Vixen

Poll: Which DC Woman Most Deserves Her Own Solo Book?
Poll: Which DC Woman Most Deserves Her Own Solo Book?
Poll: Which DC Woman Most Deserves Her Own Solo Book?
DC unveiled a post-Convergence line-up of titles last week that included two new solo titles for female heroes -- Black Canary, by Brenden Fletcher, Annie Wu, and Irene Koh; and Starfire by Jimmy Palmiotti, Amanda Conner, and Emanuela Lupacchino. These books join the current line-up of Wonder Woman, Catwoman, Batgirl, and Harley Quinn. The publisher also announced the cancellation of Supergirl and Batwoman, leaving the number of DC solo titles starring women at a steady six. Clearly DC can do better than that. The publisher has a wealth of great female characters that haven't headlined their own solo series recently, or in some cases at all. DC clearly knows that the audience for these heroes is out there, but maybe it doesn't know who its next headliner should be. So ComicsAlliance will give them a little help by asking you, the readers, to vote for the DC woman you think most deserves her own book. (Spoiler: We know they all do.)
'Vixen' Animated Series To Launch On CW Seed
'Vixen' Animated Series To Launch On CW Seed
'Vixen' Animated Series To Launch On CW Seed
Marc Guggenheim, writer/producer for The CW's Arrow and The Flash TV shows -- and various comics including Arrow and The Flash -- will oversee an animated Vixen series set in the same universe as his other superhero shows, the network announced at the Television Critics' Association press tour on Sunday. Vixen will air on the CW's digital platform CW Seed this fall as a six episode mini-series.
Nine Unbeatable All-Lady Justice League Line-Ups
Nine Unbeatable All-Lady Justice League Line-Ups
Nine Unbeatable All-Lady Justice League Line-Ups
If you spend as much time thinking about comics as I do, you probably find yourself creating hypothetical-based thought experiments about super-team line-ups and such. Usually I only share them with Chris Sims, who then goes on to turn them into an Ask Chris and get paid for my idea. [cough] But a few weeks ago, I took to Twitter to ask people who they would recruit for an all-female, seven-member Justice League. The response at the time was great, with lots of interesting variation in potential team rosters, but then the idea got a bump again when artists started posting drawings of their ideal Justice Ladies teams on Twitter and Tumblr. I've collected nine such line-ups, including my own, which kicked everything off, but you can check my Twitter feed to see all the responses I received.