this post was submitted on 18 Jun 2025
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I've never heard of that. But, I've heard that writers say it's really hard to write good Superman stories because of his super hearing. This guy is portrayed as someone who is always fighting for what he believes in. With his super hearing, he is never unaware of the crimes going on around him. He hears every case of domestic violence, every mugging, every rape, every suicide attempt in a huge city of millions of people. But, sometimes he wants to be Clark Kent, so he has to just ignore all those horrors going on around him.
Kurt Busiek's Astro City's Samaritan is a good take on that.
He's basically Superman (except from the future, not another planet), down to working for a newspaper.
I don't recall if he's got superhearing, but he's got a pocket supercomputer that tells him where he's needed in the optimum order to maximise how much he can help.
He counts every fraction of a second he spends flying from place to place, because that's the only part of the job he really enjoys, the only time he can relax. Forty-five seconds is a great day.
And when he finally gets home, exhausted, to sleep for a few hours before starting the next day, he dreams of flying.
Does his supercomputer compute how much sleep and downtime he needs?
I don't recall, but probably.
I think he got a day off once to go on a date, with the whole equivalent of the Justice League covering for him, if I'm not misremembering.
I have to reread Astro City one of these days. It was a nice series. A homage to classic superhero books.
Sounds interesting. I like it when they find a quirk like that and explore what it would mean.