CBI Archive
John Seavey’s Storytelling Engines: Superman Family
Wednesday, May 30th, 2007 at 4:45 AM EST
Updated: Wednesday, May 30th, 2007 at 4:45 AM EST
Here’s the latest Storytelling Engine from John Seavey. Check out more of them at his blog, Fraggmented.
Storytelling Engines: Superman Family
(or “Driving The White Elephant”)
Looking back, it’s hard to believe that Jimmy Olsen, Superman’s Pal, ever got his own comic series. Or that it ran…222 issues? Can that even be right? Jimmy Olsen, the nerdy little geek with the bow-tie and freckles, the poster child for “Why DC Got Its Butt Kicked By Marvel” and the target of endless post-Crisis revamps to attempt to shake the stench of lameness away from him, was the headliner for a series that ran longer than ‘X-Factor’? How can this even be? We have to look at the storytelling engine here. Something must be wrong.
So we’ve got Jimmy Olsen. He’s a young man, just starting out in his career as cub reporter for the Daily Planet. He’s bright, helpful, but with just enough terminal enthusiasm that he frequently rushes into a situation without thinking about whether he can handle it. But luckily, he’s also resourceful, adaptive, expert with disguises and pretty good in a fight…and he also happens to be the trusted confidant of Superman, the Man of Steel. However, don’t think that being Superman’s pal solves all your problems–Jimmy’s as often the target of Superman’s enemies as he is the recipient of his aid. We follow Jimmy as he looks for stories, helps the little guy, and does his best to help the biggest guy of all, Superman.
Wow. When you actually sit down and read it, suddenly it does seem like a pretty good storytelling engine. There are lots of hooks that help writers get a story going, Jimmy is the kind of character who never has trouble finding something interesting going on, and the Superman angle is a nice way of giving him an unconventional superpower–he’s like Johnny Thunder, able to summon the lightning down on his enemies when he needs it, but never in control of the actual results. Nobody seems to like Jimmy Olsen anymore, but he’s got a surprisingly good storytelling engine sitting there, waiting to be used. Even the bow-tie and goofy jacket make sense, in context; Jimmy presents a distinctive appearance because it helps fix a mental image of him in people’s eyes, so that just changing the jacket and putting on a normal tie is half-way to a disguise.
All that really makes Jimmy Olsen seem lame is the whole “Gosh!” and “Super-duper!” thing…and let’s face it, for the Fifties, that was cursing like a sailor.






16 Comments
J To The AAP
May 30, 2007 at 5:09 am
Jimmy Olsen could still work very well as a modern comic I think. He could be a sort of Matty Roth for the DC universe, trade the war and cynicism for superhero and Daily Planet stuff and you’re there.
The ASS is issue starring Jimmy Olsen opposite ‘dark Superman’ was great too, then again, ASS=Greatness.
Dan K
May 30, 2007 at 5:12 am
“Nobody seems to like Jimmy Olsen anymore.”
I thought everybody loved Jimmy Olsen thesedays. I know I do. I’ve been waiting for this to come out for months:
http://www.amazon.com/Amazing-Transformation-Superman-Graphic-Novels/dp/1401213693/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1/104-2034863-4195963?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1180527091&sr=8-1
Rohan Williams
May 30, 2007 at 5:37 am
Who doesn’t like Jimmy Olsen?
Knox
May 30, 2007 at 5:40 am
For some reason I never liked the idea of Olsen being “good in a fight.” I guess because the bowtie and plaid jacket just scream “NERD!” but it always pulls me out of the story whenever we see him sock a bankrobber in the jaw.
Ye Olde Iowa
May 30, 2007 at 5:44 am
I’m a huge fan of Jimmy Olsen. As a “sidekick” he works incredibly well with the rest of Superman’s supporting cast and makes a very strong foil to Clark and Lois. His goofy transformation stories were the epitome of Silver Age oddity, making them a fun spectacle all their own. Recent revamps such as Grant Morrison’s Jimmy in All-Star Superman or Aaron Ashmore as Jimmy on Smallville show that the core of the character is versitile enough to be adapted to a modern context (although, admittedly, Ashmore’s Jimmy is a bit too edgy, though the “Noir” episode was perfect as we see Jimmy’s fantasy life). Personally I’m really pleased to see Jimmy as a crucial character in Countdown, especially since it is fairly clear that they will be using the classic Jimmy Olsen story structure on his portion of the book.
Mike Loughlin
May 30, 2007 at 5:56 am
Jimmy Olsen comics were written for kids, in an era when most or all super-hero comics were written for kids, and kids bought comics. There was the wish-fulfillment piece, and a consistent fun factor. Hence, its success. Adult super-hero fans (minus those who have blogs) seem to have disdain for the “childish” aspects of super-hero comics, and buy super-hero death comics by the truckload. (a small truckload, like in one of those pick-ups with the back seats)
Adam Jones
May 30, 2007 at 6:32 am
Now Jimmy Olsen on Smallville…
That’s LAME.
Jimmy with a mullet on Superman: TAS?
AWESOME.
Beta Ray Steve
May 30, 2007 at 7:07 am
I thought the Jimmy vs. Bizarro in ASS was classic. All this time it had been taken for granted, “Jimmy is Superman’s pal”, but we were never shown why.
Parker
May 30, 2007 at 4:37 pm
I’m pro-Olsen, especially the Weisenger era. And especially that he had a creepy fan club that monitored his activities and meddled in his personal life as with Lana.
Marc
May 30, 2007 at 5:53 pm
With the bowtie and goofy jacket, Jimmy Olsen doesn’t look so much like a nerd as he does Tucker Carlson, which is infinitely worse.
Tucker Carlson, Superman’s Pal is the sort of thing that gives me nightmares.
Bill Reed
May 30, 2007 at 6:58 pm
I love Jimmy Olsen, and I’d be tempted to break my superheroic No Killing Rule for a chance to write a new Jimmy Olsen ongoing.
Mike P
May 31, 2007 at 6:52 am
I agree with Mike Loughlin — Jimmy was designed to appeal to kids. He *still* appeals to my 5-1/2 year old — we have read a lot of Silver Age comics, and Jimmy is one of his favorites. Of course, that may be because I do a goofy, perpetually-breaking voice when I read Jimmy’s lines… who knows.
I think Jimmy could work today if they would play up an angle of his character from those Silver Age stories that doesn’t (to my knowledge — which is limited) show up much: Jimmy as the “master of disguise.” I think that All-Star Superman made use of this recently, if memory serves — but it might make a pretty good “story-telling engine” for an ongoing series today, if Jimmy had the attitude and “coolness” of his TAS incarnation, with the disguises of his Silver Age years. Sort of like “Alias,” only with a boy and more all-ages friendly. “Jimmy Olsen Adventures,” if you will.
Scavenger
May 31, 2007 at 11:47 am
As a counter, my impression of Jimmy Olsen is pretty much my impression of the Lois Lane from the era. Goes out, gets in trouble, and has Superman come and saves him. He doesn’t do anything himself, he just blunders in, and relies on his pal to get him out.
He’s one part wimp, and one part wimp with big strong older brother (”See this watch…you touch me and my buddy’s gonna come and whup you!”
The post crisis one seems better at times, but the Silver Age fetish just pushes him back to being where he was before.
John Seavey
May 31, 2007 at 3:27 pm
That was my impression too, until I read the actual stories in ‘Showcase Presents: Superman Family’. What I found out was that it was nothing like that. Jimmy frequently gets himself out of trouble, sometimes gets Superman out of trouble (no bonus points for guessing that Kryptonite is involved), and when he does use the signal watch, it’s usually in situations where other people would probably be wishing they could call Superman too.
In fact, he’s got a real strong sense of responsibility about being “Superman’s Pal”, something that comes across in a lot of stories. He knows that Superman trusts him, and he’s careful to be worthy of that trust–one story highlights the fact that unlike Lois Lane, he never tries to find out Superman’s secret identity, because he knows that as Superman’s friend, he’s the target for people who want that information, and what he doesn’t know, he can’t be forced to tell.
All I have to say is, read the comics, and you might be pleasantly surprised.
The Mutt
May 31, 2007 at 6:49 pm
When I was a little kid, I wanted anything with Superman in it, so I read a lot of Jimmy Olsen and Lois Lane. I outgrew them real fast. I despise the “signal watch” with the heat of a thousand suns.
Jimmy Olsen must die? Wouldn’t bother me a bit.
FunkyGreenJerusalem
May 31, 2007 at 8:30 pm
I like that he used to cross dress reguarly.