- Title: USA: Obama and McCain make the comic pages
- Date: 13th October 2008
- Summary: (SOUNDBITE) (English) FORBIDDEN PLANET MANAGER JEFF AYERS SAYING: "Somebody remarked to me about these comics, that 100 years from now both of them could be in the Smithsonian. You know, you never know what's going to happen in 100 years from now, but it's the kind of thing that both of them could be there. Andy pointed out to me, however though, and I agree with this point: nobody remembers the other guy. So whoever wins, maybe his comic will be in the Smithsonian, maybe not the other guys."
- Embargoed: 28th October 2008 12:00
- Keywords:
- Location: Usa
- Country: USA
- Topics: Arts / Culture / Entertainment / Showbiz,Domestic Politics
- Reuters ID: LVAEC16GH3PY1Y09Q46PVHB0SVM5
- Story Text: The lives of presidential candidates John McCain and Barack Obama are now enshrined in the world of comics.
With less than a month before the election, the Presidential campaign moved in a new direction on Wednesday (October 8) as the biographies of John McCain and Barack Obama ventured into the world of comic books.
A day after the second presidential debate, IDW Publishing released the highly anticipated biographies, which have already become a collector's item among comic book aficionados.
Andy Helfer, who wrote the McCain comic, said comics were a great way of getting people to understand fairly complex issures more easily.
The comic biographies depict the lives of McCain and Obama from childhood to this year.
For Helfer, fitting the 72-years of John McCain's life into the standard format of a 28-page comic was not a simple task.
Jeff Mariotte, who wrote the script for the Obama comic, envied the material that Helfer had at his disposal, including McCain's military service.
Both authors poured over volumes of source material, from printed books, biographies and autobiographies of the candidates, to the voluminous media stories from the two-year-long presidential campaign.
Manager at Forbidden Planet Comics Books in New York, Jeff Ayers, said in a hundred years from now, the comic book of whoever wins the election will be preserved in the Smithsonian for history whereas the one for the loser will probably not. That's politics. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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