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United States News Title: Marvel is replacing Steve Rogers with the new, black Captain America Marvel is making big changes this year. In a special announcement made on the Colbert Report this evening, the comics giant will this fall have Steve Rogers pass his star-spangled shield on to Sam Wilson, making Wilson (otherwise known as the Falcon) the first black Captain America. This shift comes only a day after Marvel revealed plans to give the role of yet another founding Avenger, Thor, to a woman this fall, and follows with Marvel's overall push for more diversity in its biggest titles. That Colbert got to announce the change is altogether fitting; Cap's shield has been on display on the show since early 2007, ever since Marvel "bequeathed" the shield to the host after Steve Rogers' assumed death in the aftermath of the Civil War event series. Wilson will take up the mantle as a result of more recent events in Captain America continuity, however. In Captain America #21, Rogers fights his greatest foe yet in the Iron Nail, only to have the villain drain him of the super soldier serum keeping him young and super-strong. As a result, Cap is not only depowered, but ages into an old man. ""Hes a modern day man in touch with the problems of the 21st Century."" Falcon, one of Cap's oldest allies, has been rumored for weeks as the most likely candidate to carry on Steve's legacy. After all, Wilson was there to save the former super soldier's life before the end of issue 21. Created in 1969, he was Marvel's first African American superhero. (The honor of first black Marvel superhero goes to Black Panther.) He's far from the first character to replace Rogers as the iconic American hero James "Bucky" Barnes, also known as the Winter Soldier, is just one hero to take up the mantle for a time but he's the first person of color to hold the moniker officially. In an interview with Marvel, series editor Tom Brevoort said, "While Sam shares many of Steves beliefs in a general sense, hes also a very different person with a very different background. He didnt grow up in the 1930s, hes a modern day man in touch with the problems of the 21st Century." However, Marvel has explored the idea of black super soldiers in the past. In the 2003 limited series Truth: Red, White, and Black, World War II scientists attempt to recreate the original super soldier serum and test their formula on enlisted black soldiers, mirroring the infamous Tuskegee syphilis experiment. Only Isaiah Bradley survives the tests and gains superhuman strength, speed, and endurance. Bradley would go on to become a legend in the African-American community and even be regarded as the Black Captain America, but his identity and historical significance aren't commonly known. Of course, this move jibes very much with what Marvel has done in the last few years. Pakistani-American student Kamala Khan recently became the first Muslim Ms. Marvel, and Miles Morales has become a fan favorite in his tenure as Marvel's Ultimate Spider-Man.
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