
Before Watchmen, Silk Spectre... laundry day at the ol' government base. Thankfully, Doc Manhattan doesn't increase the load.
Before Watchmen, Rorschach... was kicking heads in. Of course.
Before Watchmen, the Comedian... was walking around, unaware that he would soon fly out a window.
Before Watchmen, Ozymandias... was opening his mint action figures, ruining their resale value.
Before Watchmen, the Minutemen... had been retired for decades.
Before Watchmen, Nite Owl... was buying beans, to set us up for THIS crucial scene:

(It also explains a couple of mysteries: The Watchmen-style new DC logo now has a reason to exist, and there's the evasive answers given at panels about where certain talents were in the New52 line. "They're working on something." This was it for many of them.)
Some of the creators on these books have name status out in the Mundane world as well, like Darwyn Cooke, though I do question the use of J. Michael Straczynski on something set to be a weekly project (very much aside from the fact that I hate his comics writing). Brian Azzarello, Amanda Conner, J.G. Jones, Joe Kubert (inking son Andy?), Adam Hughes, even Jae Lee. I feel kinda bad for comics veteran Len Wein whose style is much more workmanlike compared to these contemporary all-stars. And if I DO question something, it's that they're doing it as a massive weekly (unless JMS derails the whole thing) series of 35 issues. If you're going after the market that buys Watchmen, you need to put them out as pre-collected graphic novels. You really do. I truly believe that's how you're going to grab the untapped market, not with monthly rags, but with shelf-ready BOOKS.
As for the Alan Moore issue, well, that's complicated. I can't claim to understand whatever deal he has with DC, or who really own the rights to the characters (as opposed to licensing them), or how he has been treated by DC historically. It doesn't matter to me because that's not the issue he's raised. His complaint isn't that DC is profiting from his work, it's that you don't touch a classic work like that. He compared Watchmen to Moby Dick and everything. Hubris aside, this is the guy who made his CAREER upending (not always flatteringly) other people's creations. It's actually amusing that Swamp Thing co-creator Len Wein gets to work on Moore's baby. But look, LXG uses tons of characters pinched from 19th-century authors. There's Marvelman. And I wonder how Barrie, Baum and Carroll would have liked Lost Girls, in which their characters are pictured in underage orgies and incestuous situations? The Peter Pan copyright holders apparently raised concerns, which Mr. Moore brushed off. And if Watchmen had been done with the Charlton characters as originally planned, would artists like Steve Ditko have appreciated Captain Atom in threeways with himself and Nightshade, or Blue Beetle's costume fetish? In other words, he loses all credibility for me, and he's just become the industry's big grouch, always good for a bit of controversy to keep comics in the headlines. He MIGHT have a real case to make, but he's been crying wolf for so long, I just can't tell anymore. Dave Gibbons doesn't seem bothered.
By the way, I don't remember him being pissed at the three DC Heroes RPG Watchmen products that filled in a lot of the history of the Watchmen (prized items in my collection).
And before publishing this post? ...I fed a cat and took a shower. You?
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