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Kenneth W. Penders, II[1] is an American comic book creator and writer. In addition to his comic work, Penders has worked in television on storyboards, backgrounds and character design, and worked on screenplays for his own unpublished films.[2] He is noted for his work on the Archie Comics series Sonic the Hedgehog and its spin-offs, which he worked on for over fifteen years, along with his subsequent lawsuits involving the works.
Prior to working in the comics business, Penders's earliest jobs as a commercial artist included silk screening T-shirts at age 16, serving as a technical illustrator in the US Air Force, and working as a graphics illustrator at an unspecified Boston engineering firm.[3] According to Penders, he first got work in the comic book industry working on DC Comics' Who's Who In Star Trek miniseries in 1986,[4] later working on their run of Star Trek: The Next Generation comics in the early 90s. He was hired to work on the latter at the request of regular Star Trek author Robert Greenberger.[5] Penders also accepted a contract illustrating for DC's Captain Atom series, after being selected as a finalist in a comic book drawing contest sponsored by Marvel Comics in 1989 and agreeing to visit weekly seminars.[3]
Penders was hired to work on the comic series Sonic the Hedgehog, published by Archie Comics, early into the comic's run in 1993.[6] He served as lead writer for much of the series' early life until he switched focus to working on side-series Knuckles the Echidna, which ran from 1997 until being cancelled due to poor sales in 1999. Penders would still produce stories and artwork for the main title during and after Knuckles's initial run, eventually resuming his role as lead writer of the comic issue #145 onwards after then-lead writer Karl Bollers left the comic in 2005.[4][7][8] Penders continued to work on the comic as lead writer until he left Archie in 2006,[9][6] with his final contribution being inks and lettering for the back story in issue #169.[10] Outside of the comic, Penders illustrated the cover of the complete series DVD set of Sonic the Hedgehog.[11][12]
In addition to his works for Sonic and Star Trek, Penders wrote and illustrated comics for DC, Marvel, Image and Disney for series such as Disney Adventures, Savage Sword of Conan, and The Green Hornet. Penders created his own original comic IP for Image in the early 2000s, The Lost Ones, releasing a single issue before it was cancelled.[13] He has also worked in other media, including producing children's activity books and creating graphics for CD-ROM games.[14] Penders also has credits for storyboards on two episodes of King of the Hill, and created concept art for advertisements for the Motorola Razr.[9][6][15]
In 2002, Sonic the Hedgehog writer Ben Hurst attempted to pitch an animated film continuation of the series, proposing his idea to a Sega executive.[16] Hurst stated the executive was interested in the project, and that he was later called about the film by Penders, at the time lead writer of the Archie Comic Sonic the Hedgehog series; the comic originated as an off-shoot of the animated series. Hurst said of the call that he "generously offered to include [Penders] in the effort and told [Penders his] strategy."[16] However, he stated that after calling Sega back, his contact's demeanor had completely changed, angrily stating that Sega is paid to develop Sonic projects, rather than paying others to do so. Hurst theorized that, "Penders had related my strategy to them in a less-than-flattering way... Then [Penders] dropped hints that he would be the writer for a big Sonic Feature Film."[16] Penders would later pitch Sega his own concept for a movie in 2003 based on the Archie comic, under the name Sonic Armageddon.[17] Not much is known about the pitch, except that the film would have followed Sonic and friends after their home planet of Mobius explodes, something shown in pitch art and stated by Penders himself.[18][19] According to Penders, he had the support of both X-Men director Larry Hudson and Sega of America licensing manager Robert Leffer behind him, and cites the opportunity to make the film as to why he left his position as lead writer of the Sonic comic at Archie.[9] He created four pieces of concept art and a homemade pitch video, but the project never materialised due to the death of Leffer and what Penders described as "massive corporate upheaval" at Sega sometime in 2007.[9][19][20]
In July 2010, after the US Copyright Office had certified his claims over his work for the Sonic the Hedgehog Archie series, Penders announced his intentions to continue the story of Lara-Su, one of his original characters created for Sonic and the in-universe daughter of Knuckles the Echidna, along with the other echidna characters he had created for the Archie comic.[21][22] In December 2011, Penders announced the continuation would be in the form of a graphic novel series, entitled The Lara-Su Chronicles.[9][6][23] The series also is set to feature many other characters created during his time at Archie, with it serving as a continuation of a story he had written for the Sonic comic, "Mobius: 25 Years Later".[4][24] Penders stated that the series shares the same starting point with his Sonic Armageddon pitch, beginning with the planet Mobius exploding.[18] On March 5, 2014, Penders announced on his Twitter account that his characters were no longer echidna but Echyd'nya,[a] an alien species.[6][26] Penders stated reasons for the change were that he needed to make some adjustments to broaden the audience, that he wanted to give longtime fans answers and resolution, and because of the apparent difficulty he has seen with people pronouncing the word echidna.[27]
In January 2009, three years after leaving Archie Comics, Penders began filing for copyright of every story, character, and artwork that he had created for Archie's Sonic the Hedgehog comic series and its spin-offs, with the claims certified as of April 2010 by the US Copyright Office.[6][21][22] Penders planned on continuing his "Mobius: 25 Years Later" story independently of the publisher, and declared that everything using his copyrighted works since issue #160 of the main Sonic comic[b] was "essentially unauthorised". He had been prompted to do so after fans of his had contacted him asking if he had anything to do with the release of Sonic Chronicles: The Dark Brotherhood, which he did not; Penders alleged the game used concepts and characters similar to those he had written for the comic series.[20][21]
In 2013, the lawsuit ended with prejudice, with Penders gaining the rights to an estimated over 200 characters from the comic in a confidential settlement with Archie Comics.[33][6][34] He would later turn the "Mobius: 25 Years Later" continuation project into The Lara-Su Chronicles.[24] Archie would initially write his characters out of future comics, rewriting issues mid-lawsuit to remove any references to them and not republishing stories involving them, before rebooting the canon entirely to retcon out not only his but any other former writers' original characters and concepts fully.[6][35] When asked about this reboot in an interview, Penders stated that the retcon wasn't necessary, and that Archie could have continued using his copyrighted characters and concepts to some degree.[20] Pender's success in his lawsuit would inspire fellow Archie Sonic alumni, Scott Fulop, to file his own copyright infringement lawsuits against Archie and Sega in 2016;[36][37] Fulop's lawsuits were dismissed a year later due to insufficient evidence.[38]
In October 2015, Penders made a post to his Twitter some interpreted to be directed at Archie Comics, about comic publishers not "believ[ing] in living up to their side of the bargain", and to not "blame [him] for what happens next"; the tweet was believed to be in response to planned reprints by Archie.[42] However, no lawsuits against Archie have been filed by Penders since.
Penders and his work for the Archie Sonic comics are considered controversial within the wider Sonic the Hedgehog fandom.[6][43][45][46][47] While his work garnered praise during the series' run, his lawsuits against Sega and Archie are regarded as souring his standing with fans, serving as the subject of regular criticism from fandom.[6][43][47][48] Fans blame the lawsuits for both the eventual cancellation of the Archie Sonic comics and a collection of rumoured mandates limiting all post-lawsuit Sonic comics, although the existence of these mandates has been refuted by former lead Archie and IDW Sonic writer Ian Flynn.[c][6][46][48] The outcome of the Archie lawsuit meant that hundreds of characters created by former Archie contractors were removed from the Sonic canon, something that Penders recognizes upset fans, but has stated was a decision made by Archie rather than himself.[9][20][47] Content created for Sonic Chronicles has also not appeared in Sonic media since Penders's lawsuits against Sega and EA, likely due to any new material allowing Penders to file a new lawsuit within the Statute of Limitations.[6] 2b1af7f3a8