I literally came in here to post him, glad I'm not the only one. As terrible as the Clone Saga obviously was, Ben Reilly I think was actually a cool idea and should have gotten the deal that Miles now has, as a concurrent main Spider-Man alongside Peter. It sucks what's repeatedly happened to him.
Manhattan is the only place where Peter Parker makes sense, and a clone running around is a bit cramped, but make up a new world out in space and you can do whatever you like with him and still have his powers/skill set make sense. I think they should have gone cosmic with him, possibly even as Venom instead of Flash Thompson. (Basically just rattling off fan-fiction here, but I'll stand by it!)
I'm always sad there's been a lack of major Taskmaster appearances, he usually just appears as a mook or a hired gun here and there but I think the character has some potential for a little more.
He's had some pretty great comedic turns, though he's usually getting paired up with Deadpool, who I think kinda crowds him and dilutes his whole shtick.
I was reading the King version, and i really think that it's beating a dead horse, doing a parody of Authority and Jenny Sparks (with all his flaws, i prefer reading something written by Mark Millar). I'm not a fan of Tom King, and i really despise his treatment of Steve Ditko and Frank Miller in the Rorscharch miniseries, i think it was distasteful in the first case and offensive in the second. I enjoyed his Vision miniseries, but Human Target and Danger Street were an absolute trainwreck, with good art. I hope Milligan returns to the character someday, his run it's still perfect.
It really is a parody, mixed with....well, have you seen the joke about how given enough time and writing gigs, Tom King is going to confess to war crimes one day?
Jenny Sparks really felt like the one for a minute there, the guy has a *lot* to say about the Global War on Terror; from the perspective of a CIA employee!
I love that you brought up Millar, I think he's a great comparison for King. They both kinda approach capeshit comics with a bit of a "Oh, you *like* this?" mentality; where Millar mocks you for it, King is looking to "elevate" things, in a sense. I don't hate that, entirely - comics *can* be a little too silly and insular a lot of the time, and it's good to keep some perspective - but there's definitely limits of good taste.
(I really can't stand
Wanted, for example).
I don't think it's all bad with King, like you said The Vision was great, and I really enjoyed his
Strange Adventures, which was a really sharp rebuke of a kind of pulp sci-fi story with a pretty good twist or two. I'm ready for his run on Wonder Woman to be over though, I'm not sure I appreciate him making her a mourning wife and single mother.