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Moonlight meanderer

Timeliness vs Timelessness

Banes at Nov. 24, 2016, midnight
tags: banes, thursdays, timelessness, timeliness


Rogue from the X-Men encounters President Ronald Reagan!
(…who???)


Timeliness vs Timelessness

Some comics are very much "of the moment", while others are more timeless.

Connecting to the events of the moment can be a worthy endeavor. The political satire of Jesus 2016 comes to mind. Webcomics are well suited to this kind of approach, too, with our ability to create and instantly distribute our pages. South Park manages to do animated shows very quickly, delivering commentary on current events.

On the other end of the spectrum would be comics or series that make no mention of current events, and do not seem to exist at any specific point in time (or exist in a time outside of the contemporary, like a fantasy world or a futuristic scifi setting). The Godstrain is a timeless tale.

In my own comic, the characters live in a slightly dated world that still has Movie Rental stores…or at least one. Despite the movie-geek nature of some of the heroes, I make an effort not to stick any brand new movie references in there. It's not an issue lately, with the long stretches between updates.

The parody films by Seltzer and Hamburg (or whatever their names are) are sort of famous for the lame pop-culture references/jokes that are just a little bit too old to be relevant.

On the other hand, when i've watched old Daily Show or Colbert Report episodes, they often hold up. The self importance and hypocrisy of the powerful and the insincerity of politicians is eternal.

Then there's the problem of technology - things are moving so damn fast; the long-running tropes we always see in movies, shows and comics have got to change to relate to modern audiences.

It can be distracting to revisit old comics or series and catch old pop culture references or dated technology. They usually take me out of the story. Anything that was cool or meaningful about shallow references is now completely meaningless, and exposes the true holes in the thing.

Unless it's a GREAT story, that is. Chris Claremont's X-Men is always great, no matter how "dated" some parts of the stories are. Ditto PSYCHO.

A great story that doesn't use its place in time as a crutch is timely AND timeless.

Or maybe I just made that up. I like the sound of it, though…

Alright, I'm out of time, here!

Are your stories timely, timeless, or somewhere in between?

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Moonlight meanderer

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