Tag Archives: Wonder

Motown’s First #1 Hit, "Please Mr. Postman," Released 53 Years Ago

Mother Jones

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The knockout girl group song “Please Mr. Postman,” by the Marvelettes was released on August 21, 1961. Later in the year it went on to become the first Motown single to hit #1 on Billboard’s Hot 100 chart.

Motown wouldn’t hit the #1 position again until 1963, when Little Stevie Wonder’s “Fingertips, Pt. 2” reached the top. From that point on, Motown was a non-stop hit machine with at least one #1 hit on the charts each year through 1974. 1970 proved to be Motown’s best year–they dominated Billboard with seven top hits.

The Marvelettes followed “Please Mr. Postman” with “Twistin’ Postman,” in an effort to cash in on their own song and the popularity of “The Twist.” That song hit #34 on the pop charts, and was followed by their bigger hits “Playboy” and the current oldies radio staple “Beechwood 4-5789.” Like a lot of groups of the era, the Marvelettes had a hard time cracking the charts once the British Invasion hit States.

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Motown’s First #1 Hit, "Please Mr. Postman," Released 53 Years Ago

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Man Tapped to Draw the New Wonder Woman Doesn’t Want Her to Be Feminist

Mother Jones

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David Finch, the artist who’s taking over DC Comics’ Wonder Woman, says he wants the feminist icon to be “strong”—but not “feminist.”

In an interview with Comic Book Resources News, David and his wife, newly appointed Wonder Woman writer Meredith Finch, talked about their plans to reimagine the character. But David missed a step when he was asked about what he’s excited to touch on in Wonder Woman’s character with the new book:

I think she’s a beautiful, strong character. Really, from where I come from, and we’ve talked about this a lot, we want to make sure it’s a book that treats her as a human being first and foremost, but is also respectful of the fact that she represents something more. We want her to be a strong—I don’t want to say feminist, but a strong character. Beautiful, but strong.

I’m pretty visual and I’m really interested in that. She’s got a great costume and she’s got a lot of history—I’m really very visually attracted to “Wonder Woman.” She just looks great on the page.

“That’s pretty funny,” Kristy Guevara-Flanagan, who created the film Wonder Women! The Untold Story of American Superheroines, said when I told her about Finch’s comments. “She’s an obvious feminist role model for many people for many reasons…. It’s like getting rid of her kryptonite to say that about her.”

Feminist comics fans shouldn’t panic quite yet, though. As Wonder Woman‘s writer, Meredith Finch is likely to have more control over the plot of the series, and she demonstrated a deeper grasp of the character’s history than her husband:

She’s really a female icon from way back in the ‘70’s when females were stepping up and taking such powerful roles. Being able to take on that quintessential female superhero who represents so much for myself and for millions of people out there—especially at a time where comics are coming more into the mainstream—I feel like it’s really special, and that’s really where I’m coming from when I’m writing this. I want to always keep who she is and what I believe her core is central to what I’m doing.

Meredith Finch isn’t the first woman to write Wonder Woman. In 2007, Gail Simone became Wonder Woman’s first female “ongoing writer,” stepping into a role previously only occupied by male writers and designers.

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Man Tapped to Draw the New Wonder Woman Doesn’t Want Her to Be Feminist

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Seeds of Hope: Wisdom and Wonder from the World of Plants

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