Posts Tagged ‘Dan Parent’

Kevin Keller The Jock

Wednesday, August 17th, 2011

Last week part two of the Kevin Keller mini series was released, making it the fourth Archie comic I’ve ever bought and read in my life. Dan Parent succeeded in keeping the tone of the issue consistently good with the debut chapter and in fleshing out Kevin’s character in particular as well as the Keller family. Rather than comment on the entire issue I’d like to focus on one scene. Kevin has already come out of the closet at home and school and in this sequence a trio from the track team are verbally harrassing Kevin for trying out. Having a positive self-image, Kevin confronts the boys and challenges them to a race. Not long after the three boys collapse on the ground trying to catch their breath. Kevin gives them a dose of their own medicine when he says “If I’m such a girly man and you can’t keep up with me — wat does that make you?”

This flashback resonated for me because PE class in junior high and high school was torture for me. Back then I was gangly, socially inept (a nerd’s nerd), dressed in K-Mart blue light specials (at least they weren’t hand me downs since I was the oldest), and ridiculed for being gay years before I came out. I might as well have had a bull’s eye painted on me when it came to gym class and team sports. The only exception was track though unlike our fictional Kevin though, I refused to participate on the track team. Coach Seaman (I am not making the name up) and later Coach K (whose his Polish name was usually mangled) had little empathy for kids who weren’t players on a team, especially football. The worst though were those days when the coach shouted the words “dodge ball” at the beginning of the period! Those two words struck horror in me as I and every other unpopular kid knew we’d just become targets for all the jocks eager to hurl fast balls at us with ugly delight while the coach took it easy and turned his eye. Good times! Right. The stress gym class caused reached such a point that I somehow convinced the family doctor to get me out of it for the rest of high school.

Several years after high school was a different story. Internally I’d come to terms with being gay though it still wasn’t smart to come out in my rural hometown back in the late 70s. I’d developed a crush on a slightly older guy that I worked with and one day he brought up the idea of taking karate classes together and was I interested? I jumped at the idea, hoping it’d lead to something more with him. It did, but it was only friendship and the occasional practicing nunchaku kata, punches or kicks. The lessons stopped for him when he got serious with a woman while the adrenaline thrill (it was to me) of breaking boards with bare feet, double jump front kicks and sparring with farm boys kept me going back for another couple years.

And then one night I was shocked when two guys from my high school class walk in, jock footballer Bob Cody and John, whose last name I’Ve forgotten and will always remember for this story and being the one bully I actually fought in 6th grade till a teacher pulled us apart. There they were, wanting to take lessons! The next few days I debated about staying or leaving the class but decided to stay partly because I had a green belt (which isn’t all that much but I was proud) and I wasn’t going to be run off. Dojo philosphy was to be helpful so I was glad that I wasn’t asked to help them as they struggled to make their stiff legs do kicks or perfect their form in general, and I secretly celebrated when they gave up a couple months later.

More props to Dan Parent and a lot of encouragement from me to you if you’re dreaming of doing something outside your comfort zone! Find a way to do it and do it! And if you’ve ever had a similar experience I’d love to hear about it!

Kevin Keller

Sunday, August 7th, 2011

Kevin Keller is Archie Comics’ first gay character if one puts aside sub-text, innuendo, reader wishes, and slash. Keller debuted in a story titled “Isn’t It Bromantic?”. Writer/ artist Dan Parent created Keller as a blond, blue-eyed teen next door and planted him into the Archie world by relocating his family to Riverdale. In this first appearance Kevin is presented as a serious contender for Jughead’s legendary bottomless stomach, besting him in a hamburger eating contest and later losing another contest by a single hot wing. Quickly bonding, Keller confides to Jughead the news that he’s gay. Jughead is completely unfazed though he recognizes an opportunity to make Veronica the butt of a joke when he sees one, and persuades Kevin to withhold telling Veronica, getting him to naively play along as long as possible. Parent succeeds in creating some cute scenes built around this without condescending or pandering before allowing Veronica to discover Jughead’s scheme, and ending the story in typical, amiable Riverdale fashion. Parent is not above letting readers romantically speculate about Kevin by having him text William and giving no clues to their relationship till Kevin’s third appearance. In a nod to comics readers, Parent has made Kevin a collector of old comics, as well as giving him another common interest with Jughead.

By the time of his next appearance, Keller and Veronica have become BFF’s. The new relationship is the vehicle for Parent to further integrate Keller and explore the meaning of friendship while fleshing Keller out a little more as a character. Here we’re told that Kevin is an aspiring journalist and his father is a retired Army colonel.Kevin’s background comes more fully to life with the character’s third appearance. Here we meet Wendy and William, the boy Kevin texted in the first story. Kevin’s invited his best friends from a former school to Riverdale for a Fourth of July celebration in which his father, Thomas, will be the parade’s guest of honor. The visit is an opportunity for Kevin to catch up with his old friends since their “Muska-dweeb” days in Bricktown. Parent shows Kevin to be a loyal friend, sticking with and standing up for Wendy and William and fighting a mean kid who plans to break Wendy’s heart by standing her up for a dance after pretending to be interested in her. Kevin’s further devotion is demonstrated when he reassures Wendy and William that he won’t dump them for a place with the popular kids after a growth spurt transforms from nerd status to hottie. The enduring friendship between William and Kevin underscores the reality that gay and straight males of any age can and do have non-romantic/ non-sexual relationships. Most importantly, Parent conveys the dual messages for unconditional parental acceptance of LGBT children and that patriotism is not limited to heterosexuals in a scene in which Thomas reassures Kevin of his love during a heartfelt father-son talk

Kevin has proven to be a hugely popular character for the publisher and his story will continue in the remainder of this mini series as well as a solo Keller title in 2012. This entry will occasionally be updated to reflect new and relevant details. Kevin’s first appearance is in and shown as gay in Veronica #202. Other appearances include Veronica #205 and the Kevin Keller mini series (under the Veronica title). Kevin Keller created by Dan Parent.

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