While reading your “One Less Day” article in CBG #1635, it had me reflect on what I missed. I’d dropped all the Spidertitles after the Hobgoblin fiasco. Why do writers need to turn every supporting character into a villain? I exaggerate, but it does feel that way. Carol Ferris, Snapper Carr, Jarvis the butler, Alfred the other butler, Happy Hogan, nearly all of Tony Stark’s girlfriends, etc. Reading your capsule summary on “The Clone Saga” certainly makes me happy I didn’t waste my money on 136 issues or, frankly, any since then. Marvel lost me as a Spider-customer 18 years ago. That’s a lot of lost money over that time. I still buy select Marvel titles but rarely buy into those storylines that jump from Amazing to Web to Spectacular to Friendly, etc. That type of stunt just ticks me off, and, instead of buying them all, I drop them all. In retrospect, the mid-’90s was a tough time for comics writing. The ideas were bizarre, and far too many stories stank. Thank goodness the ’00s came along.
I’ve long made fun of the ’70s as one of the worst decades in pop-culture history. I was there, and, let me tell you, it was dreadful. Disco, leisure suits, poofy hair, Starsky & Hutch, Leo Sayer — it was a long 10 years! When it comes to comic books, though, the ’90s are certainly in competition for Worst Decade Ever. (Two words: Heroes Reborn.)
Anyway, I also disliked the Hobgoblin story. Not only was I already bored in the early ’90s with the endless parade of Green Goblin retreads (a trend that continues, and continues to annoy me, today), but also because it killed Ned Leeds. Ned wasn’t that important in the Parker circle, but, by the ’90s, he was just about the only supporting character left whose name I knew.
In the Romita years, Amazing Spider-Man had probably the best cast of supporting characters ever. But by the ’90s most of them were dead: Frederick Foswell, Captain Stacy, Gwen Stacy, Norman Osborn, Harry Osborn — the list goes on. Turning Ned (briefly) into a villain and then offing him was part of a long series of bad decisions that threatened to make Peter Parker the sole survivor of his circle of friends.
Of course, the recent “Brand New Day” leaves the door open for a lot of these characters to return. We’ve already seen Harry Osborn; maybe Ned isn’t as dead as we thought, either. And maybe this time he’ll have a personality.