Shane McCarthy

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Thank you for loving Drift.
I wouldn't read anything I wasn't enjoying either.

—Shane McCarthy[1]

Shane McCarthy is an Australian comic book writer. His first major comics work was a back-up story in Detective Comics, and later he was responsible for the temporary reinvention of the Riddler during the five-part "Riddle Me That" storyline in Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight. Beginning with All Hail Megatron, a "soft reboot" of IDW Generation 1 continuity, McCarthy has written several Transformers comics for IDW Publishing.

McCarthy's comics are known for their decompressed storytelling and Brian Michael Bendis-style approach to dialog. The theme that runs through his Transformers comics is that both the Autobots and Decepticons have lost their grounding in their ideals. McCarthy's most contentious addition to the mythos, the character Drift, serves as a mouthpiece for McCarthy's theme.

Outside of comics, one of Shane McCarthy's passions is swing dancing. He is the owner of the Swing It! swing dancing school in Perth, Western Australia.[2]

Comic bibliography

IDW Publishing

Notes

  • The first details of All Hail Megatron were revealed by McCarthy in a television interview on the disreputable Australian tabloid current affairs programme Today Tonight on January 16, 2008. He was quoted saying that the story would be about a "world without the Autobots", but later retracted his comments, claiming he had been misquoted.[3] Considering the quality of Today Tonight's journalism (trust us, it's terrible), it's hard not to give Shane the benefit of the doubt on this one.
  • He is not a fan of the 2007 Transformers movie.[4]
  • He is a fan of Simon Furman, has read everything he has produced, and would never ever do anything to "piss all over what that man did",[5] though this didn't stop him from completely ruining the plans Furman had for the character Hunter O'Nion and his partner Sunstreaker.
  • McCarthy reported on his blog that neither he nor artist Guido Guidi were given complimentary Generations Drift figures from Hasbro. He considered this to be rather lame and agreed with a reader that Hasbro should be ashamed.[6]

References