logo
Review – Batman Gotham by Gaslight: A League for Justice #1

Review – Batman Gotham by Gaslight: A League for Justice #1

Geek Dad09-07-2025
Gotham by Gaslight: A League for Justice #1 cover, via DC Comics.
Ray: This 19th-century Elseworlds started out as a gritty Gotham adventure – but with this new chapter, the scale has increased to an almost staggering degree. After taking about half a year off, a new arc begins as the entire Justice League of this era has gathered in Smallville. There's just one problem – very few of them can stand each other. As Harley Quinn's criminal gang ravages the town on behalf of Lex Luthor, Superman is focused on stopping them. This version of the character is very similar to the classic 1930s version, more a brawler than a superhero. But he's the only one focused – as this version of J'onn J'onnz views him as a murderer, complicit in the ancient Kryptonian genocide of the Martians. As a flashback journal by Adam Strange makes clear, this is a darker world – and every character in this world is haunted by the times in a way they usually aren't. Haunted. Via DC Comics.
The most interesting segment of the issue is the showdown between J'onn and Alan Scott. Alan's ring has given him memories of the past wielders – including Jong Li, the last human wielder, who died in battle with J'onn ages ago. Alan in this world is a distinctly less honorable man than he usually is, but there's a brilliant flashback segment to his childhood with an abusive father that shows how he became so embittered and how he's choosing to rise above it now. This issue packs a lot of character work into an oversized first issue packed with action, but the scale of the issue escalates even more with the final page – as Lex Luthor arrives in town and debuts a new weapon that fits the aesthetic of this world perfectly. This is very much just the next issue of this series, so I highly recommend reading the previous mini before jumping in here – it's a great ride and another win for the Elseworlds line.
To find reviews of all the DC issues, visit DC This Week.
GeekDad received this comic for review purposes. Liked it? Take a second to support GeekDad and GeekMom on Patreon!
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Astronomer says its CEO has been placed on leave after viral Coldplay video
Astronomer says its CEO has been placed on leave after viral Coldplay video

CTV News

time38 minutes ago

  • CTV News

Astronomer says its CEO has been placed on leave after viral Coldplay video

Astronomer, the tech company that found itself launched into the public eye after its CEO was spotted on a Jumbotron video at a Coldplay concert earlier this week embracing an employee, issued a statement about the matter via LinkedIn. (@calebu2/TMX via CNN Newsource) Astronomer, the tech company that found itself launched into the public eye after its CEO Andy Byron was spotted on a Jumbotron video at a Coldplay concert earlier this week embracing an employee, announced that Byron has been placed on leave. Astronomer's cofounder and chief product officer Pete DeJoy is now serving as interim CEO, the company said in a statement Friday night. The New York-based company issued a statement on Friday about the matter via LinkedIn. 'Our leaders are expected to set the standard in both conduct and accountability,' the statement said in part, adding that the company's board of directors 'has initiated a formal investigation into this matter and we will have additional details to share very shortly.' The statement also addressed incorrect information circulating on the internet in the day following the video's release, including a misidentification of a third person seen in the clip, and a parody X account that falsely claimed to have a statement from the CEO. Byron was spotted on a Jumbotron screen at a Coldplay concert at Gillette Stadium in Massachusetts on Wednesday, embracing Kristin Cabot, the company's chief people officer, who oversees the organization's human resources. Coldplay was performing The Jumbotron Song when the camera turned to a man and woman cuddling as they watched the stage. The two quickly separated and attempted to hide their faces, with the man ducking down, when they noticed they were on a giant screen at the venue. 'Whoa, look at these two,' Coldplay frontman Chris Martin quipped. 'Either they're having an affair or they're just very shy.' CNN has reached out to a representative for Coldplay for comment. The video quickly went viral and internet sleuths were the first to identify Byron and Cabot. Social media has been so invested that there are now a slew of memes and comedic videos poking fun at the incident. Lisa Respers France, CNN

Phil Collins once pulled off an intercontinental Live Aid stunt. It wasn't without drama
Phil Collins once pulled off an intercontinental Live Aid stunt. It wasn't without drama

CTV News

timean hour ago

  • CTV News

Phil Collins once pulled off an intercontinental Live Aid stunt. It wasn't without drama

With the help of helicopters and a supersonic turbo jet, Phil Collins pulled off a series of performances worthy of a Mission Impossible movie at Live Aid 40 years ago. The singer and drummer participated in the benefit concerts organized by musicians Bob Geldof and Midge Ure to draw attention to a famine in Ethiopia and raise money for relief efforts. Collins didn't perform on just one stage, but two – on two different continents. The Genesis front man initially took to the stage in London at Wembley Stadium, where he performed Against All Odds (Take a Look at Me Now) and In the Air Tonight. He also played played drums for Branford Marsalis and Sting. That would have been enough for most artists, but not Collins. Instead, he hopped on a helicopter to Heathrow Airport in London, boarded The Concorde to New York City, then took another helicopter to Philadelphia, where he joined superstar Eric Clapton for his set and performed three songs with Led Zeppelin's Robert Plant, Jimmy Page and John Paul Jones. (The Concorde was a supersonic airliner that allowed passengers to cross the Atlantic in under three and a half hours. It made its first test flight in 1969 and was officially retired in 2003.) Backstage after the London performance, Collins gave an interview in which he said he thought the first performance had 'gone very well, considering' and expressed his pride in participating. 'I'm very proud to be asked to do it because everybody's involved and it's just great to be a part of something like this,' he said. 'It's just too obvious to say it's for a good cause.' Trouble across the pond There was, however, some drama in regards to the second show, and how the multiple performances came about. Collins explained that both Plant and Sting had separately asked him to participate in Live Aid, with a UK-based promoter suggesting he take The Concorde in order to play both shows. But Collins explained to Classic Rock in 2021 that second show with Led Zeppelin was less than smooth, in part because he neglected to rehearse with the band beforehand, and also due to the bandmates' strained relationships. 'By the time I got there, me and Robert and Jimmy playing together had become The Second Coming Of Led Zeppelin – (bassist and keyboardist) John Paul Jones was there too. Jimmy says: 'We need to rehearse.' And I said: 'Can't we just go on stage and have a play?'' Collins recalled. 'So I didn't rehearse when I got there, but I listened to Stairway To Heaven on Concorde.' He said the end result was messy, partially due to the fact that co-drummer Tony Thompson 'had rehearsed for a week, and I'm about to steal his thunder – the famous drummer's arrived! – and he kind of did what he wanted to do. Robert wasn't match-fit. And if I could have walked off, I would have done, cause I wasn't needed and I felt like a spare part.' 'Anyway, we came off, and we got interviewed by MTV. And Robert is a diamond, but when those guys get together a black cloud appears,' Collins continued. 'Then Page says: 'One drummer was halfway across the Atlantic and didn't know the stuff.' And I got pissed off. Maybe I didn't know it as well as he'd like me to have done, but… I became the flagship, and it looked like I was showing off.' It ended up becoming a Led Zepplin reunion that Collins wrote about not wanting to be a part of in his 2016 autobiography, Not Dead Yet. 'I didn't come here to play with Led Zeppelin, I came here to play with a friend of mine who has morphed back into being the singer of Led Zeppelin – a very different animal to the one that invited me,' Collins wrote. 'Now I'm caught up in the ceaselessly toxic, dysfunctional web of Led Zeppelin interpersonal relationships.' A surprise encounter While his second performance perhaps did not go quite as Collins had hoped, Live Aid raised more than US$100 million for famine relief. His transatlantic flight also included a very famous fellow passenger. 'When I got on Concorde, Cher was on it,' Collins recalled in the CNN original series Live Aid: When Rock 'n' Roll Took On the World. Cher asked Collins what he was up to. 'There's a live gig in London today and in Philadelphia,' Collins said he told Cher. 'She said, 'Oh, could you get me on it?'' Hours later, Cher joined a star-studded group of artists on stage to close out Live Aid with a performance of We Are the World. Mission accomplished. By Lisa Respers France, CNN

Coldplay couple a reminder that anyone can go viral — even in a crowd of 60,000
Coldplay couple a reminder that anyone can go viral — even in a crowd of 60,000

CBC

time8 hours ago

  • CBC

Coldplay couple a reminder that anyone can go viral — even in a crowd of 60,000

A tech CEO and his company's HR manager had a joyful evening turn into a nightmare after they popped up on the big screen at a Coldplay concert in Boston on Wednesday. The viral moment is one of many recent examples of people's lives being upended by social media, as experts say we are increasingly under multiple layers of surveillance and subject to heavy social media scrutiny that can be harmful. Astronomer CEO Andy Byron, who multiple reports say is married, and his company's chief people officer Kristin Cabot were embracing, but quickly jumped away from each other as they appeared on a giant screen in front of more than 66,000 fans at the concert. Byron crouched down to hide from the camera as Cabot covered her face with her hands. In a TikTok video with seven million likes, posted by user @instaagrace, Coldplay singer Chris Martin is heard saying: "Either they're having an affair or they're just very shy." The clip was soon splashed all across social media, with users speculating that the two must have been cheating on their spouses. Angling to prove it, some got to work sleuthing to find out their identities, posting their theories on sites like Reddit and X. On Friday afternoon, Andy Byron was the top trending search on Google in the past 48 hours. Online gambling sites have even posted bets on whether he'll be fired. Astronomer posted a statement on X Friday afternoon, saying it has "initiated a formal investigation into this matter." Evan Light, an expert in privacy and surveillance technology and co-ordinator of critical information policy studies at the University of Toronto, says the case is "an interesting analogy for life online in general" and the tension between private and public life. "I think many still had the assumption that if we go into a show like these two people did, and you're amongst tens of thousands of people, that maybe you can relish in some anonymity, the way that we might think that we do online," he said. "In reality we don't, necessarily. The Jumbotron can capture you and dramatically change your life." Canadians among the named and shamed The Coldplay fans are the latest in a long line of people named and shamed after unwittingly being posted online. An Alberta man went viral last week after challenging former NHL enforcer Nick Tarnasky to a fight on a golf course in Red Deer, Alta., and ending up on the receiving end of a beatdown. After the fight was strewn across social media and news articles, Trevor Ogilvie posted an apology video, saying he "drank way too much" alcohol before the July 4 incident at Alberta Springs Golf Course. "Not my finest moment," he said. In April, an image of a retired Liberal supporter giving two middle fingers at a rally for party Leader Mark Carney in Brantford, Ont., went viral and was shared heavily in right-wing social media circles. The man was turned into memes and dubbed the "Brantford Boomer," and identified online as Matt Janes, prompting him to delete his Facebook account. "It's been a week from hell, it's taken over my life," Janes told CBC News in an interview later that month. June Tangney, a professor of psychology at George Mason University in Virginia who studies shame and guilt, says we live in a world where we have almost no privacy and people tend to be drawn to "salacious" interpersonal stories, especially when they can feel "morally superior." On social media, in the absence of face-to-face interactions, these things can quickly spiral as people play off each other. WATCH | The story behind the 'Brantford Boomer': The Liberal 'Brantford Boomer' going viral — what really happened? 3 months ago Tangney says everyone has made bad choices, and the online reactions can be out of proportion. "When people are excommunicated, and totally distanced and treated like they are a certain kind of negative person for having done one thing, that's really kind of overkill," she said. Tangney also warns that public shaming could prevent people from focusing on making amends for their behaviour and making positive changes because it can be hard for them not to get defensive and angry at the social media fallout. "If people try to justify the the schadenfreude and delight in pouncing on somebody who is an easy mark, think carefully about that and realize that it can be very, very hurtful and very harmful," she said. Widespread surveillance increasing: prof Light says people are increasingly under surveillance on multiple levels, by government and police as well as private businesses and home doorbell cameras. With "more cell phones than people on the earth," he says he worries the constant surveillance is also affecting the way people act in public, and how it impacts the evolution of kids and society in general. "I worry that it risks, say, people self-censoring or feeling the need to be clinical or in control — that there's a pushback on spontaneity," Light said. New York City's sanitation department played into those concerns on Thursday, posting a photo of Byron and Cabot to its official X account. "Cameras are EVERYWHERE! Don't get caught doing something you *maybe* shouldn't be doing," the post reads, above the screenshot from the viral video.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store