KEITH DAVID:
“On the next ‘Justice League’...” J’ONN J’ONZZ:
“It seems we are not in Metropolis anymore.” KEITH DAVID:
“A ‘Justice League’
premiere, next Sunday at 7.” What you just watched...
isn't real. Well, okay. It's real. Like, it exists. Someone made it.
But it's not the actual commercial. This is. KEITH DAVID:
“On the next ‘Justice League’...” THE FLASH:
“Hey, you've got the wrong--” GREEN LANTERN:
“The Justice Guild of America.” J’ONN J’ONZZ
“It seems we are not in Metropolis anymore.” KEITH DAVID:
“A ‘Justice League’
premiere, tonight at 7.” KEITH DAVID:
“Only on Cartoon Network.” Back when the first season of the “Justice
League” animated series was originally debuting on Cartoon Network,
from November 2001 to October 2002, promos like this would play after
every episode, advertising the next one that would air in a week's time.
Keith David's luscious voice over top of clips of what was to come, accompanied by an array of spectacular color
and imagery that told you: “This is not something
you're going to want to miss, kid. “You're going to want to tape record
every one of these to VHS, you hear? “You stupid little kid!
Tape this! Watch forever!” That's what Keith
David was actually saying, I think. But this promotion for the episode
“Legends” got a fan-augmented version featuring different characters than those
we saw in the actual show. And the remake was so convincing
that it's had fans fooled into thinking it was an early cut of the episode,
for over 20 years. So, why was this fake made...and who made it? First, the why. Why would
someone take the original commercial and edit
different characters on top of it? And why would so many people believe
it was real without a second thought? The actual “Justice League” episode “Legends”
featured the League traveling to a parallel earth inhabited by the
Justice Guild, a team of superheroes who lived and breathed a bygone
America set decades in the past. But, there was a twist. GREEN LANTERN:
“It’s the Justice Guild.
They’re...comic book characters.” THE FLASH:
“What?” GREEN LANTERN:
“They were the stars of my favorite comic book,
the Justice Guild of America.” To avid comic book readers
watching this video, this doubtlessly sounds familiar. The Justice Society of America
is a group of DC heroes that predates the Justice League by roughly
a couple decades, whose initial adventures
wrapped through World War II and who were eventually relegated
to Earth-2 to avoid continuity problems, a reality
which existed in the form of comic books in the League's world. It's more or less
the exact same concept here. The animated Justice Guild were
clearly tributes to the JSA. Among others, Society had Wildcat,
Black Canary, Green Lantern Alan Scott, the original Atom, Al Pratt,
and Jay Garrick, The Flash. While on the other hand... THE STREAK:
“Justice Guild: roll call!” CATMAN:
“Catman.” BLACK SIREN:
“Black Siren.” GREEN GUARDSMAN:
“Green Guardsman” TOM TURBINE:
“Tom Turbine.” THE STREAK:
“The Streak.” “Crooooooow!” By the way, apparently Tom Turbine is much less
Golden Age Atom and much more Dynamo from Thunder Agents, with a sprinkle
of public domain hero Captain Tootsie. Just, uh...just wanted to toss that in. But why would they create original characters
mildly spoofing the Justice Society instead of just actually
using the Justice Society? Well, the DCAU has a long-running history
of repurposing existing characters to fit their needs
if the story calls for it. And oftentimes
it wasn't so much their intention as it was the producers’ superiors
making an administrative decision. Case in point, when Hawkgirl was eventually
revealed to be a...secret spy... (Check out our entire video on
why that had to happen) Bruce Timm and co. planned to make her
Thanagarian fiance be just straight up Hawkman, Katar Hol. But the higher-ups wouldn't
allow Hawkman to be turned into a bad guy. They wouldn't allow his core
characterization to be bastardized. And so, the “Justice League” creative team
tossed Katar Hol's name into a blender and spat out
Hro Talak instead. Same happened with Power Girl, I mean Galatea. Evil Power Girl? No way. Can't do it. Change her name.
Change her background a bit. Good to go. While the Justice Society members weren't
being turned into villains, they were.... ...well, if you haven't seen the episode,
sorry, but they were being killed. They were dead the whole time. Like, this kid should have been played
by Haley Joel Osment. so the crew had to find a middle ground
to still tell the story they wanted to tell. DAN RIBA:
“DC loved the script. DAN RIBA:
“They saw that outline and they went,
‘Oh, this is awesome, DAN RIBA:
“ ‘but we were not going to let you do it. DAN RIBA:
“ ‘You know, DAN RIBA:
“ ‘We don't want their introduction
to the cartoon being that they're dead. DAN RIBA:
“ ‘We really don't want you to kill the story
because it's really good. DAN RIBA:
“ ‘We want this to exist,
but we just can't let it be the JSA. DAN RIBA:
“ ‘Would you mind creating a new group
that's like the JSA?’” Bruce Timm himself
elaborated on the situation in an old post on the ToonZone forums. And so the Justice Battalion--
or, Justice Squadron-- Justice Guild of America came to be. But listen carefully to that last part. They were making changes to the script
all the way up until the recording session. And if you know how cartoons are made, you know that happens
before the animation process ever begins. When I asked Dan Riba how far the Justice
Society version got in the production, he answered: I even reached out to then-DC Comics
president Paul Levitz for comment. And after showing him
the fake, he responded quite succinctly... Damn, son. Where’d you find this? No, but really, he confirmed:
Nothing to do with the original. The final version of the episode clearly had the JGA
still retaining all the DNA of the JSA, IMO, TBH and even concluded
with a dedication to the late Gardner Fox, the original writer and co-creator of the
Justice Society and the Justice League. The JSA were essentially there in wolf's clothing,
but they were never actually there. This is not real.
If I'm being honest... yes, this is a very well-made
replica of the actual promo, but it's still got several
telltale signs of forgery fiddling. For example, our opening shot
of Wally West becoming Jay Garrick as he runs at the camera is, like, three
or four frames repeated over and over. Sure, the actual DCAU
didn't not do that from time to time. (See: Professor Hamilton's head bobbing
like a South Park Canadian here) But it certainly doesn't feel up to par
with something we'd typically see. And if you pause on any of the main
running poses, it's just verbatim a trace of this commonly seen
piece of “Justice League” style guide art. Then you've got literal calendar dates
changing behind Flash, which the DCAU crew avoided as much as possible to keep things
locked into a “timeless” aesthetic. And finally, we get the blast of light
that leads us to the JL logo and, like, Jay’s layer just hangs on a couple extra seconds
for no reason. Again, not trying to dig too hard at this. It really is very well done, though, to me, it's kind of obvious
when you see it. NED FLANDERS:
“But we can't blame you NED FLANDERS:
“because you have good intentions!” Clearly the creator of the fake
just wanted to show off what the episode might have looked like with the JSA
had DC signed off on the original script. But still, like I said,
it's fooled hundreds, thousands of people for a very long time. One quick glimpse and it's easy
to assume this was truly a clip from an earlier version of “Legends” before DC pulled the plug
and the episode had to be remade. Except...that it'd be crazy to recolor all of those characters and re-record
a few lines in less than a week. Yes! Correct! Think for a second, people! Your mind may drift to this funeral scene
at the end of the “Superman” episode, “Apokolips... Now!” that we've done a whole video
about, where Marvel characters and creators appeared
in the crowd for the initial airing but were gone by the reruns. And...yeah, because they made two versions
from the get-go. And even if they hadn't, that's
a small handful of still frames to redraw. Redoing “Legends” would be redoing
the better part of 44 minutes’ worth of animated content.
In one week? In 2002? Just not feasible. They would have delayed the episode or
shifted it to the next season or something. Even Justice League Adventures artist
Min S. Ku whipped up this fake comic cover based on the original JLA/JSA
team-up way back when, and I know this single image
wasn't an afternoon's effort. So...now...the real question becomes... Can we track down
who actually made this fake JSA version? The only way you can find the fake promo
today is on YouTube. And you might think, “Well, “clearly the obvious answer is that
the person who put it on YouTube made it.” But while it was uploaded 14 years ago,
that's still seven years shy of when the real promo
actually aired on TV. Still, it's our easiest
and most immediate lead. The video was uploaded on July 12th, 2009, by user “bversaw.” Beaver saw?
Like, a saw for beavers? A saw made of beavers? A version of the horror movie franchise
“Saw” featuring exclusively beavers?! Who's to say? FREAKAZOID:
“Lay off the poor beavers, will ya?!” But of course, as is my luck,
there is absolutely nothing else on their channel to aid me in narrowing
down their true identity. And their latest upload was ten years ago, so any comment I might leave on a video
asking for help will likely go unseen, other than this “But will it blend?” comment
from somebody that I hit like on 11 years later.
The thing is, this must be a re-upload. I know for a fact
I saw this animation before 2009. Now this next part is going to make me sound really old to some of you
and really young to others, but 2009 was the year
I graduated high school. I definitely witnessed
this video much earlier on what would eventually become
the Superbuddies message boards. At the time they were named
DCU Animated, the online space where fellow Databud, Ted Kendrick,
and I actually first met. STUDIO AUDIENCE:
“Awww...” Yeah, yeah. Keep your shirt on, lady. Folks on these boards back in the day
would post fan art all the time, including the webmaster himself, Kryptcom,
who at one point created this fun Justice Guild piece based off JL concept art.
Much like Kryptcom and a few others, my whole thing back then was creating
model sheet-style renderings of various DCAU characters whose actual designs
had yet to have public releases. Example: I saw this fake promo and was inspired
to promptly create artwork depicting Green Lantern
Alan Scott in the cartoon’s style. And yes, I still have this. Of course I still have this.
It was on a floppy disk in my attic. Do you think I get rid of anything? GREEN LANTERN:
“Wait, Don't answer that.” This Alan Scott file is dated
March 20th, 2005, over four years earlier than the YouTube upload,
and it was...fairly crude. I mean, I was 14. Everyone's fan art at the time was just as
okay as we could have possibly made it. Photoshop had only been around and popular
for a few years and alternative, more experimental graphics
software was being hocked left and right. Shout out to my Aunt Laura
for teaching me Photoshop because if I don't say something about it,
she's going to say something to me. Every piece of art that even
the best of us would pump out at the time was a still frame,
a single image, never animated and never this fluid or professional... ...no offense...
indistinguishable from the original. In short, whoever made this,
they were good. A quick Googling of “bversaw”
only really landed me one solid lead, The commonly-used prefix for a Caltech
student named Brooke Versaw...B. Versaw! BRUCE WAYNE:
“Mr. E. Nygma...Edward Nygma!” But after finally tracking her down, Brooke
responded: “Excuse me, but I do believe you made this
JSA animation.” “Doesn't look familiar to me.”
“What? “But the YouTube username “matches every public email
and social media account you have.” “Nope, it's not mine.” “It is yours. “I am trying to be a good detective
and link the video to you.” “Link what to who?” “Aren’t you bversaw?”
“Yep.” “And this is your username?”
“Yep.” “I found this username attached
to this YouTube channel. “And if that's the case,
this must be...your YouTube channel.” “That makes sense to me.” “Then you made this video.” “It's not my channel.”
[INCOMPREHENSIBLE SCREAMING] But okay, fair enough. Chances are low that this YouTube uploader
is the original creator anyway, since the video's description
reads: Clearly written from the perspective of:
“Look what I found!” So my next easy target would be to ask any
and all members of the DCU Animated message boards that I was still in contact
with if they had any idea who made this. Unfortunately, that'd be a no. I got everything from “I can't say it rings any bells” to “Not a single clue” to even “I haven't seen this.” I reached out to other folks who were heavily present in “Justice League”
online spaces at the time and still are today, like Joseph Davis,
otherwise known as Karkull, whose old Justice League Watchtower site
cataloged some of the most well-researched behind-the-scenes quotes and trivia
the internet had or has to offer. He remembered the animation well,
but remembered first seeing it on the ToonZone forums, Now Anime Superhero, though
now heavily under reconstruction after a server failure caused them
to go kaput for the foreseeable future. Webmaster of the World's
Finest fan site, Jim Harvey, also vaguely remembered it and offered to look back at all his
relevant emails dating back through 1997. But even he reached a dead end
without the Anime Superhero boards accessible Though we at the Watchtower here have attempted
many times in the past, I figured it wouldn't hurt
to try and throw the old ToonZone URLs into the Web Archive, which, by the way,
if you haven't used before, is an extremely cool online tool
for looking back at ancient, long-dead websites or even much earlier
versions of ones that still exist. But alas, although I can load the home page,
none of the forum threads’ links work. Another brick wall. But with this in mind, I figured, why not try the Web Archive
tactic on the DCU Animated boards? Maybe I could find the original post of
the video from pre-YouTube dinosaur times. This is where good ol’ Ted decided to hop on board the search train
and stumbled on the jackpot. Before they were even available
under a DCU Animated web domain, these boards were hosted on Kryptcom’s
personal server. You see kids, there was a time before social media... OBI-WAN KENOBI:
“Before the dark times.” ...when, if you wanted to say something
on the internet, you pretty much had to pay your internet service provider
to create server space for your own personal website, with which you could
then do pretty much whatever you wanted. Kryptcom had chosen: Make a place
where a bunch of DC nerds can talk about the new “Justice League” and “Teen
Titans” cartoons, and DCUA was born. Kryptcom, you out there, buddy? We miss you. Come back to us.
This Web Archive snapshot from December 2003 is, first of all,
pretty crazy to look back on. We've got discussions about the latest JL episodes
that had just aired for the first time. We've got folks chatting about the brand-new “Mystery
of the Batwoman” animated movie. We've even got a thread called
“Whaaa... ‘The Batman?’” And then, the Holy Grail, what I had been
hoping and praying would be here: Here, user fresh101 posts: What? I see this as an absolute win. [SIGHS]
So...not the original creator after all. Give me a break. I couldn't remember
exactly what this 20-year-old post said. Remember, I graduated high school in 2009. I'm an old man, maybe. BATMAN:
“You mean that old man?” JASON BLOOD:
“He’s 32 years old.” It's also funny to see in this thread
all the way back then, even: That's what I'm saying. That's from CoryB,
one of the board's top artists. and even Kryptcom himself
weighed in to note that this was the first time
he'd ever seen this, comparing its entertainment quality
to the “Super Friends” “wassup” fan edit. “Hello?”
“WASSUUUUUP?!” “WASSUUUUUUUUUP?!” So it was neither of the top dogs
who done created this masterpiece. There is, however, a URL that, while it's
broken now, clearly led to this video. If you recall, young one,
this fits the same address structure as Kryptcom’s
original forums themselves, aka Cox.net was some sort of hosting site. Hey, better than balls.org,
better than dicks.cu-- “white38” must then be the user, the owner of the web space this original QuickTime
file was uploaded to. So if fresh101 says they “found it on the net,” then whoever white38 is must be our guy. Well,
what if I told you...that I am white38?! I made this and I've been sitting back
withholding this info just to watch you squirm! LEX LUTHOR / THE FLASH:
“Because I'm evil.” Oh, boy, I wish. Listen up: we do giveaways pretty much every video
and this is one of them, okay? All this stuff on screen,
if this is you, it's all yours. Is that you right
there? Please send us an email. Please, God, I hope you're watching this video,
too. See this! Email us! ROBERT COSTANZO:
“Do it! Now!” Next up is this stuff! You can win it by commenting below,
answering our Question of the Day from the end of this video.
We'll pick a winner at random next time. It's that simple. Subscribe
so you don't miss future giveaways! Also, we do a podcast on Fridays
called “Jump on the Bat-Wagon,” where I'm showing my friend Brian
the entire DCAU for the first time. It's funny, It's good, you'll like it. Go listen to it on every app ever. Now... BRAINIAC:
“Be gone.” Googling “white38” of course didn't land me anywhere. Ted suggested seeking out 38-year-old white people, who would be 58 by now,
which, yeah, really narrows it down, Ted, thank you so much. After trying a variety
of keyword combinations, searching “cox.net white38” finally gave me another clue:
another forum post on a different forum this time those of the audio
engineering software Cakewalk from 2006 which is really weird
because this was around the same time my mom, who mastered those euphonium
arrangements you heard in our DCEU timeline video, was using Cakewalk
for various music compositions. Not at all relevant to this story,
but still, it's a bit on the nose. It's weird. Here we find fresh101 again,
trying to get some help with a software bug, sending along a test file
for the support team and...the URL is another “cox.net/white38”. Fresh101 once again using the white38
hosting space unfortunately tells me that those two usernames
in fact belong to the same person. ACE VENTURA:
“Finkle is Einhorn!” Which means, I'd reached yet another dead end. It means fresh101,
whoever they are, found the JSA animation somewhere else online, downloaded it,
and uploaded it to their own hosting space in order to share it with others.
Meaning, the only way to figure out where they found it in the first place would be
to track down the identity of fresh101 and ask them. Hilariously,
their DCUA profile no matter what year you choose
on the Wayback Machine is empty. No name, no email, no location, nothing. But perhaps this person has used fresh101
as a username on other sites? Yeah? Wouldn't that make sense? Wouldn't
you like that to be the case? I Googled “fresh101”
and only got a health food restaurant in Detroit that likely isn't related
and never emailed me back anyway and some radio station
that likely isn't related and never emailed me back--
I also found a user on DeviantArt named fresh101 and, while they haven't been active
since 2008, I sent them a private message just in case... and never heard back. But you want to know the worst part
about all of this? Even if I do find whoever fresh101
is, they didn't even know who made this fake promo in 2003
when they first shared it. Chances are extremely low they'd remembered 20 years later. Had I exhausted every possible lead here? Was this all...hopeless? It was then that we noticed
this very tiny, absurdly illegible watermark in the bottom right
hand corner of the video. It's nearly impossible to read. But we managed to run it through
some upscaling and sharpening filters and wound up with this! JERRY SEINFELD:
“Great! What?” K, so, this method is not helping. Now
it's in Kryptonian or something. Horrible. Bad. What does this say? Is that last part a date? “11/2002” perhaps?
Or maybe those first couple symbols there could be “DC”?
But why would the original creator put “DC” in the credit? Unless they wanted us
to think this was official! PIERCE HAWTHORNE:
“Ooh! Plot twist!” More realistically, this could be text that was automatically
placed on the video, because of the video editor they used to make it,
or the screen recorder or DVD ripper they used to get the original clip,
or even whatever software they might have used to upload the video
to the internet in the first place. Look, kids, pre-YouTube this was extremely common and getting rid of
it was pretty much out of the question. It was the Wild West out there! Or
even less likely, this could be a watermark of some kind from WB themselves
from the original ad. You know... DAFFY DUCK:
“Exclusive property and trademark
of Warner Bros. Inc.” Wait. “Edit”! That totally
says E-D-I-T-semicolon at the start there. I mean, of course it does,
this is a fan edit, we've established this. But damn if I sincerely cannot hold
confidence in what any of the remaining letters
and/or numbers are. Just to see if the actual “Legends” commercial
had any corner watermark to speak of Ted went searching for a YouTube upload of these promos and well, no,
it doesn't have a watermark. But on his way
he discovered a second YouTube upload of this fake promo.
This one was uploaded by user Grant Giandonato on May 8th, 2009, over two months
before bversaw’s copy. You know, the person who was “amazed [they] couldn't
find this on YouTube already.” But it was on YouTube already!
With...no description. “There is no explanation.” You're tellin’ me! Luckily,
we have his full name to go off of. It only took a few seconds of Facebook
stalking before stumbling on the same name
with the same Mandalorian profile picture. Er...I'm going to call it an avatar because
this whole damn video is stuck in Y2K. More snooping from Ted revealed Grant's
LinkedIn account. ANNIE EDISON:
“What? That's crazy. ANNIE EDISON:
“People use LinkedIn?” He worked at QVC Television
as a line producer during the time this would have been made. So he was definitely around
all the right equipment. Warner Brothers is listed under
his interests, and he seemed to be involved some interactive web
content with “Star Wars: Episode 1.” He looks roughly ten or 15 years older than us Databuds,
so likely would have had the digital arts training required. This very well
might actually be our guy.. Since the only other upload on his YouTube
channel is a “Phantom Menace” video, also uploaded
in 2009 on the same day as the JSA promo, it's possible he uploaded two pieces
of his work that he was proud of. So...I sent him a Facebook
message...and went to bed. MICHAEL SCOTT:
“Oh, my god! Okay, it's happening. MICHAEL SCOTT:
“Everybody stay calm.” DWIGHT SCHRUTE:
“What’s the procedure, everyone?
What’s the procedure?” MICHAEL SCOTT:
“Stay f***ing calm!” JENNIFER LAWRENCE:
“What do you mean? What do you mean?
What do you mean?” I am so sad right now. Grant was not the creator
of the animation. He did not have the original MOV file. He did not know who made it.
Thank you anyway, Grant. At the very least,
you responded to my messages. At the very least,
you seem like a good guy. Grant
recommended a couple other old forums he was a member of where he remembers
sharing and discussing the promo. But while Ted and I did find those posts
after searching through over 150 ancient, long-buried web pages,
there was nothing really helpful. And even if I could find
any other old shares of the fan edit, it seems that the story is always
the same. Excited fans stumble upon JSA promo, they share it with their friends,
they laugh, they cry, they go home. 20 years pass and the Watchtower Database tries to
unravel the age-old mystery to no avail-- Oh. It's friend of the channel,
writer of Back Issue #99 and artist of this coloring book
right here, John Trumbull. The hell does he want? James, it's me,
friend of the channel, writer of Back Issue 99, artist of that coloring book right there, John Trumbull? JAMES:
Uh, yeah, I know. Anyway, the ToonZone forums are
back up so you might be able to find
an answer to that question on there-- JAMES:
Look, John,
I'm going to have to call you back. JAMES:
I'm in the middle of something. Yes, thanks John,
thanks for interrupting my recording. Where was I? Uh...oh yeah. Okay. 20 years pass and the Watchtower
Database tries to unravel the age old mystery to no avail-- [GASPS] [MUMBLING UNDER BREATH] Come on, come on, come on, come on...
[MUMBLING] [GASPS]
“LEGENDS; The real JSA”. “For a brief glimpse at the DCU’s
true legends, “below is a tiny “and I do mean tiny clip from the ‘Legends’
commercial featuring the classic JSA.” Shit! Lucho. Last seen on the forums about a year ago, which is insanely recent
compared to what I expected. And yet...
I haven't been able to get a hold of them. I found some antiquated email addresses
that bounced back, I sent them a private message that may never be seen. If I didn't know
the ToonZone boards were back who knows how long it'll be ‘til
otherwise-unreachable Lucho finds out? A week? A month?
A year? A decade? [SIGHS] But, you know, after everything... maybe it's okay. NITE OWL:
“We’ll be all right...in the end.” SILK SPECTRE:
“Nothing ends...nothing ever ends.” Perhaps this person's perplexing obscurity is symbolic of our own childhood experiences with the “Justice League”
cartoon: gone, but not forgotten. Maybe it's okay that this enigma, this specter, this lone warrior... remain at arm's length,
that they may live on through a 240p QuickTime video file from 2002 as...well... ...a legend. And legends live forever. Legends inspire. They embolden, invigorate, rejuvenate. They bring forth in ourselves
what we alone could never realize. And that is what makes them everlasting. Remember, there's heroes and there's legends. Heroes get remembered but legends...never die. GREEN LANTERN:
“I know it sounds corny, but... GREEN LANTERN:
“...those comics taught me
what it meant to be a hero.” THE STREAK:
“We died once to save this Earth,
and we can do it again.” THE JUSTICE GUILD:
“Let justice prevail!” KEITH DAVID:
“On the next ‘Justice League’...” J’ONN J’ONZZ:
“It seems we are not in Metropolis anymore.” KEITH DAVID:
“A ‘Justice League’ premiere, tonight at 7. KEITH DAVID:
“Only on Cartoon Network.” If you're seeing this, Lucho,
wherever you are...thank you. I can totally see your name in that
watermark if I squint hard enough, too. God dammit. Now that my work here is done,
or at least as done as it can be, I shall upload this remake of the remake to my oldest,
most unattended YouTube account. No context, no description. Simply...new life to an old friend. Will I be contributing to the endless
ocean of rumors and misconceptions? KEITH DAVID:
“Probably. KEITH DAVID:
“Maybe.” But you will know, dear viewer.
You'll know the truth. Next time you see someone out there going,
“Did you know? It almost looked like this?” Smack ‘em upside the head and show them this video
you just watched, because that is nonsense. In the end I think there's a beautiful lesson
to be learned here. It doesn't matter how much we think
we know. Sometimes...we just have to Google...
a little bit harder. Would you have preferred this “Justice
League” episode to have the actual Justice Society, or are you okay
that we got doppelganger replacements? We did see various members of the JSA
show up in “Justice League Unlimited,” but let us know
if you'd like to see a follow-up video about whether the actual JSA
did exist in the DCAU. Also, there's
another new shirt in the merch store. Go get it. And the Blue Beetle one because the day this video drops
is the last day you can get it! Oh, my goodness! Thank you for coming with me
on this migraine of a journey and I want to give a big thanks to
Toonami Remastered for helping me with some of the graphics and audio
for my new version of the JSA promo. Check out their YouTube channel
linked below. If you'd like to help support our channel, head over to
Patreon.com/DCAUWatchtower and check out all the cool exclusive perks
you can get over there, like your name read out loud, like Luke Mears, John
Ryan Masters and Jonathan Andrew Brantley (thank you so much) and tons of other stuff. Everybody else
who supports us on Patreon is listed here, and once we get to 200 of you,
we'll do a “Will It Canon?” episode on if “Teen Titans” exists
in the same universe as “Whaaa... ‘The Batman’”?! We'll see you in the next one. MARKIPLIER:
“Hmm. Well, that's a problem.
But not my fault. MARKIPLIER:
“I did everything I could.
And you did, too. MARKIPLIER:
“Also, why are you still here?” BEAVERSAW IS READYYY!