Tape #15: Sandboxers vs Canonizers
The Fifteenth Tape: DC Dave and Doug Adamson play Tape #15, which looks at …
Sandboxers vs Canonizers
With co-host Kevin Miller
In this episode of The Monitor Tapes, DC Dave and Doug Adamson are joined by Kevin Miller, author of The Crisis Companion (releasing August 2026). The discussion centers around Crisis Sandboxers vs Canonizers – what are those terms, and do they mean, and how was it utilized by the Crisis creators.
Timestamps:
- 4:53 – Crisis News: Assorted Crisis Events #9 Update
- 5:15 – Crisis News: DC Needs a Series Exploring the Justice League of Earth-1985
- 5:57 – Crisis News: 7 Greatest Moments From Crisis on Infinite Earths
- 6:36 – Introduction of Guest Host: Kevin Miller
- 48:37 – Promo: Opal City Confidential
- 49:42 – Sandboxers vs Canonizers discussion
- 1:30:26 – Infinite Earth Spotlight
- 1:43:36 – Promo: Infinite Earths: A Guide to the DC Multiverse
- 1:44:39 – Notes from the Multiverse
- 1:57:22 – The Crisis Companion
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Guest Host
Kevin Miller
The Crisis Companion, available from TwoMorrow’s Publishing
Crisis News
- Assorted Crisis Events #9 Update
- DC Needs a Series Exploring the Justice League of Earth-1985
- 7 Greatest Moments From Crisis on Infinite Earths
Promos
Music: Achilles
Kevin MacLeod incompetech.com
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License
Thanks for another surprise episode, I actually thought Kevin‘s book had come out – it feels like forever since I ordered it! Still, it will be an extra treat when it does get here.
It’s weird that I hadn’t heard of these two chaps, Adam and Peter, Kevin kept talking about with such reverence, and who Dave said were an inspiration for this podcast – tell us more, what do they do?
Doug honestly, read some Tommy Tomorrow, they’re great stories. You can find them via the usual sneaky interweb ways. Better yet, there are some awesome, beautifully reproduced stories in the DC Finest science-fiction collection, the one with the gorilla.
Kevin’s correct, Planet of the Capes is indeed full of plot holes, but remember, plotholes are just things for Geoff Johns to mine – Jor-el becomes Mr Oz, and we get a six-issue series explaining that parallel world Clark was using Golden Age Superman’s face stretching disguise power. Stupid Crayola Corps, grumble grumble..
Martin – Kevin and I were talking about “The Crisis Tapes” from the Comic Geek Speak crew. CGS is, I think, the oldest still active comic book podcast (21 years!). Adam and Peter, two of the hosts from that group, did a “deep dive” into Crisis, starting with “The Crisis Tapes” episode one back in 2009. They put out about an episode or two a year, and got 28 episodes out through mid 2024. Their show is on permanent hiatus, but well worth your time to listen to. They were pretty quickly producing 3 hour long episodes, and their indepth analysis of individual episodes usually ran 2 to 3 parts long. Yes, 6-9 hours of content about a single issue of Crisis!
PS Doug, the word you were reaching for was ‘pareidolia’.
Thank you for that Martin! I knew I’d seen it recently when someone posted better resolution photos of “The Face of Mars” which show it’s not a face at all – Sorry j’onn j’onzz – there was a discussion about how humans are hard wired to see faces on glances at items even if the faces aren’t there. because it could be a real face and it could be a threat!
Great episode.
Doug should no better then to try rent the satellite to aliens trying to take over the world .
You need to tell them they have to pay only in gold and diamonds. Come on .
Any ways here’s two secret questions
1. Will batlash get spot light episode or blue beetle ?
2. Here’s the question: Dave and Doug put together a five person team but here’s the catch
You have to use people from different earths and you both can’t use the same earths
To make it more of challenge who ever goes first has to have there
Leader from earth S (note no members of Shazam family may be used) and the second person has to use some one from earth x military hero as there leader
Bucky….have you been sneaking a peak at my “upcoming episode” notes? Hmmm….
I’m rooting for the team led by Spy Smasher…
Miller brings up an interesting number of topics — the utility of the Crisis to either canonize DC history (create a strict, unified timeline) or act as a sandbox (a place for creators to play fast and loose with continuity) is an interesting one.
I was actually thinking of it as a combination of both — creating a broad DC history that is vague in stretches of time with clear milestones that are either canonized, retconned to the modern era, or erased out of existence, allowing the current set of storytellers to tell their stories to the modern audiences.
I appreciate the economic concerns of just retconning a currently popular character or team comic, with ongoing storylines and characters. In those cases — just address any backstory via minor retcons. Anything major (like Superman never having been Superboy) then you gotta do some major jumping through hoops (and boy, there were many).
And every so often you take the long view, see what has worked with the character and what hasn’t, and adjust and move on. I think some things that really didn’t jive with the identity of the character (like Golden Age Superman’s ability to reshape his face to look like other humans or aliens, or the New 52 Superman’s Solar Flare ability) will eventually fade and be forgotten.
I finished this episode on this morning’s bike ride. Wonderful discussion with Mr. Miller (XI), Uncle Dave and Uncle Doug, and I look forward to reading his companion book. I also hope we’ll be able to read the thousands of words that were excised from his final draft in some shape or form in the future.
Having first read CRISIS 1 to 12 in one go one lazy Sunday afternoon thanks to my dad’s Absolute Edition (sorry Uncles), I do agree with Mr. Miller’s assessment of the story retconning itself as it went. My dad had commented a few times that it seemed Marv Wolfman was making up the back end as he went along, and it showed. I do wonder if readers at the time who were taking each chapter in month by month had noticed the story discrepancies…
I read some AMAZING HEROES articles about the CRISIS project leading up to the release, which mentioned that the original plan was for the CRISIS story itself to finish in issue 10, and issues 11 and 12 would be about the new history of the DC Universe. I assume the plan for the last two issues broke off into its own prestige format project when Marv Wolfman discovered he had more story to tell.
Despite what my dad said, I’d like to think that, similar to Mr. Miller’s experience writing the Companion, Marv Wolfman had continued to be inspired by the rich 50-year history of DC Comics publications as he was plotting and writing CRISIS, which gave him new ideas that he felt he had to work into the story, even if some of them may had perhaps been shoehorned in. I truly cannot fault Mr. Wolfman for that.
Regarding canonizing, I had always admired how the DC comic books of the 1970s and 1980s in my Dad’s collection truly allowed me to just pick up any one of them and easily jump in even if it was in the middle of a story or ongoing subplot. There was usually a word balloon that briefly summarized any past plot point that I needed to know, as well as a helpful “editor’s note” telling me the specific issue number where I can read more of that backstory. That doesn’t seem to be as much of the case for comic books published in this century, as you all had stated in regards to “homework requirements” and the difficulty of jumping on to the current continuity ride. I tried to read the INFINITE CRISIS trade paperback and I was a bit lost because of plot threads that picked up from the earlier set-up mini-series (plural; mini-series-es?), of which the book did not provide helpful references, summaries or even pertinent points of information. So those plot threads had taken me completely out of the story long before I got to the revolting Superboy Prime temper tantrum…
(I suppose this was akin to, though not precisely the same as, Uncle Doug’s comment of watching AVENGERS: ENDGAME as the first MCU movie… or perhaps reading CRISIS ON INFINITE EARTHS beginning with issue #4…)
Your responses to Bucky749’s question of Kamandi versus Tommy Tomorrow made me realize for the first time that CRISIS was essentially intended to be Kamandi’s “final” send-off as he essentially no longer existed in the new post-Crisis universe… at least for awhile. One interesting item to note is that issue 60 of the original KAMANDI series, which was never published because of the so-called DC Implosion, was going to establish that Kamandi’s “Great Disaster” future was actually on a parallel Earth, and that the Legion of Super-Heroes’ future was one in which “the Great Disaster never happened.” But since this comic was never officially published, does that even count? I myself prefer to think that the “Great Disaster” scenes in CRISIS did not take place on future Earth 1, but actually on “Earth Kamandi”…
INFINITE EARTHS, A GUIDE TO THE DC MULTIVERSE sounded like a legitimate podcast, and part of me still hopes it is, even though a lot of that territory had been covered in Peter Watson and David Steele’s brilliant EARTH 2 PODCAST (including the “Planet of the Capes” adventure Mr. Miller had mentioned)…
And THE SOUND OF BRICKS promo was so BLEEPing funny that it made me tear up and I couldn’t see. I had to brake my bike immediately because I did NOT want to go down another steep dropoff these rural mountain roads are known for…
Tomorrow’s ride will be my catching up on the tape backlog until the next one’s release. Until then, Uncles Gentlemen…
Hey guys. I know I have not commented before but I wanted to write in to tell you that I listen and especially enjoyed this episode. I have been looking forward to The Crisis Companion as well so it was a treat to hear Kevin. A few miscellaneous thoughts:
I also thought it would have been easy to place Kamandi’s time well before the Legion’s.
Agree with Martin that the Tommy Tomorrow stories are fun indeed. The recent DC Finest Science Fiction volume has a bunch of them as well as some other great stuff.
As someone who bought each issue of Crisis as it came out, I remember being amazed by the scope of it all. You have to remember there had been nothing like Crisis previously. My first time reading it was literally over a year long period and if you think about it that was how it was created as well. It’s no wonder that things changed for Wolfman, Perez and company especially given the office politics of the time. Another reason I am looking forward to the Companion!!
Thanks for a fun show!