The Colbert Report

The Colbert Nation will literally do anything that Colbert asks of them, whether it is to vote for him to choose NASA's name for a space module or edit wikipedia pages so they say elephants aren't in danger of extinction anymore. More importantly, people, items or websites mentioned or appearing on the Colbert Report always get the trademarked "Colbert bump", which is similar to the Oprah bump that sees the aforementioned topic's popularity rise for a short period of time after the show because fans will be interested in learning more about said people/items/websites.
Tek Jansen

The main character in the series is basically an oversexed, more muscular and more confident version of Colbert as a cosmic secret agent James Bond-type that goes around the universe killing aliens and having sex with women.
What I've been wondering is why Colbert didn't promote this issue, especially on Free Comic Book Day of all days, when literally any one of his Colbert Nation followers and viewers could have been informed of its existence and prompted to head to their local comic shop to acquire a copy. This would have definitely been in the spirit of FCBD and resulted in getting new people to go to comic book shops to check out material they otherwise would ignore.
Colbert & Marvel Comics

Colbert is also on very friendly terms with Marvel's Editor-in-Chief, Joe Quesada, who has appeared several times on the show to promote certain big events at Marvel, such as Civil War and Secret Invasion. As a matter of fact, Colbert was awarded with Captain America's shield following his death and a lot of Marvel comics carried faux-election promotion material (such as bumper stickers and banners) for Colbert's short bid in 2008 for the United States presidency.
Quesada informed Colbert that in the Marvel universe, his presidency bid did not fail early on and continued all the way to election day, where he was a third-party candidate and won the popular vote, only to lose the electoral vote to Obama.
The Colbert Bump Applied to Comics

According to Diamond sales data, Amazing Spider-Man #573 sold better than the previous one by around seven thousand copies (Amazing Spider-Man 572 sold ~75,000 units and 573 sold ~82,000). Additionally, Quesada appeared on the Colbert report to promote the issue. Was this another example of the Colbert bump or just a coincidence because it happened to be the end of a highly publicized storyline with high-profile creators? Maybe it is a little bit of both, but I think the appearance of Colbert and the mention in his show certainly helped the sales.
This brings me back to my original thought on why wasn't the Tek Jansen comic or its availability as a free comic on Free Comic Book Day mentioned at all on Colbert's own show? Wouldn't it have benefited Colbert himself, his comic, and the industry in general? Sadly, it is not the only case of comics being forgotten in late-night TV shows.
The Daily Show

The story in question was a tale of neighbourhood politics and how Luke Cage prefers not to get involved with politics, which would have been a nice fit for a political/social-commentary-heavy comedian involved with The Daily Show.
Wyatt Cenac has turned out to be pretty popular (he is my second favorite correspondent, second only to John Oliver) and I am sure lots of viewers would have checked out this comic and voted for him if they had known about it, so it puzzles me that he did not mention it on his own show.
Neil Gaiman & DC "Promotion"

However, it does make me wonder if DC can even promote their comics on Comedy Central. Comedy Central is part of the media giant Viacom and DC is (as Kirk pointed out in last year's post about what he thought DC was doing wrong) a part of the AOL Time-Warner corporation, who are bitter rivals in the international media market. Marvel, because it is not owned by a parent company, can work out whatever promotional deal benefits them the most without fear of conflicts. Comedy Central's late night programs have high ratings among college and high school students, one of the biggest demographics among comic book readers, so the possibility to promote comics through this channel could certainly help publishing companies.
How to Promote Comics on Late Night Television

Hugh Jackman has recently appeared in the Daily Show (among other shows, I am sure) as a means of promoting X-Men Origins: Wolverine, which he just happens to star in. If they can have the person that plays Wolverine as a guest on the show, couldn't they also have as a guest, either as a secondary guest or at a later date, the creators that are currently writing the Wolverine comics the movie is based on? Sure, neither Jason Aaron, Mark Millar nor Daniel Way would have the mass appeal of Jackman, but I think they would still provide an interesting interview that would be relevant to a popular topic, such as said Wolverine movie.
Final Thoughts
With dragging sales numbers across the board, new types of promotions could really make a difference for comic book companies. Maybe the late-night shows fear (and rightfully so) that having comic book writers as their guest would not be a big enough draw or not be of interest to their viewers when considering how small the comic book industry is compared to the book, TV, or movie industry. When you consider the kind of people that a movie draws in, even the lowest performing movies probably have a bigger audience than the highest selling comics of the past decade.
Obviously, I am not a comic book or TV insider, so there could be more at work here than I don't understand. But just as a viewer and a reader, I really wonder why there isn't more promotion of comics in TV shows that have the same target audience. Maybe one of you, the readers, knows why this is and I would love to hear your thoughts on the subject.
12 comments:
This was a really great post. I myself was surprised that Wyatt Cynac didn't mention the Assistant Sized Special. I love the Daily Show, not a huge fan of the Colbert Report but I still watch it every so often and I admit whenever Quesada is on I check it out. I would love to see writers coming onto The Daily Show and Colbert Report talking about their books.
Andrenn, I'm glad you liked the post, and that I'm not the only one that thinks it would be a good idea to have them on the show.
Fantastic work. I see this one took some legwork.
I was a little iffy when I heard the Weekly Crisis was changing up the format, but it has definitely delivered. Thanks, guys!
Sebastian, thanks, we always strive to provide as much information as we can. Of course it's not all me, Eric and Kirk always help me with the articles.
While agree that this does benefit sales, every time I watch one of these appearances I get the weird feeling that comic books are being exploited. Joe Quesada comes on the show grinning and kissing Colbert's ass, drawing pictures for his book, handing him Captain America's shield, making him president for a couple days or hours or however long that lasted... That kind of annoying sycophantic pandering is beneficial for sales and further turning Marvel into the company du jour for thirteen year old boys who are, let's face it, the only people who would be susceptible enough to think Quesada's appearance on Colbert is enough to warrant buying a comic book.
But is that necessarily a good thing? After the industry puts out movies like Dark Knight, Iron Man, and Watchmen to make comics look cool or even *gasp* sophisticated to the general public, what is there to gain by making the popular perception of comics be that they are for socially awkward prepubescent boys?
I know, I know, "if young audiences don't get into comics how will the medium sustain itself?" Well, I'm not sure, but I get the feeling like marginalizing the audience. Because that's what it does. Comic book fans are no stranger to being label, it was not too long ago that comics were for children, then for punk teenagers, then for forty year old men in their mother's basement. And just because that whole "geek chic" thing is popular NOW doesn't mean that's how people will remember comics a few years from now.
But maybe I'm just over reacting. Though I've gotta say, I'm a bit shocked by your exclusion of Big Bang Theory in this post. They are not only discuss comic books, but on network tv, and during primetime. Oddly enough, they can generally be seen discussing DC comics like the recent Battle for the Cowl argument.
Big Bang Theory? I can't say that I am familiar with that show, but I never watched much in the way of cable outside of Comedy Central (plus some Discovery and History Channel). Is it a relatively new show?
It has been running for about two seasons now. It's on CBS.
I'm also a little surprised you didn't mention anything about Harvey Pekar who used to have a regular guest spot on David Letterman when David Letterman was more popular than he is today.
As cool as it would be to see a comic writer (or artist) as a guest on a talk show, I don't think the vast majority of people that watch those shows would particularly care all that much about the comics. Like I said, Pekar was a guest on that show for a good stretch and he still only got big notoriety after someone decided to make a movie about him and his work. It's the same reason they don't put authors of prose writing on late talk shows unless they are hugely popular, the general public wants to see people on TV on their TV.
Well, I never really watched Letterman, which is why I never knew he was on the show. Otherwise I would have definitely mentioned it.
It was awhile ago so I guess it may have been a little irrelevant to the topic. I'm more surprised that you mentioned Wyatt Cenac's not shilling his comic on the daily show when Reggie Hudlan is President of Entertainment over at BET and he writes Black Panther. Yet never once did they ever reference it at all on the channel to my knowledge.
Also, no mention of Alan Moore on the Simpsons? That was fairly recent, fairly well publicized, and pretty inconsequential as far as comic sales I would imagine. I just don't think audiences in general respond to seeing comic writers on TV.
Well, I don't watch BET, so I wouldn't know if he promoted it or not. I do remember some rumors about him possibly producing a Black Panther animated series, although I think that never came to fruition.
And I can't believe I forgot that Simpsons episode! It also featured the author of Maus and Ghost World.
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