Date: 2014-02-23 06:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] londonkds.livejournal.com
Said character is now the only previously existing named Marvel character to be a hero in the show, albeit an extremely obscure one.

I'm not sure any show not actively made by members of the National Socialist White People's Party could top Heroes for sheer level of race/culture/class offensiveness, after they decided to become Dallasty with superpowers and that anybody who wasn't a member of the rich white Bennett/Petrelli clan was only there as a jobber to die horribly and helplessly every time a villain needed a dog-kicking moment.

Date: 2014-02-23 07:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] keithmm.livejournal.com
Said character is now the only previously existing named Marvel character to be a hero in the show, albeit an extremely obscure one.


It was also a nice bit of red-herring and foreshadowing. When he made the second appearance, I know pretty much everyone was thinking "Power Man". Deathlok might be relatively obscure, but the character has been around for 40 years and pops up in assorted comics on a fairly regular basis.

His origin also tracks pretty closely with some of the various versions of Deathlok (death/near death, unwilling weapon for bad guys, African-American).

Date: 2014-02-23 07:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dewline.livejournal.com
I wouldn't call the Deathlok concept "obscure" either.

And - as you've noticed - this particular version hews closely to that developed by Dwayne McDuffie, Gregory Wright and Jackson Guice. Particularly the "African-American trying to raise a child on his own" part.

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