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HomeCurrent NewsMarvel Comics Writer’s Two-Word Tweet Ignites Firestorm After Assassination Attempt

Marvel Comics Writer’s Two-Word Tweet Ignites Firestorm After Assassination Attempt

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Marvel and DC comic writer Deniz Camp seemingly posted his disappointment about President Trump’s assassin failing at his mission, then backtracked and faced even more criticism for playing dumb.

It all started when Camp posted on X, “Missed again :(” just after news broke over the weekend that there had been an assassination attempt at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner in Washington, D.C., Saturday night.

His comments were immediately flooded with outraged followers, even fellow leftists who were disgusted by the seeming celebration of violence.

“Pretty sickening to see a writer I once admired wishing death on the President of the United States,” one reply said.

“Bravo on the all-time self-own. Heroism and hope in your comics, pure glee at political murder in your tweets. Mask fully torched. Exactly why comics suck now and nobody cares what you ‘creatives’ think anymore. Enjoy the backlash and canceled orders,” another commenter wrote.

Instead of deleting the post or apologizing, Camp made the claim that he was talking about something else entirely.

Follow up tweets included one that said, “I am so bad at darts!” alongside a stock image of a dartboard with darts not hitting their mark, and another that said, “People are really passionate about darts.”

No one in the comments believed that Camp was posting about darts. Many X users tagged DC and Marvel in the posts.

Camp is a comic book writer who has worked across Marvel, DC, and independent publishers. He wrote for “The Ultimates” for Disney-owned Marvel and contributed to X-Men-related projects. He’s also the writer of “Absolute Martian Manhunter” for DC’s “Absolute Universe” line. His independent work includes “Assorted Crisis Events” and “20th Century Men,” per Geeks and Gamers.

Meanwhile, actor and Trump critic Ben Stiller faced similar backlash for a social post that got misinterpreted and does seem to be a mistake, according to Community Notes.

Prominent figures including Congresswoman Nancy Mace and Richard Grenell came after Stiller when he posted “Got it done” about 20 minutes after the would-be assassin breached security at the Washington Hilton. But his post also coincided with the end of the Knicks game.

“Ben Stiller’s post refers to the New York Knicks’ 114-98 playoff win over the Atlanta Hawks, as shown by his preceding Knicks post and the game recap,” the note clarified.





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