Marvel Vice-President, Tom Brevoort, agreed to grant this independent reporter an interview over breakfast under the condition that I pick up the tab. Â He asked me to meet him at a McDonalds just off Times Square. Â I entered the restaurant and saw him sitting by himself in a booth wearing his signature brown hat and duster.
TL: Â Good morning, Mr. Brevoort.
Brevoort: Â [looks TL up and down] Â I thought youâd be taller.
TL: Â Iâm 6 feet tall.
Brevoort: Â [motioning to a restaurant employee approaching with a platter full of Egg McMuffins and hash browns] Â Pony up, son!
TL: Â [hands the waitress a credit card] Â I donât think Iâve ever spent $80 at a McDonalds before.
Brevoort: Â [hands TL one Egg McMuffin and one hashbrown; keeps the rest for himself] Â Really? Â I have. Â Regularly.
TL: Â Iâm a little surprised you granted me this interview. Â I mean, given that weâve had a pretty contentious set of exchanges in the past.
Brevoort: Â Wilth, Shceeber culdnt bay tady.
TL: Â Excuse me?
Brevoort: Â [swallows mouthful of Egg McMuffin] Â Well, CBR couldnât buy today.
TL: Â Of course.
TL: Â I just finished reading NINO #20 and I wanted to get your reaction to some of my observations about NINO in general and this issue in particular.
Brevoort: Â [rolls eyes] Â Again with the NINO stuff? Â Really? Â Heâs âNovaâ because I made him Nova. Â Thereâs no âIn Name Onlyâ to it. Â Take it or leave it. Â I replaced Rider with Sam; and itâs Sam or nothing.
TL: Â I know thatâs you position, and Iâm glad you brought it up because that was going to be one of my questions. Â Heâs never been inducted into the Corps by anyone empowered to do so, he doesnât report to a higher authority, heâs had no training and is unfamiliar with any pan-galactic law granting the Corps law enforcement authority, he doesnât live up to the ideals of the Corps, and even after issue #20 itâs not clear whether the so-called âBlack Novasâ were criminals or eventually officially sanctioned. Â Heâs wearing his dadâs uniform and pretending to be a Nova. Â How is he anything other than a Nova In Name Only?
Brevoort: Â You cosmic fans think about stuff too much. Â Look â we just want to sell books. Â Thatâs what we do. Â It doesnât have to make sense. Â The zombies will still buy it. Â My advice to you and your little cosmic fan friends â just stop thinking and start buying.
TL: Â In other words, become zombies.
Brevoort: Â Sure. Â Whatever. Â [Drops some McMuffins into the pockets of his duster; puts a McMuffin and a hash brown under his hat].
TL: Â So now I understand the outfit.
Brevoort: Â Yeah â the coat has deep pockets for snacks and the hat traps heat to keep one warm for a mid-morning snack later.
TL: Â What about the child soldier issue then. Â You say forget logic and just go with it. Â But, come on. Â In this issue he skips school, almost dies from poisoning, and destroys the defenses at a military outpost that he should have protected. Â In fact, why were the defenses activated against him anyway if heâs a real Nova as you claim? Â Particularly since the computer recognized him as Jesse. Â Furthermore, isnât it poor parenting for both of his parents to encourage him to risk his life? Â Isnât it a poor example for him to skip school and to be disrespectful to teachers as he has in the past? Â Arenât you sending the wrong message to the 8-year-olds at whom this book is presumably aimed?
Brevoort: Â [slowly finishes a hash brown before answering] Â Bucky, Mulan, Katness, Arya Stark, Joan of Arc, etc.
TL: Â Precedents? Â Your argument is precedents? Â Just because minors have risked their lives before in fiction and historical fact doesnât make it morally right in reality or in fiction in the present. Â And most of those werenât encouraged to do so by their parents. Â And presumably youâd like these 8-year-olds at whom this book is aimed to be able to read so they can continue to buy your products â so whatâs with the disrespect for school and teachers?
Brevoort: Â [motions to my untouched hash browns] Â You gonna eat that?
TL: Â Itâs all yours.
Brevoort: Â [finishes the hash brown; un-raps another McMuffin] Â You do know this is fantasy, right?
TL: Â Of course. Â But shouldnât it follow some internal logic? Â Otherwise, it talks down to the reader. Â Also, donât you have a responsibility to send an appropriate message to the young readers youâre trying to capture? Â Is glorifying using children as soldiers and deprecating education the right message?
Brevoort:  Itâs selling above cancellation threshold, so the zombies like it well enough.  Like I said beforeâŠâŠâŠâŠ
TL: Â Stop thinking and start buying.
Brevoort: Â [winks] Riiiiiight. Â On to a more important topic. Â Have you tried their new Peaches & Cream fried pies?
TL: Â No. Â But order away if you like.
Brevoort: Â [waves at the employees to get their attention; Points at the fried pie rack and puts up 5 fingers]
TL: Â Sorry, but I have to follow up because that unbridled Capitalism argument just doesnât cut it. Â What about the moral implications of using a child as a soldier? Â You claim NINO is a real Nova just because you say so. Â If heâs a real Nova, that makes him a soldier. Â Rich was at least enlistment age when he was deputized. Â NINO was 14 when he was first sent into battle with minimal training. Â The entire world is now condemning use of children as combatants and as shields for combatants. Â Why is Marvel/Disney glorifying it?
Brevoort: Â Well maybe if this place would hire a few 8-year-olds, I could get my fried pies a little faster. Â [yells at the front counter] Â Hey! Â Whereâs my pies?
TL: Â You canât be serious.
Brevoort:  Like I saidâŠâŠâŠ.
TL: Â Stop thinking, start buying.
Brevoort: Â [winks] Â Riiiiight. Â [snatches a sack full of pies from a McD employee] Â You donât want one of these do you?
TL: Â [hands credit card to McD employee] Â All yours.
TL: Â All right. Â What about the weapon of mass destruction issue? Â NINO is portrayed as an irresponsible minor. Â He skips school, is disrespectful to teachers, heâs negligent in babysitting his sister allowing her to put on the âmagic helmetâ and inadvertently do damage. Â Heâs portrayed as having at least Centurion level powers â essentially, the destructive powers of a tactical nuclear weapon. Â How is it that all the adults in the Marvel Universe are just fine with him having enough power to level a city â yet being demonstrably irresponsible in its use?
Brevoort: Â [stares with a mouthful of fried pie] Â Haff yubn lstning?
TL: Â Stop thinking, start buying.
Brevoort: Â [swallows the pie] Right. Â And speaking of buying, Iâm getting a little thirsty. [motions at the shake machine and puts up 2 fingers]
TL: Â Go for it.
TL: Â Letâs move on to characterization. Â In this issue, Rocket is written completely out of character as a thug who beats up a doctor who is only trying to help him. Â Fans have also been upset by the writing out of character of most of the cosmic characters who have appeared in NINOâs book and in GotGINO. Â Starstalker was recently written as a cowardly idiot. Â Spaceknights have been written as buffoons. Â Cosmo has been written completely out of character every time he has appeared. Â And donât get me started on the wreck Bendis has made of the GotG team. Â Simple question. Â Why? Â And donât tell me, âStop thinking, start buying,â if you want me to pay for those shakes.
Brevoort: Â Look. Â We understand how to sell comic books. Â You donât. Â The zombies arenât all that imaginative. Â They have to have someone whoâs relatable â you know, like a Norse God, a Billionaire Inventor, a World War II Soldier, a Canadian Guy with a metal skeleton and claws, a smart-ass mercenary who canât be killed, a human with the powers of a spider, or a guy who turns into a giant green monster when he gets mad. Â Anybody could relate to them, right? Â But these space characters â now they are just weird! Â Totally un-relatable in comparison! Â I mean, who could relate to a weirdo like Star-Lord? Â Now â a female version of Thor â that I can relate to in an instant. Â Who couldnât? Â And why would anybody care about anything happening outside the surface of the Earth anyway? Â We had to dumb down and camp up those weirdo cosmic characters â and also contrive some reason for them to be obsessed with Earth in order to get the zombies interested. Â In the case of Sam, Loeb just wanted to create a character with a readymade fan base â and we didnât think there were enough of you Rider fans to make much of a fuss if we replaced Rider. Â In fact, we didnât think youâd even notice and that youâd buy it anyway. Â [motions to the approaching McD employee holding 2 shakes] Â Now how about those shakes.
TL: Â [hands the McD employee a credit card] Â I think youâre under-estimating the intelligence of your readers.
Brevoort: Â [belly laughs, spurting a mouthful of shake onto the table] Â Thatâs the funniest thing Iâve heard all week!
TL: Â The art used to be the best part of the cosmic books. Â Lately, itâs taken a turn for the worse. Â NINO #20âs art was cartoonish.
Brevoort: Â We have a saying. Â Why pay for good art when the zombies will buy anything â and then take to the forums and insist the bad art is good! Â [laughs, shakes his head] Â Gotta love those zombies.
TL: Â I must say that Iâm feeling more discouraged about the future of cosmic than I did when I walked in the door. Â In closing, can you give me any hope for a better future?
Brevoort: Â Absolutely! Â I have a better future planned beginning tonight!
TL: Â Really? Â Can you talk about it?
Brevoort: Â Of course! Â Itâs âall you can eat steak nightâ at The Golden Corral! Â The future is looking pretty good to me right about now. Â Care to join me tonight to finish this interview? Â You pick up the tab, of course.
TL: Â No, thanks. Â I think weâve just about covered everything we need to cover.
Note: Â This continues the series of satirical/parody reviews of Marvelâs so-called Cosmic books.







