[4] Brooker went on to publish Using the Force: Creativity, Community and Star Wars Fans[5] in 2002, Alice's Adventures: Lewis Carroll in Popular Culture[6] in 2005 and The Blade Runner Experience: The Legacy of a Science Fiction Classic in 2006.
In early 2013 Brooker teamed up with Suze Shore and Dr. Sarah Zaidan to create an online comic book series entitled My So Called Secret Identity.
"[28] Despite the high praise for My So Called Secret Identity, Shore, Zaidan, and Brooker have chosen to measure the success of the comic by responses "from individuals who have connected with Cat and her story, and told us how much it means to them, to the extent that it's even inspired them, changed their approach to life and given them more confidence.
[37] While first completing his PhD and then expanding it into Batman Unmasked, Will Brooker received a degree of media coverage unusual for an academic, much of it negative,[38][39] and was interviewed about his work on Touch Radio.
[41] In 2005, he appeared as himself in the TV Documentary "Generation Jedi",[42] and in 2011 he was featured in Acafandom and Beyond, an article on the blog of Henry Jenkins, Provost's Professor of Communication, Journalism, and Cinematic Arts at the University of Southern California.
[43] He has also been an invited expert on various television programmes, including ITV's Movie Mansions,[44] Channel 5's Gloria's Full House,[45] on which he spoke alongside Adam West and Paul Daniels, and he has debated Star Wars with Mark Kermode on BBC Two's The Culture Show.
[47] In his first appearance, he explained his current work and his opinion of Joel Schumacher's Batman films and, in the second, he discussed Christopher Nolan's The Dark Knight Rises.
[48] In 2015 Brooker wrote for the New Statesman magazine about his support for feminism[49] and has received media attention over his research for an academic analysis of David Bowie's life and work, Forever Stardust.