Why Steve Ditko Quit

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  • Опубліковано 4 лют 2025

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  • @ComicTropes
    @ComicTropes  6 років тому +909

    Correction: I pulled an image of comic book artist Jack Cole (Plastic Man) that was labeled as Steve Ditko. I should have caught it, but it's in there. Oops.

    • @HyperspacePictures
      @HyperspacePictures 6 років тому +9

      Jack Cole is perfect for your humorous show.

    • @ZarkleNatoPants
      @ZarkleNatoPants 6 років тому +5

      No problem. Doesn't detract from the awesome video. Keep up the great work!

    • @rocketreindeer
      @rocketreindeer 6 років тому +2

      I was wondering why Jack's picture was there. There are several pictures of him back in the day, but I wonder if any photos of Steve will emerge now that he's passed away. The reporter in this article says he looked like Uncle Junior from Sopranos. www.vulture.com/2016/11/steve-ditko-doctor-strange-c-v-r.html
      I think you summed up everything really well. In the future it would be cool if Steve's actual picture was there.

    • @macsnafu
      @macsnafu 6 років тому

      Issue #85. GL/GA discover that Arrow's partner, Speedy (Roy Harper) is doing drugs. More info here:
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snowbirds_Don%27t_Fly

    • @macsnafu
      @macsnafu 6 років тому +3

      Oh my, yes, it's childish to believe in an objective reality, the value of rationality, or in individual rights and liberties. The stuff of 12-year-old comic book readers' fantasies, I'm sure.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Objectivism_(Ayn_Rand)
      But I certainly agree that people should bear responsibility for the ideas they believe in, and the consequences of those ideas.

  • @JunoAuerWatson
    @JunoAuerWatson 5 років тому +959

    I love the irony that 3 of his creations were inspirations for several of main charaters in Watchmen, which is kind of Grey Area: the Book.

    • @Lqw17
      @Lqw17 4 роки тому +16

      Which characters inspired which watchmen characters?

    • @JunoAuerWatson
      @JunoAuerWatson 4 роки тому +151

      @@Lqw17 mentioned in the video is Question who inspired Rorsharch, Blue Beetle inspired Nite Owl, and Captian Atom inspired Dr Manhattan.

    • @Lqw17
      @Lqw17 4 роки тому +25

      @@JunoAuerWatson wow that's really cool! Thanks bro!

    • @erikkaye1114
      @erikkaye1114 4 роки тому +77

      Don't forget Mr. A! A is A! I think The Question was a toned-down version of Mr. A. While the Question was one of the Charlton properties that DC acquired, Alan Moore was very aware of Mr. A when he created Rorschach. While the Question was a rigid moralist, Mr. A was a psychotic nut. Not that Ditko thought so. Alan Moore tried to make Rorschach a villain, but he found that however evil Rorschach was, he had a noble center that Moore couldn't erase.

    • @chickrepelant
      @chickrepelant 4 роки тому +18

      so true! It's almost ignorant to think that way - also, AYN RAND? GTFOH

  • @Noms_Chompsky
    @Noms_Chompsky 3 роки тому +664

    Stan: With great power comes great responsibility
    Steve: Wait, what now?

    • @dannyboy5008
      @dannyboy5008 3 роки тому +44

      The concept of "with great power comes great responsibility" doesnt really conflict with objectivism. Mr A still took it upon himself to fight evil doers and save the innocent despite it not really benefiting him, even putting his life at risk to do so. He had the physical/mental ability to do it plus he had the strong moral compass to guide him, and felt the responsibility to act stem from that.

    • @stam7250
      @stam7250 2 роки тому +63

      @@dannyboy5008 I see you made some comments explaining the ideas or Steve ditko and that is appreciated. But the disagreement is obvious. Spiderman is the kind of character that needs to use all of his power to serve the greater good. That means he has to remove himself of any personal stances and principles. His only principle should be (after he learns his lesson) to save and protect people. Mr A seems to me like a character that values his principles and ideals above all making him someone that doesn't struggle with morality at all (which is not all that relatable). So the dispute imo makes perfect sense and for me it's obvious that spidey needed to be what he eventually continued to be (after ditko left).

    • @pn2294
      @pn2294 2 роки тому +9

      @@stam7250 struggling with morality makes you relatable? I think those are a very poor choice of words as they’re often used to justify “mistakes”.

    • @PurpleColonel
      @PurpleColonel 2 роки тому +33

      @@pn2294 Moral grey areas are pretty common in the real world and make for good stories. Like what do you do if someone assaults a person while drunk but are otherwise not violent? Are they evil or good?

    • @pn2294
      @pn2294 2 роки тому +4

      @@PurpleColonel pointless question
      What we really should be asking is, are they still a threat?

  • @frankfontaine8817
    @frankfontaine8817 3 роки тому +458

    When you revealed Snyder is an objectivist it all clicked for me as to why his portrayal of Superman was so off. This was a fascinating study of an important figure in comics and I learned something too so a subscribe from me. Great work.

    • @Imetral0
      @Imetral0 3 роки тому +24

      he isn't tho lol. the only reason his portrayal of Superman is "off" is bc he doesn't start out as the Blue Boy Scout from the jump, he would have had to have earned it thru the 5-film Justice League arc Snyder had planned.

    • @DarkReflections86
      @DarkReflections86 2 роки тому +64

      @@Imetral0 Actually, he is. In fact, Snyder wanted to adapt The Fountainhead

    • @Imetral0
      @Imetral0 2 роки тому +15

      @@DarkReflections86 he also said that Rand's ideas were dumb. just bc he wants to adapt The Fountainhead doesn't necessarily mean he's into her ideology.

    • @Keldroc
      @Keldroc 2 роки тому +73

      @@Imetral0 More evidence that Snyder doesn't generally understand what he reads or the stories he tells. His Superman is complete shit from someone who doesn't understand how heroism works or why the S stands for "hope." He even goes for the lazy, simplistic trope of "Superman is only good because of Lois, and if she dies he's a monster," which is like a child's idea of Superman's moral compass. Then again, with Snyder's Kents as his moral foundation, I suppose Snyder's Superman never had a chance to be anything else.
      That said, I'd watch a Snyder adaptation of The Fountainhead just to see how badly he misunderstands that story, too. Snyder seems like a genuinely nice person in real life, but he should leave storytelling to people who are competent at it.

    • @Imetral0
      @Imetral0 2 роки тому +13

      @@Keldroc half your statement was filled with insults toward Snyder, who didn't write any of the Snyderverse beyond the outline. that would be David S. Goyer. hell, Chris Nolan helped Goyer out with the story for Man of Steel. your main problem is that you just keep projecting your ideal of what Superman is onto these movies that are clearly trying to do their own thing with the mythos.

  • @VaniacV
    @VaniacV 6 років тому +1116

    Now everything makes sense ...for him, Stan Lee was either good or evil ...he decided evil.
    ... In order to make his characters interesting Stan made them imperfect, with flaws ... I can't imagine the constant confrontation between those 2 minds, so different.

    • @HoorayTV21
      @HoorayTV21 5 років тому +98

      Considering Stan Lee wouldn't give Steve any credit....uh....sorta evil.

    • @nickrichie517
      @nickrichie517 5 років тому +121

      @The Law anyone who ever thought stan was evil didn't know him or possibly never read any of his work. Although other creators made significant contributions to marvel over the years and deserve recognition none of it happens without stan.

    • @robvangessel3766
      @robvangessel3766 5 років тому +47

      I remain on Stan's side all the way.

    • @VideoHostSite
      @VideoHostSite 5 років тому +97

      @@HoorayTV21 Why would you post something so stupid, wrong, and easily disproved? Right in THS VERY VIDEO, it shows Stan telling the world that Ditko was writing Spiderman.

    • @lkcdarzadix6216
      @lkcdarzadix6216 5 років тому +4

      @@VideoHostSite lol someone questions that he say he did credit him but ask him again and he'll look for his lawyer

  • @Larry
    @Larry 5 років тому +690

    I wonder what Ditko would have done if he could have created a storyline for Judge Dredd?

    • @ziggystardust7001
      @ziggystardust7001 5 років тому +92

      Justified murder, basically.

    • @michaelkeha
      @michaelkeha 5 років тому +51

      I mean probably would be Judge Dredd with better written dialogue and better story structure.

    • @supreme-dictator-donald-tr6611
      @supreme-dictator-donald-tr6611 5 років тому +118

      It would be the same without the tongue and cheek humor.

    • @lkcdarzadix6216
      @lkcdarzadix6216 5 років тому +17

      @@supreme-dictator-donald-tr6611 this

    • @lkcdarzadix6216
      @lkcdarzadix6216 5 років тому +18

      @@ziggystardust7001 also it's already justified cause judge dredd is a judge

  • @ImplicitlyPretentious
    @ImplicitlyPretentious 6 років тому +403

    My mind is blown by your ability to talk about such a politically intense philsophy while staying so incredibly impartial, like wow it's so refreshing to see for once

    • @fshoaps
      @fshoaps 4 роки тому +6

      Implicitly Pretentious why is that good? lol

    • @ImplicitlyPretentious
      @ImplicitlyPretentious 4 роки тому +76

      @@fshoaps because his exploration is not limited by a need to vindicate a judgement or opinion but by a genuine sincere sense of curiosity, therefore the whole video benefits from the wider mapping of ideas :)

    • @mandarkastronomonov2962
      @mandarkastronomonov2962 4 роки тому +4

      Implicitly Pretentious Agreed! 👍🏼

    • @sethleoric2598
      @sethleoric2598 4 роки тому +16

      @@fshoaps it is because he simply says and doesn't include some sort of 1 hour presentation on why he agrees/disagrees with it and it chill with it.

    • @Bustermachine
      @Bustermachine 4 роки тому +20

      ​@@fshoaps Even if you loathe a philosophy, and I personally have very little good to say about objectivism, understanding is a path to knowledge. I also loathe fascism, that doesn't mean studying its history doesn't give insight into sociology.
      I guess an analogy would be how some people are squeamish about doing dissection's in a biology class. Or how some people find the study of human decomposition, they call them corpse farms, to be deeply unsettling. It can be unpleasant, maybe even disturbing. There's nothing wrong with wanting little to do with it.
      But you don't have to like it to learn something from it. You don't even have to learn what the creator intended. You can come to new conclusions and decide that writer's argument is dead wrong. A story is just an extended analogy created by another person to try and communicate their ideas.

  • @paulware4701
    @paulware4701 4 роки тому +456

    Ditko was my favourite artist when I discovered comics back in 1967 and remains so to this day. He's one of the best visual story tellers in the business, right up there with Kirby. But he really, really couldn't write. His characters talk like badly written text books - if you read Rand's books (especially Atlas Shrugged) you can see where he gets it from. His inability to appreciate what Stan Lee brought to his stories was a blindspot that, ultimately, did him no favours. Like too many people (especially nowadays) he couldn't understand the difference between balance and compromise; a good story must have balance, so that the reader can make up his own mind; towards the end, Ditko wasn't writing fiction, he was peddling propaganda. But, as I said at the start, he's still my favourite artist, and his Dr Strange will stand the test of time for as long as comics endure.

    • @jewsco
      @jewsco 4 роки тому +45

      It is as if he couldn’t see his own flaws and that the world isn’t black and white

    • @dakota4384
      @dakota4384 3 роки тому +7

      Is that any different from many other comic artists, even today?

    • @paulware4701
      @paulware4701 3 роки тому +36

      @@dakota4384 Actually, compared to many modern writers/artists, Ditko now looks like a moderate. (And I'm only half kidding.)

    • @mbsb1376
      @mbsb1376 3 роки тому +6

      That's an unfair idea honestly, he had pretty good writing even through his hard to understand worldview. Same as a guy like Niestzche.

    • @majormoolah5056
      @majormoolah5056 3 роки тому +32

      His need to teach his readers, who he seems to consider stupid, is very grating. Very gifted visual artist, but a high school philosopher basically.

  • @harrypartridgelive
    @harrypartridgelive 6 років тому +395

    You knocked this one out of the park, Chris.

    • @gnarlestongnu637
      @gnarlestongnu637 6 років тому +11

      It's hard to touch on something like Objectivist philosophy and not get bogged down in details or politics. I was ready to cringe but it was all quite well handled, light touch and apolitical. On the internet, that is a superpower for sure.

    • @Kriskazam
      @Kriskazam 5 років тому +3

      Gnarleston Gnu nothing is ever apolitical lol. I’m glad this was ComicTropes take on the subject.

    • @Glassandcandy
      @Glassandcandy 5 років тому

      I’m glad when I find out when my favorite creators appreciate some of my other favorite, but less famous, content creators. Both of y’all are fantastic; thanks for the years of consistently stellar content ❤️

    • @Glassandcandy
      @Glassandcandy 5 років тому +2

      Kriskazam least of all comics. Comics have an amazingly complex political history and legacy. From the patriotic ideological machine of the golden age comics to the subversive and self aware commentary of watchmen, comics have always been a mirror image of the dominant political ethos of the societies which created them. I’m glad that Chris doesn’t shy away from that important aspect of comics in his show. Trying to understand comics without understanding their ideologies is like trying to understand the Bible without knowing what Judaisms is. I.e. it’s such a core fundamental aspect of it that without knowledge of it you will never understand it fully

    • @MovieMush
      @MovieMush 10 місяців тому

      And not fo da first time!

  • @Cernunnnos
    @Cernunnnos 6 років тому +240

    I'd always kind of assumed Ditko was just some old hippy that Stan had found at Woodstock who he asked to draws his acid flash backs in Dr Strange.
    To learn that he was a dry as boot leather objectivist (of all things) is actually fucking hilarious.

    • @prajwaljayaraj5887
      @prajwaljayaraj5887 3 роки тому +8

      Ikr 🤣

    • @HoboTheHenry
      @HoboTheHenry 2 роки тому +10

      I thought he was like a “straight man” from his face but he’s pretty different from what I thought he was like

    • @Sirzhukov
      @Sirzhukov Рік тому +8

      It's actually sad that you are incapable to comprehend vivid imagination without the use of drugs.

    • @Cernunnnos
      @Cernunnnos Рік тому +6

      @@Sirzhukov oh please. Ove probably got a mind that wonders more than yours.
      The thing that's so weird about this is how trip accurate a lot of his illustrations are.

    • @ruggiebuggie3195
      @ruggiebuggie3195 29 днів тому

      Ditko, a great artist and visionary, but man, he sounded like he had his head far up his own ass and was a pain to work with.

  • @Takeshi357
    @Takeshi357 5 років тому +319

    You know, the one thing I've always found an admirable trait in a writer is the ability to present people whose moral, religious, political, etc. values the writer might actively disagree with, and _still_ present them in a fair light as real characters with real personalities, instead of just treating them as weak strawmen for the author's pet characters to debunk.
    Ditko seems like the complete antithesis of that.

    • @lmao2302
      @lmao2302 5 років тому +22

      He literally is the opposite of that.

    • @lmao2302
      @lmao2302 5 років тому +11

      It's kinda hilarious.

    • @michaelkeha
      @michaelkeha 5 років тому +15

      Um my dude have a look at the villians he wrote and the stories he wrote you will see he is more than capable of doing that but prefered stories where shock of shocks the good guys actually do the right thing.

    • @Takeshi357
      @Takeshi357 5 років тому +45

      The way he wrote Hawk & Dove proves you wrong. He didn't even TRY to present both sides in an equal fashion.

    • @laststrike4411
      @laststrike4411 4 роки тому +1

      That's one work though.

  • @prajwaljayaraj5887
    @prajwaljayaraj5887 6 років тому +322

    I loved his psychedelic and imaginative work on Doctor Strange. In fact Steve Ditko and Stan lee's Doctor Strange series was my first introduction to the character. At the age of five I would pick up that cover-less fat paperback collecting and re-read over and over. It was all so fascinating. I still read that paperback to this day. I always pick up details I missed years back. Steve Ditko's Doctor Strange was fun. Imagine my excitement when I found out a movie was being made of him in 2016. I knew way before any of my friends did. When I dressed up as him for Halloween everyone thought I was Dracula. This misconception has been cleared up by the movie.

    • @wk3820
      @wk3820 5 років тому +18

      On this point even Stan Lee was in agreement. Those Doctor Strange stories were all DItko. Stan said so in print multiple times.

  • @cdubbart
    @cdubbart 6 років тому +398

    I don't fully agree with Ditko or Ayn Rand's views, but I respect Ditko greatly for what he accomplished & how he accomplished it.

    • @jaredgarcia8638
      @jaredgarcia8638 6 років тому +14

      Wise choice

    • @AceLM92
      @AceLM92 6 років тому +31

      Best response somebody has given to Ditko's views so far

    • @jaredgarcia8638
      @jaredgarcia8638 6 років тому +2

      @@AceLM92 indeed.

    • @christianbjorck816
      @christianbjorck816 5 років тому +21

      I agree with him. Rand and her ideology is very misunderstood. Most people simplify it and don’t really get it.

    • @jaredgarcia8638
      @jaredgarcia8638 5 років тому +26

      @@christianbjorck816 how would you better explain the ideology?

  • @doombotspod
    @doombotspod 4 роки тому +19

    Wow - I had no idea Ditko was still active up through 2016. I always learn something unexpected when watching this channel. Thank you!

  • @PurpleColonel
    @PurpleColonel 2 роки тому +82

    The thing about "objectivism" is that it may actually work out if we have something we're CERTAIN can discover the objective truth and good in every matter. In practice people just decide what's objective, hopefully based on evidence but in morality often not. It's basically Ayn Rand going "I'm literally so smart that if we disagree I can comfortably write you off completely as wrong."

    • @misterknightowlandco
      @misterknightowlandco Рік тому

      Ayn Rand’s philosophy is literally satanism and the basis of libertarianism/consumerism. If our personal happiness is our moral guide you basically have “do what thou wilt is the law of the land”. Her philosophy just eliminated the religious aspect of it. There is “objective truths” in the world and I don’t buy into post modern relativism either, but ayn rands application of objective truth to everything including morals is just downright evil. Simple things like physical reality is objectively true. The sun comes up in the morning and it’s observable…. But that’s about the end of it.

    • @ChakkyCharizard
      @ChakkyCharizard 3 місяці тому +6

      Yeah, like...Girl, that's not a philosophy, that's just narcissism😭

  • @andrewjensen8128
    @andrewjensen8128 6 років тому +78

    Steve Ditko's art speaks for itself. His designs were revolutionary and he helped define how motion was shown in comic books. Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko are responsible for what I consider to be the finest art in comic books. Whether you agree with Ditko's views does not matter. His contributions should be recognized.

    • @Einnor084
      @Einnor084 2 роки тому +1

      YUPPERZZZzzzzzzzzzzzz

  • @MiggySmalls714
    @MiggySmalls714 6 років тому +464

    Ditko sounds like how I was in high school...I'm really glad I changed.

    • @frankandstern8803
      @frankandstern8803 5 років тому +15

      lol Exactly

    • @frankandstern8803
      @frankandstern8803 5 років тому +11

      Exactly lol

    • @Cythil
      @Cythil 5 років тому +38

      @svin There are some quite types in high school.
      Joking aside there clearly referring to his objectivist views when he was alive. Those ideas still resonate after he is dead. And there is a lot of people in there high school years that tend to gravitate toward this philosophy. I mean who does not want to be rational and objective like this philosophy claim to be?
      Personally I find it full with contradictions and follows tend to justify after the fact there moral stances. It pretty nice to have a black and white moral compass, when you can change the compass heading at will.
      (of course in Ditko stories he has the benefit of being the narrator so it easy to actually make the story fit the characters. The world change, not the character, as the video so well put it.)

    • @Cythil
      @Cythil 5 років тому +6

      ​@svin Wait... I was not even aware that we where debating if Ditko was a real person or not.
      And that techneclly does not matter to what I brought up as it the ideas that was communicated by Ditko (psudonym or not) that I discussed. As well as how the narrator has the power to shape the story to fit whatever ideas they want to communicate.

    • @lecoclarkson497
      @lecoclarkson497 5 років тому +15

      Steve wasnt the problem at all, everyone else was and it's good he stuck to his beliefs instead of conform to what other people wanted from him. Marco Pierre White has a similar ideology of never selling is soul because other people want him to be some nice guy who is cool with everyone. It has nothing to do with high school, he was a grown man with beliefs similar to us all. Show some fucking respect.

  • @Lead122
    @Lead122 5 років тому +291

    I do love how The Question has an unmovable set of thinking, it makes him unique... and a bit crazy. Ironically, his beliefs makes him a flawed character to my eyes.
    I would probably have a hard time hanging out with someone like Ditko. I'm such a "case by case" kind of person, very few things are inherently evil to my eyes.

    • @bigfan1041
      @bigfan1041 4 роки тому +18

      Most people are like that, its a very convenient kind of morality you can bend every which way.

    • @janorhypercleats
      @janorhypercleats 4 роки тому +2

      I LOVE Mysterious Suspense #1--the comic that introduced The Question! It's probably my favorite comic of all! And it's hilarious that it was published by Charlton Comics, this really 3rd rate comic book company that paid the lowest rates in the industry! You have this really complicated philosophical novel being marketed to 6 and 7 year old kids who have no idea what the hell he's talking about!

    • @maxque2841
      @maxque2841 3 роки тому +39

      @@bigfan1041 Or perhaps it is the convenient philosophy that doesn’t force you to distinguish between shades of grey... Life is not black and white, friend.

    • @trodgerable-u4i
      @trodgerable-u4i 3 роки тому +7

      @@bigfan1041 I think its far more convenient to rely on some arbitrary moral code determined by a man in the clouds

    • @dante_0962
      @dante_0962 Рік тому +1

      You have the same thoughts as me “case by case” and not everyone is inherently evil.

  • @SamMcDonald83
    @SamMcDonald83 3 роки тому +34

    His artwork is truly remarkable. Shame he couldn't have worked better with other. Still co-creating (arguably creating) Spiderman will leave a legacy few can match...

  • @Phantom9252
    @Phantom9252 5 років тому +74

    I respect Ditko as a creative, he deserves his Co-Creator title for his Marvel work, but people out there who say Stan was a fraudster and that Ditko deserves all of the credit reeeeeaaaally know nothing about either of them. Ditko was an amazing artist and his belief in Objectivism and how he used that as a lens for his work is fascinating, but his lack of credit is really his own fault for pushing people away and not doing his own press work. Ultimately, his rigid Objectivism is what built Ditko up, and is the very thing that tears him down.

    • @tikitokiworld3242
      @tikitokiworld3242 3 роки тому +7

      Stan lee was just the face and so called 'snakeslin oil salesman' of the business. Atleast he gave credit to the artists unlike fraudster Bob Kane

    • @Frustratedartist2
      @Frustratedartist2 Рік тому +3

      You're wrong blaming Ditko here. Jack Kirby wasn't a recluse, and Lee stole all his credit too (and wrote nothing). What you do not realize, is just how little of "writer: Stan Lee" was actually written by Stan Lee. Very little.
      Also, that's a fine philosophy - if you steal from a silent person, it's his fault for not shouting.

  • @Rometiklan
    @Rometiklan 6 років тому +84

    Truly Outstanding video, Chris! I'll be watching this one a few times just to wrap my head around Ditko's way of thinking. If I had a list of comic creators I would want to interview, Ditko would be pretty high on that list. I think it was a huge loss to the comic world that Ditko chose to live his life as a recluse. Even though he was still turning out some work in his latter years, he didn't garner the commercial success/attention like his early Marvel days. Thanks for posting Chris. RIP, Mr. Ditko.

  • @NoJusticeNoPeace
    @NoJusticeNoPeace 6 років тому +453

    "I didn't fire Ditko, I didn't. Oh hi, Mark."

  • @truefanforum3273
    @truefanforum3273 6 років тому +36

    I love the videos where you explore a writer or artist, their works, impact and personality. They are so informative, balanced and clearly well researched. Excellent job!

  • @LinusManning
    @LinusManning 5 років тому +314

    That moment when you realize Rorshach is actually a hilarious parody of Mr. A. I wonder if Moore was giggling to himself every time he was writing Rorshach.

    • @LinusManning
      @LinusManning 5 років тому +32

      @Jacob Wood Moore was aware that Question was a toned down version of Mr. A. Also, the black and white, right and wrong aspect of Rorshach where he does not believe things can be morally grey was inspired by Mr. A.

    • @savagetv6460
      @savagetv6460 4 роки тому +51

      Alan Moore already is pissed because most people believe Rorshach was right and it is true, he was right

    • @sirperybLakeney
      @sirperybLakeney 4 роки тому +19

      Yeah, Moore has spoken about The Question/Mr A and how completely insane they are and how hilarious he finds Ditko's bizarre convictions:
      ua-cam.com/video/3gwDnhMO8is/v-deo.html

    • @alejoqc9540
      @alejoqc9540 4 роки тому +46

      @@savagetv6460 Sorry, but I could never accept Rorschach wasn't right. And I will NEVER, EVER accept Ozymandias was right.

    • @sethleoric2598
      @sethleoric2598 4 роки тому +14

      To be honest all of the characters (except Nite Owl) were pretty problematic

  • @kidkunjer
    @kidkunjer 6 років тому +725

    ironic that his unwillingness to create grey-area characters created psychopathic anti-heroes...

    • @briannafranklin8263
      @briannafranklin8263 5 років тому +75

      @Raving Dave You don't need to kill someone to be a psychopath

    • @michaelkeha
      @michaelkeha 5 років тому +43

      None of his characters were anti heroes they were some of the finest examples of real super heroes in comics they don't bend or compromise in the pursuit of justice and they give these villians exactly what they have earned.

    • @autumn_breeze616
      @autumn_breeze616 5 років тому +172

      @@michaelkeha nah they're pretty wack tbh. Mr A is a terrifying psycho, and Ditkos writing gives off a weird detached vibe. I'll be honest, I'm glad he didn't get a stranglehold on writing Spiderman because the character never would have been as popular with Ditko at the helm.

    • @Jeddostotle7
      @Jeddostotle7 5 років тому +95

      Why are there so many objectivism-defenders (who all appear to have a loose-at-best grasp on punctuation to varying degrees) in the replies to comments on this video? Did some particularly objectivist UA-camr direct their fans toward it?

    • @macsnafu
      @macsnafu 5 років тому +16

      @@autumn_breeze616 Ditko DID have a 'stranglehold' on writing Spider-Man, when it became popular. Given the Marvel style of plot-art-script, the artist had tremendous control over the plot of the story, and eventually Ditko was given full credit for the plots.
      "Ditko eventually desired credit for the plotting he was contributing under the Marvel Method. Lee concurred, and starting with #25 (June 1965), Ditko received plot credit for the stories."
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_Ditko
      You should read those early Spider-Man stories and see for yourself why they became popular

  • @chimpmaster
    @chimpmaster 2 роки тому +8

    A great portrait of an extremely fascinating comic icon. Thank you!

  • @TupocalypseShakur
    @TupocalypseShakur 3 роки тому +535

    Objectivism seems to encourage stepping over everyone around in order to satisfy yourself. It's like the justification of selfishness

    • @Tophergr8
      @Tophergr8 3 роки тому +68

      Ayn Rand wrote a book called "The Virtue of Selfishness."

    • @dannyboy5008
      @dannyboy5008 3 роки тому +56

      Theres truth to the benefits of individuality and selfishness. From the way you speak I suppose you give every penny you have to others and never consider your own well being? Objectivism is understanding that you and your closest loved ones should come first before you begin to consider others, *not* that you can *never* consider others. That's not really immoral, its moreso a realistic ordering of priorities.

    • @measuringband
      @measuringband 2 роки тому +1

      @@dannyboy5008 thats not what objectivism is, youre replying to every comment trying to justify it, kinda embarassing, ayn rand was a crazy moron cultleader, youre just selfish and greedy and a loser. Get laid.

    • @JGHMusic
      @JGHMusic 2 роки тому +77

      @@dannyboy5008 standing by your convictions no matter what sounds a little counterintuitive and could cause you to be selfish in a destructive and ignorant way

    • @dante_0962
      @dante_0962 Рік тому +31

      I have a mix feelings about objectivism one hand I like how it makes you think in a objective manner and standing your ground in your beliefs even if you didn’t win in a argument. But it makes bad view on crime and other people, because the world is not just black and white there’s a lot of grey in there. And encourage you to be selfish and a dick to people with a shortsighted world view.

  • @bbeg-j2p
    @bbeg-j2p 6 років тому +10

    Great video. One of the most objective and non-judgmental reviews of Ditko's philosophy, his contribution to comics, and his influence to the medium.

  • @petitio_principii
    @petitio_principii 5 років тому +198

    _"All my life I've been interested in only one thing-making money! And yet Spider-Man risks his life day after day with no thought of reward! If A man him is good-is a hero-then what am I?? I can never respect myself while he lives! Spider-Man represents everything I'm not! He's brave, powerful, and unselfish! The truth is-I ENVY him! I, J. Jonah Jameson-millionaire, man of the world, civic leader-I'd give everything I own to be the man HE is! But I can never climb to his lever! So all that remains for me is-to try to tear him down-because Heaven help me-I'm JEALOUS of him!"_ - *John Johah J. J. J. J. Jameson*

  • @montemay100
    @montemay100 2 роки тому +2

    This was a really good episode. This is the most thorough information on Steve Ditko that I’ve seen. Well done man! Please keep up the good work!

  • @anthonypalumbo1954
    @anthonypalumbo1954 6 років тому +28

    Another great video from my favorite youtuber. You are underrated.

  • @KevinMayle1974
    @KevinMayle1974 6 років тому +30

    Wow, you really did a tremendous job on this!

  • @pulsarstargrave256
    @pulsarstargrave256 6 років тому +8

    I learned about Mr.Ditko's passing from this video and I burst out in tears! I hadn't yet had that kind of instant reaction to the loss of a cartoonist before! A lot of my favorites are gone, from Jack Kirby to Bob Kane;from Gene Colan to Carl Barks but none hit me like that! Some called him "Reclusive" but I saw him as a private man and I respected his privacy! I'm not one of those people who believe a cartoonist "owes" me a glimpse into their personal lives!
    Having said that, I have to mention that in an article that was published in a comics related magazine, which came out around the time of the first Sam Raimi SPIDER-MAN movie
    quotes attributed to Steve Ditko said conclusively that the identity of the Green Goblin had nothing to do with leaving Marvel because:
    "...Stan never knew what he was getting in my Spider-Man stories and covers until after [production manager] Sol Brodsky took the material from me ... so there couldn't have been any disagreement or agreement, no exchanges ... no problems between us concerning the Green Goblin or anything else from before issue #25 to my final issues".
    Some have speculated that Ditko's real beef was with (Marvel owner) Martin Goodman's alleged reneging on a royalty offer and instead pledging to give Ditko an increase in page rate, but unless an exact quote came from Steve, I just think of it as "possibly true--but perhaps not"!
    Overall, I loved this video! I didn't agree 100% with Ditko and definitely NOT with Ayn Rand (who died living on Social Security, while allegedly espousing views which condemned government programs like "The New Deal" and "The Great Society!!) but Steve and I were on the same wavelength in many ways! And darn it, I LOVED his artwork!
    GOOD BYE, STEVE--MAY YOU DWELL IN PARADISE!

  • @spiritualphysics
    @spiritualphysics 5 років тому +48

    To think that as a teenager I was told comics were mindless drivel. How could I have possibly kept up w/ this vid w/o advanced education. Comix taught me so much and inspired research. Thanks for sharing. Yes love.

    • @nevohyams
      @nevohyams Рік тому +2

      not to disagree with your point, but tbf Objectivism isn't a philosophy with any intellectual merit

    • @turtleanton6539
      @turtleanton6539 Рік тому

      😊

  • @joeljukus9129
    @joeljukus9129 5 років тому +4

    The Pennsylvania State Library has large collection of Ditko's comics from his personal collection including Amazing Fantasy 15. The collection includes correspondence with Ditko and the Library. Ditko is from PA and it is nice that PA is preserving his work.

  • @stevenguitink5947
    @stevenguitink5947 6 років тому +191

    I always find it strange how Objectivist heroes are lauded in-story as these Randian superheroes for refusing to compromise on their principles and are larger than life and loved and respected, yet their real world creators are often relegated to being pariahs or recluses due to their same philosophy. Kinda shows how the philosophy interacts with the real world IMO.

    • @johannpopper1493
      @johannpopper1493 6 років тому +33

      It just shows how the real world is not ideal, which is why people hate to think about objectivism.

    • @savagetv6460
      @savagetv6460 6 років тому +25

      It's because the industry is full of lefties who ironically are just uncompromising, but their philosophy is an appeal to emotions and worshiping feelings. Objectivism values logic

    • @savagetv6460
      @savagetv6460 5 років тому +7

      @Jake Proven you clearly either don't understand logic or learned about Objectivism from a Marxist professor who probably told you that feminism is good

    • @savagetv6460
      @savagetv6460 5 років тому +5

      @DJHart you can't disprove Objectivism without resorting to collectivist arguments. I bet you voted for Bernie

    • @notaraven
      @notaraven 5 років тому +19

      well not necessarily there are many rich objectivists, politicans and buisness men come to mind but there are others. The problem with Ditko was, unlike many similar men, he wasn't a person to do things for the paycheck rather he would gladly throw the money back at thier face. Honestly its a difference in perspective as someone else would make sure they get all the compensation they deserve for thier creation while he put effort to keep them the way he wanted them to be.
      Also worth noting that the industry is very liberal and progressive especially back then, Stan lee himself noted that when he decided to make iron man as a way to troll the industry while presenting a different point of view if i recall correctly. Being so convicted while working with a room full of people that disagree, hate, or misunderstand your beliefs is a discomforting situation.

  • @israelvaldez26
    @israelvaldez26 6 років тому +68

    That was a really informative video about Steve Ditko! I don't know if I agree with his philosophy but I do respect his point of view and the interesting way it affected his career in the comic industry.

    • @futurestoryteller
      @futurestoryteller 6 років тому +22

      When you think about it, by respecting his point of view you're already giving him far more credit than he'd give you.

  • @IloveOtherPplsMsry
    @IloveOtherPplsMsry 6 років тому +181

    Goes without saying there will never be another Steve Ditko

    • @NoJusticeNoPeace
      @NoJusticeNoPeace 6 років тому +37

      There's plenty of neckbearded Randroids in the comics industry.

    • @kuzwawszystkozajete1
      @kuzwawszystkozajete1 6 років тому +4

      Can you name any?

    • @NoJusticeNoPeace
      @NoJusticeNoPeace 6 років тому +14

      Frank Miller? Chuck Dixon?

    • @kuzwawszystkozajete1
      @kuzwawszystkozajete1 6 років тому +24

      Neither of them are Objectivists, it's clear from their works. I don't know where you got that notion from.

    • @NoJusticeNoPeace
      @NoJusticeNoPeace 6 років тому +28

      Sorry I forgot the major Randroid pastime of Objectivism-of-the-gaps, where only things you like get the official Randroid seal of approval, while anything which shows Randroids as being a cult of obnoxious sociopaths is deemed sociopolitically impure.

  • @RobbyRSmith
    @RobbyRSmith 4 роки тому +5

    Great overview of Ditko's carreer and his beliefs. Im not his biiggest fan but since Spidey is my fav super hero and ASM 33 is probably one of my fav comics, then he will always have a special place in my heart.

  • @markukeley2924
    @markukeley2924 5 років тому +4

    Ditko's figure drawing had a wonderful dynamism to them, even when the backgrounds were nonexistent. Good episode, again!

  • @CWargh63
    @CWargh63 6 років тому +22

    Ditko also designed the now iconic red and gold Iron-Man armor, probably saving that character from oblivion.

    • @Kiwi2375
      @Kiwi2375 3 роки тому

      Sure that was Don Heck

    • @CWargh63
      @CWargh63 3 роки тому +3

      @@Kiwi2375 Nope, it was an issue Ditko did guest art and featured Doll Man or something as the villain. Don Heck was the regular illustrator, and either he or Kirby designed the original armor, which was so clunky casual readers thought it was a robot, so Steve redesigned it. To the best of my knowledge, as I am phone only away from my PC...

  • @aa-id7li
    @aa-id7li Рік тому +7

    It's funny to me that in retrospect Stan so perfectly embodied objectivest ideas of evil takers stealing credit for the work of others and glorifying himself at their expense.

  • @michaelmcclure7434
    @michaelmcclure7434 5 років тому +3

    Thank you for this. I thought you were fair and I learned a lot. When I was a kid, (I am now 71), Ditko and Kirby were my favorite comic book artists; men not only of great talent but conviction and character.

  • @misanthropicmusings4596
    @misanthropicmusings4596 5 років тому +1

    ComicTropes is the most fun site on youtube, bar none! Thanks for all you do Chris!

  • @gaminawulfsdottir3253
    @gaminawulfsdottir3253 8 місяців тому +1

    5:54 That sequence of pages and panels is arguably not just the most iconic scene in Spider-Man, but the most iconic sequence ever created in any comic. In my experience, speaking as someone who read these comics at a young age, it will never be equaled.

  • @kyriesanchez4122
    @kyriesanchez4122 6 років тому +23

    I appreciate the objectiveness of the video itself. Especially considering Ditko had a perspective that can be considered terrible. But because of his contributions to many lives through his cultural contributions, we learn about his perspective and what made the man behind the contributions. I respect you, Steve Ditko, even if I disagree with your philosophy.

  • @tezzerii
    @tezzerii 3 роки тому +9

    Steve Ditko and Jack Kirby. Totally different styles. Both brilliant.

  • @rasheedqe
    @rasheedqe 6 років тому +202

    It might be bad to say but judging by Mr A. I'm really glad ditko stop writing spider man and hawk and dove. Mr A is a lunatic with no idea of context. Just an inflexible psychotic philosophy.

    • @TungstenViper
      @TungstenViper 6 років тому +12

      Superheroes are supposed to act without context in an Objectivist Justice POV, as their emotions could lead them to failure and misniterpretation. An Objectivist hero must be resolute and uncompromisable to oppose to slimy villains and their attempts at deception. You can't bend the will of a 100% convinced man, It's his way or nothing else. It's an utopian view on society, sure, but it's one of the bases of the modern Superhero values. it's what makes a superhero stand apart from the masses.

    • @rasheedqe
      @rasheedqe 6 років тому +53

      Only crazy people act without context. Even laws have context like you can't kill people unless your attacked with this amount of force or if you were in this dire emotional state. As a great jedi once aid only a sith deals in absolute.(Corny I know but true) No one is fully good or evil. Sometimes good people make bad decision. Sometimes good people are forced to make bad decisions. Example your family is staving and the only way to feed them is by stealing. Do you steal food to feed your children who depend on you. Who's the bad guy in that situation? Good and evil are abstract concepts created by humans that change from place to place. Where I live you can't have sex with a girl under 16. But in other places you can marry 10 year olds. Which law is right? Which law is good? Mr A is a crazy person because he can't accept the simple truth that good and evil are arbitrary concepts created by man and ever changing. Not only from place to place but from time period to time period.

    • @EvilSandwich
      @EvilSandwich 6 років тому +49

      You basically just unironically described a complete sociopath. Like, literally the clinical definition.

    • @rasheedqe
      @rasheedqe 6 років тому +1

      @@EvilSandwich who me?

    • @EvilSandwich
      @EvilSandwich 6 років тому +9

      Lol no. The other guy in the thread.

  • @YAMISOOLD2009
    @YAMISOOLD2009 Рік тому +1

    This was truly informative. Glad I clicked on it. I think the stories of the comic creators are more interesting often than the comic book stories! thank you!

  • @TheAyeAye1
    @TheAyeAye1 3 роки тому +1

    Well. I gave up comics long, long ago. Your channel has answered a number of questions I hadn't thought about in decades.

  • @oldmanlogan9616
    @oldmanlogan9616 6 років тому +6

    Great essay! That was a very well ressearched video.

  • @archmage7813
    @archmage7813 Рік тому +9

    The hero in an objectivist story is actually the villain in the real world.

  • @leprechaunbutreallyjustamidget
    @leprechaunbutreallyjustamidget 4 роки тому +92

    He's just as morality grey as everyone else, he just doesn't have the balls to face it

    • @savagetv6460
      @savagetv6460 4 роки тому +15

      that's funny coming from people who reeee about justice when cops kill someone. where's that gray morality bitch?

    • @leprechaunbutreallyjustamidget
      @leprechaunbutreallyjustamidget 4 роки тому +10

      @@savagetv6460 lol

    • @dannyboy5008
      @dannyboy5008 3 роки тому +1

      @@savagetv6460 rules for thee but not for me

  • @TiredOldSparky
    @TiredOldSparky 5 років тому +2

    Excellent work! One of the best looks at Steve Ditko and his work I have seen...

  • @Rechargerator
    @Rechargerator 4 роки тому +3

    Well researched, you filled in some details I didn't know.
    I always thought of Mr. A as what the Punisher would be like as a clerical worker, "I totally knew you would get paper cut, but I said nothing." It was a lot of text for very little pay off.

  • @singaporesammy
    @singaporesammy 5 років тому +29

    "No "Buts"! My policies rule my property. I decide on the uses and disposal of my earned property! If you and Henry want to promote your causes, earn, create your own paper. Now GET OUT!" writes the man who spent his entire career trying to make other people publish his philosophy.

  • @danielgertler5976
    @danielgertler5976 Рік тому +7

    Reading the summary if Ayn Rand books comes across like a satire of what objectivism is about, but then you realize that's exactly what objectivism is.

    • @Elfenlied8675309
      @Elfenlied8675309 Рік тому +3

      I just always think of Alan Moore's response when asked about Rorschach's beliefs and objectivism something like "Never compromise your morals no matter what? Not even in the face of Armageddon? That's the way a child views the world, that's something a 15 year old kid would think was deep and philosophical. How ridiculous. Do you know what I think when somebody tells me that they were inspired by Rorschach or they can relate to him? I think "Get the F away from me you freak, I hope I never see you ever again." "

    • @ApophisTw0Thousand6309
      @ApophisTw0Thousand6309 8 місяців тому

      @@Elfenlied8675309 the funny thing is Rorschach is the character people resonate with the most because he wouldn’t compromise in the face of Armageddon (or in this case, a malignant narcissist murdering tens of thousands of people for flimsily justified reasons).

  • @MitchRuth
    @MitchRuth 6 років тому +4

    This was as good and concise a summary of Ayn Rand and Objectivism as I have encountered.

  • @TheGreatDevlin
    @TheGreatDevlin 5 років тому +2

    This might've been my first CT video and it honestly reminds me why comics and their creators are so fascinating. Maybe my favorite video of the channel.

  • @swanberger
    @swanberger Рік тому

    Excellent episode! You especially deserve praise for being so fair and balanced in your discussion of Steve Ditko’s philosophy.

  • @infesticon
    @infesticon 6 років тому +121

    So Steve Ditko was real life Rorshach with out the smells and murdering?

    • @onyxt3589
      @onyxt3589 3 роки тому +11

      And the mask.

    • @panthergod
      @panthergod 3 роки тому +6

      Yeah..."without"...suuuuuuuure....

    • @yurifairy2969
      @yurifairy2969 2 роки тому +9

      Rorshach is based on his character The Question, it's no coincidence

    • @11111110
      @11111110 8 місяців тому +1

      Sadly his body was only found by his landlord, after responding to days of complaints about a smell from his apartment. What few visitors he had described it as small and messy.

  • @TheVileOne
    @TheVileOne 6 років тому +146

    I don't necessarily agree with all of Steve Ditko's philosophies, but on some level I respect that he always adhered to his own personal beliefs. It wasn't like he was some psycho radical. He just stuck to his guns.

    • @salum75
      @salum75 6 років тому +11

      more of a sociopath than a psychopath

    • @thelastmotel
      @thelastmotel 5 років тому +18

      @@salum75 No

    • @Werrf1
      @Werrf1 5 років тому +19

      It's easy to stick to one's personal beliefs when those beliefs include "I can never, ever be wrong about anything". That's what's so attractive about so-called "Objectivism" for so many - it allows one to stop thinking, and justify reacting emotionally.

    • @chimedemon
      @chimedemon 5 років тому

      I agree, although I feel if it harms people, THAT'S a whole different thing, which luckily Ditko never did.

    • @spaceknight793
      @spaceknight793 5 років тому +3

      @@Werrf1 = ....while telling everyone else it is THEY who are thinking emotionally!

  • @cabronmalisimo
    @cabronmalisimo 5 років тому +94

    Zack Snyder an Objectivist?, that explains Everything...

    • @Vivi2372
      @Vivi2372 4 роки тому +29

      Fuck it really does doesn't it? Even Batman killing. By his standards there's no one more qualified to deal out death than an exceptional billionaire. Even if the wealth was entirely inherited.

    • @jewsco
      @jewsco 4 роки тому +4

      And why he was wrong for those movies

    • @57wookie
      @57wookie 4 роки тому

      It's not at all subtle tbh

    • @chickrepelant
      @chickrepelant 4 роки тому

      abasa-fckin-lutely

    • @vintheguy
      @vintheguy 4 роки тому

      I found this video specifically critiquing zack snyder and pointing out that objectivism is likely why the dcue movies and watchmen movie sucked so much
      ua-cam.com/video/hdxk7dB9yeU/v-deo.html

  • @JosemiBezerra
    @JosemiBezerra 3 роки тому +1

    I love how you stay respectful for Ditko's legacy. Much love from Brazil. :)

  • @markloveless1001
    @markloveless1001 4 роки тому +10

    Ahhhh. Clancey Brown's Luthor and Jeffrey Coombs' Question. Some of the finest voice casting ever.

  • @gustavgnoettgen
    @gustavgnoettgen 5 років тому +72

    "He took no drugs"
    In my opinion, more insane people eventually consume drugs than drugs produce insane people.
    This doesn't make drugs harmless! But the whole "drugs artist" trope has problems. Drugs don't really make you more creative. They only can inspire a bit or keep you awake / asleep. This can lead to creativity... but only if you are disciplined enough to _actually work with them._

    • @trippinsciko
      @trippinsciko 5 років тому +7

      If anything, it's the sober artists hat give me the creeps, they're all just so.... off....

    • @RD-dd9ol
      @RD-dd9ol 2 роки тому +1

      He didn’t say it was surprising that Ditko didn’t take drugs because Ditko was insane. He suggested that it’s surprising Ditko didn’t take drugs because of how psychedelic the art was on Doctor Strange. No one here is equating drugs with insanity

  • @josephmatthews7698
    @josephmatthews7698 Рік тому +18

    The thing about killing someone is, you're not just killing who they are but everything they could be to the people around them and the world at large.

    • @zacklapaglia7644
      @zacklapaglia7644 11 місяців тому +1

      That's one of the things I'm trying to perfect in my own stories. All too often in fiction, Death is either overused or cheated with resurrections.
      Death should never lose its meaning, as the sudden destruction of a soul, should impact how the story is told onwards.

    • @ianfinrir8724
      @ianfinrir8724 7 місяців тому

      Clint Eastwood said it best in Unforgiven, that killing somebody "takes away all he's got and all he's ever gonna have."

  • @kforcer
    @kforcer 6 років тому +6

    People miss the fact that in Hawk and Dove, it was their father, the judge, who was supposed to be the mouthpiece for Ditko. Hawk and Dove were both supposed to be be rather misguided in their world views. I also would add that a lot of people, myself included, really loved Ditko's run on Rom, perhaps especially his work on the finale. Its true that a lot of people were jarred by Sal Buscema's departure from Rom, but at the same time, Ditko's work on the series certainly had its supporters.

  • @ariconsul
    @ariconsul 5 років тому +1

    Fantastic video. Thanks for bringing some special insight into Ditko and Lee. Interesting to see the stark dichotomy between Ditko's curvy, often phantasmagorical drawing style and character conception and the rigid intellectual philosophy he followed.

  • @real_fjcalabrese
    @real_fjcalabrese 6 років тому +185

    I may not agree with his "philosophy," Steve Ditko was a talented man.

    • @razofdead
      @razofdead 5 років тому +5

      Right with you

    • @sjewitt22
      @sjewitt22 4 роки тому +14

      @Mark Dobzyn What? Obama.?

    • @phantomdriver2010
      @phantomdriver2010 4 роки тому +3

      @Mark Dobzyn wait how did Obama get into this?

    • @phantomdriver2010
      @phantomdriver2010 4 роки тому +4

      @Mark Dobzyn thats not true and has nothing to do with whats happening

    • @vintheguy
      @vintheguy 4 роки тому +4

      @Mark D
      Ah yes
      The ideology that's mocked by literally everyone for being a self serving, ludicrously cartoonish, hateful, childish, narcissistic apologia that's literally spawned cults

  • @DeathBYDesign666
    @DeathBYDesign666 5 років тому +87

    Yeah it's not a good idea to get too attached to one philosophy. In doing so you might just miss out on a whole world of possibilities. It's admirable to stand by ones convictions, but in reality without compromise you miss the whole point of life in general. The views and experiences of others make life interesting and worth living, while sameness only leads to stagnation. Creativity would dwindle to nothing in such a world.

    • @BurkinaFaso69
      @BurkinaFaso69 3 роки тому +13

      It‘s especially not a good idea to get attached to _this_ „philosophy“

    • @kaboose111
      @kaboose111 3 роки тому +5

      That thinking is for weak people.

    • @DeathBYDesign666
      @DeathBYDesign666 3 роки тому +8

      @@kaboose111 You said it so explain why. I'm not saying all people by the way, just not to live by a strict narrative of my way or the highway and under no circumstances can you think differently than I do. We all want to "fit in" so to speak but that only leads to a boring an unfulfilled society on a mass scale.

    • @imsamurai3000
      @imsamurai3000 3 роки тому

      @@kaboose111 do you mean successful people

    • @BestWayKilla
      @BestWayKilla 3 роки тому

      So you don't stand for anything, that's what you're saying?

  • @jdredd8152
    @jdredd8152 5 років тому +4

    Wow. I had no idea Mr. Ditko was so such an interesting fella. Now I want to pick up and read some Mr. A comics. Thanks for this great video. I'm subcribed to your channel now. 😎👍

  • @TheKevphil
    @TheKevphil 5 років тому +6

    I recall a gray ink wash story Steve did for one of the B&W Warren mags that was simply amazing. VERY illustrative and realistic, unlike anything I had ever seen from him. He was a very inspired and skilled draftsman.

  • @venvon6433
    @venvon6433 5 років тому

    I know I’m late to the show (just recently discovered your channel), but I wanted to say how impressed I am with your material. I’ve been enjoying many of the episodes you’ve uploaded and I appreciate your hard work. Thank you!

  • @stevencampbell5110
    @stevencampbell5110 4 роки тому +14

    The Lee, Ditko team was and always will be my favorite ! I was always chomping at the bit waiting for their next issues. Two more legends are gone.

  • @randomcoyote8807
    @randomcoyote8807 6 років тому +51

    How ironic. He refused to "sell out" and do projects that went against his convictions... but then was disappointed when "the market" didn't want his ideological stuff.

    • @funkyweapon1981
      @funkyweapon1981 5 років тому

      @Jay TalentsGodddamn right, bro!

    • @michaelkeha
      @michaelkeha 5 років тому +3

      I mean no one likes to be rejected and fail seeing as he continued working and his stuff is valued now seems like he was a case of people only care when your dead

  • @Crowley9
    @Crowley9 6 років тому +103

    I am so ever glad Ayn Rand's nonsense doesn't have a foothold outside of the States.

    • @julianhermanubis6800
      @julianhermanubis6800 5 років тому +15

      Guess again, Chester: qz.com/17881/why-ayn-rand-outsells-karl-marx-in-india-by-16-to-1-and-what-else-she-tells-us-about-countries/

    • @Zenbladison
      @Zenbladison 5 років тому +21

      Why can't it die like the mistake it always was?

    • @christorpher84
      @christorpher84 5 років тому +1

      Crowley9 aren’t you asshole

    • @lakiog1938
      @lakiog1938 5 років тому +4

      Maxism is for retards

    • @Azrael_Garou
      @Azrael_Garou 5 років тому

      Aren't we so smug in that notion.
      Seriously though, is arrogance some sort of European vitrue? You people are *dripping* with it when you speak poorly of places you have zero personal knowledge of.

  • @TheHiddenGroove
    @TheHiddenGroove 6 років тому +5

    Very well Done. Steve Ditko deserves to be Studied.

  • @CoreySosner
    @CoreySosner 3 роки тому

    Wow. Great episode Chris. I love your channel and this is one of my if my favorite ones. I look forward to all you newer shows. Been watching for awhile but I need to go back and dig out these GEMS !! Keep up the great work wonderful show

  • @williamwerner7599
    @williamwerner7599 6 років тому

    Hi Chris, I am a new subscriber and found your channel via some other comic channels I watch. I started collecting comics in the early 90's but then stopped after high school before joining the military. After I retired from active duty last year, I got back into collecting and absolutely love being back to reading and seeing awesome comic books. I really enjoy your videos and your natural comedy when you make them. I look forward to more great content!

  • @harutothefriendlyodst7639
    @harutothefriendlyodst7639 5 років тому +13

    While I thank him for the creation of spiderman,and may he rest in peace.
    He would be a pain to work with,
    The objectivists may say otherwise but not all people are objective.
    In the world it isn't black or white, And there are so many shades of gray between them.
    And personally I find the bland 'there is good, there is bad' as just that, Bland.

  • @jeremycline9542
    @jeremycline9542 6 років тому +14

    If you like the Question or Mr. A, pick up the Fly #6 (Archie, 1983) where Ditko creates the Crooked Man, an objectivist who brings criminals to a haunted house to punish them.

  • @KikiDiki
    @KikiDiki 6 років тому +5

    The fact that Spiderman became so beloved while Mr. A is not gives me hope for humanity

  • @vilekyle22
    @vilekyle22 5 років тому +1

    Very well researched and presented. The Question is my favorite character currently and I hope he is written in the future as the Question from JLU. Moore and Ditko are my favorite writers.

  • @robertrusso7825
    @robertrusso7825 6 років тому +2

    Outstanding Video!! I was a teenager in the early 80's and never was able to understand why Steve Ditko didn't go on to become a big name and kind of slowly faded away. Fast Forward to 2008, I discovered Atlas Shrugged due to the similarity with national politics at that time. How interesting that Steve Ditko was an Objectivist and couldn't tolerate Stan Lees "Romanticism" No wonder they made such a good team! I can just imagine the arguments! In fact thinking about it now, most of the early Spider man stories seem to be one long argument between Stan Lee and Steve. I mean Spider man taking money at the wrestling contest and then not stopping the robber I bet that idea came from Steve. Then Stan Lee answers with the consequence of the robber killing Uncle Ben, take that! Steve!

  • @marklawrence2772
    @marklawrence2772 6 років тому +6

    i was sad to hear of Steve's passing. The few Stranges Tales with Dr Strange Ditko art i have are some of my most prized comic books, i also have to say i do like the line art in the Mr A stories.

    • @SciFiFan2012
      @SciFiFan2012 6 років тому +1

      Mark Lawrence I've always wanted to own original comic art, but even smaller items are pricey.

    • @SciFiFan2012
      @SciFiFan2012 6 років тому +1

      Mighty Raccoon yeah, but to own a piece of artwork before it became the comic is what I'd like (if that made any sense lol).

    • @marklawrence2772
      @marklawrence2772 6 років тому

      There is a seller on ebay that has a lot of the original cel work used to produce the comicbooks from the silver age - i'd like to know a bit more about the process to be honest but the work is interesting to look at: try searching for "Original Production Art STRANGE TALES" there's some classic covers and art there.

    • @SciFiFan2012
      @SciFiFan2012 6 років тому

      Mark Lawrence I've always wanted animation cells from Filmation, esp ST:TAS and Flash Gordon.

  • @jonx9199
    @jonx9199 6 років тому +284

    Don't do Rand, kids.

    • @jwhite1016aol
      @jwhite1016aol 5 років тому +7

      Yea.. do Rand then do Spooner and Rothbard

    • @jwhite1016aol
      @jwhite1016aol 5 років тому +5

      Also dont take advice from people who use fake names like mr X.. fake names fake news

    • @trippinsciko
      @trippinsciko 5 років тому +67

      Rand's philosophy is just sociopathic tendencies glorified to make a worldview simple enough for her coke addled mind. Not to mention her protagonists were inspired by her hero, a man who killed and dismembered a 12 year old girl and felt nothing. Objectivism only appeals to 16 year olds who don't know better and people who refuse to improve and better themselves.
      www.rawstory.com/2019/08/the-right-wing-love-affair-with-ayn-rand-ties-conservatism-to-one-of-the-most-disturbing-sociopathic-killers/

    • @trippinsciko
      @trippinsciko 5 років тому +49

      @@jwhite1016aol "anyone who dislikes my hero Ayn Rand is immediately wrong, no, I will not explain why" lol you're all like 12

    • @trippinsciko
      @trippinsciko 5 років тому +35

      Not to mention there's no logical fallacies there, she did worship a murdering psychopath and used it for her weak and easily disproven philosophy, cry about it why don't you?

  • @jimmyvolakis5194
    @jimmyvolakis5194 3 роки тому +61

    Nobody told Ditko to subscribe to such a flawed philosophy… I feel like Stan made the correct decision. He seemed to be a genuinely unpleasant person to work with.
    Further evidence that Ditko couldn’t have plotted Spider-Man all by himself, otherwise it would’ve been some sort of Mr. A drywall comic, lol!

    • @Moniker8858
      @Moniker8858 Рік тому +7

      Ditko isn't an idea guy but he's great at visualizing other people's ideas. Lee and Ditko were both needed for Spider-Man

  • @killadirk
    @killadirk 6 років тому

    This is incredibly well put together.

  • @drawctopusArt
    @drawctopusArt 2 роки тому

    This was incredibly fascinating, thanks for sharing. I took out my old issue of Charlton Blue Beetle; you’ve given me an added appreciation of this era of his work.

  • @raycearcher5794
    @raycearcher5794 6 років тому +105

    Steve Ditko, one of those rarest things: an objectivist who actually lives by objectivism. You don't have to agree with him, but at least he had his integrity.

    • @BuildinWings
      @BuildinWings 3 роки тому +9

      Until he decided he deserved more money than what he agreed to, which Objectivism would reject.

    • @rabronin
      @rabronin 3 роки тому +3

      @@BuildinWings Artists in general suffered greatly in the comic industry back then for getting less than they deserved i.e. Bill Finger.
      I think Steve was right to reject that standard and go his own way.

    • @BuildinWings
      @BuildinWings 3 роки тому +4

      @@rabronin
      He didn’t reject it until he decided he wanted more money than he agreed to. Again, Objectivism would reject that behavior. He signed a work for hire.

    • @slxpictures
      @slxpictures 3 роки тому +5

      This is true. The man could not be more philosophically or politically my polar opposite, but damn he is my favourite comic book artist. I have to say, his plots where standardly objectivism, but the ART, there's something tortured in the art that tells me another story. Something inthe blocking the elegance of the line work.

  • @the-NightStar
    @the-NightStar 5 років тому +69

    Oof. I respect what Ditko did for comics, I respect his talent, and I respect him as a person. But there is no way in hell that I can respect or agree with his views. As soon as I heard Ayn Rand brought up, I immediately went "oh, no.".

  • @donttrustem13
    @donttrustem13 Рік тому +5

    15 minutes in Ditko is complaining about superheroes being unable to fix their personal lives, I don't think he understood at all why Spiderman worked and it was what made him famous

    • @Elfenlied8675309
      @Elfenlied8675309 11 місяців тому +2

      Yes, he said it is ridiculous to think that beings like Superman or Spider-Man would even have to deal with these petty personal problems when they save the universe every week. The idea that beings that battle evil space God's and interdimensional demons would have to deal with problems with their girlfriends or a sick parent was stupid to him.
      Ditko has said once Spider-Man graduated from college he would either, retire from being Spider-Man forever and live a normal life, or he would become a Rorschach style douchebag that murders criminals because that's what being an "adult" is, Murdering the bad guy.

  • @marcusi.7740
    @marcusi.7740 Місяць тому

    great video - i never fully realized the connection of rorschach to the question in regard to objectivism

  • @paulofmelllo
    @paulofmelllo Рік тому

    Amazing Video, Chris. Thank You !

  • @Joseph_Pines
    @Joseph_Pines Рік тому +4

    Objectivism and Superheros as a concept just do not work together. Superheros are all about an alteuistic person with abilities and morality that surpass our own. They are more often than not kind to a fault. To create an objectivist superhero story is to completely miss the point of superheros all together.

  • @AlejandroSilva-mr7yy
    @AlejandroSilva-mr7yy 6 років тому +235

    Muh opinion, yes, but I laughed when he compared complex morality of superheroes to the mind of a 6yo when his own comics had a black and white morality

    • @johannpopper1493
      @johannpopper1493 6 років тому +29

      Morality is black and white. Even saying morality isn't black and white is a morally black and white statement because you're saying that moral absolutists are absolutely morally wrong. There's nothing unsophisticated about that. What's sophisticated is accepting the complexity of reality -- that few people agree about what must be true.

    • @Jose-se9pu
      @Jose-se9pu 6 років тому +2

      Remember, Ditko never wrote Spiderman, and I think that was one of the reasons why he left.

    • @macsnafu
      @macsnafu 6 років тому +22

      @@Jose-se9pu "Ditko never wrote Spiderman"
      Not exactly true. Stan Lee added the words, but Ditko did most of the plotting for the Spider-Man stories. It was part of the Marvel style of doing comics: plot-art-script.

    • @savagetv6460
      @savagetv6460 6 років тому +6

      Morality is black and white dude. Lol do you view rape and murder as justified and gray? No you don't. Relativism is cancer to any functional society. It's how you get Islamic rape gangs raping girls and Marxists making excuses like cultural relativism

    • @KnjazNazrath
      @KnjazNazrath 5 років тому +31

      ITT: YT commenters assuming they understand morality when they've never read Rand, Aristotle, Nietzsche, Kant, Hobbes, Hume, Pufendorf, Ross, Moore, Ehrlich... I could go on, but suffice to say there's a 70% chance that any quotes you've read were via a website. ​
      @@savagetv6460 , do you find the killing of a killer to be black and white? What if someone kills the guy who's raping his wife? Black and white morality is akin to black letter law and 7th day creationism.

  • @LikaLaruku
    @LikaLaruku 3 роки тому +12

    Mr A was so moral to him, but to me he seems like one of those morally questionable villains with good intentions who believe in doing nessisary evil to achieve a greater good. Maybe like Unit.

    • @ninjasniperproductions4476
      @ninjasniperproductions4476 2 роки тому

      So punishing and killing evil itself, the kind of evil that gave birth to Jeffrey Dahmer, killing monsters like him so that innocent men & women can live peacefully without worry, you call that evil?
      Mr. A didn't kill an innocent man or woman in cold blood. Did you even listen to a word or read about the whole point, of why Mr. A is the way he is.
      Mr. A doesn't let evil succeed, the kind of evil that does the sickest thing to please themselves, to see bloodshed, to ruin a family, to murder a child, to destroy an innocent person's life, to see humanity eradicated, Mr. A fights against that kind of evil.
      Good is good. Evil is evil. Mr. A is Mr. A.
      Deny it all you want, but if you are ignorant of thought to not bother to listen and pay attention to what you were watching, then you are you. I can't change you, and I don't want to. There is no point even if I tried.
      Stay ignorant, let evil win if you want. Who would blame you and who would care?
      I'm not an objectivist either, even if I was, I don't bother with the existence of those who would compromise if it meant saving their own ass at the cost of an innocent life, no matter how brutal or sickening their death.
      I know who I am and you know who you are. Point being, don't be ignorant, and listen to what is being said. If you use your brain a lot more, you'd notice a lot more than you should.

  • @zacharymcmillan2788
    @zacharymcmillan2788 4 роки тому +1

    Great video,there's a lot about comic book history here that I never knew about,thanks.👍

  • @cumberbatchpepperpot
    @cumberbatchpepperpot 5 років тому

    This might be your best video. Great job!