That's actually completely intentional. In Kirby's biography by Mark Evanier - Kirby: King of Comics - Jack's quoted about The Thing: "If you'll notice the way The Thing talks and acts, you'll find that The Thing is really Jack Kirby. He has my manners, he has my manner of speech, and he thinks the way I do. He's excitable, and you'll find that he's very, very active among people, and he can muscle his way through a crowd. I find I'm that sort of person."
I imagined a very similar accent. If I were to ever draw Ben Grimm in human form I'd draw a bulky Jack Kirby, like the pics you see when he was fighting in the war.
Great New York voice; someone who was an auto didact and conspicuously brave and able when called on. He told great stories, possibly because he was one himself.
It's crazy how there was a time when comic books were still seen as a nerdy hoppy it's a shame Jack never lived to see his creations brought to life on the big screen hail to the king baby
You may not believe me, but when I was a boy in Southern California my sister was friends with Mr. Kirby's grand-daughter. I was at his house numerous times, swimming in his pool and spending the day there. I wish I still had the comics and posters he gave me. I can tell you, honestly, he was a sweet, kind, wonderful man. Visits to Mr. Kirby's, or as my mother called him "Mr. Creator" are likely the fondest of my childhood.
That's spectacular to have those experiences and memories. In all the media I've seen of him, he seems a genteel and decent as he appears in this interview. I would say he seems closest to the Thing to me in personability and relatablity. Thanks for your leaving your comment, friend! 🖖🙂
I hate to break your heart, but Jack Kirby got millions of dollars before he died from Marvel for his creations. I believe it was in the sum of 11 to 18 million. He did not pass away without money and to me...it should have come faster. But he got his due before he passed. So, dont worry. He got his money and it wasn't enough.
@@cyberpunkholiday Stan Lee got tens of millions each year. Jack Kirby got 11 to 18 million on his deathbed. Steve Ditko died on assisted living, with no compensation for his creations, no royalties. It's not right.
I still remember watching this segment when it first aired. It was the first time I had ever heard Kirby speak, and it inspired me. I think I had read a Comics Scene interview with him shortly before that, too, so this segment was a big deal to me! I still have a sketch I did that day copying Kirby's drawing of the lady thrown from a helicopter only to be rescued.
He did contribute to the dialogue and still gave credit to most of his collaborators, he did plenty of work himself which is more than what Bob Kane did.
Alex Acerra Jack did the art and some dialogue and Stan did the scripting at marvel, both of them were prolific in their fields. Jack did plenty of writing on his own too. There are plenty of conflicting reports on who did what, but even if you look at Jack purely from artistic point of view he's still one of the biggest artists in the medium. Stan us pretty prolific to being the creator and scripter of countless superheroes. So can't both be great?
Been reading Fourth World for this last months. His run on Jimmy Olsen and Forever People are so great. The love he felt for the medium jumps out of every page.
Jack Kirby not only drew those comics but also wrote the stories too. In fact he left dialog suggestions on the margins of the artwork for Stan Lee so he could understand the story and do his job...I mean EDITING ! The "Marvel Method" the way Marvel worked those days confirms what I said. Stan Lee was an editor not a writer of those comics.
Love Jack Kirby not just for his art but he's a really cool guy that I wish I could've had the chance to meet. Also can we acknowledge the video ending on that sick burn?
Wow! Thanks for posting. I remember seeing this way back when it aired. It was the first time I saw an interview on tv with Kirby... the greatest comic book artist ever!
I think he gave a decent interview. I've read that, when compared to Stan, Jack gave "bad" interviews...but I don't see that here. He seems well spoken and very charming. Long live the king...
That man was prolific and his legacy is mind boggling. Love u Stan Lee, rip, but the KING really is the creator of all these characters... it’s always the artist image in his mind that becomes what is cherished...
Man I wish I got to meet Jack. Just to pick his mind about anything: life, art, comic history, storytelling. His pages alone are an encyclopedia on how to make comics.
We may never see another creative force with such output ever again. Jack Kirby was truly a one of a kind. Thor, Iron Man, Captain America, The Black Panther, The Eternals, I mean this guy's vision molded the way we think of super heroes today. Jack Kirby didn't have a blue print, he wrote the blue print.
hipstermi mick Jones and strummer were HUGE Kirby fans !!!!!!!! Mick Jones especially loved comic's and his mum sent him books regularly from the USA !!!!!! Ummmm so they wasn't so bored of the USA !!!!!!! Lol
Stan didn't fuse genres. He was actually leaving comic books when his publisher Martin Goodman petitioned him to copy the Justice League. Since he was going to quit comics, because of the lack of freedom the CCA imposed, he did the book his way in a show of defiance. That copy was the Fantastic Four and the rest is history. The reason Superheroes remained on top was because the code didn't truly evaporate until the early 2000's. People didn't choose superheroes they were the only genre left.
Stan Lee mentions him in his Documentary "With Great Power" a must see. Watch it till the very end. It has a Marvel-esque finish. He was sad to loose him. R.I.P. Jack & Stan🙏
this clip should made a cameo in the eternals cuz he created them. Like imagine if one of the eternals member were watching a tv during the 80s and this came up.
I've been an artist for many years, never been a big comic book fan, i don't dislike them, but I'm just not into them, but i will say, there are some great comic book artists out there and my area of interest is almost always the originals, the guys who started something, be it the Dada guys, the Surrealists, Impressionists and so on. I've only just found out about this guy and he seemed to have a real presence about him. The figure work is what impresses me the most and comic art always has amazing figures, muscles everywhere and great postures.
This is an excellent artifact of popular culture and I’m so glad you’ve uploaded it. At the same it’s all so exquisitely painful. [chuckle] And square, too-it’s 1982 and ET is surprised by the existence of the Clash?
Stan Lee may have been the brains behind the comic book heroes but Jack Kirby was the guy who drew it down to the last ink. Out of all the other comic book drawers, Jack Kirby is the greatest comic book ink artist of all time.
Not true. Justice League, Superman, and Batman were prosperous titles in the early 60's pre Marvel. I'm not saying superheroes were literally the only genre left. I'm implying that the castration of content reduced the complexity that afforded the other genres to balloon the way they had in the first place. If you look at War comics pre code and post code you see a dramatic difference in the stories and their intended demographic. Post code told more simplistic stories because of limitations.
I wonder how new generations and Marvel fanboys would react if you put this interview at the beginning of Avengers Endgame. I would love to see their confused faces 😂 Long live the King !
Gatekeeping isn't a good look, gramps. I love history, and I love shit like this, and it all ties into one big love for Marvel but to you and I it means different things, we have different memories of these things. I wasn't alive when this interview came out, saw the first Raimi Spider-Man in the theater when it came out as a kid, read marvel.com entries, watched videos like these, watched the MCU, and all that was my gateway into reading the comics. Now I have long boxes full of them and love the stories and the art, and the history. So yeah, you and I love Marvel just the same and I guarantee if they did put this before Endgame, a lot of people would research it later and you'd probably see a resurgence in artists and interest in comics among my generation, and a lot of us already read comics and know this stuff.
It occurred to me today that despite Stan Lee having a very distinctive voice, I had never heard what Jack Kirby sounded like. Not surprised to hear he sounds like what you'd imagine Ben Grimm wold sound like. Articulate and well spoken but with that casual working man New York Jewish tilt. Hope that isn't lost with whoever is cast as Grimm when the Fantastic Four hit the MCU
"How many character have you created?"
"Oh, all of them."
He's a legend, he deserved more recognition and respect.
Jack Kirby sounds like Ben Grimm/The Thing.
I've always thought that too! I felt Ben Grimm was Jack Kirby in so many ways.
That's actually completely intentional. In Kirby's biography by Mark Evanier - Kirby: King of Comics - Jack's quoted about The Thing: "If you'll notice the way The Thing talks and acts, you'll find that The Thing is really Jack Kirby. He has my manners, he has my manner of speech, and he thinks the way I do. He's excitable, and you'll find that he's very, very active among people, and he can muscle his way through a crowd. I find I'm that sort of person."
I imagined a very similar accent. If I were to ever draw Ben Grimm in human form I'd draw a bulky Jack Kirby, like the pics you see when he was fighting in the war.
IT'S COLLABORATIN' TIME!
Great New York voice; someone who was an auto didact and conspicuously brave and able when called on. He told great stories, possibly because he was one himself.
the leonardo da Vinci of modern media
We miss you Jack.
I wish I see him when he still alive.
That Jack's a charmer. No surprise he was able to get an amazing woman like his wife, Roz.
We owe him so much. Even years after his passing, I am still learning from him. Rest in glory.
After years of reading comics this is the first time I've ever heard Jack Kirby's voice.
It's crazy how there was a time when comic books were still seen as a nerdy hoppy it's a shame Jack never lived to see his creations brought to life on the big screen hail to the king baby
Unsure how he'd have felt seeing Stan Lee all over them.
It's still nerdy. There are just a lot of nerds.
You may not believe me, but when I was a boy in Southern California my sister was friends with Mr. Kirby's grand-daughter. I was at his house numerous times, swimming in his pool and spending the day there. I wish I still had the comics and posters he gave me. I can tell you, honestly, he was a sweet, kind, wonderful man. Visits to Mr. Kirby's, or as my mother called him "Mr. Creator" are likely the fondest of my childhood.
That's spectacular to have those experiences and memories. In all the media I've seen of him, he seems a genteel and decent as he appears in this interview.
I would say he seems closest to the Thing to me in personability and relatablity.
Thanks for your leaving your comment, friend! 🖖🙂
RIP Jack such a creative genius
Jack King Kirby...LONG LIVE THE KING
It's a shame he never got rich off of his creations.
John Stern His friends and family say he couldn't step inside a toy store, because he didn't want to see his art on packages without compensation.
I hate to break your heart, but Jack Kirby got millions of dollars before he died from Marvel for his creations. I believe it was in the sum of 11 to 18 million. He did not pass away without money and to me...it should have come faster. But he got his due before he passed. So, dont worry. He got his money and it wasn't enough.
He had money. He just was a private man who didn’t flash his wealth. Unlike today’s society where that’s common.
@@cyberpunkholiday Stan Lee got tens of millions each year. Jack Kirby got 11 to 18 million on his deathbed. Steve Ditko died on assisted living, with no compensation for his creations, no royalties. It's not right.
He did. But not super rich
Hail to the King.
Lee,Ditko and Kirby. The Holy Trinity of the comic world
I agree with you, but they're not equals.
Jack Kirby > Steve Ditko
Steve Ditko > Stan Lee.
You're welcome ;)
Lee is a thief
@@badfoody and a scumbag too 😉
@@Gamer-lq4wl
Alan Moore > Stan Lee
@Griffin Chalem stan wasn't an artist
Thanks for posting this. "We can be better!" Kirby
Jack Kirby - It Is Good to Be The King
His Art is Immortal!
Even now it looks amazing, uncanny, incredible, mighty, fantastic and just marvelous.
I still remember watching this segment when it first aired. It was the first time I had ever heard Kirby speak, and it inspired me. I think I had read a Comics Scene interview with him shortly before that, too, so this segment was a big deal to me! I still have a sketch I did that day copying Kirby's drawing of the lady thrown from a helicopter only to be rescued.
Jack Kirby, gotta love that man.
Marvel comics wasn't just Stan Lee ! Both Stan and Jack made Marvel what it is today ,great art with a great story
It was mostly Kirby. Kirby came up the with stories too. (And Steve Ditko was a big part of the success of Marvel too)
He did contribute to the dialogue and still gave credit to most of his collaborators, he did plenty of work himself which is more than what Bob Kane did.
Alex Acerra Jack did the art and some dialogue and Stan did the scripting at marvel, both of them were prolific in their fields. Jack did plenty of writing on his own too. There are plenty of conflicting reports on who did what, but even if you look at Jack purely from artistic point of view he's still one of the biggest artists in the medium. Stan us pretty prolific to being the creator and scripter of countless superheroes. So can't both be great?
Stan lee is a thief, passed decades of his death, and never mentions the kirby legacy, neither in his comics nor when he sold disney
studlygrish exactly
He created Darkseid, Kalibak, Desaad, Orion, etc.
Been reading Fourth World for this last months. His run on Jimmy Olsen and Forever People are so great. The love he felt for the medium jumps out of every page.
One of my BIGGEST influences...long live the KING!!!
"If you look at my characters you'll find me"
I just noticed that all the characters seem to have his face.
"Oh Jack, you're endowing me nicely heh heh *snort*"
"It's my normal masculine instinct. "
Awesome :3
Artists never had trouble impressing women. lol
I'm impressed with his nailing her hairstyle on apparently the first try!
Thank you Mr. Kirby for helping create the characters for the MCU RIP
My son will be 2 years this month, and in a year, when he's 3, I can assure you, he WILL read comics, just like his 40 years old dad :)
8 years later does he read comics?.
@@upon136, he does indeed! He’ll be 11 next month and his knowledge of Marvel characters rivals mine. Thanks for asking :)
I was just about to ask if your plan came into fruition but I see that you’ve been asked already. Good stuff.
Rest In Peace:
Feb 6 1994: Jack Kirby
Nov 12 2018: Stan Lee
Goodbye, mr. excelsior.
The World always be remember you.
Don't forget Jack Kirby's nick name The King
so we have Mr Excelsior and The King
OMG he does sound like Pacino! I’ve never noticed that before!
Jack Kirby and Stan Lee both legends in their right. One being an artist and creator while the other being a writer and creator.
Jack Kirby not only drew those comics but also wrote the stories too. In fact he left dialog suggestions on the margins of the artwork for Stan Lee so he could understand the story and do his job...I mean EDITING !
The "Marvel Method" the way Marvel worked those days confirms what I said.
Stan Lee was an editor not a writer of those comics.
O verdadeiro mestre dos quadrinhos de herói. Jack kirb. Não é o Stan Lee como sempre disseram.🇧🇷
I wish he was still alive, he was the best.
The create of Big Barda and Mister Miracle!!!
If it wasn’t for him my childhood would have sucked. The art was always the best part of comic books.
The man's a legend. Continued drawing and doodling for most of his entire life.
we could do better
we wanna do better
we have totally to do better
pretty sure he said "we haven't time to do better"
@@eatshrots we have *the time to do better
imagine the value of that sketch?
What a beautiful human being.
The King!
there would no marvel without the king
I miss you Jack, You and your world taught me how to read. God bless you and your family
a true legend its a amazing to hear him wow 😂😍😇
A piece of history Thanks!
Such an amazing, natural artist
Hey look its Detective Turpin!!!
joeofmacabre07
You may already know this, but Dan Turpin was drawn to resemble Jack Kirby.
DeRosset Myers terrible Turpin !!!!!!yes !!!!!!!!
the one and only true master of comics
RIP Jack Kirby. I love Jack Kirby's work. But those host didn't give a shit about meeting him. Don't trust the media. Kirby was a great man.
this is amazing!
Thank you jack, you are one of my favorite kinds of people.
Video of the Master at his drawing table! Priceless!! *****
Definitely one the coolest guys EVER
Love Jack Kirby not just for his art but he's a really cool guy that I wish I could've had the chance to meet.
Also can we acknowledge the video ending on that sick burn?
Wow! Thanks for posting. I remember seeing this way back when it aired. It was the first time I saw an interview on tv with Kirby... the greatest comic book artist ever!
The King.
The King
I remember watching this when it originally aired. Brings back memories!
Imortal rei dos quadrinhos, obrigado Jack Kirby, por nos fazer sonhar , tive uma infância feliz e hoje coleciono tudo que trás seu nome.
I love how he sounds exactly like what you'd imagine Ben Grimm sounds like.
I think he gave a decent interview. I've read that, when compared to Stan, Jack gave "bad" interviews...but I don't see that here. He seems well spoken and very charming. Long live the king...
That man was prolific and his legacy is mind boggling. Love u Stan Lee, rip, but the KING really is the creator of all these characters... it’s always the artist image in his mind that becomes what is cherished...
Wow,an amazing man,I had the good forture of meeting the ''king'' just before his pasting'',long live the king''
Kirby is the reason why we have the type of comic book illustrations we have now, among many many other things.
Man I wish I got to meet Jack. Just to pick his mind about anything: life, art, comic history, storytelling. His pages alone are an encyclopedia on how to make comics.
>THANK YOU for POSTING THIS....my FAVORITE BAND and my FAVORITE ARTIST mentioned TOGETHER is almost UNIMAGINABLE...
Cheers!
A throw away segment about the co-creator of the biggest entertainment franchise ever. If only they knew who they were really talking to.
Back when Entertainment Tonight was good.
This is my first time hearing JK in an interview. An awesome mind.
“We are not rich by what we possess but by what we can do without”
We may never see another creative force with such output ever again. Jack Kirby was truly a one of a kind.
Thor, Iron Man, Captain America, The Black Panther, The Eternals, I mean this guy's vision molded the way we think of super heroes today. Jack Kirby didn't have a blue print, he wrote the blue print.
Without Him, stan lee would remembered as the guy who did SNAFU lol
those sound effects are disrespectful as hell. Treating a friggin KING like that.
That is an insane laugh
The best ever
A comic book legend! 'Nuff said!
Jack Kirby and the Clash on the same show?? AWESOME!
hipstermi mick Jones and strummer were HUGE Kirby fans !!!!!!!! Mick Jones especially loved comic's and his mum sent him books regularly from the USA !!!!!! Ummmm so they wasn't so bored of the USA !!!!!!! Lol
That drawing at the end probably paid for Catherine’s posh retirement.
Stan didn't fuse genres. He was actually leaving comic books when his publisher Martin Goodman petitioned him to copy the Justice League. Since he was going to quit comics, because of the lack of freedom the CCA imposed, he did the book his way in a show of defiance. That copy was the Fantastic Four and the rest is history. The reason Superheroes remained on top was because the code didn't truly evaporate until the early 2000's. People didn't choose superheroes they were the only genre left.
Fantastic Four was Kirby's Idea, it was Super Powered Challengers of the Unknown
@@AliFareedMC Absolutely. Kirby is the majority creator of the FF.
Stan Lee mentions him in his Documentary "With Great Power" a must see.
Watch it till the very end.
It has a Marvel-esque finish. He was sad to loose him. R.I.P. Jack & Stan🙏
that documentary full of lies
R.I.P Jack Kirby, We'll See You in Comic Book Con Heaven with Stan Lee in Heaven, You Old Friend. :'-(
he is awesome
Hes a man who enjoys his own world.
When the Clash were new on the scene. Charming little interview.
this clip should made a cameo in the eternals cuz he created them. Like imagine if one of the eternals member were watching a tv during the 80s and this came up.
I've been an artist for many years, never been a big comic book fan, i don't dislike them, but I'm just not into them, but i will say, there are some great comic book artists out there and my area of interest is almost always the originals, the guys who started something, be it the Dada guys, the Surrealists, Impressionists and so on. I've only just found out about this guy and he seemed to have a real presence about him. The figure work is what impresses me the most and comic art always has amazing figures, muscles everywhere and great postures.
He Deserves way more credit for creating marvel superheroes than Stan Lee. Stan lee was mainly an editor while Jack Kirby was a writer and artist.
This is an excellent artifact of popular culture and I’m so glad you’ve uploaded it. At the same it’s all so exquisitely painful. [chuckle] And square, too-it’s 1982 and ET is surprised by the existence of the Clash?
Genius.
Stan Lee may have been the brains behind the comic book heroes but Jack Kirby was the guy who drew it down to the last ink. Out of all the other comic book drawers, Jack Kirby is the greatest comic book ink artist of all time.
Stan lee wasn't the brain he was the editor
RIP Sweet prince...
Not true. Justice League, Superman, and Batman were prosperous titles in the early 60's pre Marvel. I'm not saying superheroes were literally the only genre left. I'm implying that the castration of content reduced the complexity that afforded the other genres to balloon the way they had in the first place. If you look at War comics pre code and post code you see a dramatic difference in the stories and their intended demographic. Post code told more simplistic stories because of limitations.
I wonder how new generations and Marvel fanboys would react if you put this interview at the beginning of Avengers Endgame.
I would love to see their confused faces 😂
Long live the King !
Darth Sidious they would sadly be like, „who’s this guy?“
Well you're wrong because i know who both jack Kirby and stan lee is soooo...yeah
Gatekeeping isn't a good look, gramps. I love history, and I love shit like this, and it all ties into one big love for Marvel but to you and I it means different things, we have different memories of these things.
I wasn't alive when this interview came out, saw the first Raimi Spider-Man in the theater when it came out as a kid, read marvel.com entries, watched videos like these, watched the MCU, and all that was my gateway into reading the comics. Now I have long boxes full of them and love the stories and the art, and the history.
So yeah, you and I love Marvel just the same and I guarantee if they did put this before Endgame, a lot of people would research it later and you'd probably see a resurgence in artists and interest in comics among my generation, and a lot of us already read comics and know this stuff.
@@ILoveRavenclaw9 gatekeeping is a great thing. you cant just let any tool or Joe Schmo write and draw. thats how you get trash.
master !!
You can see the hulk in his eyes. The real jade giant. Legendary Jack Kirby.
THE MASTER, THE KING
He was a legend too 😓😖💔 #RipStanLee
Ah yes, the people who nibble at the edges of the entertainment world...the clash and jack kirby 😂
@Dyler you have to realize this was from the 80's and about comics from the late 70's.
back then, that's what comics were, a juvenille medium.
It occurred to me today that despite Stan Lee having a very distinctive voice, I had never heard what Jack Kirby sounded like.
Not surprised to hear he sounds like what you'd imagine Ben Grimm wold sound like. Articulate and well spoken but with that casual working man New York Jewish tilt.
Hope that isn't lost with whoever is cast as Grimm when the Fantastic Four hit the MCU
Happy 104th Kirby!
DOMINUS!!!