In this compelling episode of The Source Material Comics Podcast, Jesse Starcher and Mark Radulich dissect Grant Morrison’s Superman and the Authority (2021), a sharp and introspective mini-series that sees the Man of Steel not as the invincible Boy Scout, but as an aging legend struggling to stay relevant in a cynical world.
Set decades after a private meeting with President Kennedy, the comic introduces a Superman who's graying at the temples, physically weakened, and emotionally worn from watching the Justice League stagnate. Morrison’s Superman recognizes that inspiration alone won’t fix a fractured world—and so, he recruits a new, morally flexible team: The Authority. Co-led with the sardonic telepath Manchester Black, the squad includes steel-hearted technologist Natasha Irons, enforcers Apollo and Midnighter, and the haunted sorceress June Moon (Enchantress), among others.
Jesse and Mark explore the book’s big ideas: aging gracefully, compromise over idealism, and the necessity of adapting your mission when the world won’t bend to your values. From Brainiac’s manipulation to a Solomon Grundy possessed by Ultra-Humanite, the team battles both internal conflict and surreal external threats—all while Superman grapples with the knowledge that his powers are fading, but his responsibility is not. The conversation also touches on the book’s political and philosophical analogies—how Superman’s leadership style echoes real-world debates around executive power, governance gridlock, and the need for reform.
With their signature mix of wit and depth, the hosts shine a light on what makes this book not just another superhero team-up, but a story about legacy, loss, and the refusal to give up—even when the cape no longer fits like it used to.