1. Now that Stan Lee is being eulogized far and wide, it's important to remember how marginal Stan Lee and his collaborators (Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko) were in the 1950s and 1960s.
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10. The framing of the Marvel books as a coherent interlocking universe was the key shift. We're very used to this now in pop culture. Even frigging Lego has their own cinematic universe! But Lee in 1960s (perhaps influenced by sci-fi) was pioneerhttps://www.denofgeek.com/us/movies/cinematic-universes/247152/the-9-cinematic-universes-currently-in-development …
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11. The key to Stan Lee's life is that he wanted originally to be a novelist (Stanley Leiber!) and did comics as a day job & pen name (Stan Lee). By the time he was 39 he realized the novel wasn't coming and so threw himself into the day job with a passion.
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12. My more extended thoughts on Stan Lee and his legacy here:https://newrepublic.com/article/152201/stan-lee-midwife-marvel-universe …
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13. My Lee piece should be read in conjunction with my earlier Kirby piecehttps://newrepublic.com/article/144558/jack-kirby-unknown-king …
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14. And also my Ditko obituary: https://newrepublic.com/minutes/149680/steve-ditko-co-creator-spider-man-doctor-strange-dead …
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End of conversation
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Great thread that’s fair to Lee’s impressive and important legacy without avoiding valid criticism. Excelsior!
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The greatest character Stan Lee created was "Smiling Stan."
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