If you were a comic-book nerd like me in the 80s -- and I sure was -- the death of Jason Todd's Robin was a huge deal. Like, really huge.
It was the first time the public decided the fate of a character, and we did so by phoning a hotline. The question was simple: Does Jason Todd survive an attack by the Joker? In the end, 72 votes determined his fate, and A Death in the Family became the stuff of pop-culture legend.
But what if the vote swung the other way? How would Batman #428 have played out?
Well, you can have a look at what that first page would have looked like had Jason Todd survived. Check it:
It's a bit jarring to see a smiling, happy Batman. But hey, even Batman deserves to be happy once in a while. I'm most struck by how close the vote was, with 5,343 votes tallied to kill Jason Todd, and 5, 271 to save him.
There you go, an alternate look at comic-book history some 32 years after the fact.
Source: io9
It was the first time the public decided the fate of a character, and we did so by phoning a hotline. The question was simple: Does Jason Todd survive an attack by the Joker? In the end, 72 votes determined his fate, and A Death in the Family became the stuff of pop-culture legend.
But what if the vote swung the other way? How would Batman #428 have played out?
Well, you can have a look at what that first page would have looked like had Jason Todd survived. Check it:
It's a bit jarring to see a smiling, happy Batman. But hey, even Batman deserves to be happy once in a while. I'm most struck by how close the vote was, with 5,343 votes tallied to kill Jason Todd, and 5, 271 to save him.
There you go, an alternate look at comic-book history some 32 years after the fact.
Source: io9


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