in which readers voted to kill off Jason Todd, as well as long-standing FridgeHorror criticisms of the superhero genre.genre.
* UnintentionalPeriodPiece: Being a deconstruction the superhero genre focusing on [[KidSidekick kid sidekicks]] ended up dating the comic due to kid sidekicks in the superhero genre largely falling out of practice with most most sidekicks growing up and many going on to carry their own books, with kid sidekicks still appearing in superhero stories being the exception to the rule.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

!![[ComicBook/BratPack The Comic]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* InspirationForTheWork: Rick Veitch was influenced by the publicity stunt for ''ComicBook/ADeathInTheFamily'' in which readers voted to kill off Jason Todd, as well as long-standing FridgeHorror criticisms of the superhero genre.

Top