Good idea; Aurora and Northstar get used a lot, too
An organized campaign to let MARVEL know Alpha Flight is missed is a good idea. However, it seems that MARVEL knows that the AF fans are frustrated and hurting and disillusioned about how the team is being treated.
To say MARVEL doesn't care---given that some (Fred Van Lente) appearances convey a truer sense of what Alpha Flight is than many of the other (Lobdell/The Collective-New Avengers# 16/Omega Flight) recent renditions---is only half-right, at best. Someone, somewhere has decided that putting non-original characters in the group and calling it "Alpha Flight" is the way to gear it to today's audience.
This premise has proven false time and time again.
Given that MARVEL has been acquired by Disney maybe they should listen to what the reader's want for a change and give it to them. It shouldn't be any worse than the things they have put out and called "Alpha Flight" over the last 15 years.
Maybe finding out what MARVEL needs to publish a new AF...
...might be helpful.
Does MARVEL need to publish a certain amount of books in order to consider an Alpha Flight series sustainable? If so, how many? 16,000?
25,000? 50,000? More?
Does Alpha Flight need to incorporate other characters from the MARVEL Universe in order to be considered for a new series? If so, wouldn't Wolverine be the #1 most logical choice?
With so many Alpha Flight characters to work with, would a GIANT-SIZE Alpha Flight be a good starting point to begin a new series? If the GIANT-SIZE issue did not attract enough readers, then everyone would know that there isn't enough interest to sustain or justify a new on-going series.
What if a creative team could tell a self-contained story (between 28 and 48 pages) that features a good number of Alphans and sells an acceptable amount of copies (32,000)? Would that be successful enough to green light a new Alpha Flight series, mini-series, or maxi-series?
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