Who's Who: Sam Foswell
(art by @donsparrow)
If you've been watching the CW's Superman & Lois, you've heard the name "Foswell" a whole lot, usually in an exasperated tone. That's the jackass who fires several Daily Planet employees in the early episodes, including Clark Kent and, most devastatingly, Whit, the heart and soul of the Planet. In the comics, Foswell plays a very similar role, with some slight differences that probably won't make it to TV, like when he makes out with a satanic being masquerading as an angel and then transforms into a muscular demon (someone correct me if I'm wrong and that already happened in the show but I missed it, somehow).
And so, for anyone who might be wondering "Who's Sam Foswell?" or "Which DC Comics does Sam Foswell appear in?" or other Google-able phrases that might lead people to this page, we present the definitive comic book history of this classic Superman supporting character ("classic" meaning "he was in the comics I read as a kid in the ‘90s").
Sam first showed up in Superman #51 (1991), soon after a storyline in which a satanic being/nightclub owner called Lady Blaze steals the souls of Jimmy Olsen and Perry White's son, Jerry \xe2\x80\x93 who is actually the biological son of Lex Luthor, but should NOT be confused with Lex Luthor II (for one thing, Jerry never slept with a gooey other-dimensional being shaped like Supergirl). Superman manages to save Jimmy and Jerry from Blaze's hellish realm, but only one of them comes back to life. Unfortunately, it's Jimmy. I mention all of this because, after the death of his son, Perry decides to quit being the Daily Planet's editor-in-chief for a while and cedes that title to long-time staff member Sam Foswell, who must have worked in another floor, because we'd never seen this guy before.
It's pretty obvious right away that Perry would have been better off leaving a janitor or something in charge. In Superman #52, Foswell asks Clark for help using Perry's computer and seems surprised to learn that those crazy Kent and Lane kids are working on a story together (they've been dating for so long that they're already engaged). In Action Comics #665, he has to beg Clark to go from freelancer to full time staff member because he's just way in over his head. Up until now, Foswell basically seems like a clueless grandpa running a major media outlet, but he'll soon become far less adorable…
Clark's full time salary must be pretty good, because in Superman: The Man of Steel #1, Foswell says the Planet is suddenly having money issues and fires some people. Among them is Jimmy Olsen, who literally just signed the lease on his first apartment, so excellent timing there, Sam. But hey, at least this means Jimmy's concern that his new editor would "bust his chops" was unjustified! (Because he has no editor, because he's unemployed.)
(Fun fact: That other girl Foswell fires is secretly the daughter of a DC hero, as part of a storyline absolutely no one noticed, which I'll write about another time.)
Jimmy only finds out he's been fired in Superman #57, and he tells Foswell he's gonna regret it. I'm not sure what Jimmy meant by that, but it probably wasn't "I'm gonna spend several months homeless and living in my car until a drunken bar owner takes pity on me," which is what happened. Anyway, on that same issue Foswell says he's gonna write an editorial praising the Eradicator, who was in his "murder criminals and forcibly turn the Earth into Krypton" phase. When Clark objects, Foswell not so subtly threatens to fire him, even though he was practically kissing Clark's ass just the other day.
Foswell goes all "Mr. Slate from The Flintstones" on Clark again on Superman #58, this time because he thinks Clark overslept, like he does every time Superman has an early morning emergency. While at it, Foswell also gives Lois crap about some expense reports, leading to an adorable sequence where Clark kisses her at super-speed while she's being chastised, without Foswell noticing. After going around firing and antagonizing people for several months, Foswell still seems baffled to learn that no one likes him in Adventures of Superman #481. Yeah, this guy's not the most perceptive journalist ever.
Continuing his quest to become the most hateable Daily Planet staffer ever (not surnamed "Olsen"), Foswell writes an anti-Superman editorial in Superman #59 — he says that if Superman really cared about Metropolis, he'd take over as CEO of LexCorp and create more jobs. Ironically, Foswell treats his own employees so poorly (the ones he hasn't fired, I mean), that in Adventures #482 a bunch of them go on strike start heckling him… not very effectively, but it's the thought that counts.
Perry comes back to the Planet in in Action #670 and the first thing he does is call Foswell and the other higher ups a bunch of idiots for mistreating their employees. Foswell goes back to being a regular staffer after that, but he's so unpopular that they finally kick him out in Action #677. Foswell tries to get a job at Newstime magazine (the DC Universe's version of Newsweek and Time) in Superman #68, but the owner, Colin Thornton, basically tells him to go to Hell… which is a spoiler of where this story is going.
This is where things turn really dark for old Sam. The next time we see him, in Man of Steel #14, he's at the cemetery visiting his wife and son (or someone else he affectionately called "Little Geoffrey," anyway) and thinking about joining them. Even the Babadook is like "damn, poor guy"…
And sure enough, in Superman #70 Foswell actually jumps off a bridge — only for a beautiful angel to save him and promise that his fortunes will change if he "pledges himself" to her. Later that same issue, Foswell runs into Colin Thornton again and is offered a job as Newstime's editor on the spot. Everything's coming up Foswell! He even gets a smooch on the mouth from that hot angel!
Unfortunately, Foswell's new "angel" girlfriend is actually the satanic Lady Blaze in disguise. This is leads to "The Blaze/Satanus War" saga (starting in Adventures #493), in which Blaze tries to invade Metropolis by teleporting demons through Foswell, since his soul belongs to her. In Action #680, she convinces Foswell that Superman wants to kill him for firing his pal Jimmy, so Sam fully gives himself to her and becomes a big, muscular demon creature (whom this blog dubbed "FosHELL").
In Man of Steel #15, Superman is told that the only way to prevent Metropolis from literally going to Hell is to kill Foswell. This seems like it's setting up a big heroic sacrifice scene, which would have at least given the character a dignified end, but nah. Instead, Superman ends up teaming up with Blaze's evil-but-less-evil-than-her brother, Lord Satanus, to defeat her.
Once Blaze is taken care of, Satanus restores Foswell to his dweeby human form in Superman #71… but only because he now owns Sam's soul and thinks he might be useful some day. Oh yeah, and Satanus is secretly Foswell's boss, Colin Thornton! So he owns the guy in both the earthly and the satanic realms.
I guess his new demonic master never found a use for the guy, because this storyline was the last time we ever saw Sam Foswell… until he was brought back by a TV show in 2021. And he also got new art by our own Don Sparrow!* At last, everything really IS coming up Foswell. Until the show kills him off to bring back Perry White, anyway.
*Foswell fanatics can see Don's full artwork without that pesky logo in our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/posts/51941393