From what my readers have been telling me, John Haynes is a basically
a Vertigo Comic without the Vertigo label. They say it’s everything oldschool
Vertigo readers want in a Vertigo comic. A strong masculine Black male hero and
his sexy Black assistant taking on supernatural forces in a strange and unusual
world. A CEO working in a corporate Hell filled with vampires, demons and
monsters. A book filled with supernatural action, adventure and a little bit of humor. A fresh 21st
Century take on the occult and horror stories not unlike Ghostbusters or Buffy
The Vampire Slayer.
All the elements of top selling Vertigo comics like
Constantine back in the day.
Right now John Haynes: A Conversation With Death is one of
the top sellers on the SJS DIRECT imprint. Many of my readers tell me that JohnHaynes: A Conversation With Death reminds them of John Constantine and his
comic, John Constantine: Hellblazer. A Vertigo comic that was one of the
pillars Vertigo during Karen Berger’s tenure on the imprint. A Vertigo book
that was a consistent seller for DC/Vertigo for over 20 years.
A Vertigo property that has allowed DC to reap a bounty of
profits from licensed merchandise like action figures and has allowed them to
make both movie and TV adaptations like his TV series and DC’s Legends of
Tomorrow.
Why do I wonder if John Haynes could’ve saved Vertigo? In
2018 Vertigo relaunched with a series of titles comic fans hated out the gate like
Border Town, Hex Wives, High Level, and Goddess Mode. But I wonder if Vertigo were to have launched with John
Haynes in the mix could it have been the title that saved the imprint?
In publishing 90% of books fail. And it’s the 10% that succeed
that keep the lights on. John Haynes: A Conversation With Death has been
selling since I published it in June 2018. It’s been acclaimed by readers who
have picked it up.
Could John Haynes have been the book to keep the lights on
at Vertigo?
I believe it could’ve. With the word of mouth the book is
getting on the POD track and marketing on a shoestring budget on Facebook,
Twitter, and YouTube it’s been selling strong. I believe with a Vertigo label
and Diamond’s mass distribution of DC Comics, John Haynes could’ve probably
gotten 25,000 orders on the first run and another 25,000 on the second
printing.
Combine that DC/Vertigo label distribution with my online
marketing skills and professional web presence on Social media (I spend most of
my time selling books when I’m on Twitter, Facebook and YouTube) and I believe
John Haynes could’ve sold 50,000 comics. That would’ve built anticipation for the
next pair of two-issue story arcs John Haynes: Dark Succubus and the upcoming John Haynes:
The Man With Nothing To Lose.
I believe a Vertigo John Haynes title would’ve made Warner reconsider
on shuttering the imprint. As long as one title is selling well enough it gives
a conglomerate incentive to keep the lights on.
And I also
believe my professionalism online would’ve been a model for comics pros in the
face of the numerous online scandals that plagued Vertigo 2018 with so-called
SJW comics pros like Eric Esquival, Robbie Reyes, and Zoe Quinn. Scandals that
generated a lot of controversy with Comicsgaters on social media, but didn’t generate many sales
of their books.
As a writer with over 25 years of writing experience in
romance, fantasy, chick lit and women’s fiction, and 10 years of publishing
experience I know what sells books is what’s on the page. These days almost
every person who buys John Haynes: A Conversation With Death and Dark Succubus
has gone back to pick up his past appearances in Isis: Escape From Transylvania,
Isis: Bride of Dracula, Isis: Wrath of the Cybergoddess, The Man Who Rules TheWorld and John’s first book The Temptation of John Haynes. So the new stories
are selling the old ones.
Just like a good comic book should.
Proving there’s nothing wrong with the business model for
selling comics. Just a problem with those who create the content these days.
Could John Haynes have been a hit at Vertigo?
Maybe if WB executives had reneged on their crazy contract
demands that led to numerous top selling comic pros like Neil Gaiman, Warren
Ellis and Garth Ennis leaving the imprint. As a creator their new contract deal
would’ve made me WALK AWAY. No creator who invests YEARS of their time into
creating and developing a character is gonna throw it all away on a bad deal
where they sign away their intellectual property rights like film, TV, and
merchandising.
In a world where creators can get their projects funded and
put on the market through crowdfunding while keeping all their rights, What
incentive does a creator like myself have for working with a publishing house?
What incentive do they have to work with a comic publishing house if they’re
going to profit from all the rights to all their work?
Any deal I’d sign with any comic publishing house would be
for North American Comic adaptation rights ONLY. And there’d be a clause for me
to do the writing and be paid for it. Along with final approval on the artist.
I would also want a cut of the merchandising on those adaptations from
companies like DC Collectibles or I’d negotiate a separate deal.
Warner Brothers needs to realize that the world of
publishing has changed. And that Karen Berger was on the right track when she
was allowing creator-owned properties to be published at the imprint. In the
short-term the higher costs of those film and TV rights that those creators
owned were nothing compared to what Warner Brothers would’ve reaped on a
successful adaptation of a Vertigo property and the sales from casual readers
off the street when that film or TV show premièred.
As I see it better to pay a creator like myself than to have
to risk the reputation of Warner Brothers on a blasphemous comic like Second
Coming that alienated Christians and led to a petition with over 200,000
signatures in a boycott against it. The controversy Second Coming is what DC
Got for being cheap and looking to generate controversy instead of hiring a
creator who was out to generate strong sales numbers.
Could John Haynes saved Vertigo? We’ll never know. All I
know is it’s a shame that Vertigo is shuttering its doors. I’m saddened that a
generation of readers will never experience any of the unique takes on comics
and genres of comics Vertigo offered. When I think about the praise readers
shower on me for John Haynes wonder what I could’ve contributed to Vertigo
Comics with a John Haynes book.
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