The 60 Minutes Wednesday story on Stan Lee tonight is a good example of why I've lost so much respect for TV news. Some fans will probably be upset with Stan because he was hailed as the sole creator of Spider-Man, The Hulk, The X-Men, etc., with no mention of his collaborators. Jack Kirby was not mentioned. Steve Ditko's artwork was shown but he was not mentioned.
(In fact, I'll bet a lot of folks watching the broadcast thought Stan drew those comics. He was referred to "artist Stan Lee" in a lot of program listings, and there were cutaways to the hand of someone drawing Spider-Man comics…but no shot to clarify that it wasn't Stan's hand you were seeing. This is just bad reporting…the kind of thing that would get you a D-minus in a college journalism class.)
Stan will be blamed for the omission of his partners' names but I don't know that this is a fair charge. They probably taped an hour or two of interviews with him and edited it all down to the few minutes we saw on screen. For all we know, he spoke of the artists — who, as we all know, did more than just draw; they contributed plot and character ideas — in footage that didn't make it in.
And even if he didn't mention Kirby and Ditko, it's the responsibility of any TV reporter to do at least a little independent fact-checking on their interviewees. Can you imagine a newsman going out to do a story on Paul McCartney who didn't know of John Lennon? I don't know how you could fact-check Stan Lee in the slightest and not discover that Spider-Man has been hailed by everyone, including Stan himself, as the joint creation of Lee and Ditko. There are only about fifty books in print that mention this, and I just did a Google search on "Spider-Man created" and eight of the first ten hits mentioned Ditko.
So we are left with two possibilities, neither of them flattering. One is that the folks who put together the 60 Minutes story didn't take the five minutes to look up any background info at all. Given how the program just about got shamed out of existence over its recent memo screw-up, I find that hard to fathom. But the other possibility ain't too pretty either, which was that they knew about Kirby and Ditko, but decided it would mess up their story of a creative genius being wronged by the company he built. Leave Kirby and Ditko out of the picture and it's a real nice, clear-cut David/Goliath tale with Stan as the injured party, finally winning justice from the super-villainy of Evil Marvel. Mention his co-creators and the story gets a bit more complicated…and your "hero" is no longer the most injured party. He's the guy who got fewer millions than he deserved, but still fared a lot better than his teammates.
As I mentioned here, Stan's lawsuit is not about his status as co-creator, company founder, a 50+ year employee…any of that. It's about a specific contract he received a few years back that entitled him to a designated share of the profits from Marvel-based movies. And yes, that contract and his entire employment with Marvel the last few decades probably flowed to a great extent from his co-creatorship…but as a legal point, the contract is not about that. An exec who went to work for Marvel in the last ten years and created nothing could theoretically have negotiated a similar pact. The judge who ruled in Stan's favor did not address or care about past service to Marvel; only about the terms on a piece of paper.
The 60 Minutes Wednesday story glossed over that aspect of it and dwelled on Stan as unrewarded creator. They did bring up that he has not exactly been living in poverty, receiving a million bucks a year for some time…but their story's happy ending is that he's probably going to be getting a lot more, and there it ends. No mention of the unrewarded co-creators who never saw a million bucks out of Marvel, or anything close to that, over the course of their entire lives. Kirby and Ditko are not relevant to the legalities of Stan's case, but when you start focusing on what he deserves as the "creator" of the characters, as this report did, then the guys who share that distinction become absolutely relevant. There's a much greater story of injustice there…one that a lot of us have stewed over for years and will continue to note, and one which CBS News has just helped perpetuate.
Meanwhile, right this minute, I'm more annoyed at just plain rotten reporting. And just think: As I write this, these people are covering the State of the Union address, the War in Iraq and the proposals for revamping Social Security…all, probably, with the same dedication to accuracy.