They probably fired her because she didn't want to be some backseat to Snyder's crossovers. When everyone was pissed and started boycotting DC, they probably hired her on and said she wouldn't have to be a part of the next crossover. Mark my word: when Snyder makes another cross-over, it will not include Batgirl.
@deathpixie60: I'm glad it worked out. And you don't need to thank me. Just help the rest of the community. I haven't been on the site as much as I'd like to, so I think they definitely need people like you to spur on others and help them out in their time of need. It's a good day to be deathpixie60, yeah?
@divingfalcon713: The DCnU on their web site is divided first into three families, the Superman family, the Batman family and the Green Lantern family. The rest are divided into Justice League, Dark, Edge and Young Justice. Within Justice League, there is one comic called Wonder Woman. In the 1990s, Batman had his back broken, Superman was killed and Green Lantern turned evil. Those were the three ideas they had to shake up the DCU. I don't remember Wonder Woman doing anything nearly as significant. And in the last decade, the two most significant DC books have been Green Lantern and Batman. Not even Superman has been able to compare to Johns and Morrison. And both Batman and Green Lantern have basically accepted all of their history into the new DCU, whereas both Wonder Woman and Superman are completely rebooted. I suppose Wonder Woman's logo is historically more recognizable than Green Lantern's, but I think that is quickly becoming less and less the truth. I think the evidence, at least of the last thirty years, points to the fact that Wonder Woman is the vestigial limb of the DC trinity. The only circles that accept her accept her because of what she used to be.
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