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Watch Out Marvel & DC: 'The Walking Dead' Company Has A Plan To Steal Your Thunder
the walking dead rick daryl
the walking dead rick daryl

Frank Ockenfels 3/AMC Things get real on "The Walking Dead." When "The Walking Dead" television series premiered on AMC on Halloween 2010, the zombie apocalypse series began its transition from Robert Kirkman's then-seven-year-old comic book title into a worldwide phenomenon.

The most recent season of the TV series averaged 18.4 million viewers per episode (including DVR views and re-runs in the week following each premiere) and is the most-watched drama series in basic cable history, according to AMC. Issue 115 of the comic sold over 350,000 issues, according to its publisher Image Comics, making it the top-selling comic book of 2013, and episodes of the franchise's video-game series by Telltale Games have been downloaded 36 million times.

Kirkman has had total control over the direction of the franchise as it has grown through different mediums, which also includes novels and a slew of merchandise. He's now looking to use the success of his biggest series to develop his company, Skybound Entertainment, into an industry heavyweight that lets creators retain the copyrights to their intellectual properties, an approach that has long been in the independent comic scene that has previously not been applied to a multimedia entertainment business.

Kirkman founded Skybound in 2010 with his former manager and "Walking Dead" TV show executive producer David Alpert as an imprint of Image Comics that gave both ownership and an unusual amount of creative control to series' creators. Kirkman and Alpert are now poised to turn Skybound into a full-blown media company with comics, TV shows, and movies all produced with a unique ethos.

robert kirkman scott gimple david alpert
robert kirkman scott gimple david alpert

Frazer Harrison/Getty Skybound cofounders Robert Kirkman, left, and David Alpert, right, with AMC's "The Walking Dead" showrunner Scott Gimple. "We have a pretty lofty idea of what we can be," Alpert tells Business Insider. "Really what we think Skybound can be is the next-generation media company."

The way Alpert sees it, there are two ways of running a business using intellectual property. In the traditional way, a business pays creators for their series and has the final say regarding the direction of the series through multiple platforms. In the new way, creators use the internet to fully self-publish and distribute their work. Alpert and Kirkman want to find the sweet spot in between these, where Skybound can provide creators with the resources to launch titles that they still have full control over.

"When you look at the bigger companies, they're licensing houses," Kirkman says, referring to the way that a comic series' creator is often barely involved with Hollywood film or television adaptations. "But to a certain extent, the people that originate a thing are the people that know it the best, and so with Skybound, if we take one of our comics and adapt it into a video game or a movie or a television show, the person that originated that will be involved in that. And I think that that will make that product that much better."