James McDonough
| This article is about the Dreamwave writer. For other people called James, see James (disambiguation){{#switch:{{#sub:James (disambiguation)|-1}}|!=|.=|?=|.}} For other people known as Brad, see Brad (disambiguation). |
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James McDonough (sometimes credited as Brad Mick) is an American comic book writer. He was a writer on some of Dreamwave Productions' Transformers comics. At one point, he was also listed as "Creative Director" for the company.<ref>Mega Man #1, September 2013 credits him as such.</ref>
History
[edit]McDonough's first "official" encounter with the Transformers was in 1997. By this time, he was running a surf shop in North Carolina when he received a cease-and-desist order for slapping Transformers logos on shirts, hats, surfboards and other things he was selling.<ref>Comic Book Resources' "The Comic Wire" interviews "Brad Mick"</ref> Later he worked for Wizard: The Comics Magazine, where he would meet his future writing partner, Adam Patyk. Both of them tried to push for coverage of Transformers-related materials and eventually established contacts with Dreamwave Productions representatives through magazine-related contacts and conventions.
When Dreamwave wanted to intensify their relationship with a larger, unnamed company, McDonough was hired to act as a "Creative Director" for Dreamwave.<ref name="nrama">Newsarama interview with McDonough and Patyk (archive copy)</ref> When it was decided that Chris Sarracini would not write the second Generation 1 volume, contrary to what had been originally intended, McDonough was asked to write an entirely new story.<ref>TFormers citing a Wizard Edge article that hints at the originally proposed plot for Dreamwave's Transformers: Generation 1 vol. 2</ref> For a while, he would go by the alias "Brad Mick" to distinguish between his double duties, even going so far as referring to his "Brad Mick" persona in the third person in interviews. The "Brad Mick" guise first began to crack at a convention in 2003, when different Dreamwave representatives alternatively referred to McDonough by both names.<ref>Lying in the Gutters uncovering the true identity of "Brad Mick"</ref>
With issue #5 of the third Generation One volume (now an ongoing title), McDonough brought his former Wizard colleague, Adam Patyk, on board, now forming a writing duo. With the following issue, McDonough would start using his real name, initially being credited as "James 'Brad Mick' McDonough", finally dropping the "Brad Mick" alias for good with issue 9. In addition, McDonough and Patyk also wrote the eight-issue More Than Meets The Eye limited series of profile books for Generation 1 characters and the three-issue Armada counterpart, the four-issue Micromasters mini-series and the 2004 Summer Special, as well as various non-Transformers-related titles published by Dreamwave, such as Custom Robo and Devil May Cry. Lastly, the two were supposed to write the crossover Transformers/G.I. Joe: Divided Front (of which ultimately only one issue would be released) and a solicited Beast Wars mini-series.
In late 2003/early 2004, Dreamwave started to delay payments for McDonough and Patyk, initially coming up with various excuses while at the same time assigning the two with additional work. Despite their threats to leave the company, McDonough and Patyk were repeatedly asked to stay in order to resolve the problems at hand. Eventually, Dreamwave's debt with the two writers would total over $40,000. When they threatened legal action in mid-2004, they were fired by Dreamwave,<ref name="nrama"/> with the latter trying to suppress this delicate bit of information.<ref>Lying in the Gutters reporting on Dreamwave's attempt to contain information about Patyk and McDonough's firing</ref> Their unpublished stories were supposed to be rewritten by Chris Sarracini (Generation One) and Simon Furman (Beast Wars), while McDonough and Patyk filed a lawsuit against Dreamwave.<ref>TFormers.com quoting a statement by Patyk and McDonough</ref>
The case would ultimately never be settled, as Dreamwave officially filed for bankruptcy in early 2005. Meanwhile, McDonough and Patyk refused to offer any kind of public closure to their planned storylines unless they were paid the money they felt they were owed by Dreamwave.<ref>McDonough and Patyk commenting on the lack of closure to their Dreamwave plotlines at TFW2005</ref>
The pair continue to do freelance writing, mainly for video games, as "The Enemy".
Writing credits
[edit]Comics
[edit]Single writing credit (as "Brad Mick")
[edit]- Transformers: Generation 1 vol. 2: War and Peace: #1, #2, #3, #4, #5, #6
- Transformers: Generation One (vol. 3): #0, #1, #2, #3, #4
Shared writing credit with Adam Patyk
[edit]- Transformers: More than Meets the Eye #1, #2, #3, #4, #5, #6, #7, #8
- More than Meets the Eye: Transformers: Armada: #1, #2, #3
- Transformers: Generation One (vol. 3): #5, #6, #7, #8, #9, #10
- Transformers: Micromasters: #1, #2, #3, #4
- 20th Anniversary Transformers Summer Special: Individual stories "Welcome to the Jungle" (G1), Ultra Magnus...to the Rescue? (Robots in Disguise), Ain't No Rat (Beast Wars)
- Transformers/G.I. Joe: Divided Front: #1
Games
[edit]- Transformers (mobile game)
- Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (mobile game)
Notes
[edit]- McDonough and Patyk wrote for issue #20 of Archie Comics' Sonic X series in 2007, in which Sonic had to battle a very clearly Transformers-inspired Eggman robot that transformed into a race car.