Apparently, Buck Cashman is also going to be in the new Born Again show working for Fisk. He looks a lot different though (thinner and in a nice suit), so I'm not sure how loyal it will be to Bullet from the comics.
But do you have a write-up for him? <3
All these years, I somehow missed that his civilian name was Buck Cashman, so thank you for that. And yes, of course!
Daredevil vol. 1 #260 by Ann Nocenti, John Romita Jr., Christie "Max" Scheele, Al Williamson, and Joe Rosen
Bullet is a Nocenti/Romita Jr. invention who first appeared in Daredevil volume 1 #250. He was created in alignment with Nocenti's explorations of violence and the ways it manifests-- within the superhero genre, on a global scale, and between ordinary people struggling to survive in a harsh and unjust world. He presents a compelling dichotomy: he is a dangerous man, a hulking human battering ram with super-strength and durability, an assassin willing to do anything for the right price. But he is also the distant-yet-loving father to a little boy named Lance, who idolizes his father but has grown so fixated on the danger in the world around him that he builds himself a bunker to prepare for nuclear armageddon.
Daredevil vol. 1 #250 by Ann Nocenti, John Romita Jr., Christie "Max" Scheele, Al Williamson, and Joe Rosen
No matter how much Bullet cares for Lance, he can't help but pull his son into his life of crime and bloodshed. In one particularly memorable issue, Lance is witness to a fight between his father and Daredevil in his own home. Instead of being a hero, the "good guy" saving the day, Daredevil takes the form of just another aggressor, a perpetuator of the violence that has so affected Lance, not much different than Bullet himself.
Perhaps due to his somewhat generic character concept, code name, and power-set, and perhaps because he lacks a flashy signature look (despite that sick mustache), Bullet has remained a bit of a D-level villain. He's had a handful of appearances here and there, usually as a throw-away minor antagonist, but his core establishing comics are Daredevil volume 1 #250-252, 259-260, 267, and 291. You should also check out Daredevil volume 2 #71 if you want to see him drawn by Alex Maleev (you do). And definitely also read the 2017 Bullseye mini-series, my favorite non-Nocenti Bullet story, where he appears alongside fellow Nocenti/Romita Jr. invention, Shotgun (be aware: this comic is extremely dark and bloody. In other words...it's a Bullseye comic). Bullet is also in Daredevil volume 7 #6-7.














