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<!--When featuring episodes, issues, or other stories, please remember to include the title, with "big" tags used for formatting.--> | <!--When featuring episodes, issues, or other stories, please remember to include the title, with "big" tags used for formatting.--> | ||
'''[[Jim Shooter]]''' ([[September 27]], [[1951]] | '''[[Jim Shooter]]''' ([[September 27]], [[1951]]–[[June 30]], [[2025]]) was a comic book writer and editor. Shooter is perhaps best known for serving as [[Marvel Comics|Marvel]]'s editor-in-chief during the mid-1980s. | ||
He worked on a number of story treatments for toy companies and had an acrimonous relationship with sister company [[Marvel Productions]], claiming they thought little of the comics company (to the extent of ignoring Marvel Comics treatments for toy properties) and that the relationship didn't improve until [[Margaret Loesch]] took over. One property he worked on including a proposed transforming-robot toyline borrowed from Japan... called ''[[Mysterians]]'', which never got made after Knickerbocker Toys was bought out by Hasbro. Hasbro came to Marvel to work on a treatment for ''their'' transforming robots and Shooter wrote the initial six-page treatment for ''The Transformers''. He then handed it over to [[Denny O'Neil]] to do character treatments for it but considered O'Neil's work to be "cranked out, pithless stuff" and went looking for another writer-editor to do it. [[Bob Budiansky]] was given the job after Shooter's first few choices turned it down. | He worked on a number of story treatments for toy companies and had an acrimonous relationship with sister company [[Marvel Productions]], claiming they thought little of the comics company (to the extent of ignoring Marvel Comics treatments for toy properties) and that the relationship didn't improve until [[Margaret Loesch]] took over. One property he worked on including a proposed transforming-robot toyline borrowed from Japan... called ''[[Mysterians]]'', which never got made after Knickerbocker Toys was bought out by Hasbro. Hasbro came to Marvel to work on a treatment for ''their'' transforming robots and Shooter wrote the initial six-page treatment for ''The Transformers''. He then handed it over to [[Denny O'Neil]] to do character treatments for it but considered O'Neil's work to be "cranked out, pithless stuff" and went looking for another writer-editor to do it. [[Bob Budiansky]] was given the job after Shooter's first few choices turned it down. | ||
Revision as of 05:26, 2 July 2025
Jim Shooter (September 27, 1951–June 30, 2025) was a comic book writer and editor. Shooter is perhaps best known for serving as Marvel's editor-in-chief during the mid-1980s.
He worked on a number of story treatments for toy companies and had an acrimonous relationship with sister company Marvel Productions, claiming they thought little of the comics company (to the extent of ignoring Marvel Comics treatments for toy properties) and that the relationship didn't improve until Margaret Loesch took over. One property he worked on including a proposed transforming-robot toyline borrowed from Japan... called Mysterians, which never got made after Knickerbocker Toys was bought out by Hasbro. Hasbro came to Marvel to work on a treatment for their transforming robots and Shooter wrote the initial six-page treatment for The Transformers. He then handed it over to Denny O'Neil to do character treatments for it but considered O'Neil's work to be "cranked out, pithless stuff" and went looking for another writer-editor to do it. Bob Budiansky was given the job after Shooter's first few choices turned it down.
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