Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Superman
Episode Date: November 11, 2024In 1938, writer Jerry Siegel and artist Joe Shuster released what would become one of the most well-known fictional characters of the 20th century. Their creation was a hit and soon spread to its ow...n line of comic books, TV shows, movies, cartoons, and merchandise. Yet, as popular as the character was, it has been constantly reinvented and even resurrected over the years. Learn more about Superman, his origin, and his evolution on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Sign up at butcherbox.com/daily and use code daily to get chicken breast, salmon or ground beef FREE in every order for a year plus $20 off your first order! Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Ben Long & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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In 1938, writer Jerry Siegel and artist Joe Schuster released what would become one of the most well-known fictional characters of the 20th century.
Their creation was a hit and soon spread to its own line of comic books, TV shows, movies, cartoons, and merchandise.
Yet as popular as the character was, it has been constantly reinvented and even resurrected over the years.
Learn more about Superman, his origin, and his evolution on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong?
ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed.
It effectively turned day into night.
And how it shaped the world now.
Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR.
The invention of the modern superhero was largely a product of the 20th century.
Putting aside ancient legends such as hard.
Hercules and other gods and demigods, what we know as the superhero archetype began with
cheap popular fiction in the early 20th century. The Scarlet Pimpernel is a novel by Baroness Orchie,
first published in 1905, featuring Sir Percy Blakeney, a daring English aristocrat who leads
a double life to rescue French aristocrats from the guillotine during the reign of terror
following the French Revolution. Known for his cunning disguises and daring escapades, the character of
the Scarlet Pimpernel is considered to be one of the early
precursors to the modern superhero.
Pulp magazines in the early 1900s featured characters with extraordinary abilities or adventurous
crime-fighting personas.
Characters like Zorro, The Shadow, and Doc Savage displayed elements that would influence
later superhero narratives.
Newspaper comics introduced costumed characters and adventurers.
Characters such as Flash Gordon and The Phantom featured early elements of superhero
motifs, such as distinctive costumes and codes of conduct.
What all of these early characters had in common is that they were dramatic, exceptionally skilled
heroic figures, but in the end they were just regular human beings.
They were heroes, but not superheroes.
It was in this environment that the team of Jerry Siegel and Joel Schuster began.
The two met in 1932 while attending Glenville High School in Cleveland, Ohio.
Siegel aspired to be a writer, and Schuster wanted to become an illustrator.
They developed a friendship around their love of pulp fiction of the era.
One of their first joint projects was a 1933 short story that was titled The Rain of the Superman,
for their own self-published science fiction fanzine called
Science Fiction, the Advanced Guard of Future Civilization.
Unlike the heroic character they would later create,
this story features a villainous lead character by the name of Bill Dunn,
a bald, down-and-out man who gains telepathic powers after consuming an experience.
experimental drug, given to him by a mad scientist named Professor Smalley.
Using his newfound abilities for personal gain and power, Dunn becomes a tyrant, which
Siegel and Schuster used to explore themes of corruption and absolute power.
This early version of a character named a Superman showcases the duo's initial exploration
into the concept of superhuman abilities, which would evolve dramatically by the time they
introduced the iconic superhero in 1938.
The two had a brief falling out during which Siegel came up with a story about a great scientist from the future who sends his three-year-old son back in time to the year 1935.
The time machine was found by a couple by the name of Sam and Molly Kent.
The child has superpowers including super strength.
They adopt him, name him Clark, and taught him how to use his powers for good.
After the two reconciled, they continued to work on the story.
Instead of a time traveler, they made him in a time.
alien from the planet Krypton. They made him a journalist, created a love interest for him,
a fellow journalist by the name of Lois Lane, who didn't know Clark's real identity, and set him
in the fictional city of Metropolis. Schuster later said that Metropolis was actually based on
the city of Toronto. Schuster began doing illustrations for this character, including creating
a costume with an S on the front, along with tights and a cape. In June of 1935, the two were hired
by National Allied Publications, a producer of comic books.
Despite working for a comic book publisher,
the two decided to keep their idea to themselves
and tried to get it syndicated to newspapers.
The publication they worked for eventually merged and became Detective Comics.
Detective Comics eventually just changed their name to DC Comics.
The two had a deal for a Superman comic strip to syndicate in newspapers,
but the deal eventually fell through.
At this point, the two were getting to do.
Despert when they were told that Detective Comics was going to be publishing an anthology series
called Action Comics. Desperate to get something, they sold their idea to Detective Comics for
$130, including all rights to the character. The story idea went over so well that it was on the
cover of Action Comics No. 1, which was released in June of 1938. It was the world's
introduction to Superman. Action Comics No. 1 sold.
for 10 cents at the time. However, if you own one today, it's worth substantially more. In 2014,
a copy of Action Comics No. 1 was sold at auction for $3,207,852. It is estimated that there are no
more than 50 to 100 copies of Action Comics No. 1 in the world today. While Superman of the
1930s is clearly the character we know today, there were some major differences in the
between the original Superman and what he would later become.
When he first appeared in Action Comics number one,
Superman's abilities were relatively limited compared to his later portrayals.
He was incredibly strong,
could leap great distances up to an eighth of a mile,
and was impervious to anything less than a bursting shell.
He was also fast enough to outrun a train.
Superman was a hit with readers.
While Action Comics was originally an anthology with multiple stories,
it soon became dedicated to nothing but Superman.
In 1939, Superman became part of a syndicated comic strip for newspapers
and was also part of a new comic book simply called Superman.
The launch of Superman wasn't just about Superman.
Superman was the first real modern superhero.
All subsequent superheroes were based on Superman, in part,
or sometimes they were just nothing but a blatant rip-off.
Superman launched the entire superhero genre, which today has become a multi-billion dollar business.
As early as 1940, the first adaptations of Superman began to appear outside of print.
The Adventures of Superman was a radio program that began in 1940 and ran through 1951, with 2008 episodes.
In 1941, animated cartoons were produced that ran before movies.
In 1948, a series of live action movies were produced starring Kirk Allen as Superman.
And in 1951, the first full-length feature called Superman and the Mole Men was released, starring George Reeves as Superman.
From 1952 to 1958, the Adventures of Superman Television Show aired, and George Reeves also starred in the title role.
All the while Superman was finding an audience outside of comic books, the Superman mythos was evolving in the
comic books. The era from 1938 to 1956 is known as the Golden Age of Comic Books. In fact,
the Golden Age is said to begin with the publication of Action Comics No. 1. As the stories
progressed, Superman gained new powers. His ability to leap evolved into the power of flight,
and his strength and vulnerability levels increased significantly. During the Silver Age of Comics,
which lasted from 1956 to 1970, Superman's powers increased.
even more.
Superman wasn't just as fast as a locomotive or a speeding bullet.
He could now travel the speed of light.
Superman had the ability to time travel.
In one of the earliest issues of the Superman comic,
he was given the ability to change his appearance like a shapeshifter.
He was given superior mental abilities,
including the ability to learn any language instantly
and a super genius IQ,
which allowed him to invent new materials and technologies.
His eyes had x-ray vision allowing him to see through,
anything other than lead, and he was eventually given heat vision, which basically allowed him
to shoot lasers out of his eyeballs. He was given super senses, including hearing, taste, touch, and smell.
He was given the power of super ventriloquism, the ability to throw his voice extreme distances.
His breath was super cold breath that could freeze things or put out fires. And he wasn't just
invulnerable anymore, able to stop bullets. He could now fly through the core of the sun and come out
unscathed. In addition to his powers, there were eventually weaknesses given to Superman,
the best known of which is kryptonite. The origins of kryptonite are traced to an unpublished
story by Jerry Siegel called The K-metal from Krypton written in 1940. In this original story,
K-metal didn't just take powers away from Superman and everyone else from Krypton, but also gave
superpowers to Earthlings. Cryptonite was formerly introduced into the comics in 1949.
According to the editor, it was introduced because Superman's invulnerability had started to become boring.
In the 1970s, Superman's powers were pulled back precisely because he had gotten too powerful.
One of the biggest events in the history of DC Comics began in 1985 with the Crisis of Infinite Earth's storyline.
This was their way of getting rid of all the alternate dimensions in the DC universe,
which were used to explain a way inconsistent plot points.
In the aftermath of that story, Superman was once again given downgraded powers to make him more relatable.
The early 1990 saw perhaps the greatest storyline in the history of Superman and the one that garnered mainstream media attention, the death of Superman.
The story features an unstoppable alien monster named Doomsday, who emerges from a deep underground containment and goes on a destructive rampage across America, heading straight for Metropolis.
Superman confronts the creature in a colossal battle that causes widespread devastation.
Despite his immense powers, Superman is gradually worn down by Doomsday's attacks.
The story reaches its climax in a dramatic showdown where both Superman and Doomsday strike each other with fatal blows,
leading to Superman's tragic death in the arms of Lois Lane.
I, of course, can't talk about Superman without talking about the Superman movies.
The early Superman film starring George Reeves and Kirk Allen,
were low-budget affairs.
However, just as Action Comics No. 1 launched the era of superheroes, the 1978 film Superman
by director Richard Donner was the first big-budget superhero film.
This was followed up by the even better Superman 2 in 1980, and the truly awful Superman 3
in 1983, and the shockingly even worse, Superman 4 in 1987.
In 2006, Brian Singer directed Superman Returns, which is considered to be a lot of the movie of
considered a sequel to the original Superman quadrilogy starring Brendan Routh as Superman.
A new DC-universe series of films featuring Superman was relaunched in 2013 with The Man of Steel,
directed by Zach Snyder and starring Henry Cavill.
This was followed by Batman v. Superman in 2016 and the Justice League in 2017.
There is currently a plan to reboot the original Superman franchise in 2025, starring David Cornswet.
There have also been many Superman-related TV shows over the years.
Lois and Clark, the New Adventures of Superman, ran from 1993 to 1997.
Smallville ran from 2001 to 2011, and Superman and Lois ran from 2021 to the time of this recording.
The Superman mythos shows no signs of stopping.
Superman has, in all its related titles, sold more comic books than any other superhero.
There are more movies in the works, and,
there will probably be more TV shows.
Every few decades, as the plot lines in the comic become more convoluted,
they will probably reset the Superman story again and again.
Despite all of the comic books, movies, and TV shows,
the Superman story all goes back to two high school friends from Cleveland, Ohio.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Benji Long and Cameron Kiever.
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