Mike Pallotta
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Oh, wow. Yeah. With Batman, I love the aspect of the character that's so malleable. He's a character over 80 years now you can do so much with. I mean, it speaks volumes that you can put him in absolute Batman.
with what scott snyder is doing and he still works you can make you know like the 60s tv show with adam west and and it's a more comedic satirical take and it still works and he's still iconic the iconography is so malleable my own personal draw for the character i i just love that
with what scott snyder is doing and he still works you can make you know like the 60s tv show with adam west and and it's a more comedic satirical take and it still works and he's still iconic the iconography is so malleable my own personal draw for the character i i just love that
with what scott snyder is doing and he still works you can make you know like the 60s tv show with adam west and and it's a more comedic satirical take and it still works and he's still iconic the iconography is so malleable my own personal draw for the character i i just love that
There's a sense that I can always go back to Batman stories and find something new, whether it's the stories we're adapting here, like year one, every time I read it, there's something new there. And in adapting it, I found so much that I did not see before. It's like a lot of great texts where you go back and you revisit it at different points in your life and you find something new.
There's a sense that I can always go back to Batman stories and find something new, whether it's the stories we're adapting here, like year one, every time I read it, there's something new there. And in adapting it, I found so much that I did not see before. It's like a lot of great texts where you go back and you revisit it at different points in your life and you find something new.
There's a sense that I can always go back to Batman stories and find something new, whether it's the stories we're adapting here, like year one, every time I read it, there's something new there. And in adapting it, I found so much that I did not see before. It's like a lot of great texts where you go back and you revisit it at different points in your life and you find something new.
Like so many other people, I think the earliest, earliest days is the Adam West Batman. I remember my sister babysitting me and I wanting to watch Batman, the 1960s TV show, and she wanted to watch 90210, and we fought it out. And then, you know, being a six year old and seeing commercials for the Batman animated series and programming my VCR.
Like so many other people, I think the earliest, earliest days is the Adam West Batman. I remember my sister babysitting me and I wanting to watch Batman, the 1960s TV show, and she wanted to watch 90210, and we fought it out. And then, you know, being a six year old and seeing commercials for the Batman animated series and programming my VCR.
Like so many other people, I think the earliest, earliest days is the Adam West Batman. I remember my sister babysitting me and I wanting to watch Batman, the 1960s TV show, and she wanted to watch 90210, and we fought it out. And then, you know, being a six year old and seeing commercials for the Batman animated series and programming my VCR.
And then from there, you know, getting into the comics, my entry point into the comics, in comics in general, was from movies like Terminator and Aliens and Predator. I was such a Terminator, Aliens and Predator kid. So I was reading, you know, Terminator, The Burning Earth by Alex Ross. It was like his first comic book ever. Go read it, it's amazing. It blew my mind as a nine-year-old.
And then from there, you know, getting into the comics, my entry point into the comics, in comics in general, was from movies like Terminator and Aliens and Predator. I was such a Terminator, Aliens and Predator kid. So I was reading, you know, Terminator, The Burning Earth by Alex Ross. It was like his first comic book ever. Go read it, it's amazing. It blew my mind as a nine-year-old.
And then from there, you know, getting into the comics, my entry point into the comics, in comics in general, was from movies like Terminator and Aliens and Predator. I was such a Terminator, Aliens and Predator kid. So I was reading, you know, Terminator, The Burning Earth by Alex Ross. It was like his first comic book ever. Go read it, it's amazing. It blew my mind as a nine-year-old.
From there, I remember picking up the Batman alien crossover that Bernie Wrightson had drawn. Bernie Wrightson's art is- Staggering. Amazing, and I just fell in love with Batman comics starting with that book and it just fully dove in from there and just consumed all Batman comics I possibly could from there.
From there, I remember picking up the Batman alien crossover that Bernie Wrightson had drawn. Bernie Wrightson's art is- Staggering. Amazing, and I just fell in love with Batman comics starting with that book and it just fully dove in from there and just consumed all Batman comics I possibly could from there.
From there, I remember picking up the Batman alien crossover that Bernie Wrightson had drawn. Bernie Wrightson's art is- Staggering. Amazing, and I just fell in love with Batman comics starting with that book and it just fully dove in from there and just consumed all Batman comics I possibly could from there.
I think the first time I read year one and Long Halloween would have been probably about 14 years old. I think it was about the same. Yeah, which is I think about the best age to first read it. Now it's weird to revisit those stories being older than Batman. Yeah.
I think the first time I read year one and Long Halloween would have been probably about 14 years old. I think it was about the same. Yeah, which is I think about the best age to first read it. Now it's weird to revisit those stories being older than Batman. Yeah.
I think the first time I read year one and Long Halloween would have been probably about 14 years old. I think it was about the same. Yeah, which is I think about the best age to first read it. Now it's weird to revisit those stories being older than Batman. Yeah.
Yeah. I'm like, oh yeah, he's such a man. Yeah. When he's 26 and I'm how old?