Falcon, War Machine, Cyborg, and most famously, Black Panther. Roy Wood Jr. dives into the history of Black superheroes, from their first appearance in 1936 to the modern heroes we know and love today. #DailyShow #Comedy
Falcon, War Machine, Cyborg, and most famously, Black Panther. Roy Wood Jr. dives into the history of Black superheroes, from their first appearance in 1936 to the modern heroes we know and love today. #DailyShow #Comedy
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why are people asking about static, he was a relatively new character compared to the characters being discussed.
ReplyI love War Machine. Former military and always decked out with weapons.
ReplyWhat happened to the whole of Milestone comics?
ReplyThe man forgot to include Luke Cage & Black Panther in his introduction…
Sweet Christmas! 🤦♂️
ReplyWHAT ABOUT SPAWN MICHAEL JAI WHITE
ReplyWhen he took off his blazer and pants
ReplyNo love for Spawn?
ReplyYou really gonna talk about black superheroes and NOT bring up my boy BLANKMAN?!
ReplyDon’t forget Runaways which have Alex Wilder…that they villianized and killed off just for pairing up with an Asian character…did I mention the story was writen by a white guy
ReplyLet’s not forget that Steel and Spawn were also both Black supes with their own movies.
ReplyAMAZING
ReplyRoy should host the show next. He’s the best correspondent they’ve had since John Oliver left.
ReplyYou forgot Blue Marvel and Milestone Comics.
ReplyDid he……just skip static shock? It was created by a black man and it was one of the popular show in early 2000s??????? HELLO!?
ReplyNo Luke Cage mention!!!!????!!!!
ReplyMuch better than Noah himself.
ReplyI’mma just assume Roy’s always wearing that under his suit from now on. 😍
ReplyWith Trevor leaving, I am TERRIFIED. What will become of you all? What will become of the truth? Will you, Roy take the reigns? I am so scared. What will become of this segment? I LOVE this little moment of reality. 🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🥰👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👍🏻💯👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻💋💋💋💋🫶🏻
ReplyA version of Batman, descended from victims of the Tulsa Atrocity. His family lost everything in Tulsa, but they were well diversified. His trust fund has devolved, over time. He has recently understood his heritage, and he is here for Reparations.
It writes itself.
ReplySince Marvel owes so much to black folk, wherein Blade made them, is it not crazy to imagine Marvel paying reparations? just asking?
Reply