Dan Curtis Johnson

Ask Chris #278: Meet DC's Answer to Jessica Jones
Ask Chris #278: Meet DC's Answer to Jessica Jones
Ask Chris #278: Meet DC's Answer to Jessica Jones
Q: Who is the closest DC equivalent to Jessica Jones? -- @charlotteofoz A: For what I suspect is a pretty obvious reason, this is a question that seems to be going around a lot this week, and it's an interesting one. As much as DC has experimented with it, the publisher has never had a lot of lasting success with street-level looks at how its universe functions. And really, that makes sense when you consider that its most famously gritty urban vigilante is also a billionaire who drives around in a rocket car and hangs out with his friends on the moon. But there is a pretty good answer, and while I can't take the credit for thinking it up myself, it's definitely one that I agree with. If you're looking for a character to fill that role in the DC Universe, then you're looking for Cameron Chase --- and not just because they both have those alliterative initials.
Buy This Book: ‘Elseworlds 80-Page Giant’ Gets A Digital Release
Buy This Book: ‘Elseworlds 80-Page Giant’ Gets A Digital Release
Buy This Book: ‘Elseworlds 80-Page Giant’ Gets A Digital Release
One of the great things about the rise of digital comics is how much potential there is for access to a company's back catalog. With a lower cost that comes from not actually printing and shipping books, it's a lot easier for a company to provide readers with older comics, from classics to books that never really got their chance to shine...
Why Everyone Should (Legally) Download DC’s ‘Chase’ Drawn by J.H. Williams III
Why Everyone Should (Legally) Download DC’s ‘Chase’ Drawn by J.H. Williams III
Why Everyone Should (Legally) Download DC’s ‘Chase’ Drawn by J.H. Williams III
One of the great things about digital comics is how much potential there is to get great stories that just didn't hit the first time around into the hands of new readers. Without the print and distribution costs seen in traditional channels, publishers are able to make a few of the more obscure parts of their back catalogs available to readers at much less risk than they would with a printed comi