As with all things Internet, even the
death of beloved Marvel Comics legend Stan Lee has resulted in at least two
inappropriate and presumably well-meaning responses from celebrities. First
came actor Armie Hammer's diss of any and every celebrity posting a photo of
themselves with Lee because he felt they were making the story about themselves
instead of the man who had died. Hammer has since retracted his
comments and referred to himself as an "asshat" in the process.
It's unlikely talk show host and
all-around wise-ass Bill Maher will be issuing a similar statement anytime
soon, if at all. Maher's comments were
of the broader variety, criticizing the medium Lee represented as childish and
the readers of the books as harboring delusions of reading great literature instead
of escapist pop culture silliness. He makes his point by employing the old
adage about putting away childish things once one becomes an adult. It's a
dated outlook, a fact he hammers home when he writes, "...the assumption everyone had [when I was young], both the adults and the
kids, was that comics were for kids, and when you grew up you moved on to
big-boy books without the pictures.”
The error Maher
makes in his assessment is the same one superficial thinkers have been making
for over three decades, namely that comic books are, by and large, juvenile
fantasies incapable of transcending their medium. The very idea that a comic
book or graphic novel could do more than stimulate the adolescent portions of
the male brain is laughable in their estimation. In order to become an adult,
they insist, one must delve deeply into "serious literature," for
which there is an oppressively narrow definition.
A couple years ago, I wrote about a middle school principal in Great Britain whose views on fantastic literature drew the ire of many a keyboard warrior. My take was slightly different. I felt he had a point, one that was well-reasoned on its surface but did not hold up to intense scrutiny. Instead of discussing how readers are often focusing on the wrong aspects of fantasy, he felt the entire genre was an enormous waste with no redeeming value. Plus, his views seemed steeped in Anglo-Christian dogma.
Maher supposedly suffers from no such handicap. He is a self-avowed atheist, having gone as far as making a wonderfully entertaining documentary about the fact. Thus we can conclude that his views are based on a humanist desire to pigeonhole intellectualism. He is of the Old World mentality that all worthy intellectual pursuits must be done the same way, reading the same books in the same formats (although digital might be allowable) and eschewing the same "inferior" forms of expression.
It's all a huge
bore, frankly, compounded by Maher's constant need to piss off the squares
while at the same time seeking their approval. Shock comedy is as juvenile as
any comic book, yet there he sits, proclaiming his importance to those still
willing to listen. if we're not careful, we all become dinosaurs eventually and
Bill Maher is certainly not immune.
A commenter on
Facebook made a valid point about Maher shortly after his comments went viral.
To paraphrase: Of course Bill Maher would make the point that he shunned comics
once he got older. When he was a child, comics were indeed childish fare. In
fact, Maher grew up in arguably the worst time in the history of comics. The
industry had been gutted by moral outrage thanks to the infamous book "Seduction
of the Innocent," which had single-handedly caused a ripple effect
resulting in publishers cowering. The comics companies intentionally made their
work more juvenile in order to avoid the encroaching specter of further
censorship. By the time Maher was in single digits, he was aging out of the
Marvel Revolution. He was also likely extremely self-important and saw no value
in the new pop culture's embracing of comic books.
Again, Maher likes
to upset the apple cart. It's what he's done for years and he used to be really
good at it. Lately he seems to be either trying too hard (possible) or
succumbing to his own sense of bitterness (likelier). Maher's a control freak. Casual viewing of his show makes that obvious. And if there's one thing control freaks don't like, it's losing control. Smug male elitists have always dictated how we're supposed to view intellectualism, but now people aren't as concerned with their views anymore. Sadly, negative reactions to Maher will fuel his self-righteous attitude and convince him he's more right than ever. So, let's try this instead:
To say he has no valid point at all would be as ludicrous as Maher's blanket dismissal. Much like the British principal, the core of his argument is sound. We cannot ignore the inherent juvenalia of the most visible comic genre, namely costumed crime-fighting superheroes. And despite the fact that even those tales have "grown up" over the past three decades, they are still adolescent wish fulfillment given form. What Maher either fails or neglects to take into account are all the more adult-themed, philosophical comics out there such as "Fun Home" and "My Friend Dahmer." To acknowledge these works would be to invite the possibility of being wrong or, at least, narrow-minded in his conclusion. That's not how Bill Maher rolls.
Ultimately, Maher is a master manipulator who can often make events about him. Neil Gaimain put it best:
"Maher’s just trolling, and lots of people are rising to the troll. (Julie Burchill did it better 30 years ago with her “There aren’t any adult comics because adults don’t read comics” line. ) More people cared about Stan Lee’s death than care about Bill Maher alive."
'Nuff said~
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