In the past, we've told you how writer Scott Edelman, when signing a new contract with Marvel after writing a forward for one of their books, was asked to promise never to say anything derogatory about Marvel on social media. Edelman's statements were on Brian Keene's Horror Show podcast, and here's what he had to say at the time, back in June of 2015 (Keene's comments in bold):

I just had an issue with Marvel in that I was asked to write an essay to go with the Marvel Masterworks for Captain Marvel. They just got up to volume #5. And they said, "Would you like write about it?" because of the twelve issues, I think I'd written eight of them or something like that. So I said fine. I started writing the essay, because I remember buying the issue of Marvel Super Heroes that had the original Gene Colan and Arnold Drake, if I'm remembering correctly*, Captain Marvel in it with the old costume. The green and white costume. And so I started writing the essay and the contract shows up, which is, I don't know, eight, ten, twelve pages, and it included such clauses as… The clause that really leapt out of me is I would not say anything derogatory about Marvel or its employees or anything like that.

In the introduction.

No, no. Ever. Because this was not a contract dealing with this one thing. This was a contract dealing with the entire relationship and talking about who owned characters, talking about how I couldn't put any of my original comic book artwork on exhibition without the permission of Marvel Comics.

Whoa!

I contacted people like Roy and a bunch of other people and said "Did you guys sign this kind of thing?" And they all said no. But this was all pre-Disney that they signed it. I asked Neil Gaiman, and he said no, of course, but he's Neil Gaiman. They don't ask him to sign that. And I have to admit, when I had a conversation with them, they did remove the clause, because I said, "If I tweet that I hated an episode of Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., that's saying something derogatory about Marvel Comics. So I wouldn't want to be in breach of contract by having an opinion about a movie.

That's insane.

But I ended up never signing it. They were willing to take that out, and I did get a phone call saying "we don't want old creators to be angry at us" and that kind of thing. I don't want to nitpick it, but I have original artwork from the seventies and I don't want to be asking permission, and I finally said, look, what I would like is just a contract that says "I'm selling you a 2000 word essay, you're paying me X hundred dollars, it's about this one thing. It's not a whole relationship. We're not doing a relationship. We're just selling the one thing. Can there be a contract like that. And they really don't do things like that. It would be one thing if I was trying to write five monthly books or something, and even then I would have to think about it.

Would you ever go back to comics?

Well I don't think I can. Not with the way the rights situation is.

We'll I'm blacklisted from DC.

There's always that tug of doing stuff like that. Sure, it would be fun to do things like that again. Certain characters that you would enjoy playing with. But the idea of selling everything away for all eternity is one thing. It would be different if I was writing a comic book. I can understand you wanting to protect Spider-Man. I'm not gonna say I own Spider-Man. But to say a 2000 word essay about how I wrote Captain Marvel, can't we just make it a handshake thing?