Booster Gold: Difference between revisions
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{{about|the character|the title he appears in|Booster Gold (comic book)}} |
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{{Infobox comics |
{{Infobox comics character <!--Wikipedia:WikiProject Comics--> |
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|image=Booster Gold by Benes.jpg |
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<!-- |code_name = Green Lantern --> |
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|converted=y |
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|image = Green Lantern Rebirth 6.jpg |
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|caption=Michael Jon Carter as Booster Gold from ''[[Countdown to Infinite Crisis]]''. Art by [[Ed Benes]]. |
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|imagesize = |
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|alter_ego=Michael Jon Carter |
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|caption = {{Descript-cvr-art|[[Green Lantern: Rebirth]]||6|May 2005|art = [[Ethan Van Sciver]]|pub=DC|feature=(l to r) [[Guy Gardner (comics)|Guy Gardner]], [[Kyle Rayner]], [[Hal Jordan]], [[John Stewart (comics)|John Stewart]], and [[Kilowog]]}} |
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|publisher=[[DC Comics]] |
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|alt = |
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|debut=''Booster Gold'' #1 (February [[1986 in comics|1986]]) |
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|publisher = [[DC Comics]] |
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|creators=[[Dan Jurgens]] |
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|debut = ''[[All-American Comics]]'' #16 |
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|alliances=[[Justice League]]<br/>[[The Conglomerate (comics)|The Conglomerate]] |
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|debutmo = July |
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|partners=[[Ted Kord|Blue Beetle]]<br/>[[Rip Hunter]] |
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|debutyr = 1940 |
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|aliases=[[Supernova (comics)|Supernova]] |
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|debutyr1 = 1959 |
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|powers=Possesses advanced technology allowing flight, power blasts, force fields, enhanced strength, and other abilities. |
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|debutyr2 = 1968 |
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Slowed aging, Peak athletic condition |
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|debutyr3 = 1971 |
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|cat=super |
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|debutyr4 = 1994 |
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|subcat=DC Comics |
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|debutyr5 = 2012 |
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|hero=y |
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|writer1 = [[Bill Finger]] |
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|sortkey=Booster Gold |
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|writer2 = [[Martin Nodell]] |
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}} |
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|creators = [[John Broome (writer)|John Broome]]<br>[[Gil Kane]]<br>[[Bill Finger]]<br>[[Martin Nodell]] |
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'''Booster Gold''' is a fictional character, a [[DC Comics]] [[superhero]] created by [[Dan Jurgens]]. He first appeared in ''Booster Gold'' #1 (February 1986) and has been a member of the [[Justice League]]. The character is initially depicted as a glory-seeking showboat from the future, using knowledge of historical events and futuristic technology to stage high-publicity heroics. Booster develops over the course of his publication history and through personal tragedies to become a true hero weighed down by the reputation he created for himself.<ref name="dc-ency">{{Cite book|last=Greenberger|first=Robert|contribution=Booster Gold|editor-last=Dougall|editor-first=Alastair|title=The DC Comics Encyclopedia|page=58|publisher=[[Dorling Kindersley]]|location=London|year=2008|isbn=0-7566-4119-5}}</ref> |
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|characters = [[Alan Scott]]<br>[[Hal Jordan]]<br>[[Guy Gardner (comics)|Guy Gardner]]<br>[[John Stewart (comics)|John Stewart]]<br>[[Kyle Rayner]]<br>[[Jade (comics)|Jade]]<br>[[Sinestro]]<br>[[Simon Baz (Green Lantern)|Simon Baz]] |
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|seealso = [[Green Lantern Corps]] |
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|cat = |
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|subcat = All-American Publications |
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|hero = y |
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|villain = |
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|sortkey = Green Lantern |
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|addcharcat1= DC Comics superheroes}} |
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'''Green Lantern''' is the name of several [[Superhero|superheroes]] from the fictional [[DC Universe]], all of whom are characterized by a [[Power ring (DC Comics)| power ring]] and the ability to create solid constructs with the ring. |
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==Publication history== |
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The first Green Lantern (Alan Scott) was created by writer [[Bill Finger]] and artist [[Martin Nodell]] in ''[[All-American Comics]]'' #16 (July 1940).<ref name="dc-ency">{{Cite book | last = Wallace | first = Dan | author-link = | contribution = Green Lantern | editor-last = Dougall | editor-first = Alastair | title = The Marvel Comics Encyclopedia | pages = 144–147 | publisher = [[Dorling Kindersley]] | place = New York | year = 2008 | isbn = 0-7566-4119-5 | oclc = 213309017 | postscript = <!-- Bot inserted parameter. Either remove it; or change its value to "." for the cite to end in a ".", as necessary. -->}}</ref> |
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Booster Gold first appeared in ''Booster Gold'' #1 (February 1986),<ref>{{cite book|last=Manning|first= Matthew K.|last2=Dolan|first2=Hannah, ed.|chapter= 1980s|title = DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle|publisher=[[Dorling Kindersley]] |year=2010 |isbn= 978-0-7566-6742-9 |page= 218 |quote = The DC Universe gained one of its most peculiar stars in the first issue of writer/artist Dan Jurgens' ''Booster Gold'' series. }}</ref> being the first significant new character introduced into [[DC Universe]] continuity after the reboot of ''[[Crisis on Infinite Earths]]''. The next year, he began to appear regularly in the ''Justice League'' series remaining a team member until the group disbanded in 1996. He and his former Leaguers subsequently appeared as the "Superbuddies" in the ''Formerly Known as the Justice League'' miniseries and its ''JLA: Classified'' sequel "I Can't Believe It's Not the Justice League". |
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On March 16, 2007, at [[Wizard World]] Los Angeles, [[Dan DiDio]] announced a new ongoing series titled ''[[Booster Gold (comic book)|All-New Booster Gold]]'', which was later published as simply ''[[Booster Gold (comic book)|Booster Gold]]''. The series follows the events of ''[[52 (comics)|52]]'' and was initially co-written by [[Geoff Johns]] and Jeff Katz, with art by creator Jurgens and [[Norm Rapmund]].<ref>{{Cite web|title=DC Nation Panel from WW:LA|work=[[Newsarama]]|url=http://forum.newsarama.com/showthread.php?t=105423|first=Albert|last=Ching|date=March 16, 2007|accessdate=2007-03-18}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|title=Geoff Johns Shares Booster Gold Thoughts|work=Newsarama|url=http://forum.newsarama.com/showthread.php?t=105430|date=March 16, 2007|accessdate=2007-03-18}}</ref> The series focuses primarily on Booster Gold's clandestine [[time travel]] within the [[DC Universe]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://classic.newsarama.com/dcnew/Booster/booster.html|title=Johns, Katz, and Jurgens Talk Booster Gold|work=Newsarama|date=March 21, 2007|accessdate=2007-03-22}} {{Dead link|date=November 2010|bot=H3llBot}}</ref> The series also features [[Rip Hunter]], [[Skeets (DC Comics)|Skeets]], and Booster's ancestors Daniel Carter and Rose Levin as supporting characters. The tagline of the series is: "The greatest hero you've never heard of!"<ref>{{Cite web|title=The 52 Exit Interviews: Geoff Johns|work=Newsarama | url=http://forum.newsarama.com/showthread.php?t=111254|first=Vaneta|last=Rogers|date=May 3, 2007|accessdate=2007-05-06}}</ref> Katz and Johns left the book after 12 issues (#1-10, [[Zero Hour: Crisis in Time|#0]], and a [[DC One Million|One Million]] issue). Jurgens and Rapmund stayed. Jurgens assumed writing duties following four issues by guests [[Chuck Dixon]] and [[Rick Remender]]. |
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Each Green Lantern possesses a power ring and green lantern that gives the user great control over the physical world as long as the wielder has sufficient willpower and strength to wield it. The ring is one of the most powerful weapons in the universe and can be very dangerous. While the ring of the [[Golden Age of Comic Books|Golden Age]] Green Lantern (Alan Scott) is magically powered, the rings worn by all subsequent Lanterns are technological creations of the [[Guardians of the Universe]], who granted such rings to worthy candidates. These individuals made up the intergalactic [[Police|police force]] known as the [[Green Lantern Corps]].<ref name="dc-ency"/> |
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In May 2010, [[Keith Giffen]] took over the ''Booster Gold'' title, linking it with the 26 week miniseries ''[[Justice League: Generation Lost]]'', which saw Booster unite with [[Fire (comics)|Fire]], [[Ice (comics)|Ice]] and [[Captain Atom]] to take down the resurrected [[Maxwell Lord]]. From July 2010 through February 2011, Booster starred alongside Rip, [[Green Lantern]], and [[Superman]] in the six-issue miniseries ''Time Masters: Vanishing Point'', part of the "[[The Return of Bruce Wayne|Return of Bruce Wayne]]" arc, which also reintroduced the [[Reverse-Flash]] and established background for the 2011 DC crossover event ''[[Flash: Flashpoint|Flashpoint]]''.<ref name="tmvpflashpoint">{{Cite web | first=Russ|last=Burlingame|work=Comic Related|title=Time Masters: ''Vanishing Point'' #6 and ''Flashpoint'' Exclusive News!|url=http://comicrelated.com/news/10599/flashpoint-exclusive|date=February 3, 2011}}</ref> Jurgens returned to the main ''Booster Gold'' title with issue #44.<ref name="tmvpflashpoint"/> |
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After [[World War II]], when sales of superhero [[comic book]]s generally declined, DC ceased publishing new adventures of Alan Scott as the Green Lantern. In 1959, at the beginning of the [[Silver Age of Comic Books]], DC editor [[Julius Schwartz]] assigned writer [[John Broome (writer)|John Broome]] and artist [[Gil Kane]] to revive the Green Lantern character, this time as [[test pilot]] [[Hal Jordan]] who became a founding member of the [[Justice League|Justice League of America]]. In 1970, writer [[Dennis O'Neil|Denny O'Neil]] and artist [[Neal Adams]] teamed Green Lantern with archer [[Green Arrow]] in groundbreaking, socially conscious, and award-winning stories that pitted the sensibilities of the law-and-order-oriented Green Lantern with the [[populism|populist]] Green Arrow. Several cosmically-themed series followed, as did occasional different individuals in the role of Earth's Green Lantern. Most prominent of these are '''[[Hal Jordan]]''', '''[[John Stewart (comics)|John Stewart]]''', '''[[Guy Gardner (comics)|Guy Gardner]]''' and '''[[Kyle Rayner]]'''. |
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==Fictional biography== |
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Each of the Earth's Green Lanterns has been a member of either the [[Justice Society of America]] or the Justice League of America, and John Stewart was featured as one of the main characters in both the ''[[Justice League (TV series)|Justice League]]'' and the ''[[Justice League Unlimited]]'' [[animated series]]. The Green Lanterns are often depicted as being close friends of the various men who have been the [[Flash (comics)|Flash]], the most notable friendships having been between Alan Scott and [[Flash (Jay Garrick)|Jay Garrick]] (the Golden Age Green Lantern and Flash), Hal Jordan and [[Flash (Barry Allen)|Barry Allen]] (the Silver Age Green Lantern and Flash), [[Kyle Rayner]] and [[Wally West]] (the modern-age Green Lantern and Flash), and Jordan also being friends with West. |
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===From the future=== |
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==Publication history== |
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Michael Jon Carter was born poor in 25th century [[Gotham City]].<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.boosterrific.com/booster/history.html | title=Boosterrific! History of Booster Gold | work=Boosterrific.com | date=August 21, 1985 | accessdate=2011-01-15}}</ref> He and twin sister Michelle never knew their father because he left after gambling away all their money. Michael was a gifted athlete, attending Gotham University on a [[American football|football]] [[athletic scholarship|scholarship]]. At Gotham U., Michael was a star [[quarterback]] until his father reentered his life and convinced him to deliberately lose games for gambling purposes. He was exposed, disgraced and expelled. Later he was able to secure a job as a night watchman at the [[Metropolis (comics)|Metropolis]] [[Space Museum (comics)|Space Museum]], where he studied displays about superheroes and villains from the past, particularly the 20th century. |
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{{see also|Green Lantern (comic book)}} |
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With the help of a security robot named [[Skeets (DC Comics)|Skeets]], Michael stole devices from the museum displays, including a [[Legion of Super-Heroes]] flight ring and [[Brainiac 5]]'s [[force field (fiction)|force field]] belt. He used [[Rip Hunter]]'s time machine, also on display in the museum, to travel to the 20th century, intent on becoming a superhero and forming a [[corporation]] based around himself to make a comfortable living.<ref name="dc-ency"/> He is a shameless self-promoter whose obsession with fame and wealth irritates other heroes.<ref name="bg1">''Booster Gold'' #1 (February 1986)</ref> |
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=== Golden Age === |
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[[File:All-American Comics 16.jpg|left|thumb|200px|Green Lantern's debut in ''All-American Comics#16 (July 1940).<br>Art by [[Sheldon Moldoff]].]] |
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Carter's nickname as a football player was "Booster", but his chosen 20th century superhero name was "Goldstar". After saving the president, Carter mangled the two names, causing US President [[Ronald Reagan]] to introduce him as "Booster Gold". The name stuck. In a running joke throughout the DC Universe, people erroneously call him "Buster" to his chagrin. |
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[[Martin Nodell]] (using the name Mart Dellon) originated the Green Lantern. He first appeared in the [[Golden Age of comic books]] in ''[[All-American Comics]]'' #16 (July 1940), published by [[All-American Publications]], one of three companies that would eventually merge to form [[DC Comics]]. |
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===Celebrity=== |
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This Green Lantern's real name was [[Alan Scott]], a railroad engineer who, after a railway crash, came into possession of a magic lantern which spoke to him and said it would bring power. From this, he crafted a [[magic ring]] which gave him a wide variety of powers. The limitations of the ring were that it had to be "charged" every 24 hours by touching it to the lantern for a time, and that it did not work on objects made of wood. |
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Booster is originally based in Superman's home city, Metropolis. He starts his hero career by preventing the [[shapeshifting]] assassin Chiller, an operative of [[100 (DC Comics)|The 1000]], from killing the [[President of the United States]] and replacing him. With the subsequent public exposure, Booster signs a multitude of commercial and movie deals. During his career, his sister Michelle Carter, powered by a magnetic suit, follows in his footsteps as the superheroine [[Michelle Carter (comics)|Goldstar]]. She dies battling creatures from another dimension, devastating him. Amassing a small fortune, Booster founds Goldstar, Inc. (later Booster Gold International) as a holding company and hires Dirk Davis to act as his agent. During the ''[[Millennium (comics)|Millennium]]'' event, Davis reveals that he is a [[Manhunters|Manhunter]] in disguise and siphoned money from Booster's accounts in hopes of leaving him no choice but to do the Manhunters' bidding. Although the Manhunters are ultimately defeated, Booster is left bankrupt. |
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===''Justice League''=== |
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Nodell had originally planned to give the Green Lantern the alter ego "Alan Ladd," this being a linguistic twist on ''[[Aladdin]]'', who had a magic lamp and magic ring of his own. DC considered the wordplay distracting and foolish, and the character's name was changed before publication to "Alan Scott." In May 1942, the film ''[[This Gun for Hire]]'' suddenly made the [[journeyman]] [[actor]] [[Alan Ladd]] a [[movie star]]. Nodell would always joke that they had missed a great opportunity.<ref>{{cite web|first=Alan |last=Kistler |url=http://www.monitorduty.com/2006/02/alan-kistlers-profile-on-green-lantern/ |title=(Feb. 13, 2006): "Alan Kistler's Profile On: Green Lantern!" |publisher=Monitor Duty |date=2006-02-13 |accessdate=2010-09-14}}</ref> |
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Booster Gold is a key character in the late 1980s/early 1990s ''[[Justice League]]'' revamp by writers [[Keith Giffen]] and [[J. M. DeMatteis]]. Booster Gold is frequently partnered with fellow Justice League member [[Ted Kord|Blue Beetle]], and the two quickly become best friends. The duo's notable appearances include a stint as superhero repo men and the construction of a gaming resort, Club JLI, on the living island [[Kooey Kooey Kooey]]. |
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After one too many embarrassments and longing for his old reputation, Booster quits the League to found the [[The Conglomerate (comics)|Conglomerate]], a superhero team whose funding is derived from corporate sponsors. Booster and his team are determined to behave as legitimate heroes, but find that their sponsors compromise them far too often.<ref name="dc-ency"/> The Conglomerate reforms several times after Booster rejoins the League, though without much success. |
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As a popular character in the 1940s, the Green Lantern featured both in ''All-American Comics'' and in his own title, as well as co-starring in ''[[Comic Cavalcade]]'' along with [[Flash (comics)|Flash]] and [[Wonder Woman]]. He was a charter member of the [[Justice Society of America]], whose adventures ran in ''[[All Star Comics]]''. After [[World War II]] the popularity of [[superhero]]es in general declined. The ''Green Lantern'' [[comic book]] was cancelled with issue #38 (May–June 1949). ''[[All Star Comics]]'' #57 (1951) was the character's last Golden Age appearance. |
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When an alien comes to Earth on a rampage, Booster coins the name [[Doomsday (comics)|Doomsday]] for it. In the ensuing battle, Booster's costume is destroyed. Blue Beetle is able to design a new (albeit bulkier) costume to replace it, although this costume often malfunctions. During a later battle with Devastator, a servant of the [[Overmaster]], Booster is nearly killed and loses an arm. Again, Blue Beetle comes to his aid, designing a suit that acts as a [[life support]] system in addition to replicating the powers of Booster's previous costumes. This suit also includes a [[Cybernetics|cybernetic]] replacement arm. |
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===Silver Age revival=== |
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[[Image:Showcase 22.png|200px|thumb|left|Cover to ''Showcase''#22 (October 1959), the first appearance of [[Hal Jordan]].]]Following the successful revival of the [[Flash (comics)|Flash]] in ''[[Showcase (comic book)|Showcase]]'' #4 (Oct. 1956), a new Green Lantern was introduced in ''[[Showcase (comic book)|Showcase]]'' #22 (September–October 1959). |
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===''Extreme Justice''=== |
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This Green Lantern was [[Hal Jordan]], a [[test pilot]] who was given a [[Power ring (DC Comics)|power ring]] by a dying [[Extraterrestrial life|alien]], [[Abin Sur]], and who became a member of the [[Green Lantern Corps]], an interstellar organization of [[police]] overseen by the [[Guardians of the Universe]].<ref>{{cite web|last=Albert|first=Aaron|url=http://comicbooks.about.com/od/greenlantern/p/glhaljordan.htm|title=Green Lantern - Hal Jordan Profile|accessdate=17 January 2013}}</ref> The Corps' rings were powerless against anything colored yellow, due to a yellow-colored "impurity," or "[[Doping (semiconductor)|dopant]]," in the master power generator located on Oa, where the Guardians maintained their headquarters; the yellow dopant was described as being a "necessary" one, for without it, the master generator could not function as such. Jordan's creation was motivated by a desire to make him more of a [[science fiction]] hero, editor [[Julius Schwartz]] having been a longtime fan of that genre and literary agent who saw [[Popular culture|pop-culture]] tastes turning in that direction. Despite multiple characters taking on the role of Green Lantern for Earth, Jordan remains the most well known in both comics and media. Gil Kane and Sid Greene were the art team most notable on the title in its early years, along with writer John Broome. |
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After the Justice League falls apart, Booster Gold joins [[Extreme Justice]], a team led by [[Captain Atom]].<ref name="dc-extr">{{Cite book|last=Beatty|first=Scott|author-link=Scott Beatty|contribution=Extreme Justice|editor-last=Dougall|editor-first=Alastair|title=The DC Comics Encyclopedia|page=117|publisher=[[Dorling Kindersley]]|location=New York|year=2008|isbn=0-7566-4119-5|oclc=213309017}}</ref> While a member of this team, Booster makes a deal with the supervillain [[Hank Hall|Monarch]], who fully heals Booster's wounds so that he can once again remove his battle suit. Booster dons a new costume created by Blue Beetle. Skeets acts as its systems controller, who aids Booster and is able to take control of the costume if Booster is rendered unconscious. |
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Following the disbanding of Extreme Justice, this suit is destroyed. A new costume is created by [[Professor Hamilton]], based on the designs of both the original 25th century costume and the energy containment suit Superman was wearing at this time. This costume is apparently later tweaked to resemble Booster's original costume more closely.<ref name="dc-ency"/> |
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===Later developments=== |
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With issue #76 (April 1970), the series made a radical stylistic departure. Editor Schwartz, in one of the company's earliest efforts to provide more than fantasy, worked with the writer-artist team of [[Dennis O'Neil|Denny O'Neil]] and [[Neal Adams]] to spark new interest in the comic and address a perceived need for social relevance. They added the character [[Green Arrow]] (with the cover though not the official name retitled ''Green Lantern Co-Starring Green Arrow'') and had the pair travel through America encountering "real world" issues, to which they reacted in different ways — Green Lantern as fundamentally a lawman, Green Arrow as a [[Liberalism|liberal]] [[iconoclasm|iconoclast]]. Additionally during this run, the groundbreaking "[[Snowbirds Don't Fly]]" story was published (issues #85 and #86) in which Green Arrow's teen sidekick [[Speedy (comics)|Speedy]] (the later grownup hero [[Roy Harper (comics)|Red Arrow]]) developed a [[heroin]] [[Substance use disorder|addiction]] that he was forcibly made to quit. The stories were critically acclaimed, with publications such as ''[[The New York Times]]'', ''[[The Wall Street Journal]]'', and ''[[Newsweek]]'' citing it as an example of how comic books were "growing up".<ref>Wright, Bradford W. ''Comic Book Nation''. Johns Hopkins, 2001. Pg. 227</ref> However, the O'Neil/Adams run was not a commercial success, and after only 14 issues, the two left the title, which was cancelled. |
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===''Infinite Crisis''=== |
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The title would know a number of revivals and cancellations. Its title would change to ''Green Lantern Corps'' at one point as the popularity rose and waned. During a time there were two regular titles, each with a Green Lantern, and a third member in the Justice League. A new character, [[Kyle Rayner]], was created to become the feature while Hal Jordan first became the villain [[Parallax (comics)|Parallax]], then died and came back as the [[Spectre (comics)|Spectre]]. |
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====''Countdown to Infinite Crisis''==== |
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In the wake of ''[[DC: The New Frontier|The New Frontier]]'', writer Geoff Johns returned Hal Jordan as Green Lantern in ''[[Green Lantern: Rebirth]]'' (2004–05). Johns began to lay groundwork for "[[Blackest Night]]" (released July 13, 2010<ref>{{cite web|author=Green Lantern: Blackest Night |url=http://www.amazon.com/dp/1401227864 |title=Green Lantern: Blackest Night (9781401227869): Geoff Johns, Doug Mahnke: Books |publisher=Amazon.com |date= |accessdate=2012-07-07}}</ref>), viewing it as the third part of the trilogy started by ''Rebirth''. Expanding on the Green Lantern mythology in the second part, "[[Sinestro Corps War]]" (2007), Johns, with artist [[Ethan van Sciver]], found wide critical acclaim and commercial success with the series, which promised the introduction of a spectrum of colored "lanterns". |
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After the events depicted in the [[limited series]] ''[[Identity Crisis (DC Comics)|Identity Crisis]]'', in which [[Sue Dibny]] is murdered, Gold retires briefly, but then helps Blue Beetle discover who is manipulating KORD Industries.<ref name="countdown">''[[Countdown to Infinite Crisis]]'' #1 (May 2005)</ref> Booster is badly injured in an explosion at Kord's home, and it is revealed that his companion Skeets has been dismantled for its 25th century technology by the [[Checkmate (comics)|Checkmate]] organization. |
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=== |
====''The OMAC Project''==== |
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[[Image:Boosterquits.jpg|thumb|Booster Gold's farewell to [[Fire (comics)|Fire]].]] |
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The series and its creators have received several [[award]]s over the years, including the 1961 [[Alley Award]] for Best Adventure Hero/Heroine with Own Book<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hahnlibrary.net/comics/awards/alley61.php|title=1961 Alley Awards|accessdate=22 November 2011|year=2006|author=Joel Hahn|work=Comic Book Awards Almanac}}</ref> and the [[Academy of Comic Book Arts]] [[Shazam Award]] for Best Continuing Feature in 1970, for Best Individual Story ("No Evil Shall Escape My Sight", ''Green Lantern'' vol. 2, #76, by [[Dennis O'Neil]] and [[Neal Adams]]),<ref name="Shazam1970">{{cite web|url=http://www.hahnlibrary.net/comics/awards/shazam70.php|title=1970 Academy of Comic Book Arts Awards |
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In ''[[The OMAC Project]]'' limited series, Booster Gold gathers the old [[Justice League International]] heroes to investigate Blue Beetle's disappearance. At the series' end, he is ruined physically and emotionally, having destroyed much of his gear in the fight against the [[OMAC (comics)|OMACs]]. He has seen his friend [[Dimitri Pushkin|Rocket Red]] die in battle. He discovered that another friend, [[Maxwell Lord]], is responsible for killing Blue Beetle and that in fact, Lord always hated superheroes. He stopped trusting the other DC heroes. In a moment of self-reflection, he realizes that if only he had bothered to recall more of what was history in his native era, he might have been able to warn his friends. Giving a farewell kiss to the forehead of his wounded teammate Fire as she lay in a hospital bed, he drops his trademark goggles on the floor and leaves, saying only that he has decided to "go home", implying a return to the 25th century.<ref name="omac">''[[The OMAC Project]]'' #1-6 (June–November 2005)</ref> |
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|author=Joel Hahn|work=Comic Book Awards Almanac|year=2006|accessdate=22 November 2011}}</ref> and in 1971 for Best Individual Story ("Snowbirds Don't Fly", ''Green Lantern'' vol. 2, #85 by O'Neil and Adams).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hahnlibrary.net/comics/awards/shazam71.php|title=1971 Academy of Comic Book Arts Awards |
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|author=Joel Hahn|work=Comic Book Awards Almanac|year=2006|accessdate=22 November 2011}}</ref> |
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====''Infinite Crisis''==== |
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Writer O'Neil received the Shazam Award for Best Writer (Dramatic Division) in 1970 for his work on ''Green Lantern'', ''[[Batman]]'', ''[[Superman]]'', and other titles, while artist Adams received the Shazam for Best Artist (Dramatic Division) in 1970 for his work on ''Green Lantern'' and ''Batman''.<ref name="Shazam1970"/> Inker [[Dick Giordano]] received the Shazam Award for Best Inker (Dramatic Division) for his work on ''Green Lantern'' and other titles.<ref name="Shazam1970"/> |
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In ''[[Infinite Crisis]]'', Gold resurfaces in the ruins of the Justice League's Watchtower on the moon, along with Skeets, again branded as a criminal in his time for "hijacking historical records".<ref name="ic2">''[[Infinite Crisis]]'' #2 (January 2006)</ref> When Skeets fails to locate the absent [[Martian Manhunter]], Booster searches for [[Blue Beetle (Jaime Reyes)|Jaime Reyes]], the new Blue Beetle, whom he promptly takes to the [[Batcave]]. Booster tells [[Batman]] the subject of the stolen records: Batman never finds [[Brother Eye]], but Booster implies that, with Jaime's aid, they can succeed.<ref name="ic5">''Infinite Crisis'' #5 (April 2006)</ref> The mission is successful and Booster plays a pivotal role in the destruction of the satellite.<ref name="ic6">''Infinite Crisis'' #6 (May 2006)</ref> |
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===''52'' and Supernova=== |
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In [[Judd Winick]]'s first regular writing assignment on Green Lantern, he wrote a storyline in which an assistant of Kyle Rayner's emerged as a gay character in Green Lantern #137 (June 2001). In Green Lantern #154 (November 2001) the story entitled "Hate Crime" gained media recognition when Terry was brutally beaten in a homophobic attack. Winick was interviewed on Phil Donahue's show on MSNBC for that storyline on August 15, 2002<ref>[http://www.cbgxtra.com/Default.aspx?tabid=1191 Melby, Nathan; "Gay comics characters get media attention: Green Lantern writer Winick focuses on hate crimes, while Marvel’s Rawhide Kid is called out"; cbgextra.com]{{dead link|date=July 2012}}</ref> and received two [[GLAAD Media Award]]s for his Green Lantern work.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=2238|title=Green Lantern Honored by GLAAD|author=Jonah Weiland|date=13 June 2003|publisher=[[Comic Book Resources]]|accessdate=22 November 2011}}</ref> |
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{{Main|52 (comics)}} |
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[[Image:Supernova (comics).jpg|150px|left|thumb|Supernova from ''52'' Week 35. Art by [[Phil Jimenez]].]] |
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In the aftermath Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman temporarily retire their costumed identities, and the remaining heroes attend a memorial for [[Superboy (Kon-El)|Superboy]] in Metropolis.<ref name="52w1">''[[52 (comics)|52]]'' Week 1 (May 10, 2006)</ref> Booster attends the memorial, but when Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman do not arrive as he expects, he suspects his robot sidekick Skeets is malfunctioning and becomes hysterical. After Skeets reports other incorrect historical data,<ref name="52w2">''52'' Week 2 (May 17, 2006)</ref><ref name="52w3">''52'' Week 3 (May 24, 2006)</ref> Booster searches fellow time traveler [[Rip Hunter]]'s desert bunker for answers, finding it littered with enigmatic scrawled notes. Booster finds photos of himself and Skeets surrounded by the words "his fault" with arrows pointing toward them.<ref name="52w8">''52'' Week 6 (June 28, 2006)</ref> |
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Booster is seemingly angered when a mysterious new superhero named '''[[Supernova (comics)|Supernova]]''' appears. His reputation ruined, Booster tries to regain the spotlight by containing an explosion, but appears to be killed in the attempt.<ref name="52w15">''52'' Week 15 (August 16, 2006)</ref> Skeets uses Booster's ancestor, Daniel Carter, to regain access to Hunter's lab, where he sees the photos and arrows pointing at him. Skeets traps Carter in a time loop in the bunker and sets out to locate Hunter himself. |
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In May 2011, ''Green Lantern'' placed 7th on IGN's Top 100 Comic Book Heroes of All Time.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ign.com/top/comic-book-heroes/7|title=Hal Jordan (Green Lanter) - #7 Top Comic Book Heroes|publisher=IGN|date=May 2011|accessdate=22 November 2011}}</ref> |
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Supernova meets with Rip Hunter in the [[Kandor|Bottle City of Kandor]], and Hunter examines a number of high-tech items Supernova has brought him. When Skeets discovers the two, Supernova reveals himself to be Booster Gold and fights him, revealing how he and Rip Hunter used time travel to fake his death and create a rivalry between Booster and himself as Supernova. Hunter and Booster attempt to trap Skeets in the [[Phantom Zone]], but Skeets appears to eat the subdimension and pursues his two adversaries through time.<ref name="52w37">''52'' Week 37 (January 17, 2007)</ref> |
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==Fictional character biographies== |
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He appears in ''[[World War III (DC Comics)|World War III]]''. He tries to steal a missile, but leaves after realizing that he appeared before it was launched. Booster later appears before [[Steel (John Henry Irons)|Steel]] and [[Natasha Irons]], stealing the nanobot missile they were about to use on [[Black Adam]], saying he needs it more than they and that it would not have worked for its original purpose anyway; Booster promptly disappears.<ref>''52'' Week 50 (April 21, 2007)</ref> During his time-hopping mission, he briefly stops in the far future, robbing the [[Dominators]] of an experimental weapon designed to deal with time travelers. Trying to explain his situation to the alien warlords, he makes them suspicious as they mistake his rant of "having to save 52 worlds" as a warning that the Earth and 52 unnamed worlds are going to invade them after Booster's raid.<ref>''[[Supergirl]] and the [[Legion of Super-Heroes]]'' #29 (June 2007)</ref> |
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===Golden Age Green Lantern=== |
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Booster returns to the present, using [[T. O. Morrow]] as bait to draw out Skeets. Skeets reveals itself to be [[Mister Mind and the Monster Society of Evil|Mister Mind]] in disguise, having used Skeets' shell as a cocoon to evolve into a being capable of devouring the Multiverse. Booster and Rip flee into the timestream with Skeets' remains and return to the end of the Infinite Crisis.<ref>''52'' Week 51 (April 28, 2007)</ref> Rip and Booster witness the birth of the new [[Multiverse (DC Comics)|Multiverse]], made up of 52 identical worlds. Mister Mind attempts to trap Booster and Rip in the Phantom Zone which he devoured when it was turned on him, but he is stopped by Supernova (now Daniel Carter, who was saved from the time loop he was trapped in by Rip and given Michael's outfit), who restores the Phantom Zone to its original place. Mister Mind then devours years and events of each of the 52 worlds, altering their history in the process. The real Skeets gives Booster a pep talk which inspires him to stop Mister Mind.<ref name="dc-ency"/> |
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==== Alan Scott ==== |
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{{Main|Alan Scott}} |
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Alan Scott's Green Lantern history originally began thousands of years ago when a mystical "green flame" meteor fell to Earth in ancient [[China]]. The voice of the flame prophesied that it would act three times: once to bring death (a lamp-maker named Luke Fairclough crafted the green metal of the meteor into a lamp; in fear and as punishment for what they thought [[sacrilege]], the local villagers killed him, only to be destroyed by a sudden burst of the green flame), once to bring life (in modern times, the lamp came into the hands of a patient in a mental institution who fashioned the lamp into a modern lantern; the green flame restored him to sanity and gave him a new life), and once to bring power. By 1940, the lantern passed into the possession of Alan Scott, a young engineer. Following a railroad-bridge collapse of which he was the only survivor, the flame instructed Scott how to fashion a ring from its metal, to give him fantastic powers as the superhero Green Lantern. He adopted a colorful costume and became a crime-fighter. Alan was a founding member of the [[Justice Society of America]]. |
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Booster travels to the day after the end of ''[[Crisis on Infinite Earths]]'' on [[List of DC Multiverse worlds|New Earth]], where he retrieves the Blue Beetle scarab from Ted Kord. Using the scarab — along with Suspendium stolen by Rip Hunter, Skeets' mangled shell, and Supernova's powers — Rip, Booster, and Daniel trap Mister Mind inside Skeets and hurl it into the timestream, trapping Mister Mind within a repeating time loop of 52 seconds where he is captured by [[Dr Sivana]]. As a reward for helping save the Multiverse, Rip downloads Skeets' programming into a spare Responsometer. Rip, Booster, and Daniel decide to keep the existence of the new Multiverse a secret. |
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After the [[Crisis on Infinite Earths]] (although the original origin story was still in continuity), a later ''Tales of the Green Lantern Corps'' story was published that brought Scott even closer to the Corps' ranks, when it was revealed that Alan Scott was predated as Earth's Green Lantern by a Green Lantern named Yalan Gur, a resident of China. Not only had the Corps' now-familiar green, black and white uniform motif not yet been adopted, but Yalan Gur altered the basic red uniform to more closely resemble the style of clothing worn by his countrymen. Power ultimately corrupted this early Green Lantern, as he attempted to rule over mankind, which forced the Guardians to cause his ring to manifest a weakness to wood, the material from which most Earth weapons of the time were fashioned. This allowed the Chinese peasants to ultimately defeat their corrupted "champion". His ring and lantern were burned and it was during this process that the “intelligence” inhabiting the ring and the lantern, and linking them to the Guardians, was damaged. Over time, when it had occasion to manifest itself, this "intelligence" became known as the mystical 'Starheart' of fable. |
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[[Will Magnus]] then repairs Skeets using the Responsometer, although Skeets has no memory of the last year. Meanwhile, Daniel Carter decides to keep the Supernova costume and begin his own superhero career. His resolution weakening with time, he starts using the suit to play video games instead, because he does not need to eat, drink, or sleep while wearing it.<ref name="52w52">''52'' Week 52 (May 2, 2007)</ref> |
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Centuries later, it was explained, when Scott found the mystical lantern, it had no memory of its true origins, save a vague recollection of the uniform of its last master. This was the origin of Scott’s distinctive costume. Due to its damaged link to them, the Guardians presumed the ring and lantern to be lost in whatever cataclysm overcame their last owner of record. Thus Scott was never noticed by the Guardians and went on to carve a history of his own apart from that of the Corps, sporting a ring with an artificially induced weakness against anything made of wood. Honoring this separate history, the Guardians never moved to force Scott to relinquish the ring, formally join the Corps, or adopt its colors. Some sort of link between Scott and the Corps, however, was hinted at in a Silver Age cross-over story which depicts Scott and Hal Jordan charging their rings at the same Power Battery while both reciting the "Brightest Day" oath. During the [[Rann-Thanagar War]], it was revealed that Scott is an honorary member of the Corps. |
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===One Year Later=== |
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On June 1, 2012, DC Comics announced that it would be re-introducing Alan Scott as a gay man in the title "Earth 2." The issue was released on June 6, 2012.<ref name="Reuters.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/06/01/us-gay-greenlatern-idUSBRE85017H20120601|title=Gay Green Lantern appears in alternate universe|author=Daniel Trotta|date=June 1, 2012|work=Reuters.com}}</ref> In its story, Alan Scott and his male lover were both passengers aboard a train, but before Scott could propose marriage to his lover, the latter was killed when their train was wrecked in the railroad-bridge collapse that Scott alone survived. |
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{{Main|Booster Gold (comic book)}} |
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Following the events of ''52'', Booster Gold returns in his second solo series with the first story arc "52 Pick-Up". Booster puts in a request to the Justic League that they admit him and the group begrudgingly decide to monitor him over the following week. However, Rip Hunter informs Booster that history has become malleable after Mister Mind's rampage and [[Continuity changes during Infinite Crisis#Superboy-Prime's changes|earlier damage to the timeline]]. |
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A new villainous Supernova arises after stealing Daniel's costume, and aided by evil time traveler Rex Hunter, intends to exploit weaknesses in history, keen on rewriting it and destroying the League (they are later revealed to in fact be working under the orders of the [[Ultra-Humanite]], [[Despero]], and [[Per Degaton]]). As Booster is thought of as a buffoon, the person or persons behind the altering of time will not suspect he is thwarting them, but Booster must maintain his poor reputation to protect himself. Booster's condition for following Rip's orders is that he may travel back in time to avert the death of his best friend, Ted Kord. |
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===Silver Age Green Lantern=== |
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Despite Rip's objections, Booster and three [[Blue Beetle]]s team up to rescue Kord moments before his death. They succeed, and the restored Blue/Gold duo deserts Rip Hunter to side with the Blue Beetles group. Rip retaliates by presenting Michael's ancestors Daniel Carter and Rose Levin with replicas of the Supernova and Booster Gold suits, stating that the Carter family's heroic legacy starts "right freakin' now."<ref name="BGv2 6">''Booster Gold'' vol. 2, #6 (March 2008)</ref> When time "solidifies" following Kord's rescue, and the other three Beetles return to their own times, Ted and Michael find that as a consequence of changing the timeline, the world has become overrun by Maxwell Lord's OMACs. |
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==== Hal Jordan ==== |
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{{Main|Hal Jordan}} |
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During a final battle between the remade JLI and the OMACs, the Time Stealers return and are defeated. However, Booster suffers a tragedy when he is unable to stop Ted from entering a time sphere with the [[Black Beetle (DC Comics)|Black Beetle]] to change the past one final time, resetting history and sacrificing himself. |
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The second Green Lantern to see publication is also the most notable. The character of Harold "Hal" Jordan was a second-generation [[test pilot]], having followed in the footsteps of his father, Hal Jordan. He was given the power ring and battery (lantern) by a dying [[Extraterrestrial life|alien]] named [[Abin Sur]], whose [[Starship|spaceship]] crashed on [[Earth]]. Abin Sur used his ring to seek out an individual who was "utterly honest and born without fear" to take his place as a member of the corps. At one point, when Hal Jordan was incapacitated, it was revealed that there were two individuals matching the specified criteria on Earth, the other being [[Guy Gardner (comics)|Guy Gardner]], and the ring chose Jordan solely because of his proximity to Abin Sur. Gardner then became listed as Hal's "backup", in case there was an instance in which Jordan was unavailable or otherwise incapacitated. Later, when Gardner was put into a coma, it turned out that by then there was a third human suitable for the task, [[John Stewart (comics)|John Stewart]], who was designated as the Earth Sector's "backup" Lantern. Jordan, as Green Lantern, became a founding member of the Justice League of America and as of the mid-2000s is, along with John Stewart, one of the two active-duty Lanterns in Earth's sector of space. |
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He is later transported to the [[DC One Million|853rd century]], where he faces off against Peter Platinum, a con artist who is attempting to outdo Booster at making money off of heroic acts. When returns to the present, he is enraged by Rip's unsympathetic responses to his ordeal and quits. Batman tells Booster that he knew about Booster's attempts to prevent the crippling of [[Barbara Gordon]] and has long realised that Booster is not the fool he appears to be, offering his friendship. Booster resolves to continue working with Rip, even if it will not be "fun". Rip reveals that he is able to save Booster's sister Michelle from moments before she died, claiming there is a loophole due to Michelle being from the future. It is also revealed to the audience that Hunter is Booster's son: as Michelle and Michael go out to eat, Rip says "Keep it up, dad."<ref name="BGv2 10">''Booster Gold'' vol. 2, #10 (July 2008)</ref> |
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Jordan also automatically became a member of the Green Lantern Corps, a galactic "police" force which bears some similarities to the "[[Lensman series|Lensmen]]" from the science fiction series written by [[E. E. Smith|E.E. Smith]], although both creators Julius Schwartz and John Broome denied ever reading Smith's stories.<ref name="Lensmen">{{Cite news | last=Thomas | first=Roy | title=The Lensman Connection | periodical=Alter Ego | volume=3 | issue=10 | year=2001 | page=24 | postscript=<!-- Bot inserted parameter. Either remove it; or change its value to "." for the cite to end in a ".", as necessary. -->}}</ref> Nevertheless, the early 1980s miniseries "Green Lantern Corps" honors the similarity with two characters in the corps: Eddore of Tront and Arisia. A different interpretation of Jordan and the Corps appears in ''[[Superman: Red Son]]''. |
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Booster has shown his dedication, now calling himself a "Time Master", (with Hunter), and trains his sister.<ref>''Booster Gold'' vol. 2, #13 (December 2008)</ref> |
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Following the rebirth of Superman and the destruction of Green Lantern's hometown of Coast City in the early 1990s, Hal Jordan seemingly went insane and destroyed the Green Lantern Corps and the Central Power Battery. Now calling himself [[Parallax_(comics)|Parallax]], Hal Jordan would devastate the DC Universe off and on for the next several years. However, after Earth's sun was threatened by a Sun-Eater, Jordan sacrificed his life, expending the last of his vast power to reignite the dying star. Jordan subsequently returned from beyond the grave as the [[Spectre (comics)|Spectre]], the divine Spirit of God's Vengeance, whom Jordan attempted to transform into a Spirit of Redemption, which ended in failure. |
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===''Blackest Night''=== |
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In ''[[Green Lantern: Rebirth]]'', it is revealed that Jordan was under the influence of a creature known as [[Parallax (comics)|Parallax]] when he turned renegade. Parallax was a creature of pure fear that had been imprisoned in the Central Power Battery by the Guardians of the Universe in the distant past. Imprisonment had rendered the creature dormant and it was eventually forgotten, becoming known merely as the "yellow impurity" in the power rings. [[Sinestro]] was able to wake Parallax and encourage it to seek out Hal Jordan as a host. Although Parallax had been trying to corrupt Jordan (via his ring) for some time, it was not until after the destruction of Coast City that it was able to succeed. It took advantage of Jordan's weakened emotional state to lure him to Oa and cause him to attack anyone who stood in his way. After killing several Green Lanterns, Jordan finally entered the Central Power Battery and absorbed all the power, unwittingly freeing the Parallax entity and allowed it to graft onto his soul. |
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{{main|Blackest Night}} |
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[[File:Black Lantern Blue Beatle (Ted Kord).jpg|thumb|Booster Gold in the sights of Kord as a Black Lantern]] |
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In a tie-in to the ''[[Blackest Night]]'' event, Booster faces Ted Kord, reanimated as a [[Black Lantern Corps|Black Lantern]]. At first unavailable due to reliving Ted's funeral in the past, he returns to meet his ancestor Daniel Carter, only to find the crashed, derelict Bug at his house. Then, he finds the Black Lantern pummeling Jaime Reyes, Daniel, and Skeets.<ref>''Booster Gold'' vol. 2, #26 (November 2009)</ref> Attacked by him, he removes Daniel and Rose from the scene and heads to Kord Industries to arm himself. He uses a special light gun designed by Ted to blast the corpse and separate the ring with light, simulating the emotional spectrum. |
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Upon separating the corpse from the ring, he collects Ted's remains before the ring can reanimate them and takes them into the Time Sphere to Vanishing Point Fortress to secure them. He is somewhat relieved when Skeets uses the Fortress's special chronal surveillance equipment to display images of the days of Team Blue and Gold. Jaime promises to live up to Kord's legacy and eventually form a new Blue and Gold team. They find evidence at the warehouse of someone else entering, even though the doors were genetically coded, with only two people cleared for access: Ted and Booster.<ref>''Booster Gold'' vol. 2, #27 (December 2009)</ref> |
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The Spectre bonded with Jordan in the hopes of freeing the former Green Lantern's soul from Parallax's taint, but was not strong enough to do so. In ''Green Lantern: Rebirth'', Parallax began to assert control of the Parallax-Spectre-Jordan composite. Thanks to a supreme effort of will, Jordan was able to free himself from Parallax, rejoin his soul to his body and reclaim his power ring. The newly revived (and rejuvenated) Jordan awoke just in time to save [[Kyle Rayner]] and [[Green Arrow]] from Sinestro. After the Korugarian's defeat, Jordan was able to successfully lead his fellow Green Lanterns in battle against Parallax and with help from Guardians Sayd and Ganthet, imprisoned it within the personal power batteries of Earth's Lanterns, rendering the Green Lantern's rings free of the yellow impurity, provided they had the power of will to do so. |
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Hal Jordan is once again a member of both the Justice League and the Green Lantern Corps, and along with John Stewart is one of the two Corps members assigned to Sector 2814, personally defeating Sinestro in the [[Sinestro Corps War]]. Jordan is designated as Green Lantern 2814.1. |
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===''Brightest Day''=== |
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Post-''[[Sinestro Corps War]]'', [[DC Comics]] revisited the origin of [[Hal Jordan]] as a precursor to ''[[Blackest Night]]'' storyline, the next chapter in the [[Geoff Johns]] era on ''Green Lantern''. |
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{{main|Brightest Day}} |
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Hal Jordan is the Green Lantern portrayed by [[Ryan Reynolds]] in the 2011 [[Green Lantern (film)|Green Lantern]] film. |
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Booster next finds his sister living in Coast City mere hours before its destruction. Though unable to save her boyfriend, Booster and Michelle patch up their relationship, with her agreeing not to leave him. This arc introduces an older Booster Gold, the man that trained Rip Hunter and was the master of both Time, the [[Multiverse]], and [[Hypertime]]. Rip reveals that this Booster is not only his father, but also has been watching Rip training the young Booster Gold, aiding him when needed. Older Booster also reveals that he is still married to Rip's mother, and that Michelle is with them in some unknown time.<ref>''Booster Gold'' vol. 2, #31 (April 2010)</ref> |
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In ''[[Justice League: Generation Lost]]'', Booster is part of the manhunt to bring the resurrected Maxwell Lord to justice. He finds Max but is beaten badly. Fire, Ice, and Captain Atom find him just as Lord uses his psychic powers to the utmost to erase all memory of himself from the minds of the entire world. For some reason, Booster, Fire, Ice, and Atom are the only ones who remember Lord and see him in recorded images.<ref>''Justice League: Generation Lost'' #1 (Early July 2010)</ref> Trying to convince Batman ([[Dick Grayson]]), Booster is horrified to learn that, thanks to Max, the world believes Ted Kord committed suicide. Fire, Ice, and Captain Atom are soon set up by Max to cut them off from allies, but, ironically, Booster is left alone because his reputation is already poor.<ref>''Justice League: Generation Lost'' #2 (Late July 2010)</ref> |
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===Bronze Age Green Lanterns=== |
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<!-- Should this pair be listed in perceived importance or in publication order? --> |
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=== |
===Return of the JLI=== |
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The remnants of the JLI are, seemingly by chance, joined by the successors of Blue Beetle (Jaime Reyes) and Rocket Red. Rocket Red declares the newly formed team as the new Justice League International, prompting Booster to figure out that Max Lord manipulated them to be together. Later, during the assault on Checkmate, Fire and Ice discuss how Booster has become the leader of the team.<ref>''Justice League: Generation Lost'' #4 (Late August 2010)</ref> |
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{{Main|Guy Gardner (comics)}} |
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When his team member, Jaime, is kidnapped and tortured by Max, Jaime signals the rest of the JLI to lead them to Max's headquarters. The JLI arrives too late, and Jaime is shot in the head by Max, killing him in the same manner as his predecessor, Ted Kord.<ref>''Justice League: Generation Lost'' #19 (February 2011)</ref> Booster Gold is enraged and his team tries to take down Max, but Max escapes from the JLI using one of his headquarters' escape pods. The JLI carries Jaime to the land surface, where paramedics try to resuscitate him. However, their efforts fail as Jaime had already died.<ref>''Justice League: Generation Lost'' #20 (February 2011)</ref> As the team deals with the loss of Jaime, Booster Gold blames himself for leading the team into so much danger, and wants to abdicate as leader. The rest of the team overhear his ranting and convince him that they believe in him. Gold is still upset, saying they cannot win against Max, when Blue Beetle suddenly sits up, his wound healed, declaring he knows Max's ultimate plans and that they can stop him.<ref>''Justice League: Generation Lost'' #21 (March 2011)</ref> |
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In the late 1960s, Guy Gardner appeared as the second choice to replace Abin Sur as Green Lantern of sector 2814. Gardner was a candidate to receive Abin Sur's ring, but Jordan was closer. This placed him as the "backup" Green Lantern for Jordan. But early in his career as a Green Lantern, tragedy struck Gardner as a power battery blew up in his face, putting him in a coma for years. During the ''[[Crisis on Infinite Earths]]'', the Guardians split into factions, one of which appointed a newly revived Gardner as their champion. As a result of his years in a coma, Guy was very emotionally unstable, although he still mostly managed to fight valiantly. He has gone through many changes, including wielding [[Sinestro]]'s yellow Guardian power ring, then gaining and losing [[Vuldarian]] powers, and readmission to the Corps during ''[[Green Lantern: Rebirth]]''. He later became part of the Green Lantern Honor Guard, and oversees the training of new Green Lanterns. Gardner is designated as Green Lantern 2814.2 within the Corps. |
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While the JLI learn that Jaime is alive, Batman and Power Girl join the team. Meanwhile, Max sends the [[OMAC (comics)|OMACs]] to attack the JLI.<ref>''Justice League: Generation Lost'' #22 (March 2011)</ref> While the JLI are battling against OMAC Prime, Booster locates Max's flying headquarters and attacks it to come face-to-face with Max.<ref>''Justice League: Generation Lost'' #23 (April 2011)</ref> During the battle, Booster pulled Max out of the headquarters and ends up falling to the earth. Booster Gold saves Max at the last moment, but Max mind-controls him until he is confronted by Captain Atom. Captain Atom forces Max to undo the global mindwipe. Max then teleports to escape. Afterwards, Booster and Batman set out to re-form the JLI.<ref>''Justice League: Generation Lost'' #24 (April 2011)</ref> |
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Guy Gardner helped lead the defense of Oa during the events of ''[[Blackest Night]]''. |
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===''Flashpoint''=== |
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Following his outstanding acts of valour, the Guardians appoint Guy to a unique role behind Honour Guard, answering directly to the Guardians themselves. |
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{{main|Flashpoint (comics)}} |
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After the ''Time Masters: Vanishing Point'' event, [[Rip Hunter]] informed them that someone sneaked into their base leaving a message on the chalkboard.<ref>''Time Masters: Vanishing Point'' #6 (February 2011)</ref> When Earth entered an alternate timeline due to the actions of the [[Flash (Barry Allen)|Flash]], Booster and Skeets awaken and are the only ones who remember the original timeline. Gold travels to Coast City, but US soldiers attack him mistaking him to be an [[Atlantis (DC Comics)|Atlantean]] threat. Skeets is damaged when Gold is attacked by the military's Project Six, which is revealed to be [[Doomsday (comics)|Doomsday]].<ref>''Booster Gold'' (vol. 2) #44 (May 2011)</ref> |
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During the battle in Coast City, he discovers that Doomsday is controlled by General [[Captain Atom|Nathaniel Adam]]. He escapes from Doomsday and then saves a woman named Alexandra Gianopoulos from Doomsday's attack. He learns the timeline has been changed, suspecting [[Professor Zoom]]. Alexandra and Booster split up, but she secretly has powers allowing her to take others' powers and follows him. Later, he flies to [[Gotham City]] when Doomsday attacks him. General Adam's control link is destroyed by Alexandra in an attempt to rescue Booster. Doomsday's true personality comes to the surface and he attacks Booster.<ref>''Booster Gold'' (vol. 2) #45 (June 2011)</ref> During the fight, Doomsday beats him nearly to death, but he is rescued by Alexandra. He tries to prevent Doomsday from killing innocent people, and manages to put Doomsday's helmet back on. Doomsday's control is restored to Adam, who grabs Booster, hoping to kill him.<ref>''Booster Gold'' (vol. 2) #46 (July 2011)</ref> Fortunately, Adam takes him back to the base for interrogation, allowing him to escape when the sight of "Project Superman" causes Doomsday's true personality to resurface. Alexandra defeats Doomsday by using the control helmet to make Doomsday tear himself apart, subsequently asking Booster to take him with her when he restores history to normal. Alexandra subsequently sacrifices herself to save Booster from an Atlantean attack, leaving him to return to Vanishing Point as history resets without any clear memory of his time in the "Flashpoint" universe. Before the "Time Masters: Vanishing Point", Alexandra appeared and left the messages regarding the altered timeline on Rip's chalkboard before vanishing.<ref>''Booster Gold'' (vol. 2) #47 (August 2011)</ref> |
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====John Stewart==== |
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{{Main|John Stewart (comics)}} |
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===The New 52=== |
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<!-- "Bronze Age" notation --> |
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{{main|The New 52}} |
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In the early 1970s, John Stewart, an architect from Detroit MI, was selected by the Guardians to replace a comatose [[Guy Gardner (comics)|Guy Gardner]] as the backup Green Lantern for Jordan. When Jordan resigned from the Corps for an extended period of time, Stewart served as the regular Lantern for that period. Since then, Stewart was in and out of action due to various circumstances, even becoming the first mortal Guardian of the Universe. He also joined and led the [[Darkstars]] when the Green Lantern Corps were destroyed by [[Parallax (comics)|Parallax]]. After that, he took over being Green Lantern for Kyle Rayner when he left Earth, also taking his place in the [[Justice League|JLA]]. Now he has begun serving with Jordan as one of his sector's two designated regular-duty Lanterns, designated as Green Lantern 2814.3. |
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Booster's next appearance was as part of the new ''Justice League International'' series launched in September 2011.<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.bleedingcool.com/2011/08/26/lemire-robinson-and-azzarello-%E2%80%93-dc-bullet-points-from-fan-expo-canada/ | title=Lemire, Robinson And Azzarello – DC Bullet Points From Fan Expo Canada | work=bleedingcool.com | accessdate=2011-09-08}}</ref> |
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In the post-''Flashpoint'' continuity, Booster is portrayed with his original glory-seeking personality and is chosen by the U.N. to lead the JLI due to his PR sense and naiveté. He takes his leadership role seriously, and strives to become a better hero and role model.<ref>''Justice League International'' (vol. 3) #1 (September 2011)</ref> |
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===Modern Age Green Lanterns=== |
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However, despite his best efforts and support from Batman, who officially defers to Booster's leadership after supporting Booster for leader, the JLI falls apart due to a string of attacks against the group that leaves members killed or wounded.<ref>Justice league international #7-12</ref> Despite his best attempts to bring in new members however, Booster alienates Guy Gardner when he recruits Jaime Reyes into the roster and later watches in horror as the hero OMAC betrays the team and inflicts more carnage, including teleporting Blue Beetle to the homeworld of the villainous "Reach" species. |
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==== Kyle Rayner ==== |
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{{Main|Kyle Rayner}} |
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In the end, Gold is confronted with his future counterpart; an agent of ARGUS, who warns his present self to prevent Superman and Wonder Woman from dating. Failure to prevent it would cause Booster Gold to cease existing. As the JLI monitor reveals Superman and Wonder Woman kissing, the future Gold disappears; saying he "shouldn't have trusted him". The present day Gold disappears moments later.<ref>''Justice League International Annual'' #1</ref> [[Amanda Waller]] orders [[Chronos (comics)|Chronos]] to search for Gold through time, but Chronos is captured by the [[Secret Society of Super Villains|Secret Society]] before carrying out his mission.<ref>''Justice League of America'' #5 (June 2013)</ref> |
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Kyle Rayner was a struggling freelance artist when he was approached by the last Guardian of the Universe, [[Ganthet]], to become a new Green Lantern with the very last power ring. Ganthet's reasons for choosing Rayner remained a secret for quite some time. Despite not being from the same cloth of bravery and fearlessness as Hal Jordan — or perhaps because of that — Rayner proved to be popular with readers and his fellow characters. Having continually proven himself on his own and with the JLA, he became known amongst the Oans as ''The Torch Bearer''. He briefly operated as [[Ion (DC Comics)|Ion]] after using the power of the entire Green Lantern Corps. He was responsible for the rebirth of the Guardians and the re-ignition of the Central Power Battery, essentially restoring all that Jordan had destroyed as Parallax. |
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Booster Gold mysteriously reappears in [[All-Star Western|19th Century]] [[Gotham City]].<ref>''All-Star Western'' #19 (April 2013)</ref> |
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Kyle Rayner was chosen to wield the last ring because he knew fear, and Parallax had been released from the Central Power Battery. Ganthet knew this and chose Kyle because his experiences dealing with fear enabled him to resist Parallax. Because Parallax is a manifestation of fear, and yellow, none of the other Green Lanterns, including Hal, could harm Parallax and, therefore, came under his control. Kyle taught them to feel and overcome fear so they could defeat Parallax and incarcerate him in the Central Power Battery once again. |
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==Legacy== |
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Kyle became Ion, who is later revealed to be the manifestation of willpower in the same way Parallax is fear. During the [[Sinestro Corps War]] between the Green Lantern Corps and the Sinestro Corps, Ion was imprisoned while Parallax possesses Kyle. In ''Green Lantern'' (vol. 4) #24, Parallax consumes Hal Jordan. Hal Jordan enters into Kyle's prison, and with his help, Kyle finally escapes Parallax. |
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Since his origin, characters within the DC Universe have hinted that there is a greater purpose to Booster Gold than he knows. |
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During the ''Millennium'' event, [[Harbinger (DC Comics)|Harbinger]] reveals to Martian Manhunter that Booster is descended from the Chosen and that he must be protected. It is revealed that Booster is destined to come to the past to protect him from an unknown event in the future.<ref name="bg25">''Booster Gold'' #25 (February 1988)</ref> In ''52'' Rip states that the moment Booster helped save the multiverse from Mister Mind would be remembered in the future as the start of Gold's "glory years."<ref name="52w52"/> Later, in the new ''Booster Gold'' series, Rip hints at a "Carter heroic legacy."<ref name="BGv2 6"/> It is then revealed that Booster is important to the Time Masters, as he will train "the greatest of them all,"<ref name="BGv2 10"/> being the father and the teacher of Rip Hunter himself, who willingly chose to protect his identity against other time-travellers, to pass through history as the only loser of the clan. Despite the general distrust of Booster, Rip and his descendants apparently know the truth, always honoring him.<ref name="bg1000000">''Booster Gold'' vol. 2, #1000000 (September 2008)</ref> |
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Afterward, [[Ganthet]] and [[Sayd]] trap Parallax in the Lanterns of the four Green Lanterns of Earth. Ganthet asks Kyle to give up his right to be Ion and become a Green Lantern again. Kyle accepts, and Ganthet gives Kyle a power ring. Kyle is outfitted with a new costume including a mask that looks like the one from his first uniform. Kyle is now a member of the Green Lantern Corps Honor Guard, and has been partnered with Guy Gardner. |
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Due to the complicated Time-Travels mechanics, Booster's future self, "currently" operating from an unknown era with his time-travel educated wife, still watches over his past self and his son, making sure that Rip Hunter gives his past self proper schooling. The older Booster acts in total anonymity, and has access to other "time-lost" equipment than his suit, such as the seemingly destroyed [[Superboy (Kon-El)|Superboy]]'s "super-goggles".<ref name="BGv2 30">''Booster Gold'' vol. 2, #30 (March 2010)</ref> |
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Kyle now shows up mostly as part of the ensemble cast of ''[[Green Lantern Corps]]''. Corps rookie [[Sodam Yat]] took over the mantle of Ion. Sodam has made an appearance in the [[Legion of Super Heroes]] ''[[Final Crisis]]'' tie-in ''[[Legion of Three Worlds]]'' as the last surviving Green Lantern/Guardian of the Universe. |
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Due to a [[predestination paradox]], the future Booster is revealed to be a more experienced Time Master than his son Rip Hunter, but also that he personally tasked Rip to school his past self. It is also implied that the departure of the Hypertime concept, rather than a simple [[retcon]], is Booster's work, as in the future he tasked himself with the role of pruning divergent timelines from each universe in the Multiverse.<ref name="BGv2 30"/> |
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Kyle is designated as Green Lantern 2814.4 within the Corps.{{Citation needed|date=June 2010}} |
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==Powers and equipment== |
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Kyle Rayner died in ''Green Lantern Corps'' #42 (Jan. 2010) after sacrificing himself to save Oa from an attack by the Black Lantern Corps. The following issue, Kyle is brought back to life by the power of a Star Sapphire who connects Soranik Natu's heart to his heart. |
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While Booster Gold has no superhuman abilities (like Batman, he relies on equipment), he is an excellent athlete. He demonstrates enough willpower to use his Legion flight ring at range, a feat few have been able to demonstrate. |
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Booster gained his "powers" from the artifacts he stole from a museum in the future. A power suit grants him super strength and wrist blasters allow him to project force blasts. The wrist blasters contain the primary controls and power supply for the suit as well as communications equipment. Circuitry from a force field belt allows Booster to resist physical and energy attacks, and he uses the force field to repel objects with great force and generate a breathable self-contained environment. The force field centers on Booster's body, but can expand and even project outward. The costume's goggles have [[infrared]] and [[Magnification|magnifying]] capabilities. In addition to the powers from his suit, Booster can fly thanks to a [[Legion of Super-Heroes]] flight ring. Booster can also absorb mass and eject it either in its original form or as a melted mass,<ref name="BG 3">''Booster Gold'' #3 (April 1986)</ref> although this depletes his force field for a time afterward.<ref name="BG 7">''Booster Gold'' #7 (August 1986)</ref> |
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====Simon Baz==== |
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{{Main|Simon Baz}} |
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Simon Baz is a [[Lebanese American]] [[Muslim]] from the [[Detroit]] suburb of [[Dearborn, Michigan]]. He first appeared ''[[The New 52]]! FCBD'' #1 before making his first full appearance in ''Green Lantern'' #0 during the "Rise of the Third Army" story line written by [[Geoff Johns]]. He was caught by the police street racing in a stolen car with an armed bomb in the back of the van. While being questioned by authorities, Sinestro's Green Lantern ring chose Simon as its next ring bearer, recruiting him into the Green Lantern Corps. The [[Justice League]] eventually tracks him down and questions him as to how he came into the possession of a Green Lantern ring. Batman tries to disarm him by removing Simon's ring, but self-defense mechanisms of the ring prevent this.<ref>{{cite comic|title=Green Lantern v5 #14|date=Jan. 2013}}</ref> Simon Baz plays an important part in the "Rise of the Third Army" storyline. |
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Booster's original uniform included a cape which was taken by Superman after telling Booster, "You can't handle a cape."<ref>third issue of ''Booster Gold'' vol. 2</ref> Booster's later costumes use many different technologies to supply his powers, but the powers themselves remain basically the same despite changes to the source. Booster's third costume acts as a mobile life support system. |
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===Others who have headlined as Green Lantern=== |
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As Supernova, Michael Carter uses a [[Phantom Zone#Post-Crisis|Phantom Zone Projector]] built into his suit to teleport matter from one place to another.<ref name="52w37"/> |
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==== Jade ==== |
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{{Main|Jade (comics)}} |
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The daughter of Alan Scott, '''Jennifer-Lynn Hayden''' would discover she shared her father's mystical connection to the [[Alan Scott#Post Crisis and Ragnarok|Starheart]], which gave her the abilities of a Green Lantern. Choosing to follow in her father's footsteps, she became the superheroine Jade. She would later fight a manifestation of the Starheart and lose those abilities. |
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Despite the fact that Booster stole the elements of his costume in the 25th century, recent Legion of Super-Heroes reboots and retcons depict them as having been invented in either the 30th or 31st century. Originally, the time bubble Booster used to travel from 2462 to 1985 was discovered in 2986 with pieces of Brainiac 5's force field belt aboard.<ref>''Booster Gold'' #8-9</ref> This prompted Brainiac 5, [[Reep Daggle|Chameleon Boy]], and [[Ultra Boy]] to travel to 1985 to investigate. In the process, they assisted Booster in foiling an assassination attempt on President [[Ronald Reagan]]. Brainiac 5 left his force field belt and flight ring with Reagan and determined that these would end up as the ones Booster would eventually steal in 2462, thus completing the causality loop. |
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After Jade was stripped of her powers, Kyle Rayner gave her a copy of Hal Jordan's power ring. When Rayner left Earth to restart the Green Lantern Corps, Jade donned the classic Green Lantern uniform and served as the planet's Green Lantern until losing the ring during a battle with the villain [[Fatality (comics)|Fatality]]. Later, when the ring was returned to her, she changed her Green Lantern uniform to a modified version of Rayner's. Jade continued to function as a Green Lantern until Rayner, as Ion, used his power to restore her connection to the Starheart. During ''[[Infinite Crisis]]'', she died while trying to stop [[Alexander Luthor, Jr.]] from destroying the universe to create a new multiverse. Upon her death, Jade returned her Starheart power to Rayner. In the ''[[Blackest Night]]'' event, her remains have been reanimated as one of the [[Black Lantern Corps]] after receiving a black power ring. She was resurrected by Hal Jordan while he was bonded with the [[White Entity]] along with eleven other [[Black Lantern Corps]] members. |
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{{-}} |
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In the context of the "Threeboot" ([[Mark Waid]]) Legion continuity, it is revealed that in a sort of predestination paradox, Booster's ring and force field belt were stolen by Rip and Daniel in an attempt to reverse a "Time Stealer's" plan intended to erase Booster from the continuity by damaging the Time Sphere held in the museum.<ref name="BGv2 10"/> |
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====Thaal Sinestro==== |
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{{Main|Sinestro}} |
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Sinestro was born on the planet [[Korugar]] and became Green Lantern of space sector 1417. He was a friend of [[Abin Sur]] and mentor to Hal Jordan. His desire for order was an asset in the Corps, and initially led him to be considered one of the greatest Green Lanterns. As the years passed, he became more and more fixated upon not simply protecting his sector, but on preserving order in the society of his home planet no matter the cost. Eventually, he concluded that the best way to accomplish this was to conquer Korugar and rule the planet as a dictator. Exposed by Hal Jordan and punished, he later wielded a yellow ring of fear from [[Qward]]. Later in league with Parallax, he would establish the [[Sinestro Corps]], which began the [[War of Light]]. Following [[Blackest Night]] and [[War of the Green Lanterns]] Sinestro would once again receive a Green Lantern ring, and he headlines the monthly ''Green Lantern'' following [[The New 52]]. |
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{{-}} |
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In the future, an older Booster will have access to "lost" technology, such as Superboy's super-goggles. |
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====Jediah Caul==== |
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Premiering in ''Green Lantern: New Guardians Annual'' #1, Caul is an undercover Green Lantern agent who unwillingly helps Carol Ferris and the New Guardians attempt to petition Lady Styx to send aid against the Third Army. For betraying them, the New Guardians leave Caul behind and he is forced to become part of a reality program called "The Hunted". Stripped of his powers, Caul stars as part of an ensemble cast of space bound DC characters including the [[Blue Beetle]] and a new [[Captain Carrot|Captain K'rot]] in the Hunted feature of ''Threshold''. |
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{{-}} |
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Booster's equipment includes: |
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==Powers and abilities== |
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*'''Legion flight ring''': The standard flight ring employed by the adult Legion of Super-Heroes, made of a particular alloy named "valorium", bestows his/her owner with flight abilities. It is the only piece of equipment stolen from the Space Museum that survived to the most recent version of Booster's suit unscathed. Its origins differ slightly between the 1987 and the 2008 series, but in both origins, it is revealed that the ring originally was the one held by [[Brainiac 5]]. In the alternate continuity of the ''[[Legion of Super Heroes in the 31st Century]]'' series, Brainiac 5 himself arranged the events leading Booster to steal a random flight ring, knowing about his heroic life in the 21st century from historical sources. |
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{{Main|Power ring (DC Comics)}} |
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*'''Power suit''': Instead of any superhuman powers, Booster Gold uses an advanced microcircuitry-powered all-purpose combat suit. The suit bestows enhanced strength, at least twenty tons without exertion, and protection to the wearer, and is durable, lightweight and easy to wear. The suit is able to withstand bullets without losing its integrity (although being shot hurts). It is equipped with a force field, courtesy of the Brainiac 5 belt, able to withstand powerful impact forces and supplying air for no-air atmospheres and defending Booster from germs and pollution: this particular feature was later downplayed, as Booster prefers now engaging the shield only when necessary to avoid weakening his immune system. Originally, it was the war-suit of an alien invader, put on display on the museum from which Booster stole much of his equipment. The suit was damaged by Doomsday, then replaced with bulky suits of armor and a variation of the "Energy [[Superman]]" energy-dampening costume. The current suit, of unknown origin, is a close replica of the original. In the alternate continuity of the ''Legion of Super Heroes in the 31st Century'' series, Brainiac 5 arranged the events leading Booster into stealing a huge array of power cells used by the [[Science Police]] to fuel his suit. |
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Each Green Lantern wields a [[Power ring (DC Comics)|power ring]] that can generate a variety of effects, sustained purely by the ring wearer's imagination and strength of will. The greater the user's willpower, the more effective the ring. The upper limits of the power ring's abilities remain undefined, and it has been referred to as "the most powerful weapon in the universe" on more than one occasion. The [[Qward|Weaponers of Qward]] say that every weapon has a weakness and the weakness of a Green Lantern power ring is its wearer, although some argue that the wearer is its strength. The ring can produce a very wide variety of effects, but all these effects are accompanied by a green light projected from the ring, and any object the ring conjures is always pure green in color. The 2005-2006 miniseries ''[[Green Lantern Corps: Recharge]]'' clarified the ring's long-established ineffectiveness on yellow objects, stating that the ring-wielder need only to understand and overcome their fear in order to affect yellow objects, which means that even experienced Lanterns can at times succumb to this weakness. |
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*'''Time-travel circuitry''': Originally reliant on a Time-Sphere from chronal transportation, Booster showed during the ''52'' series the ability to travel back and forth in time on his own volition. His association with Rip came with upgraded time circuitry woven into his costume, allowing him to travel safely through the time-stream and sense and repair chronal anomalies, at the cost of a permanent link with Rip's equipment. |
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*'''Gauntlets''': Originally on display as the exotic weaponry of an alien warlord, and using the same energy cells as the suit, the gauntlets contain blasters that can plow through two solid feet of concrete. In the alternate continuity of the ''Legion of Super Heroes in the 31st Century'' series, [[Brainiac 5]] arranged the events leading Booster to steal a pair of gauntlets built by [[LexCorp]]. |
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*'''Visor devices''': Booster's visor is outfitted with both sensory amplification devices (both auditory and visual) and a heads-up-display for targeting and threat-identification, along with broad scanning along the electromagnetic spectrum, providing infra-red, ultraviolet, and X-ray vision. It is described by Daniel Carter as "lightweight as a pair of contact lenses", and although it is unable to protect the wearer from sudden flashes of blinding light, it provides a measure of protection. |
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After being infected and later cured of chronal leprosy, Booster's body now ages at a much slower rate than a normal human being. |
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Power rings as used by various wielders have exhibited (but are not limited to) the following effects: |
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==Enemies== |
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*Constructs of green 'solid-energy,' which can vary from microscopic to tremendous in size and/or complexity and are limited by the imagination of the ring's wielder. This can be used to attack, defend, or to grab targets (Pre-Crisis, the rings generated telekinetic skills without constructs, if needed). |
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* '''[[100 (DC Comics)|The 1000]]''' - Vast criminal organization led by the '''Director of Death''' (secretly Senator Henry Ballard), they served as Booster's greatest thorn during his earliest adventures. Operatives included '''Blackguard''', '''Chiller''', '''Mindancer''', '''[[Shockwave (comics)#DC Comics|Shockwave]]''', and '''Doctor Shocker'''. |
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**[[Force field (science fiction)|Force field generation]], a somewhat protective aura (limited by user's willpower) used to shield the wearer from the rigors of the vacuum of space. This provides a breathable atmosphere for the user as well. Contrary to older canon, a Green Lantern ring currently does not automatically protect its wearer from harm but must be willed to do so (previously, an unconscious wielder generated a protective force field automatically). |
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* '''Broderick''' - An agent for the United States in the 25th century who has been tasked on several occasions to apprehend Booster for his misuse of time travel technology. |
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**Generation of mental "earplugs" to block out telepathic communication and manipulation.<ref>''[[52 (comics)|52]]'', Week #13. Writers [[Geoff Johns]], [[Grant Morrison]], [[Greg Rucka]] and [[Mark Waid]] Artists [[Todd Nauck]] and [[Marlo Alquiza]].</ref> |
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* '''Time Stealers''' - A villainous counterpart to the ''Time Masters'', the Time Stealers are a group of time travelers that employ their technology for personal gain. Their membership includes '''[[Mister Mind and the Monster Society of Evil|Mister Mind]]''' (controlling Jonar Carter donning the Supernova persona), '''Per Degaton''', '''[[Ultra-Humanite]]''', '''Despero''', '''[[Black Beetle (DC Comics)|Black Beetle]]''', '''Rex Hunter''', an alternate evil version of time traveler Rip Hunter, and evil tycoon '''Maxwell Lord''' along with his private android Maximillion, modeled after Gold's partner Skeets. |
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**Rendering targets [[Invisibility|invisible]].<ref>''[[Identity Crisis (DC Comics)|Identity Crisis]]'' #2</ref> |
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**Lights and beams of various intensity and colors, such as destructive plasma and harmless multicolored lights. |
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*Movement capabilities: |
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**[[Flight#In fiction|Flight]], including flight at [[Faster-than-light|speeds beyond that of light]], although this requires an enormous expenditure of energy. |
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**Relatively instantaneous transport across the [[galaxy]] and other distances through generated [[wormholes]] |
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**Teleportation (an ability that has not been used in quite some time and is outside the ability of modern Green Lanterns. In modern stories, only the Indigo Rings allow instantaneous teleportation) |
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**Pre-Crisis, the rings allowed for travel faster than the speed of light. |
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**[[Time travel]], though several power rings are needed to complete this. |
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*The rings can act as semi-sentient computers and access information through their connection with the Book of [[Oa]]; the rings have problem-solving skills but they cannot make decisions or take actions on their own, and must be given directives by the wearer: |
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**Translation of nearly all languages (originally, this was accomplished by using willpower, but this has changed in the modern era to be a function of the rings themselves). |
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**Communication between ringwielders, regardless of distance apart |
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**Diagnostic capabilities, allowing the user to see in [[X-Ray]], diagnose illnesses, and identify materials. |
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*Mental powers of various stages: |
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**Telepathy |
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**Hypnosis, including projecting the target's thoughts onto constructed maps |
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**Creation and emission of certain types of [[radiation]], including simulated wavelengths, such as [[Kryptonite]]<ref>{{Cite comic| title = Man of Tomorrow| issue = 19| date = 1998}}</ref> |
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**Placing humans into a state of suspended animation <ref>Justice League of America v1 #77 p18 Dec 1969"</ref> and pulling them out of it |
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*Changing the state of targeted matter and the wearer: |
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**Allowing targets and the wearer to [[phasing (ability)|phase]] through solid objects |
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**Rendering the wearer and targets [[invisible]] |
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**Accelerated healing of wounds, protection and treatment from viruses and biological attacks and certain surgical procedures including reattachment of severed limbs and digits. More advanced medical procedures may be performed manually and are limited by the wearer's knowledge of medicine. Lanterns can still do this via constructs of objects with that capability, although Pre-Crisis, a wearer could instantaneously reinvigorate limbs that had not been used in years, so someone bedridden for years could walk as though their muscles had not atrophied. |
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**Virtual shape-shifting by generating a hard-light holographic disguise around the ring bearer. |
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**"Digitizing" the wearer to absorb them into the ring where they can live in a wearer-generated "world" of their own nearly indefinitely. |
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**Pre-Crisis, a ring could alter a target or wearer's molecular size (including shrinking to an atomic level or growing to galactic sizes), evolutionary stage (such as turning a target human into an ape), or distort specific areas or the entirety of the body (such as slowing the Flash down by making his upper torso too large for him to run, or causing Arisia to age when she wanted to be older subconsciously). |
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**Pre-Crisis, a wearer could animate non-living matter and make the target do whatever he willed. |
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**Pre-Crisis, the rings could create a construct of a ring that a "non-Lantern" could use for 4 hours at a time (as opposed to 24) without a great effort of will. In the modern era, Guardians can simply create duplicate rings at will. |
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**Pre-Crisis, a ring could create multiple copies of its wearer if certain conditions were met; each copy had the capabilities of the original wearer. |
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**Pre-Crisis, rings could extract information from corpses. An example of this is shown in ''Green Lantern: First Flight'' Sinestro was able to "reconnect synapses" in the brain of a dead criminal in order to extract information via a kind of guided discussion. |
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== |
==Other versions== |
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As the series ''Booster Gold'' features time travel as a major plot element, Booster regularly visits alternate timelines where key events in history played differently. Occasionally, in ''Booster Gold'', and in ''Justice League International'' and ''Super Buddies'', alternate versions of Booster from these timelines make appearances. |
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Green Lantern is famous for the oath he recites when he charges his ring. Originally, the oath was: |
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{{quote|''...and I shall shed my light over dark evil.''<br/>''For the dark things cannot stand the light,''<br/>''The light of the Green Lantern!'' |
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|||Alan Scott}} |
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This oath is also used by Lanterns [[Tomar-Re]] of sector 2813, and Chief Administrator [[Salaak]].<ref>''Green Lantern Corps'' 206</ref> |
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In ''I Can't Believe It's Not the Justice League'',<ref>''JLA Classified'' #8 (August 2005)</ref> several "Super Buddies" visit an alternate universe where Maxwell Lord leads a violent super-team of [[Striptease|stripper]]s and male enforcers called the "Power Posse". An apparently unpowered and street-talking Gold serves as an employee. He is much more brutish, [[wikt:pimp slap|pimp slap]]ping a female employee simply because Lord commands it. This alternate version of JLI may be the same team as the [[Qward|Antimatter Universe]]-based [[Crime Syndicate of America|Crime Syndicate of Amerika]], which first appeared in ''Justice League Quarterly'' #8 (1992) sans Booster Gold,<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://blaklion.best.vwh.net/timeline3.html | title=Earth-3 Timeline | work=Blaklion.best.vwh.net | accessdate=2011-01-15}}</ref> but many of the events in this series do not seem to tie directly into continuity. |
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In the mid-1940s, this was revised into the form that became famous during the Hal Jordan era: |
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{{quote|''In brightest day, in blackest night,''<br/>''No evil shall escape my sight''.<br/>''Let those who worship evil's might,''<br/>''Beware my power, Green Lantern's light!!!'' |
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|||Hal Jordan/Many Current Lanterns}} |
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===Elseworlds=== |
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The oath in this form is thought to be the creation of [[Alfred Bester]], who wrote many Green Lantern stories in the 1940s, although his version used "darkest" in the first line; the change to "blackest" came a few years later, probably by [[Henry Kuttner]].<ref>{{cite web |title = Green Lantern's Oath |work = [[Dial B for Blog]] |url = http://www.dialbforblog.com/archives/299/}}</ref> |
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In ''[[The Kingdom (comics)|The Kingdom]]'', the sequel to the [[Mark Waid]] and [[Alex Ross]] ''[[Kingdom Come (comics)|Kingdom Come]]'' [[Elseworlds]] series, Booster is the founder and owner of the Planet Krypton restaurant. He is also mentioned in ''Kingdom Come'' by Fire. |
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In ''[[Justice Riders]]'', a western take on the Justice League by [[Chuck Dixon]] and [[J. H. Williams III]], Booster is a travelling gambler who wants to join Sheriff [[Wonder Woman|Diana Prince]]'s posse. To counter the speed advantage of Prince's preferred choice, [[Wally West|Wallace "Kid Flash" West]], he acquires a [[machine gun]] from the eccentric inventor Ted Kord. At the end of the story, once the Justice Riders have defeated Maxwell Lord, Gold heads for Denver, where "the suckers come in by the trainload every day." |
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Many Green Lanterns have a unique personal oath, but some oaths are shared by several Lanterns. They are usually four lines long with a [[rhyme scheme]] of “AAAA” or “AABB”. |
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===One Million=== |
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The [[Pre-Crisis]] version of Hal Jordan was inspired to create his oath after a series of adventures in which he developed new ways to detect evasive criminals: in the first adventure, he used his ring as [[radar]] to find robbers who had blinded him with a magnesium flash; in the second, he tracked criminals in a dark cave by using his ring to make them glow with [[phosphorescence]]; finally, Jordan tracked safecrackers by the faint shockwaves from the explosives they had used. |
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The [[DC One Million|One Million]] version of Booster Gold is a time traveler named Peter Platinum ("Platinum always beats gold") who appears in ''Booster Gold'' vol. 2, #1000000. Based on Booster's reputation as a profiteer posing as a hero, Platinum admits to Booster that he is pulling the same scam, but more successfully, and assumes Booster is after a cut. His superhero gear is based on technology stolen from Rip Hunter, who has apparently had several encounters with him to get it back. |
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===''52'' Multiverse=== |
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[[Medphyll]], the Green Lantern of the planet J586 (seen in ''[[Swamp Thing]]'' #61, "All Flesh is Grass"), a planet where a sentient plant species lives, has the following oath: |
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In the final issue of DC Comics' 2006–2007 year-long weekly series, ''[[52 (comics)|52]]'' Week 52, it was revealed that a "[[Multiverse (DC Comics)|Multiverse]]" system of [[Worlds of the 52 multiverse|52 parallel universes]], with each Earth being a different take on established DC Comics characters as featured in the mainstream continuity (designated as "New Earth") had come into existence. The Multiverse acts as a storytelling device that allows writers to introduce [[:Category:Alternative versions of comics characters|alternate versions of fictional characters]], hypothesize "What if?" scenarios, revisit popular Elseworlds stories, and allow these characters to interact with the mainstream continuity. |
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:''In forest dark or glade beferned'' |
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:''No blade of grass shall go unturned'' |
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:''Let those who have the daylight spurned'' |
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:''Tread not where this green lamp has burned''. |
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The 2007–2008 weekly series ''[[Countdown to Final Crisis]]'' and its spin-offs would either directly show or insinuate the existence of alternate versions of Booster Gold in the Multiverse. For example, ''Countdown'' #16 introduced his evil [[Earth-Three|Earth-3]] counterpart, a member of the villainous [[Crime Syndicate of America#Crime Society of America of Post Crisis Earth-3|Crime Society of America]] — and a similar Booster Gold exists on the Antimatter Universe, as suggested in a 1992 ''Justice League'' comic book,<ref>''Justice League Quarterly'' #8 (Summer 1992)</ref> with Booster's evil variant first appearing in a 2005 ''Super Buddies'' story. The 2007 ''Countdown'' spin-off series ''Countdown Presents: [[Atom (Ray Palmer)#Identity Crisis and Countdown|The Search for Ray Palmer]]'' also featured a gender-reversed Earth-11 where, through character exposition, it is revealed that Maxine Lord (the female Maxwell Lord) murdered this world's female Booster Gold as opposed to its Ted Kord counterpart. The 1997 [[Tangent Comics]] [[fifth-week event]] (Jurgens) originally introduced an entirely different version of Booster Gold, a yacht-owning gentleman connected to the origins of the mysterious [[Green Lantern]]; when the Tangent Comics universe was later amalgamated into Earth-9 of the 52 multiverse, 2008's ''Tangent: Superman's Reign'' #1 (again by Jurgens) introduced an African American superhero by that name. |
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Other notable oaths include that of [[Jack T. Chance]], |
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:''You who are wicked, evil and mean'' |
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:''I'm the nastiest creep you've ever seen!'' |
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:''Come one, come all, put up a fight'' |
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:''I'll pound your butts with Green Lantern's light!'' |
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:''Yowza''. |
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==In other media== |
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and that of [[Rot Lop Fan]], a Green Lantern whose species lacks sight, and thus has no concepts of brightness, darkness, day, night, color, or lanterns. |
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:''In loudest din or hush profound'' |
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:''My ears catch evil's slightest sound'' |
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:''Let those who toll out [[evil]]'s knell'' |
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:''Beware my power, the [[Musical scale|F-Sharp]] [[Bell (instrument)|Bell]]!'' |
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===Television=== |
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Since ''[[Green Lantern: Rebirth]]'' and the re-establishment of the Green Lantern Corps, the only oath used has been the ''Brightest Day, Blackest Night'' version. |
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[[Image:Booster and skeets.JPG|right|thumb|Booster Gold and Skeets, as depicted in ''[[Justice League Unlimited]]''.]] |
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* Booster and Skeets appeared as members of the Justice League in the [[DC animated universe]] series ''[[Justice League Unlimited]]'' voiced by [[Tom Everett Scott]], while Skeets was voiced by [[Billy West]]. Booster appeared in several episodes with non-speaking roles. He spoke in one episode, "The Greatest Story Never Told", which focused on him. In the episode, a self-promoted Booster, who was excluded from the League's fight against [[Mordru]] and was assigned to [[crowd control]] during the battle, noticed that physicist Dr. Tracy Simmons' experiment had gone wrong, causing her partner Dr. Daniel Brown, to uncontrollably walk around while having a [[Chunk (comics)|black hole on his chest]]. Booster tried to stop Daniel on his own, but repeatedly failed. Realizing he could not be a hero just looking for fame, he decided to become a true hero and finally stopped Daniel and closed the black hole, which had almost swallowed the city. Despite finally being heroic, no one knew what he had achieved. Following Mordru's defeat, Batman approached Booster wondering why he left crowd control. When he is unable to explain what happened while the other superheroes were fighting Mordru, Batman tells him that he will speak to him later. To Booster's delight, Tracy asks him out to thank him. In his subsequent appearances in the series, Booster performs his duties in a more professional manner. |
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* In the first episode of 2006's ''[[Legion of Super Heroes (TV series)|Legion of Super-Heroes]]'' animated series, Booster Gold and Skeets make a cameo appearance as the janitors in the Superman museum. |
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In ''Green Lantern'' (vol. 4) #27, the [[Alpha Lanterns]] use the oath: |
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:''In days of peace, in nights of war'' |
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:''Obey the Laws forever more'' |
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:''Misconduct must be answered for,'' |
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:''Swear us the chosen: The Alpha Corps!'' |
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* Tom Everett Scott reprises his role of Booster Gold, who appears alongside Skeets (Billy West again), in the ''[[Batman: The Brave and the Bold]]'' episode "Menace of the Conqueror Caveman!".<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.comicscontinuum.com/stories/0807/23/index.htm | title=Comics Continuum by Rob Allstetter: Wednesday, July 23, 2008 | work=ComicsContinuum.com | accessdate=2011-01-15}}</ref> He comes back 1000 years from the future to stop [[King Kull (DC Comics)|Kru'll]] [[Vandal Savage|the Eternal]], and teams up with Batman, believing this will increase his chances of having his own celebrity. After Kru'll kidnaps Skeets, he sacrifices his glory to save his only friend. Booster ends up earning Batman's respect. In the teaser for "A Bat Divided!", he participates in [[Riddler]]'s game show "Riddle Me This", and Booster fails to solve the riddles, harming Batman. Batman eventually frees himself and the two fight Riddler and his henchmen. Later, he appeared in "The Siege of Starro! Part One" where he and Skeets team up with [[B'wana Beast]], [[Firestorm (comics)|Firestorm]], and [[Captain Marvel (DC Comics)|Captain Marvel]]. They are the only ones who have not been brainwashed by [[Starro]]. Booster helped fetch the [[Metal Men]] for the final battle in "The Siege of Starro! Part Two". In "Menace of the Madniks!", it was revealed that Booster Gold was friends with Ted Kord before his death. During a trip to visit Ted Kord in the past, he ends up helping Blue Beetle fighting the Madniks when they break into S.T.A.R. Labs to steal the Quark Pistol. When Booster Gold shoots the Quark Pistol, it knocks them out. When Booster Gold returns to the present, he finds Batman fighting an Energy Monster and Batman figures out that Booster Gold was behind this. When Batman and Booster Gold transport back in time to see Blue Beetle, they visit Hub City Penitentiary where the escape of the Madniks causes them to turn into Energy Monsters that drained energy from the electric fence. Batman, Blue Beetle, and Booster Gold end up pursuing the Madnik Energy Monsters to Hub City's Nuclear Plant. Batman and Booster reverse the polarity of the Nuclear Plant to return the Madniks to normal. He joins JLI in "Darkseid Descending!" to fight Darkseid when they invade Earth. He later appears in "Shadow of the Bat!", where he and the rest of the JLI become trapped on the [[Justice League Satellite|JLA Satellite]] with the vampire Batman. He tries to use a garlic spray on the vampire Batman. This is later revealed to be a hallucination Batman got from a vampire bite. |
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In ''[[Final Crisis: Legion of 3 Worlds|Legion of 3 Worlds]]'', [[Sodam Yat]] in the 31st century - the last of the Green Lanterns and the last of the Guardians - recited a new oath: |
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:''In brightest day, through [[The Blackest Night|Blackest Night]],'' |
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:''No other Corps shall spread its light!'' |
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:''Let those who try to stop what's right,'' |
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:''Burn like my power, Green Lantern's Light!'' |
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[[File:Booster Gold (Smallville).jpg|right|thumb|200px|[[Eric Martsolf]] as Booster Gold in ''Smallville''.]] |
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In the animated TV series ''[[Duck Dodgers]]'', Duck Dodgers temporarily becomes a Green Lantern after accidentally picking up Hal Jordan's laundry. In the first part of the episode, he forgets the real quote and makes up his own version: |
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* Booster Gold appeared alongside Blue Beetle Jaime Reyes and Ted Kord in "Booster", the 18th episode of the 10th and final season of ''[[Smallville]]'', written by [[Geoff Johns]]. Booster was played by [[Eric Martsolf]].<ref name="smallville">{{Cite episode | title=Booster | series=Smallville | serieslink=Smallville | credits=[[Geoff Johns]] (writer); [[Tom Welling]] (director) | network=[[The CW Television Network|The CW]] | airdate=2011-04-22 | season=10 | number=18}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web | first=Eric | last=Goldman | url=http://tv.ign.com/articles/110/1107100p1.html | title=SDCC 10: Smallville - Darkseid, Blue Beetle and More Are Coming! | work=[[IGN]] | date=July 25, 2010 | accessdate=2011-01-15}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web | first=Natalie | last=Abrams | url=http://www.tvguide.com/News/Smallville-Spence-Kord-1028188.aspx | title=''Smallville'' Exclusive: Sebastian Spence Cast as Ted Kord | work=TVGuide.com | date=January 21, 2011 | accessdate=2011-01-22}}</ref> Much like in the comics, Booster is portrayed as a fame-seeker from the future who travels back in time to become a superstar. His antics bring him into conflict with a young [[Clark Kent (Smallville)|Clark Kent]], who has not yet taken on the Superman identity. After Booster's misguided heroics lead to an alien parasite bonding with a teenager named [[Blue Beetle (Jaime Reyes)|Jaime Reyes]], the boy attacks Booster. Booster is able to convince Jaime to fight the Scarab's influence, and the youth ultimately gains control over it. After his near-death, Booster confesses to Clark that he is a washed-up athlete from the 25th century, and that he had traveled back in time in hopes of taking Superman's place in the timestream. Booster chooses to stay in the 21st century to help Jaime learn to use his powers for good. Skeets does not appear physically, but instead exists as voice speaking in Booster's earpiece from an unknown location. (An alternative interpretation is that the earpiece ''is'' Skeets.) Additionally, Booster is shown in possession of a [[List of Legion of Super-Heroes items|Legion Flight Ring]], which he admits he stole from a member of the Legion. On the next episode, "Dominion", dialogue suggests that Booster has joined the [[Justice League (Smallville)|Justice League]], and Tess Mercer is able to use the technology he brought from the future to aid Clark and Oliver Queen during their journey to the [[Phantom Zone]]. |
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:''In blackest day or brightest night'' |
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*[[SyFy]] ordered a live action Booster Gold series with [[Greg Berlanti]] and [[Andrew Kreisberg]] as executive producers with Berlanti's production company [[Berlanti Productions]].<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/syfy-booster-gold-greg-berlanti-261801|title=Syfy Orders Script Based on DC Comics' 'Booster Gold' (Exclusive)|author=Borys Kit|publisher=The Hollywood Reporter|date=November 22, 2011}}</ref> Kreisberg confirmed that the series takes place in the same universe ''[[Arrow (TV series)|Arrow]]'' does. Kreisberg was reported as being expected to deliver the script to SyFy in early June 2013.<ref>[http://www.ksitetv.com/booster-gold/the-booster-gold-script-is-going-to-syfy-next-week/22765 The Booster Gold Script Is Going To Syfy Next Week]</ref><ref>[https://twitter.com/AJKreisberg/status/339213860315742208 AJ Kreisberg post, 27 May 2013] at [[Twitter]]</ref> |
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:''[[Walla|Watermelon, cantaloupe]], yadda yadda'' |
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* Booster Gold appears in episode 46 of ''[[Mad (TV series)|Mad]]''. He joins the other superheroes in a musical number that asks Superman, Wonder Woman, and Batman why they are called "Super Friends." Booster states that the membership changes frequently and that "commitment is a sham." |
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:''Erm... [[Batman#Golden Age|superstitious and cowardly lot]]'' |
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* Booster Gold appears in [[Robot Chicken DC Comics Special]], where he can be seen alongside other members of Justice League, fighting the [[Legion of Doom (Super Friends)|Legion of Doom]]. |
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:''[[Pledge of Allegiance|With liberty and justice for all!]]'' |
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===Film=== |
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In 2011, soon after the release of the ''[[Green Lantern (film)|Green Lantern]]'' movie, a trailer for ''[[The Muppets (film)|The Muppets]]'' featured [[Kermit the Frog|Kermit]] reciting a parody of the oath:<ref>{{cite web|title=The Muppets - Being Green Teaser Trailer|url=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DUUcOmgYEhY/|publisher=MuppetsStudio|accessdate=9 July 2011}}</ref> |
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*An Easter egg of Booster Gold is seen in ''[[Man of Steel (film)|Man of Steel]]'' where the comic book company ''Blaze Comics'' is seen during Superman & Zod's battle. Referencing Booster Gold's existence in the universe the movie takes place in.<ref>[http://comicbook.com/blog/2013/05/07/man-of-steel-has-a-booster-gold-easter-egg/ Man Of Steel Has A Booster Gold Easter Egg]</ref> |
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:''In brightest day, in darkest night'' |
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:''No evil shall escape my sight.'' |
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:''Let those who laugh at my lack of height'' |
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:''Beware my [[banjo]]... Green Froggy's light!'' |
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*On December 2nd, 2013 [[David S. Goyer]] announced that a ''Booster Gold'' movie is in development as well as a ''[[Deathstroke]]'' and a ''[[Suicide Squad]]'' movie.<ref>[http://www.firstshowing.net/2013/david-goyer-developing-dc-comics-films-like-suicide-squad-more/ Deathstroke, Booster Gold and Suicide Squad films in development]</ref> |
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The TV show, ''[[Mad (TV series)|Mad]]'', included a movie parody called "RiOa", a fusion of ''[[Green Lantern (film)|Green Lantern]]'' and ''[[Rio (2011 film)|Rio]]''. Blu from ''Rio'' is turned into a Green Lantern, and recruits [[Big Bird]], [[Wile E. Coyote and The Road Runner|the Road Runner]], Mordecai from ''[[Regular Show]]'', Mumble from ''[[Happy Feet]]'', and one of the [[Angry Birds]], and turns them into Green Lanterns. |
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===Video games=== |
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:''In brightest day, in blackest night,'' |
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* Booster Gold appears in ''[[DC Universe Online]]'' voiced by [[Tracy W. Bush]]. He gives virtual tours of [[Metropolis (comics)|Metropolis]] and [[Gotham City]] and as a mini boss in duo mode of the H.I.V.E. Base Mission. |
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:''Despite our shape, our size, our height,'' |
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:''We're birds who walk, which isn't right,'' |
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:''But starting now, we will take flight!'' |
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===Miscellaneous=== |
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The phrase "in the brightest day and in the darkest night" can also be found in a letter [[Sullivan Ballou]] wrote to his wife during the [[American Civil War]], shortly before he was killed in the [[First Battle of Bull Run]] (1861). |
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* The ''[[Legion of Super Heroes in the 31st Century]]'' series, based upon the [[Legion of Super Heroes (TV series)|television series of the same name]] presents another Booster incarnation. This time, he appears as a selfish and glory-seeking young hero, operating in the 31st century against a group of High-Tech thieves known as the "Scavengers", but really selling stolen technology to the same villains he fights in exchange for payment of his father's gambling debts. Before the Legion can confront him about his thefts, using a stolen [[Green Lantern]] ring with limited time-travel abilities, he tries to follow the Chief Scavenger, escaping in a Time Bubble like the one often used by the main continuity Booster. Before disappearing into the timestream, he begs the Legion to bring his love to his sister, "the only one who always believed in me." At the Legion's headquarters, Brainiac 5 reveals he had always known of Booster's technology thefts, but having read in historical chronicles how Booster Gold is destined to redeem himself acting as one of the greatest and selfless crimefighters of the 21st century, he arranges for Booster to find and steal easily the very items he needs to be an effective crimefighter: a Legion flight ring, LexCorp experimental blaster gauntlets, and power cells employed by the Science Police. This version of Booster Gold, resembling a teenaged Booster, always travels with a version of Skeets, resembling closely the advanced ''2.0 model'' built by Doc Magnus after ''52''. |
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==Reception== |
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With the exception of Alan Scott, all Lantern oaths are formatted in four lines of [[Iambic tetrameter]]. |
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Booster Gold was ranked as the 173rd greatest comic book character of all time by ''[[Wizard (magazine)|Wizard]]'' magazine.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://herochat.com/forum/index.php?topic=170859.0 | title=Wizard's top 200 characters. External link consists of a forum site summing up the top 200 characters of Wizard Magazine since the real site that contains the list is broken. | publisher=[[Wizard (magazine)|''Wizard'' magazine]]. | accessdate=May 7, 2011}}</ref> [[IGN]] also ranked Booster Gold as the 59th greatest comic book hero.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.ign.com/top/comic-book-heroes/59 | title=Booster Gold is number 59 | publisher=[[IGN]] | accessdate=May 17, 2011}}</ref> |
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==In other media== |
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{{Main|Green Lantern in other media}} |
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==See also== |
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* [[Green Lantern: The Animated Series]] |
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* [[Doctor Spectrum]], a [[Marvel Comics]] homage to Green Lantern. |
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* The [[Green Lantern Corps]]. |
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==References== |
==References== |
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{{Reflist}} |
{{Reflist|2}} |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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*[http://www.dccomics.com/heroes_and_villains/?hv=origin_stories/booster_gold Booster Gold's secret origin] at DC Comics.com |
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*[http://greenlanternlanten.yolasite.com greenlanternlanten.yolasite.com ] |
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*[http://www.boosterrific.com/ Boosterrific.com] An annotated chronology of Booster Gold's published DC Comics comic book appearances |
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*[http://www.emeralddawn.com/ Emerald Dawn] |
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*[http://classic.newsarama.com/dcnew/WAcker/Booster/BoosterObit.html The Daily Planet: Remembering Booster Gold], [[Newsarama]], August 16, 2006 |
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*[http://www.dcauresource.com/profiles/good/g/glc.php Green Lantern Corps. DCAUresource.com entry] |
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*[http:// |
*[http://forum.newsarama.com/showthread.php?t=82236 Dan Jurgens on the death of Booster Gold], Newsarama, August 29, 2006 |
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*{{gcdb|type=character|search=Booster+Gold|title=Booster Gold}} |
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*[http://glcorps.dcuguide.com/index.php The Unofficial Green Lantern Corps Web Page] |
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*{{comicbookdb|type=character|id=714|title=Booster Gold}} |
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*[http://alankistler.squarespace.com/journal/2008/9/8/alan-kistlers-green-lantern-files.html Alan Kistler's Green Lantern Lantern Files]- An in-depth retrospective by comic historian Alan Kistler on all the Green Lanterns and how they were shaped by politics and editorial decisions. Various art scans. |
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*[http://www.toonopedia.com/boosterg.htm Toonopedia entry] |
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{{Green Lantern}} |
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{{Booster Gold}} |
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Revision as of 16:32, 7 January 2014
Booster Gold | |
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File:Booster Gold by Benes.jpg | |
Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
First appearance | Booster Gold #1 (February 1986) |
Created by | Dan Jurgens |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Michael Jon Carter |
Team affiliations | Justice League The Conglomerate |
Partnerships | Blue Beetle Rip Hunter |
Notable aliases | Supernova |
Abilities | Possesses advanced technology allowing flight, power blasts, force fields, enhanced strength, and other abilities. Slowed aging, Peak athletic condition |
Booster Gold is a fictional character, a DC Comics superhero created by Dan Jurgens. He first appeared in Booster Gold #1 (February 1986) and has been a member of the Justice League. The character is initially depicted as a glory-seeking showboat from the future, using knowledge of historical events and futuristic technology to stage high-publicity heroics. Booster develops over the course of his publication history and through personal tragedies to become a true hero weighed down by the reputation he created for himself.[1]
Publication history
Booster Gold first appeared in Booster Gold #1 (February 1986),[2] being the first significant new character introduced into DC Universe continuity after the reboot of Crisis on Infinite Earths. The next year, he began to appear regularly in the Justice League series remaining a team member until the group disbanded in 1996. He and his former Leaguers subsequently appeared as the "Superbuddies" in the Formerly Known as the Justice League miniseries and its JLA: Classified sequel "I Can't Believe It's Not the Justice League".
On March 16, 2007, at Wizard World Los Angeles, Dan DiDio announced a new ongoing series titled All-New Booster Gold, which was later published as simply Booster Gold. The series follows the events of 52 and was initially co-written by Geoff Johns and Jeff Katz, with art by creator Jurgens and Norm Rapmund.[3][4] The series focuses primarily on Booster Gold's clandestine time travel within the DC Universe.[5] The series also features Rip Hunter, Skeets, and Booster's ancestors Daniel Carter and Rose Levin as supporting characters. The tagline of the series is: "The greatest hero you've never heard of!"[6] Katz and Johns left the book after 12 issues (#1-10, #0, and a One Million issue). Jurgens and Rapmund stayed. Jurgens assumed writing duties following four issues by guests Chuck Dixon and Rick Remender.
In May 2010, Keith Giffen took over the Booster Gold title, linking it with the 26 week miniseries Justice League: Generation Lost, which saw Booster unite with Fire, Ice and Captain Atom to take down the resurrected Maxwell Lord. From July 2010 through February 2011, Booster starred alongside Rip, Green Lantern, and Superman in the six-issue miniseries Time Masters: Vanishing Point, part of the "Return of Bruce Wayne" arc, which also reintroduced the Reverse-Flash and established background for the 2011 DC crossover event Flashpoint.[7] Jurgens returned to the main Booster Gold title with issue #44.[7]
Fictional biography
From the future
Michael Jon Carter was born poor in 25th century Gotham City.[8] He and twin sister Michelle never knew their father because he left after gambling away all their money. Michael was a gifted athlete, attending Gotham University on a football scholarship. At Gotham U., Michael was a star quarterback until his father reentered his life and convinced him to deliberately lose games for gambling purposes. He was exposed, disgraced and expelled. Later he was able to secure a job as a night watchman at the Metropolis Space Museum, where he studied displays about superheroes and villains from the past, particularly the 20th century.
With the help of a security robot named Skeets, Michael stole devices from the museum displays, including a Legion of Super-Heroes flight ring and Brainiac 5's force field belt. He used Rip Hunter's time machine, also on display in the museum, to travel to the 20th century, intent on becoming a superhero and forming a corporation based around himself to make a comfortable living.[1] He is a shameless self-promoter whose obsession with fame and wealth irritates other heroes.[9]
Carter's nickname as a football player was "Booster", but his chosen 20th century superhero name was "Goldstar". After saving the president, Carter mangled the two names, causing US President Ronald Reagan to introduce him as "Booster Gold". The name stuck. In a running joke throughout the DC Universe, people erroneously call him "Buster" to his chagrin.
Celebrity
Booster is originally based in Superman's home city, Metropolis. He starts his hero career by preventing the shapeshifting assassin Chiller, an operative of The 1000, from killing the President of the United States and replacing him. With the subsequent public exposure, Booster signs a multitude of commercial and movie deals. During his career, his sister Michelle Carter, powered by a magnetic suit, follows in his footsteps as the superheroine Goldstar. She dies battling creatures from another dimension, devastating him. Amassing a small fortune, Booster founds Goldstar, Inc. (later Booster Gold International) as a holding company and hires Dirk Davis to act as his agent. During the Millennium event, Davis reveals that he is a Manhunter in disguise and siphoned money from Booster's accounts in hopes of leaving him no choice but to do the Manhunters' bidding. Although the Manhunters are ultimately defeated, Booster is left bankrupt.
Justice League
Booster Gold is a key character in the late 1980s/early 1990s Justice League revamp by writers Keith Giffen and J. M. DeMatteis. Booster Gold is frequently partnered with fellow Justice League member Blue Beetle, and the two quickly become best friends. The duo's notable appearances include a stint as superhero repo men and the construction of a gaming resort, Club JLI, on the living island Kooey Kooey Kooey.
After one too many embarrassments and longing for his old reputation, Booster quits the League to found the Conglomerate, a superhero team whose funding is derived from corporate sponsors. Booster and his team are determined to behave as legitimate heroes, but find that their sponsors compromise them far too often.[1] The Conglomerate reforms several times after Booster rejoins the League, though without much success.
When an alien comes to Earth on a rampage, Booster coins the name Doomsday for it. In the ensuing battle, Booster's costume is destroyed. Blue Beetle is able to design a new (albeit bulkier) costume to replace it, although this costume often malfunctions. During a later battle with Devastator, a servant of the Overmaster, Booster is nearly killed and loses an arm. Again, Blue Beetle comes to his aid, designing a suit that acts as a life support system in addition to replicating the powers of Booster's previous costumes. This suit also includes a cybernetic replacement arm.
Extreme Justice
After the Justice League falls apart, Booster Gold joins Extreme Justice, a team led by Captain Atom.[10] While a member of this team, Booster makes a deal with the supervillain Monarch, who fully heals Booster's wounds so that he can once again remove his battle suit. Booster dons a new costume created by Blue Beetle. Skeets acts as its systems controller, who aids Booster and is able to take control of the costume if Booster is rendered unconscious.
Following the disbanding of Extreme Justice, this suit is destroyed. A new costume is created by Professor Hamilton, based on the designs of both the original 25th century costume and the energy containment suit Superman was wearing at this time. This costume is apparently later tweaked to resemble Booster's original costume more closely.[1]
Infinite Crisis
Countdown to Infinite Crisis
After the events depicted in the limited series Identity Crisis, in which Sue Dibny is murdered, Gold retires briefly, but then helps Blue Beetle discover who is manipulating KORD Industries.[11] Booster is badly injured in an explosion at Kord's home, and it is revealed that his companion Skeets has been dismantled for its 25th century technology by the Checkmate organization.
The OMAC Project
In The OMAC Project limited series, Booster Gold gathers the old Justice League International heroes to investigate Blue Beetle's disappearance. At the series' end, he is ruined physically and emotionally, having destroyed much of his gear in the fight against the OMACs. He has seen his friend Rocket Red die in battle. He discovered that another friend, Maxwell Lord, is responsible for killing Blue Beetle and that in fact, Lord always hated superheroes. He stopped trusting the other DC heroes. In a moment of self-reflection, he realizes that if only he had bothered to recall more of what was history in his native era, he might have been able to warn his friends. Giving a farewell kiss to the forehead of his wounded teammate Fire as she lay in a hospital bed, he drops his trademark goggles on the floor and leaves, saying only that he has decided to "go home", implying a return to the 25th century.[12]
Infinite Crisis
In Infinite Crisis, Gold resurfaces in the ruins of the Justice League's Watchtower on the moon, along with Skeets, again branded as a criminal in his time for "hijacking historical records".[13] When Skeets fails to locate the absent Martian Manhunter, Booster searches for Jaime Reyes, the new Blue Beetle, whom he promptly takes to the Batcave. Booster tells Batman the subject of the stolen records: Batman never finds Brother Eye, but Booster implies that, with Jaime's aid, they can succeed.[14] The mission is successful and Booster plays a pivotal role in the destruction of the satellite.[15]
52 and Supernova
In the aftermath Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman temporarily retire their costumed identities, and the remaining heroes attend a memorial for Superboy in Metropolis.[16] Booster attends the memorial, but when Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman do not arrive as he expects, he suspects his robot sidekick Skeets is malfunctioning and becomes hysterical. After Skeets reports other incorrect historical data,[17][18] Booster searches fellow time traveler Rip Hunter's desert bunker for answers, finding it littered with enigmatic scrawled notes. Booster finds photos of himself and Skeets surrounded by the words "his fault" with arrows pointing toward them.[19]
Booster is seemingly angered when a mysterious new superhero named Supernova appears. His reputation ruined, Booster tries to regain the spotlight by containing an explosion, but appears to be killed in the attempt.[20] Skeets uses Booster's ancestor, Daniel Carter, to regain access to Hunter's lab, where he sees the photos and arrows pointing at him. Skeets traps Carter in a time loop in the bunker and sets out to locate Hunter himself.
Supernova meets with Rip Hunter in the Bottle City of Kandor, and Hunter examines a number of high-tech items Supernova has brought him. When Skeets discovers the two, Supernova reveals himself to be Booster Gold and fights him, revealing how he and Rip Hunter used time travel to fake his death and create a rivalry between Booster and himself as Supernova. Hunter and Booster attempt to trap Skeets in the Phantom Zone, but Skeets appears to eat the subdimension and pursues his two adversaries through time.[21]
He appears in World War III. He tries to steal a missile, but leaves after realizing that he appeared before it was launched. Booster later appears before Steel and Natasha Irons, stealing the nanobot missile they were about to use on Black Adam, saying he needs it more than they and that it would not have worked for its original purpose anyway; Booster promptly disappears.[22] During his time-hopping mission, he briefly stops in the far future, robbing the Dominators of an experimental weapon designed to deal with time travelers. Trying to explain his situation to the alien warlords, he makes them suspicious as they mistake his rant of "having to save 52 worlds" as a warning that the Earth and 52 unnamed worlds are going to invade them after Booster's raid.[23]
Booster returns to the present, using T. O. Morrow as bait to draw out Skeets. Skeets reveals itself to be Mister Mind in disguise, having used Skeets' shell as a cocoon to evolve into a being capable of devouring the Multiverse. Booster and Rip flee into the timestream with Skeets' remains and return to the end of the Infinite Crisis.[24] Rip and Booster witness the birth of the new Multiverse, made up of 52 identical worlds. Mister Mind attempts to trap Booster and Rip in the Phantom Zone which he devoured when it was turned on him, but he is stopped by Supernova (now Daniel Carter, who was saved from the time loop he was trapped in by Rip and given Michael's outfit), who restores the Phantom Zone to its original place. Mister Mind then devours years and events of each of the 52 worlds, altering their history in the process. The real Skeets gives Booster a pep talk which inspires him to stop Mister Mind.[1]
Booster travels to the day after the end of Crisis on Infinite Earths on New Earth, where he retrieves the Blue Beetle scarab from Ted Kord. Using the scarab — along with Suspendium stolen by Rip Hunter, Skeets' mangled shell, and Supernova's powers — Rip, Booster, and Daniel trap Mister Mind inside Skeets and hurl it into the timestream, trapping Mister Mind within a repeating time loop of 52 seconds where he is captured by Dr Sivana. As a reward for helping save the Multiverse, Rip downloads Skeets' programming into a spare Responsometer. Rip, Booster, and Daniel decide to keep the existence of the new Multiverse a secret.
Will Magnus then repairs Skeets using the Responsometer, although Skeets has no memory of the last year. Meanwhile, Daniel Carter decides to keep the Supernova costume and begin his own superhero career. His resolution weakening with time, he starts using the suit to play video games instead, because he does not need to eat, drink, or sleep while wearing it.[25]
One Year Later
Following the events of 52, Booster Gold returns in his second solo series with the first story arc "52 Pick-Up". Booster puts in a request to the Justic League that they admit him and the group begrudgingly decide to monitor him over the following week. However, Rip Hunter informs Booster that history has become malleable after Mister Mind's rampage and earlier damage to the timeline.
A new villainous Supernova arises after stealing Daniel's costume, and aided by evil time traveler Rex Hunter, intends to exploit weaknesses in history, keen on rewriting it and destroying the League (they are later revealed to in fact be working under the orders of the Ultra-Humanite, Despero, and Per Degaton). As Booster is thought of as a buffoon, the person or persons behind the altering of time will not suspect he is thwarting them, but Booster must maintain his poor reputation to protect himself. Booster's condition for following Rip's orders is that he may travel back in time to avert the death of his best friend, Ted Kord.
Despite Rip's objections, Booster and three Blue Beetles team up to rescue Kord moments before his death. They succeed, and the restored Blue/Gold duo deserts Rip Hunter to side with the Blue Beetles group. Rip retaliates by presenting Michael's ancestors Daniel Carter and Rose Levin with replicas of the Supernova and Booster Gold suits, stating that the Carter family's heroic legacy starts "right freakin' now."[26] When time "solidifies" following Kord's rescue, and the other three Beetles return to their own times, Ted and Michael find that as a consequence of changing the timeline, the world has become overrun by Maxwell Lord's OMACs.
During a final battle between the remade JLI and the OMACs, the Time Stealers return and are defeated. However, Booster suffers a tragedy when he is unable to stop Ted from entering a time sphere with the Black Beetle to change the past one final time, resetting history and sacrificing himself.
He is later transported to the 853rd century, where he faces off against Peter Platinum, a con artist who is attempting to outdo Booster at making money off of heroic acts. When returns to the present, he is enraged by Rip's unsympathetic responses to his ordeal and quits. Batman tells Booster that he knew about Booster's attempts to prevent the crippling of Barbara Gordon and has long realised that Booster is not the fool he appears to be, offering his friendship. Booster resolves to continue working with Rip, even if it will not be "fun". Rip reveals that he is able to save Booster's sister Michelle from moments before she died, claiming there is a loophole due to Michelle being from the future. It is also revealed to the audience that Hunter is Booster's son: as Michelle and Michael go out to eat, Rip says "Keep it up, dad."[27]
Booster has shown his dedication, now calling himself a "Time Master", (with Hunter), and trains his sister.[28]
Blackest Night
In a tie-in to the Blackest Night event, Booster faces Ted Kord, reanimated as a Black Lantern. At first unavailable due to reliving Ted's funeral in the past, he returns to meet his ancestor Daniel Carter, only to find the crashed, derelict Bug at his house. Then, he finds the Black Lantern pummeling Jaime Reyes, Daniel, and Skeets.[29] Attacked by him, he removes Daniel and Rose from the scene and heads to Kord Industries to arm himself. He uses a special light gun designed by Ted to blast the corpse and separate the ring with light, simulating the emotional spectrum.
Upon separating the corpse from the ring, he collects Ted's remains before the ring can reanimate them and takes them into the Time Sphere to Vanishing Point Fortress to secure them. He is somewhat relieved when Skeets uses the Fortress's special chronal surveillance equipment to display images of the days of Team Blue and Gold. Jaime promises to live up to Kord's legacy and eventually form a new Blue and Gold team. They find evidence at the warehouse of someone else entering, even though the doors were genetically coded, with only two people cleared for access: Ted and Booster.[30]
Brightest Day
Booster next finds his sister living in Coast City mere hours before its destruction. Though unable to save her boyfriend, Booster and Michelle patch up their relationship, with her agreeing not to leave him. This arc introduces an older Booster Gold, the man that trained Rip Hunter and was the master of both Time, the Multiverse, and Hypertime. Rip reveals that this Booster is not only his father, but also has been watching Rip training the young Booster Gold, aiding him when needed. Older Booster also reveals that he is still married to Rip's mother, and that Michelle is with them in some unknown time.[31]
In Justice League: Generation Lost, Booster is part of the manhunt to bring the resurrected Maxwell Lord to justice. He finds Max but is beaten badly. Fire, Ice, and Captain Atom find him just as Lord uses his psychic powers to the utmost to erase all memory of himself from the minds of the entire world. For some reason, Booster, Fire, Ice, and Atom are the only ones who remember Lord and see him in recorded images.[32] Trying to convince Batman (Dick Grayson), Booster is horrified to learn that, thanks to Max, the world believes Ted Kord committed suicide. Fire, Ice, and Captain Atom are soon set up by Max to cut them off from allies, but, ironically, Booster is left alone because his reputation is already poor.[33]
Return of the JLI
The remnants of the JLI are, seemingly by chance, joined by the successors of Blue Beetle (Jaime Reyes) and Rocket Red. Rocket Red declares the newly formed team as the new Justice League International, prompting Booster to figure out that Max Lord manipulated them to be together. Later, during the assault on Checkmate, Fire and Ice discuss how Booster has become the leader of the team.[34]
When his team member, Jaime, is kidnapped and tortured by Max, Jaime signals the rest of the JLI to lead them to Max's headquarters. The JLI arrives too late, and Jaime is shot in the head by Max, killing him in the same manner as his predecessor, Ted Kord.[35] Booster Gold is enraged and his team tries to take down Max, but Max escapes from the JLI using one of his headquarters' escape pods. The JLI carries Jaime to the land surface, where paramedics try to resuscitate him. However, their efforts fail as Jaime had already died.[36] As the team deals with the loss of Jaime, Booster Gold blames himself for leading the team into so much danger, and wants to abdicate as leader. The rest of the team overhear his ranting and convince him that they believe in him. Gold is still upset, saying they cannot win against Max, when Blue Beetle suddenly sits up, his wound healed, declaring he knows Max's ultimate plans and that they can stop him.[37]
While the JLI learn that Jaime is alive, Batman and Power Girl join the team. Meanwhile, Max sends the OMACs to attack the JLI.[38] While the JLI are battling against OMAC Prime, Booster locates Max's flying headquarters and attacks it to come face-to-face with Max.[39] During the battle, Booster pulled Max out of the headquarters and ends up falling to the earth. Booster Gold saves Max at the last moment, but Max mind-controls him until he is confronted by Captain Atom. Captain Atom forces Max to undo the global mindwipe. Max then teleports to escape. Afterwards, Booster and Batman set out to re-form the JLI.[40]
Flashpoint
After the Time Masters: Vanishing Point event, Rip Hunter informed them that someone sneaked into their base leaving a message on the chalkboard.[41] When Earth entered an alternate timeline due to the actions of the Flash, Booster and Skeets awaken and are the only ones who remember the original timeline. Gold travels to Coast City, but US soldiers attack him mistaking him to be an Atlantean threat. Skeets is damaged when Gold is attacked by the military's Project Six, which is revealed to be Doomsday.[42]
During the battle in Coast City, he discovers that Doomsday is controlled by General Nathaniel Adam. He escapes from Doomsday and then saves a woman named Alexandra Gianopoulos from Doomsday's attack. He learns the timeline has been changed, suspecting Professor Zoom. Alexandra and Booster split up, but she secretly has powers allowing her to take others' powers and follows him. Later, he flies to Gotham City when Doomsday attacks him. General Adam's control link is destroyed by Alexandra in an attempt to rescue Booster. Doomsday's true personality comes to the surface and he attacks Booster.[43] During the fight, Doomsday beats him nearly to death, but he is rescued by Alexandra. He tries to prevent Doomsday from killing innocent people, and manages to put Doomsday's helmet back on. Doomsday's control is restored to Adam, who grabs Booster, hoping to kill him.[44] Fortunately, Adam takes him back to the base for interrogation, allowing him to escape when the sight of "Project Superman" causes Doomsday's true personality to resurface. Alexandra defeats Doomsday by using the control helmet to make Doomsday tear himself apart, subsequently asking Booster to take him with her when he restores history to normal. Alexandra subsequently sacrifices herself to save Booster from an Atlantean attack, leaving him to return to Vanishing Point as history resets without any clear memory of his time in the "Flashpoint" universe. Before the "Time Masters: Vanishing Point", Alexandra appeared and left the messages regarding the altered timeline on Rip's chalkboard before vanishing.[45]
The New 52
Booster's next appearance was as part of the new Justice League International series launched in September 2011.[46]
In the post-Flashpoint continuity, Booster is portrayed with his original glory-seeking personality and is chosen by the U.N. to lead the JLI due to his PR sense and naiveté. He takes his leadership role seriously, and strives to become a better hero and role model.[47]
However, despite his best efforts and support from Batman, who officially defers to Booster's leadership after supporting Booster for leader, the JLI falls apart due to a string of attacks against the group that leaves members killed or wounded.[48] Despite his best attempts to bring in new members however, Booster alienates Guy Gardner when he recruits Jaime Reyes into the roster and later watches in horror as the hero OMAC betrays the team and inflicts more carnage, including teleporting Blue Beetle to the homeworld of the villainous "Reach" species.
In the end, Gold is confronted with his future counterpart; an agent of ARGUS, who warns his present self to prevent Superman and Wonder Woman from dating. Failure to prevent it would cause Booster Gold to cease existing. As the JLI monitor reveals Superman and Wonder Woman kissing, the future Gold disappears; saying he "shouldn't have trusted him". The present day Gold disappears moments later.[49] Amanda Waller orders Chronos to search for Gold through time, but Chronos is captured by the Secret Society before carrying out his mission.[50]
Booster Gold mysteriously reappears in 19th Century Gotham City.[51]
Legacy
Since his origin, characters within the DC Universe have hinted that there is a greater purpose to Booster Gold than he knows.
During the Millennium event, Harbinger reveals to Martian Manhunter that Booster is descended from the Chosen and that he must be protected. It is revealed that Booster is destined to come to the past to protect him from an unknown event in the future.[52] In 52 Rip states that the moment Booster helped save the multiverse from Mister Mind would be remembered in the future as the start of Gold's "glory years."[25] Later, in the new Booster Gold series, Rip hints at a "Carter heroic legacy."[26] It is then revealed that Booster is important to the Time Masters, as he will train "the greatest of them all,"[27] being the father and the teacher of Rip Hunter himself, who willingly chose to protect his identity against other time-travellers, to pass through history as the only loser of the clan. Despite the general distrust of Booster, Rip and his descendants apparently know the truth, always honoring him.[53]
Due to the complicated Time-Travels mechanics, Booster's future self, "currently" operating from an unknown era with his time-travel educated wife, still watches over his past self and his son, making sure that Rip Hunter gives his past self proper schooling. The older Booster acts in total anonymity, and has access to other "time-lost" equipment than his suit, such as the seemingly destroyed Superboy's "super-goggles".[54]
Due to a predestination paradox, the future Booster is revealed to be a more experienced Time Master than his son Rip Hunter, but also that he personally tasked Rip to school his past self. It is also implied that the departure of the Hypertime concept, rather than a simple retcon, is Booster's work, as in the future he tasked himself with the role of pruning divergent timelines from each universe in the Multiverse.[54]
Powers and equipment
While Booster Gold has no superhuman abilities (like Batman, he relies on equipment), he is an excellent athlete. He demonstrates enough willpower to use his Legion flight ring at range, a feat few have been able to demonstrate.
Booster gained his "powers" from the artifacts he stole from a museum in the future. A power suit grants him super strength and wrist blasters allow him to project force blasts. The wrist blasters contain the primary controls and power supply for the suit as well as communications equipment. Circuitry from a force field belt allows Booster to resist physical and energy attacks, and he uses the force field to repel objects with great force and generate a breathable self-contained environment. The force field centers on Booster's body, but can expand and even project outward. The costume's goggles have infrared and magnifying capabilities. In addition to the powers from his suit, Booster can fly thanks to a Legion of Super-Heroes flight ring. Booster can also absorb mass and eject it either in its original form or as a melted mass,[55] although this depletes his force field for a time afterward.[56]
Booster's original uniform included a cape which was taken by Superman after telling Booster, "You can't handle a cape."[57] Booster's later costumes use many different technologies to supply his powers, but the powers themselves remain basically the same despite changes to the source. Booster's third costume acts as a mobile life support system.
As Supernova, Michael Carter uses a Phantom Zone Projector built into his suit to teleport matter from one place to another.[21]
Despite the fact that Booster stole the elements of his costume in the 25th century, recent Legion of Super-Heroes reboots and retcons depict them as having been invented in either the 30th or 31st century. Originally, the time bubble Booster used to travel from 2462 to 1985 was discovered in 2986 with pieces of Brainiac 5's force field belt aboard.[58] This prompted Brainiac 5, Chameleon Boy, and Ultra Boy to travel to 1985 to investigate. In the process, they assisted Booster in foiling an assassination attempt on President Ronald Reagan. Brainiac 5 left his force field belt and flight ring with Reagan and determined that these would end up as the ones Booster would eventually steal in 2462, thus completing the causality loop.
In the context of the "Threeboot" (Mark Waid) Legion continuity, it is revealed that in a sort of predestination paradox, Booster's ring and force field belt were stolen by Rip and Daniel in an attempt to reverse a "Time Stealer's" plan intended to erase Booster from the continuity by damaging the Time Sphere held in the museum.[27]
In the future, an older Booster will have access to "lost" technology, such as Superboy's super-goggles.
Booster's equipment includes:
- Legion flight ring: The standard flight ring employed by the adult Legion of Super-Heroes, made of a particular alloy named "valorium", bestows his/her owner with flight abilities. It is the only piece of equipment stolen from the Space Museum that survived to the most recent version of Booster's suit unscathed. Its origins differ slightly between the 1987 and the 2008 series, but in both origins, it is revealed that the ring originally was the one held by Brainiac 5. In the alternate continuity of the Legion of Super Heroes in the 31st Century series, Brainiac 5 himself arranged the events leading Booster to steal a random flight ring, knowing about his heroic life in the 21st century from historical sources.
- Power suit: Instead of any superhuman powers, Booster Gold uses an advanced microcircuitry-powered all-purpose combat suit. The suit bestows enhanced strength, at least twenty tons without exertion, and protection to the wearer, and is durable, lightweight and easy to wear. The suit is able to withstand bullets without losing its integrity (although being shot hurts). It is equipped with a force field, courtesy of the Brainiac 5 belt, able to withstand powerful impact forces and supplying air for no-air atmospheres and defending Booster from germs and pollution: this particular feature was later downplayed, as Booster prefers now engaging the shield only when necessary to avoid weakening his immune system. Originally, it was the war-suit of an alien invader, put on display on the museum from which Booster stole much of his equipment. The suit was damaged by Doomsday, then replaced with bulky suits of armor and a variation of the "Energy Superman" energy-dampening costume. The current suit, of unknown origin, is a close replica of the original. In the alternate continuity of the Legion of Super Heroes in the 31st Century series, Brainiac 5 arranged the events leading Booster into stealing a huge array of power cells used by the Science Police to fuel his suit.
- Time-travel circuitry: Originally reliant on a Time-Sphere from chronal transportation, Booster showed during the 52 series the ability to travel back and forth in time on his own volition. His association with Rip came with upgraded time circuitry woven into his costume, allowing him to travel safely through the time-stream and sense and repair chronal anomalies, at the cost of a permanent link with Rip's equipment.
- Gauntlets: Originally on display as the exotic weaponry of an alien warlord, and using the same energy cells as the suit, the gauntlets contain blasters that can plow through two solid feet of concrete. In the alternate continuity of the Legion of Super Heroes in the 31st Century series, Brainiac 5 arranged the events leading Booster to steal a pair of gauntlets built by LexCorp.
- Visor devices: Booster's visor is outfitted with both sensory amplification devices (both auditory and visual) and a heads-up-display for targeting and threat-identification, along with broad scanning along the electromagnetic spectrum, providing infra-red, ultraviolet, and X-ray vision. It is described by Daniel Carter as "lightweight as a pair of contact lenses", and although it is unable to protect the wearer from sudden flashes of blinding light, it provides a measure of protection.
After being infected and later cured of chronal leprosy, Booster's body now ages at a much slower rate than a normal human being.
Enemies
- The 1000 - Vast criminal organization led by the Director of Death (secretly Senator Henry Ballard), they served as Booster's greatest thorn during his earliest adventures. Operatives included Blackguard, Chiller, Mindancer, Shockwave, and Doctor Shocker.
- Broderick - An agent for the United States in the 25th century who has been tasked on several occasions to apprehend Booster for his misuse of time travel technology.
- Time Stealers - A villainous counterpart to the Time Masters, the Time Stealers are a group of time travelers that employ their technology for personal gain. Their membership includes Mister Mind (controlling Jonar Carter donning the Supernova persona), Per Degaton, Ultra-Humanite, Despero, Black Beetle, Rex Hunter, an alternate evil version of time traveler Rip Hunter, and evil tycoon Maxwell Lord along with his private android Maximillion, modeled after Gold's partner Skeets.
Other versions
As the series Booster Gold features time travel as a major plot element, Booster regularly visits alternate timelines where key events in history played differently. Occasionally, in Booster Gold, and in Justice League International and Super Buddies, alternate versions of Booster from these timelines make appearances.
In I Can't Believe It's Not the Justice League,[59] several "Super Buddies" visit an alternate universe where Maxwell Lord leads a violent super-team of strippers and male enforcers called the "Power Posse". An apparently unpowered and street-talking Gold serves as an employee. He is much more brutish, pimp slapping a female employee simply because Lord commands it. This alternate version of JLI may be the same team as the Antimatter Universe-based Crime Syndicate of Amerika, which first appeared in Justice League Quarterly #8 (1992) sans Booster Gold,[60] but many of the events in this series do not seem to tie directly into continuity.
Elseworlds
In The Kingdom, the sequel to the Mark Waid and Alex Ross Kingdom Come Elseworlds series, Booster is the founder and owner of the Planet Krypton restaurant. He is also mentioned in Kingdom Come by Fire.
In Justice Riders, a western take on the Justice League by Chuck Dixon and J. H. Williams III, Booster is a travelling gambler who wants to join Sheriff Diana Prince's posse. To counter the speed advantage of Prince's preferred choice, Wallace "Kid Flash" West, he acquires a machine gun from the eccentric inventor Ted Kord. At the end of the story, once the Justice Riders have defeated Maxwell Lord, Gold heads for Denver, where "the suckers come in by the trainload every day."
One Million
The One Million version of Booster Gold is a time traveler named Peter Platinum ("Platinum always beats gold") who appears in Booster Gold vol. 2, #1000000. Based on Booster's reputation as a profiteer posing as a hero, Platinum admits to Booster that he is pulling the same scam, but more successfully, and assumes Booster is after a cut. His superhero gear is based on technology stolen from Rip Hunter, who has apparently had several encounters with him to get it back.
52 Multiverse
In the final issue of DC Comics' 2006–2007 year-long weekly series, 52 Week 52, it was revealed that a "Multiverse" system of 52 parallel universes, with each Earth being a different take on established DC Comics characters as featured in the mainstream continuity (designated as "New Earth") had come into existence. The Multiverse acts as a storytelling device that allows writers to introduce alternate versions of fictional characters, hypothesize "What if?" scenarios, revisit popular Elseworlds stories, and allow these characters to interact with the mainstream continuity.
The 2007–2008 weekly series Countdown to Final Crisis and its spin-offs would either directly show or insinuate the existence of alternate versions of Booster Gold in the Multiverse. For example, Countdown #16 introduced his evil Earth-3 counterpart, a member of the villainous Crime Society of America — and a similar Booster Gold exists on the Antimatter Universe, as suggested in a 1992 Justice League comic book,[61] with Booster's evil variant first appearing in a 2005 Super Buddies story. The 2007 Countdown spin-off series Countdown Presents: The Search for Ray Palmer also featured a gender-reversed Earth-11 where, through character exposition, it is revealed that Maxine Lord (the female Maxwell Lord) murdered this world's female Booster Gold as opposed to its Ted Kord counterpart. The 1997 Tangent Comics fifth-week event (Jurgens) originally introduced an entirely different version of Booster Gold, a yacht-owning gentleman connected to the origins of the mysterious Green Lantern; when the Tangent Comics universe was later amalgamated into Earth-9 of the 52 multiverse, 2008's Tangent: Superman's Reign #1 (again by Jurgens) introduced an African American superhero by that name.
In other media
Television
- Booster and Skeets appeared as members of the Justice League in the DC animated universe series Justice League Unlimited voiced by Tom Everett Scott, while Skeets was voiced by Billy West. Booster appeared in several episodes with non-speaking roles. He spoke in one episode, "The Greatest Story Never Told", which focused on him. In the episode, a self-promoted Booster, who was excluded from the League's fight against Mordru and was assigned to crowd control during the battle, noticed that physicist Dr. Tracy Simmons' experiment had gone wrong, causing her partner Dr. Daniel Brown, to uncontrollably walk around while having a black hole on his chest. Booster tried to stop Daniel on his own, but repeatedly failed. Realizing he could not be a hero just looking for fame, he decided to become a true hero and finally stopped Daniel and closed the black hole, which had almost swallowed the city. Despite finally being heroic, no one knew what he had achieved. Following Mordru's defeat, Batman approached Booster wondering why he left crowd control. When he is unable to explain what happened while the other superheroes were fighting Mordru, Batman tells him that he will speak to him later. To Booster's delight, Tracy asks him out to thank him. In his subsequent appearances in the series, Booster performs his duties in a more professional manner.
- In the first episode of 2006's Legion of Super-Heroes animated series, Booster Gold and Skeets make a cameo appearance as the janitors in the Superman museum.
- Tom Everett Scott reprises his role of Booster Gold, who appears alongside Skeets (Billy West again), in the Batman: The Brave and the Bold episode "Menace of the Conqueror Caveman!".[62] He comes back 1000 years from the future to stop Kru'll the Eternal, and teams up with Batman, believing this will increase his chances of having his own celebrity. After Kru'll kidnaps Skeets, he sacrifices his glory to save his only friend. Booster ends up earning Batman's respect. In the teaser for "A Bat Divided!", he participates in Riddler's game show "Riddle Me This", and Booster fails to solve the riddles, harming Batman. Batman eventually frees himself and the two fight Riddler and his henchmen. Later, he appeared in "The Siege of Starro! Part One" where he and Skeets team up with B'wana Beast, Firestorm, and Captain Marvel. They are the only ones who have not been brainwashed by Starro. Booster helped fetch the Metal Men for the final battle in "The Siege of Starro! Part Two". In "Menace of the Madniks!", it was revealed that Booster Gold was friends with Ted Kord before his death. During a trip to visit Ted Kord in the past, he ends up helping Blue Beetle fighting the Madniks when they break into S.T.A.R. Labs to steal the Quark Pistol. When Booster Gold shoots the Quark Pistol, it knocks them out. When Booster Gold returns to the present, he finds Batman fighting an Energy Monster and Batman figures out that Booster Gold was behind this. When Batman and Booster Gold transport back in time to see Blue Beetle, they visit Hub City Penitentiary where the escape of the Madniks causes them to turn into Energy Monsters that drained energy from the electric fence. Batman, Blue Beetle, and Booster Gold end up pursuing the Madnik Energy Monsters to Hub City's Nuclear Plant. Batman and Booster reverse the polarity of the Nuclear Plant to return the Madniks to normal. He joins JLI in "Darkseid Descending!" to fight Darkseid when they invade Earth. He later appears in "Shadow of the Bat!", where he and the rest of the JLI become trapped on the JLA Satellite with the vampire Batman. He tries to use a garlic spray on the vampire Batman. This is later revealed to be a hallucination Batman got from a vampire bite.
- Booster Gold appeared alongside Blue Beetle Jaime Reyes and Ted Kord in "Booster", the 18th episode of the 10th and final season of Smallville, written by Geoff Johns. Booster was played by Eric Martsolf.[63][64][65] Much like in the comics, Booster is portrayed as a fame-seeker from the future who travels back in time to become a superstar. His antics bring him into conflict with a young Clark Kent, who has not yet taken on the Superman identity. After Booster's misguided heroics lead to an alien parasite bonding with a teenager named Jaime Reyes, the boy attacks Booster. Booster is able to convince Jaime to fight the Scarab's influence, and the youth ultimately gains control over it. After his near-death, Booster confesses to Clark that he is a washed-up athlete from the 25th century, and that he had traveled back in time in hopes of taking Superman's place in the timestream. Booster chooses to stay in the 21st century to help Jaime learn to use his powers for good. Skeets does not appear physically, but instead exists as voice speaking in Booster's earpiece from an unknown location. (An alternative interpretation is that the earpiece is Skeets.) Additionally, Booster is shown in possession of a Legion Flight Ring, which he admits he stole from a member of the Legion. On the next episode, "Dominion", dialogue suggests that Booster has joined the Justice League, and Tess Mercer is able to use the technology he brought from the future to aid Clark and Oliver Queen during their journey to the Phantom Zone.
- SyFy ordered a live action Booster Gold series with Greg Berlanti and Andrew Kreisberg as executive producers with Berlanti's production company Berlanti Productions.[66] Kreisberg confirmed that the series takes place in the same universe Arrow does. Kreisberg was reported as being expected to deliver the script to SyFy in early June 2013.[67][68]
- Booster Gold appears in episode 46 of Mad. He joins the other superheroes in a musical number that asks Superman, Wonder Woman, and Batman why they are called "Super Friends." Booster states that the membership changes frequently and that "commitment is a sham."
- Booster Gold appears in Robot Chicken DC Comics Special, where he can be seen alongside other members of Justice League, fighting the Legion of Doom.
Film
- An Easter egg of Booster Gold is seen in Man of Steel where the comic book company Blaze Comics is seen during Superman & Zod's battle. Referencing Booster Gold's existence in the universe the movie takes place in.[69]
- On December 2nd, 2013 David S. Goyer announced that a Booster Gold movie is in development as well as a Deathstroke and a Suicide Squad movie.[70]
Video games
- Booster Gold appears in DC Universe Online voiced by Tracy W. Bush. He gives virtual tours of Metropolis and Gotham City and as a mini boss in duo mode of the H.I.V.E. Base Mission.
Miscellaneous
- The Legion of Super Heroes in the 31st Century series, based upon the television series of the same name presents another Booster incarnation. This time, he appears as a selfish and glory-seeking young hero, operating in the 31st century against a group of High-Tech thieves known as the "Scavengers", but really selling stolen technology to the same villains he fights in exchange for payment of his father's gambling debts. Before the Legion can confront him about his thefts, using a stolen Green Lantern ring with limited time-travel abilities, he tries to follow the Chief Scavenger, escaping in a Time Bubble like the one often used by the main continuity Booster. Before disappearing into the timestream, he begs the Legion to bring his love to his sister, "the only one who always believed in me." At the Legion's headquarters, Brainiac 5 reveals he had always known of Booster's technology thefts, but having read in historical chronicles how Booster Gold is destined to redeem himself acting as one of the greatest and selfless crimefighters of the 21st century, he arranges for Booster to find and steal easily the very items he needs to be an effective crimefighter: a Legion flight ring, LexCorp experimental blaster gauntlets, and power cells employed by the Science Police. This version of Booster Gold, resembling a teenaged Booster, always travels with a version of Skeets, resembling closely the advanced 2.0 model built by Doc Magnus after 52.
Reception
Booster Gold was ranked as the 173rd greatest comic book character of all time by Wizard magazine.[71] IGN also ranked Booster Gold as the 59th greatest comic book hero.[72]
References
- ^ a b c d e Greenberger, Robert (2008). "Booster Gold". In Dougall, Alastair (ed.). The DC Comics Encyclopedia. London: Dorling Kindersley. p. 58. ISBN 0-7566-4119-5.
- ^ Manning, Matthew K.; Dolan, Hannah, ed. (2010). "1980s". DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle. Dorling Kindersley. p. 218. ISBN 978-0-7566-6742-9.
The DC Universe gained one of its most peculiar stars in the first issue of writer/artist Dan Jurgens' Booster Gold series.
{{cite book}}
:|first2=
has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Ching, Albert (March 16, 2007). "DC Nation Panel from WW:LA". Newsarama. Retrieved 2007-03-18.
- ^ "Geoff Johns Shares Booster Gold Thoughts". Newsarama. March 16, 2007. Retrieved 2007-03-18.
- ^ "Johns, Katz, and Jurgens Talk Booster Gold". Newsarama. March 21, 2007. Retrieved 2007-03-22. [dead link ]
- ^ Rogers, Vaneta (May 3, 2007). "The 52 Exit Interviews: Geoff Johns". Newsarama. Retrieved 2007-05-06.
- ^ a b Burlingame, Russ (February 3, 2011). "Time Masters: Vanishing Point #6 and Flashpoint Exclusive News!". Comic Related.
- ^ "Boosterrific! History of Booster Gold". Boosterrific.com. August 21, 1985. Retrieved 2011-01-15.
- ^ Booster Gold #1 (February 1986)
- ^ Beatty, Scott (2008). "Extreme Justice". In Dougall, Alastair (ed.). The DC Comics Encyclopedia. New York: Dorling Kindersley. p. 117. ISBN 0-7566-4119-5. OCLC 213309017.
- ^ Countdown to Infinite Crisis #1 (May 2005)
- ^ The OMAC Project #1-6 (June–November 2005)
- ^ Infinite Crisis #2 (January 2006)
- ^ Infinite Crisis #5 (April 2006)
- ^ Infinite Crisis #6 (May 2006)
- ^ 52 Week 1 (May 10, 2006)
- ^ 52 Week 2 (May 17, 2006)
- ^ 52 Week 3 (May 24, 2006)
- ^ 52 Week 6 (June 28, 2006)
- ^ 52 Week 15 (August 16, 2006)
- ^ a b 52 Week 37 (January 17, 2007)
- ^ 52 Week 50 (April 21, 2007)
- ^ Supergirl and the Legion of Super-Heroes #29 (June 2007)
- ^ 52 Week 51 (April 28, 2007)
- ^ a b 52 Week 52 (May 2, 2007)
- ^ a b Booster Gold vol. 2, #6 (March 2008)
- ^ a b c Booster Gold vol. 2, #10 (July 2008)
- ^ Booster Gold vol. 2, #13 (December 2008)
- ^ Booster Gold vol. 2, #26 (November 2009)
- ^ Booster Gold vol. 2, #27 (December 2009)
- ^ Booster Gold vol. 2, #31 (April 2010)
- ^ Justice League: Generation Lost #1 (Early July 2010)
- ^ Justice League: Generation Lost #2 (Late July 2010)
- ^ Justice League: Generation Lost #4 (Late August 2010)
- ^ Justice League: Generation Lost #19 (February 2011)
- ^ Justice League: Generation Lost #20 (February 2011)
- ^ Justice League: Generation Lost #21 (March 2011)
- ^ Justice League: Generation Lost #22 (March 2011)
- ^ Justice League: Generation Lost #23 (April 2011)
- ^ Justice League: Generation Lost #24 (April 2011)
- ^ Time Masters: Vanishing Point #6 (February 2011)
- ^ Booster Gold (vol. 2) #44 (May 2011)
- ^ Booster Gold (vol. 2) #45 (June 2011)
- ^ Booster Gold (vol. 2) #46 (July 2011)
- ^ Booster Gold (vol. 2) #47 (August 2011)
- ^ "Lemire, Robinson And Azzarello – DC Bullet Points From Fan Expo Canada". bleedingcool.com. Retrieved 2011-09-08.
- ^ Justice League International (vol. 3) #1 (September 2011)
- ^ Justice league international #7-12
- ^ Justice League International Annual #1
- ^ Justice League of America #5 (June 2013)
- ^ All-Star Western #19 (April 2013)
- ^ Booster Gold #25 (February 1988)
- ^ Booster Gold vol. 2, #1000000 (September 2008)
- ^ a b Booster Gold vol. 2, #30 (March 2010)
- ^ Booster Gold #3 (April 1986)
- ^ Booster Gold #7 (August 1986)
- ^ third issue of Booster Gold vol. 2
- ^ Booster Gold #8-9
- ^ JLA Classified #8 (August 2005)
- ^ "Earth-3 Timeline". Blaklion.best.vwh.net. Retrieved 2011-01-15.
- ^ Justice League Quarterly #8 (Summer 1992)
- ^ "Comics Continuum by Rob Allstetter: Wednesday, July 23, 2008". ComicsContinuum.com. Retrieved 2011-01-15.
- ^ Geoff Johns (writer); Tom Welling (director) (2011-04-22). "Booster". Smallville. Season 10. Episode 18. The CW.
{{cite episode}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ Goldman, Eric (July 25, 2010). "SDCC 10: Smallville - Darkseid, Blue Beetle and More Are Coming!". IGN. Retrieved 2011-01-15.
- ^ Abrams, Natalie (January 21, 2011). "Smallville Exclusive: Sebastian Spence Cast as Ted Kord". TVGuide.com. Retrieved 2011-01-22.
- ^ Borys Kit (November 22, 2011). "Syfy Orders Script Based on DC Comics' 'Booster Gold' (Exclusive)". The Hollywood Reporter.
- ^ The Booster Gold Script Is Going To Syfy Next Week
- ^ AJ Kreisberg post, 27 May 2013 at Twitter
- ^ Man Of Steel Has A Booster Gold Easter Egg
- ^ Deathstroke, Booster Gold and Suicide Squad films in development
- ^ "Wizard's top 200 characters. External link consists of a forum site summing up the top 200 characters of Wizard Magazine since the real site that contains the list is broken". Wizard magazine. Retrieved May 7, 2011.
{{cite web}}
: Italic or bold markup not allowed in:|publisher=
(help) - ^ "Booster Gold is number 59". IGN. Retrieved May 17, 2011.
External links
- Booster Gold's secret origin at DC Comics.com
- Boosterrific.com An annotated chronology of Booster Gold's published DC Comics comic book appearances
- The Daily Planet: Remembering Booster Gold, Newsarama, August 16, 2006
- Dan Jurgens on the death of Booster Gold, Newsarama, August 29, 2006
- Booster Gold at the Grand Comics Database
- Booster Gold at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)
- Toonopedia entry
- DC Comics superheroes
- Fictional Canadian people
- 1986 comic debuts
- 2007 comic debuts
- Comics characters introduced in 1986
- DC Comics characters with superhuman strength
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- Fictional janitors
- Time travel comics
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- Characters created by Dan Jurgens
- Smallville characters