[Editor’s Note: The author of this piece is a former Marvel employee and wishes to remain anonymous.]
Disney does not care about Marvel’s female market, which makes us virtually invisible. I could probably populate Pluto with the amount of Princess items Disney makes. But where are Gamora and Black Widow? This exclusion of women from Marvel movie merchandise is completely purposeful. I know; I was there.
While working at Marvel post-acquisition, I saw a deck circulated by Disney’s Brand Marketing team. I’m prohibited from sharing the slides, but the takeaway is that, unlike the actual demos, the desired demographics had no females in it whatsoever. I asked my supervisor why that was. Ever the pragmatist, he said, “That’s not why Disney bought us. They already have the girls’ market on lockdown.”
I’d entered the comics industry because I was a comics fan. It hurt to see so plainly that to Disney, people like me didn’t matter. My demographic was already giving them money anyway, with Disney Princess purchases. Even now, there’s no incentive to make more Marvel merch for women, because we already buy Brave and Frozen products.
This does not come as a surprise, really. Anyone who knows about branding and marketing can tell you how most gender-skewed business models work (and most businesses are gender-skewed). It starts when we’re babies. Blue for boys, pink for girls. Separate, but equal. Sound familiar?
Disney bought Marvel and Lucasfilm because they wanted to access the male market. To achieve this goal, they allocate less to Marvel’s female demo, and even less to a unisex one. They won’t be interested in changing how they work until consumers understand what’s going on.
So let’s delve deeper into how licensing works. To obtain a Marvel license, you typically have to be a successful company with access to big distribution channels, like Wal-Mart, Carrefour, Target, Tesco, etc. Marvel sometimes licenses to smaller companies, but the contracts work the same. There’s a minimum guarantee, royalty rates, and a payment schedule.
Most contracts never fall below $100K for a minimum guarantee, and large companies like Hasbro will pay millions over the course of a few years. Royalty rates vary by style guide and distribution channel. Movie style guides tend to have a higher rate due to actor likeness fees, and the standard royalty rate is about 12%. To pay Marvel $25K, a licensee has to make over $208K. Moreover, they need to pay their employees and manufacturers and make a profit. For Marvel movie properties, licensees need to make as much money as possible in a short amount of time. Movie characters are hot only for a few months, so both Disney and the licensees will resort to what they know best: the “separate, but equal” strategy.
Now that my short intro into licensing is over, how do we change things? When complaining about the lack of Black Widow, don’t just tweet at Marvel and Disney. Contact the licensees. They need to know there is a high demand. They need those numbers. Look into companies like Mad Engine, Hasbro, Jay Franco, etc. Look at the tags and find those companies. Demanding Frozen products for boys would be a balanced, conjunctive step.
Another route is to create your own company and get a licensing contract. 3D printers for clothing will soon be available. Save enough capital to buy one and you could flood the market with apparel that feature the Avengers, Justice League, and Guardians of the Galaxy as they were meant to be: co-ed teams.
Personally, I don’t think we need Marvel, DC, or Lucasfilm to pave the way for us. Giants will only move when there are other giants around. For example, when an indie film becomes successful it makes waves and influences the rest of Hollywood. HerUniverse and WeLoveFine are already successfully paving the way for women’s licensed clothing lines. We need more independent content that spotlights women heroes, super or otherwise. Hellboy, Wanted, and The Green Hornet didn’t break into the billions, but they are good examples of putting another horse in the race.
Content is queen. The most lasting way to change what’s around you is to create something new. So, comics creators —especially women—more spectacular women superheroes who headline their own books from Image, Dark Horse, Oni, Top Cow, you name it, would also be incredibly helpful. And indie pubs, make those comics and pitch them to Focus Features, Lionsgate, New Line and so on.
It’s time to start getting creative about our strategy. Let’s all brainstorm and share tactics. In the immortal words of Audre Lorde: “The master’s tools will never dismantle the master’s house.” It’s time to make our own tools.
Tag: marvel
“I don’t want all this SJW diversity crap in my Marvel comics”
dude
Marvel’s entire legacy is built on social justice issues and promoting diversity
Captain America was made by Jewish creators; a young boy with many disabilities who fought for his country
Magneto was a Jewish man who experienced oppression and genocide on a grand scale in his time imprisoned by Nazis
Spidey was a young, smart kid bullied at school who lived with his uncle and aunt and who lost a relative to gun violence
Daredevil was a blind, Irish Catholic lawyer who demanded justice for the oppressed and the belittled
Luke Cage was a black man in New York imprisoned for a crime he didn’t commit who impervious to bullets
The X-Men are a metaphor for any given oppressed minority group fighting for their rights
The mid 2000s addition of Wiccan and Hulkling as a young gay couple
The latter 2000s addition of Kamala Khan as a young Muslim girl superhero
Diversity and social justice ideas built your beloved comic industries
Say it with me, Marvelous Ladies: WE WANT WIDOW! Right this moment flash mobs are popping up all over the United States, as well as in Canada and Australia, to send a message to Marvel: We want more Natasha. We want merchandise, we want a movie or a Netflix series, and we want Natasha to be recognized just as much as any of the other Avengers. Black Widow is a hero, too! So today your mission is to spread the hashtag “#wewantwidow” on social media. We here at Marvelous Lady Looks have also decided to mark the occasion by putting together a list for you of every official non-print on demand piece of Black Widow clothing for women that we are aware of, that is currently available for sale (and every place to get it that we know of if you want to compare prices). Because another great way to get Marvel’s attention? With money spent.
Ready? Here we go.
- Amazon: 1 / 2 / 3 / 4 / 5 / 6 / 7
- Disney Store: 1
- Her Universe: 1 / 2 / 3
- Hot Topic: 1
- Marvel Shop: 1
- newegg: 1
- Shirts.com: 1
- Stylin Online: 1 / 2 / 3 / 4 / 5 / 6
- Superhero Den: 1
- Superhero Stuff: 1 / 2 / 3 / 4 / 5
- ThinkGeek: 1 / 2
- Torrid: 1
- TV Store Online: 1
- Urban Collector: 1 / 2 / 3 / 4
- WeLoveFine: 1 / 2 / 3 / 4 / 5 / 6 / 7 / 8
Want more information on the We Want Widow movement? Check out http://riellygeek.com/WIDOW 🙂
Today, hundreds of cosplayers and internet supporters around the globe are taking a stand about the inequality of female superheroines in the media, and on the shelves. Especially our favorite Avenger, Black Widow. We want to see Black Widow given the same attention as her male counterparts. She deserves it. We deserve it. We want our message heard loud and clear. #WeWantWidow. There is also a multi-city Black Widow flash mob movement, run by http://riellygeek.com/WIDOW

Black Widow baby ❤ As XO of the #WeWantWidow group I had to dress the part! It’s a casual mix of her film and comic looks. All versions of Natasha are awesome. Share your cosplays and artwork! I hope to see loads of different Widows in the tag. Tell Marvel and Disney what we want to see on the shelves and in theaters! We Want Widow! http://riellygeek.com/WIDOW

Okay so seeing this gif makes me want to give major props to the set dressers as well as the cinematographer. The meta – let me show you it.
In the background between Sam and Steve we have a very modern style generic veteran poster. The words you can just make out ‘You Fought For Us, We Fight For You.” Appropriate for Sam on several levels, especially as we go into the second half of the movie where Sam chooses to fight for Cap. They give him that specific dialog ‘Hey, Captain America needs my help’.
Behind Steve we literally have his past. We have an old school (this style of illustration became popular during WW2 and except when you want to hit the nostalgia hard, stopped being used in the 1970s) illustration of an eagle in flight carrying a flag in its talons. So it not only echoes the propaganda that Steve himself would be used to seeing but they literally put it right behind his head, he’s stepping out of the past and into the future.
The spacing of the shot is very deliberate too. You have Sam in open space, moving back and forth a bit as he speaks (yes, this is also Mackie’s style but they gave him room to move). He’s backlit by the open door. Steve is, from this angle, very grounded against the door frame, the dark wooden column. He’s also standing very still. We do get a nod and a head tilt but his movements are slower and smaller than Sam’s. [I could do a whole other meta on body language in this movie but if you just look at the gif you can infer tons of stuff.]
Hawkeye covers by David Aja
Black Widow (2014-) Digital Comics – Comics by comiXology
You’ve seen Black Widow as an Avenger and even an Agent of Shield. But on her own time she searches for atonement for her past as a KGB assassin–in ways of which those teams just wouldn’t approve.
Another rec in the ongoing series. Black Widow with amazing art by Phil Noto. So far it’s been loosely linked stories so you can start with any issue. The last few (as of this posting #8 was getting ready to come out) are starting to lean on big names to draw you to the book which makes me a little sad but I do love seeing how she holds her own (and lightly makes fun of) the Winter Soldier and Hawkeye.
Twitter Art Dump II (June 5th – 22th 2014)
Various Bucky – Stucky sketches + one sketchbook spread inspired by the monologue Highway. I had problems scanning the big pages (they were scanned in 4 parts) so I had to retouch some parts of the art digitally, sorry about that. Pencil, Copic markers (+ some PS enhancements) on A4 Moleskine sketchbook.











