Archive for the About Comic Books category

This is still the Superman we know, more or less. A good man with amazing powers trying to make the world a better place, struggling to (comic book artist joe dodd) make sense of his role in the larger scheme. It’s very good. Very, very good.

Admin May 3rd, 2010

This is still the Superman we know, more or less. A good man with amazing powers trying to make the world a better place, struggling to make sense of his role in the larger scheme. It’s very good. Very, very good.

Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.

The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.


Batman Begins Billboard 3238

Brechtbug posted a photo:

Batman Begins Billboard 3238

Batman Begins Movie Film Billboard Poster being painted on a building wall above Park Avenue and 23rd Street in New York City NYC 2005 unfinished work working worker paint painting advertisement DC comic comics hero superhero Dark Knight bat adventure

Boston Mass Real Estate

online comic book pricing

Popularity: 15% [?]

The story itself is epic in scope, following the post Crisis Superman on his adventures in deep space. But wait, why is the Man of Steel not back on Earth, protecting us from (were comic books) threats domestic and alien? Simple: he is wracked with grief over his recent

Admin May 3rd, 2010

The story itself is epic in scope, following the post Crisis Superman on his adventures in deep space. But wait, why is the Man of Steel not back on Earth, protecting us from threats domestic and alien? Simple: he is wracked with grief over his recent

In the preface, the hyperbolic Tom DeSanto wildly trumpets “Red Son” as a devastating critique of American foreign policy, not the cookie cutter “feel good propaganda” that might have been expected. Instead, he hints darkly at surrendering freedom in

Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.


Coffee, Eggs, Snausage


Orlando Florida Real Estate

mature comic books

Popularity: 16% [?]

Like all the S/B stories, this one features more (comic books on cd rom) twists than a bag of pretzels.

Admin May 2nd, 2010

Like all the S/B stories, this one features more twists than a bag of pretzels.

Oh please. The Soviet Union that Superman serves here is the sort of cookie cutter comic book autocracy one might have expected in a 1950s comic and bears no resemblance to the murderous regime that truly was an “evil empire.” At one point, Stalin under

The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.


Friars Rd. 7


Hershey Pa homes

comic book drawing

Popularity: 16% [?]

(My comic book drawings) “What was the point of Lex Luthor. A human being who dared to challenge a God.”

Admin May 1st, 2010

“What was the point of Lex Luthor. A human being who dared to challenge a God.”

After “Crisis on Infanite Earths” was finished in 1986, several DC Comics characters were re started, and Superman led the charge. We are reintroduced to Kal El’s planet, which was destroyed, but not before benevolent Jor El could rocket his only son

Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.

The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.


Luke Winn: Bummer of a summer: Brewers games won’t be same without Ueck

Bob Uecker, the radio voice of the Milwaukee Brewers for 40 of their 41 years of existence, underwent successful heart surgery on Friday to repair his aortic valve and part of his aortic root. For his faithful audience on WTMJ, this will be a strangely empty stretch of baseball: As he recovers, the 75-year-old icon will be taking his longest hiatus ever from the airwaves, likely missing 10-12 weeks of games. I also presume he’ll miss his induction into the Wisconsin Meat Industry Hall of Fame, which had been scheduled for May 13. Uecker is on the verge of an extraordinary trifecta this year. He’ll be the first man ever to simultaneously belong to the Baseball Hall of Fame (as an broadcaster), the WWE Hall of Fame (for announcing early Wrestemanias) and his local meat industry’s Hall of Fame.


Keselowski cruises to easy N’wide win at Richmond

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — Brad Keselowski raced to his second straight NASCAR Nationwide Series victory, dominating all night and then rallying from fourth in a green-white-checker finish Friday at Richmond International Raceway.


Bosh asks Twitter followers: Should I stay, or should I go?

TORONTO (AP) — Chris Bosh is asking his Twitter followers to help decide his NBA future.


Former VP says USA Swimming not doing enough

NEW YORK (AP) — As USA Swimming prepared to discuss a new plan to deal with a rash of sexual abuse cases, a former vice president said Friday the governing body has dragged its feet for years and still isn’t doing enough to prevent coaches from having improper contact with athletes.

Brigantine Nj Homes

comic book subscription service

Popularity: 15% [?]

(Comic books for sale) It is said that people generally prefer familliarity over change, but this is not the very case for this revision of a classic hero created way back in the 1930’s which pioneered the comic book superhero genre, but rather this only show that there is ind

Admin May 1st, 2010

It is said that people generally prefer familliarity over change, but this is not the very case for this revision of a classic hero created way back in the 1930’s which pioneered the comic book superhero genre, but rather this only show that there is ind

Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.

The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.


Mortgage Info


New Homes in San Antonio


Print Rebate Forms


New Homes in Houston

San Diego Commercial Real Estate

art comic books

Popularity: 14% [?]

(Comic book artist cleveland) In the preface, the hyperbolic Tom DeSanto wildly trumpets “Red Son” as a devastating critique of American foreign policy, not the cookie cutter “feel good propaganda” that might have been expected. Instead, he hints darkly at surrendering freedom in

Admin May 1st, 2010

In the preface, the hyperbolic Tom DeSanto wildly trumpets “Red Son” as a devastating critique of American foreign policy, not the cookie cutter “feel good propaganda” that might have been expected. Instead, he hints darkly at surrendering freedom in

Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.


Scorched Earth page 1

jessohackberry posted a photo:

Scorched Earth page 1

joshkramer.wordpress.com/2010/05/01/scorched-earth/

Thermage Before and After

book comic marvel wallpaper

Popularity: 15% [?]

Superman has a flat blue paint scheme rather than the series 1 metallic paint scheme. (comic book bondage cover of the day)

Admin April 29th, 2010

Superman has a flat blue paint scheme rather than the series 1 metallic paint scheme.

The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.

Vancouver WA Homes

comic book super heros

Popularity: 16% [?]

What would you do if you suddenly discovered that you could fly? The answer for this Clark Kent is to spend every spare moment flying. But then he sees someone in danger and saves their life. The good deed does not go unnoticed and Clark has to decide (graded old comic books)

Admin April 29th, 2010

What would you do if you suddenly discovered that you could fly? The answer for this Clark Kent is to spend every spare moment flying. But then he sees someone in danger and saves their life. The good deed does not go unnoticed and Clark has to decide

Bottom line.as the years pass, I predict this will be a seriously sought after collector’s item. So buy it soon or now .before someone on “Amazon Marketplace”, “Ebay”, or some “other seller” in the next 20 years tries to sell you a used copy of i

Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.


orecchini CRASCH-TA-BUMP

Filo e colori di Ila posted a photo:

orecchini CRASCH-TA-BUMP

registrato e protetto su www.myfreecopyright.com

Playa del Rey Real Estate

freelance comic book artist

Popularity: 14% [?]

(Classic comic books online) Bottom line.as the years pass, I predict this will be a seriously sought after collector’s item. So buy it soon or now .before someone on “Amazon Marketplace”, “Ebay”, or some “other seller” in the next 20 years tries to sell you a used copy of i

Admin April 26th, 2010

Bottom line.as the years pass, I predict this will be a seriously sought after collector’s item. So buy it soon or now .before someone on “Amazon Marketplace”, “Ebay”, or some “other seller” in the next 20 years tries to sell you a used copy of i

On top of all this, the writing is melodramatic enough to make Jeph Loeb wince. It opens, for instance, on a six to eight page flashback of Ruin’s previous attacks played on tape , with a monologue from Lois explaining the rationale behind Ruin’s strat

Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.

The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.

Chandler Real Estate

comic books online

Popularity: 16% [?]

(Picture of comic book character) Jimmy Olsen. I don’t know if it’s just me but I’m tired of the “gosh oh golly, gee willikers, ain’t ever gonna grow up” wide eyed, juvenile Jimmy Olsen in the Superman books. I was hoping Byrne would give the kid some respect and have the common sen

Admin April 26th, 2010

Jimmy Olsen. I don’t know if it’s just me but I’m tired of the “gosh oh golly, gee willikers, ain’t ever gonna grow up” wide eyed, juvenile Jimmy Olsen in the Superman books. I was hoping Byrne would give the kid some respect and have the common sen

The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.

Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.


Batman Beyond - Return of the Joker (The Original Uncut Version)

Batman Beyond - Return of the Joker (The Original Uncut Version)
Some diehard Batfans have been slow to warm to the animated series Batman Beyond even though it was created by the same team responsible for the excellent Batman cartoon of the early ’90s. The Dark Knight should be a brooding avenger in a noir-nightmare Gotham City, the purists argue, not some smart-aleck teen four decades in the future, with jet packs, invisibility shields, and other sci-fi gizmos loaned him by an elderly Bruce Wayne (voiced, excellently as always, by Kevin Conroy, his stony bass given a raspy hint of old age), now confined to hobbling about on a cane and monitoring his protg’s activities from the Batcave. Between its respectful reexamination of the “tortured hero” mythos and its sleek, anime-inspired look, this feature-length movie should go a long way toward quieting their complaints. Of course, it doesn’t hurt that they’ve brought back the most legendary figure in the Rogues Gallery (voiced by Mark Hamill, deliciously deranged), but exactly how and why the Joker has managed to turn up 40 years after his last meeting with Batman still as youthful and diabolical as ever is explained not only logically but terrifyingly as well. The secret behind his arrival is perhaps the saddest, grimmest twist any purported “kids’ show” has dared to attempt. (Parents may well want to preview this tape before screening it for the very young.) Once again, Warner Brothers’ cartoon Batman has outshone all the live-action films, never allowing the thrilling action set pieces or flashes of wry humor to drown out the drama, even tragedy, of the all-too-human superheroes. –Bruce Reid

Director:
Curt Geda

DVD:
Animated,Color,DVD-Video,Full Screen,NTSC

Company:Warner Home Video

(2002-04-23)

ISBN:0790766833

List Price:$9.98
Amazon Price:$3.42

Used Price:$3.99


Stainless Steel Silver X Claw w/ Stand

Stainless Steel Silver X Claw w/ Stand
Hey bub, I go where I wanna go, and Get outta my way, are all things you’ll be able to say just like Wolverine when your wielding a Silver X-Claw. We don’t recommend you take on a pack of Sentinels with the Silver X-Claws, but do recommend showing them off to your friends. Constructed from stainless steel and sharpened to a razor sharp edge, handle wrapped in black leather for comfort. No knuckle guard has been added for hand protection, so caution is always advised. Sold individually with one plaque each.

Misc.:
Measurements: Each Blade Measures 11 inches long,Constructed From Stainless Steel,Comfortable Leather Wrapped Handle,Includes Wooden Display Plaque,Great Cosplay Costume Addition

Company:China

List Price:$35.00
Amazon Price:$19.90


Punisher T-Shirt, Skull

Punisher T-Shirt, Skull
100% preshrunk cotton with design printed on the front, 5.6 oz with shoulder-to-shoulder tape with a seamless collar, and double needle construction throughout.

Apparel:

Company:CHOICESHIRTS

List Price:
Amazon Price:


Teen Titans Deluxe Party Kit

Teen Titans Deluxe Party Kit
Make your party a true adventure with the Teen Titans Deluxe Party Kit. The Teen Titans Deluxe Party Kit for 8 guests includes:

  • (8) 9″ Dinner Plates
  • (8) 7″ Dessert Plates
  • (8) 9oz Paper Cups
  • (16) Lunch Napkins
  • (8) Invitations with envelopes
  • (24) Piece Purple Cutlery Set* - (8) Forks (8) Spoons (8) Knives
  • (24) Black Cake Candles*
  • (1) 54″ x 102″ Teen Titans Plastic Tablecover
  • (18) 12″ Latex Balloons - 6 each; Regal Purple, Deep Jade and Sun Yellow*
  • (1) 19″ Green Metallic Star Balloon* with balloon cup* and stick*
  • (3) 81′ Crepe Streamers - 1 each; Royal Purple, Holiday Green, Buttercup Yellow*
  • (3) 75′ Curling Ribbons - 1 each; Purple, Emerald, Yellow*

These are officially licensed Teen Titans? DC Comics products. *Please Note: These items (*) are not offically licensed.
Don’t forget a Disposable Helium Tank* and other related items shown below.

:

Company:BuyCostumes

List Price:
Amazon Price:

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academy of comic book arts

Popularity: 15% [?]

This is a very deep story that cuts to the core of Superman (bugs bunny comic books) in a way that canonized stories cannot. Essentially Superman becomes a metaphor for an all intrusive government. Benjamin Franklin once said, “Those who would give up essential liberty to purcha

Admin April 25th, 2010

This is a very deep story that cuts to the core of Superman in a way that canonized stories cannot. Essentially Superman becomes a metaphor for an all intrusive government. Benjamin Franklin once said, “Those who would give up essential liberty to purcha

If you have ever daydreamed about what it would be like to become your favorite super hero, you’ll identify with Clark. You’ll also recognize all of the issues that a person with Superman’s powers would have to deal with: should he “go public”, does

Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.


OOR WULLIE

Pagan555 posted a photo:

OOR WULLIE

1978

Playa del Rey Real Estate

value comic book collection

Popularity: 17% [?]

By all means this series should have worked. It’s John Byrne and it’s in the 1980s. He’s at his peak. I wanted it to work but frankly, this is a (female comic book hero) terrible story.

Admin April 23rd, 2010

By all means this series should have worked. It’s John Byrne and it’s in the 1980s. He’s at his peak. I wanted it to work but frankly, this is a terrible story.

I know it wasn’t all written by Greg Rucka and Geoff Johns, but they’re both capable of much, much better things than this.

Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.

The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.


Enjoy a Sumptuous Meal with a BBQ Ribs Recipe

Enjoy a Sumptuous Meal with a BBQ Ribs Recipe

Enjoy a Sumptuous Meal with a BBQ Ribs Recipe

http://www.mikesbbqshack.com

By nikhiljadhavbscit

Tags : bbq, recipe, ribs


Barbeque Maintenance Tips

Barbeque  Maintenance Tips

http://www.stainlesssteelbbqs.co.uk

When purchasing your barbeque grill, think of it as an investment
rather then just another item for your outdoor entertainment. You
should expect this item to become a large part of your outdoor
activities.

By malc150

Tags : barbequesolar, bbq, bbqchimenea, bbqstainless, cast, chimenea, gas, iron, lighting, silver, stainless, steel


Taste Spot TV: BBQ Ribs with Cherry BBQ Sauce

Taste Spot TV: BBQ Ribs with Cherry BBQ Sauce

We show you how to make awesome BBQ Ribs with a smokey home made
Cherry BBQ Sauce. More at http://www.thetastespot.com

By bestviralmedia

Tags : bar-b-que, bbq, brueski, cherry, cooking, food, grilling, homemade, network, pork, ribs, sauce, spot, taste, the, tony


2010 Greater Mississippi State BBQ Competition

2010 Greater Mississippi State BBQ Competition

http://www.bbq-directory.com went to the 2010 Greater Mississippi
State Competition in Lula MS. The event was held at The Isle of
Capri Hotel & Casino. They had antique cars, live music and
some awesome barbecue competitors.

By fgtyhnfd

Tags : barbecue, bbq, competition, contest, eating, rib

Atlantic City Homes

page 3 comic book store

Popularity: 14% [?]

Joseph Loeb has been known for (its comic books) his writing talents for a long time, since he teamed up with Tim Sale to do Batman: The Long Halloween, Haunted Knight, Dark Victory and Superman For All Seasons.

Admin April 23rd, 2010

Joseph Loeb has been known for his writing talents for a long time, since he teamed up with Tim Sale to do Batman: The Long Halloween, Haunted Knight, Dark Victory and Superman For All Seasons.

Enjoy the Guide.it is a MUST HAVE.

Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.

The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.


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comic book art 1950s

Popularity: 13% [?]

This was a shame. I think supergirl is a cool character and (violent comic books) can be done well, but this just makes clear that DC has no idea what to do with her. There is no characterization, no back up characters and the story can only loosely be called a “story.” The

Admin April 22nd, 2010

This was a shame. I think supergirl is a cool character and can be done well, but this just makes clear that DC has no idea what to do with her. There is no characterization, no back up characters and the story can only loosely be called a “story.” The

Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.


Go, Look: ERB-Dom Part Two


Hunting Advocacy Group Opposed to Publishing Effort Provides Publisher With Gift Of Free Publicity

You can read about it here if you must. I don’t really understand how these actions as (not really) reported are news. Advocating something usually means the objections of those against whom you advocate, and if e-mailed objections to content and invitations to stop publishing constitute harassment this site you’re reading is harassed once a week. The shocker is that anyone would give a about that stupid-looking comic.

Also, I don’t understand how if it’s news the PR and stories out there can’t at least call the “U.S. Sportsmen Association” by its actual name, the U.S. Sportsmen’s Alliance.


Go, Look: Nozzman Flickr Set


Go, Look: Hamlin

s Time-Travel Oops

I had never heard of this

Body Thermage

comic book girls

Popularity: 15% [?]

As Clark Kent is showing Kara the outside world Wonder Woman, Harbinger and Artemis ambush them. They insist of taking Kara to Themyscira home of the Amazons for training because Harbinger had a vague vision that bad things would happen due to (comic book creator software) Kara bein

Admin April 22nd, 2010

As Clark Kent is showing Kara the outside world Wonder Woman, Harbinger and Artemis ambush them. They insist of taking Kara to Themyscira home of the Amazons for training because Harbinger had a vague vision that bad things would happen due to Kara bein

The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.


Get The Best Price When Sell Your Comic Books

By Jeff Austin

  When many of us buy comic books we frequently read them and place them on a pile of old comic books or our book shelves. This attitude changes when we are collecting these comic books. In these cases we take great steps to preserve our comic book collection. There are instances where we may decide to sell comic books that we have doubles of or ones that we feel are bringing the value of our collection down.

To ensure that you are able to sell comic books that you have no need of there are certain steps that must be seen to. As many people want to have good quality comic books whether it is just for reading pleasure or for serious collecting you will need to make sure that both the inside and the exterior of the comic book are in excellent condition.

To sell comic books you will need to preserve the appearance of your comic books. You can store them in clear plastic sleeves with a piece of acid free cardboard at the back of the comic book to give the comic book a strong support. With the help of the supporting cardboard you should store your comic book upright on your book shelves.

This way you can be sure that your comic book will not develop any creases in the cover from the pressure of the other comic books. Besides storing your comics in an acid free plastic cover sleeve if you want to sell comics books you should know what are the types of comic books that are very popular.

These comic books will help you to gain a profit from selling them but these popular comics should also be in excellent condition. The other types of comic books that sell well are the first series comic books. There are many people who love buying these types of rare comic books.

When you sell comic books like these and they are in mint condition you can be sure that you can get a very high price for these early edition comic books. The best places to sell comic books that you have no need of or ones that you are expecting to get a profit from is your comic book store.

The internet and auction houses are also good places where you can sell comic books. There are many comic book collectors who attend these places so they can see what sort of comics are for sale and hope to buy a rare or coveted comic book. When you are looking to sell comic books the main facts to remember is that the various comic books must be ones that are in demand and the condition of the comic books should be excellent.

For more important information on comic books visit onwebnet.com where you will find comic book information and tips on comic book values, comic book stores, and more.


Men Manga Genre Summary

By Alex Scott

  Guys are the major audience of comics translated from Japanese and generally known as manga. Despite their omnivorousness, they are targeted by several genres like seinen, shonen, ecchi and hentai. Any of them can contain some comedy, drama, fantasy, mysticism and others.

Shonen manga usually features male protagonists in high-action humorous plots about friendship in teams. Sometimes attractive girls appear - check Dragon Ball Z. Shonen style is typically more reserved than shojo, though some artists are engaged in both. The best shounen are:

* Air Gear by Oh! Great

* Beck Manga by Harold Sakuishi

* Bleach by Tite Kubo

* Captain Tsubasa by Takahashi Yoichi

* Fairy Tail by Mashima Hiro

* Gintama by Hideaki Sorachi

* Hayate the Combat Butler by Kenjirou Hata

* Hunter X Hunter by Togashi Yoshihiro

* Mahou Sensei Negima! by Ken Akamatsu

* O-Parts Hunter by Seishi Kishimoto

* Rosario+Vampire by Ikeda Akihisa

* Rurouni Kenshin by Nobuhiro Watsuki

* School Rumble by Jin Kobayashi

Men (18-30 years old and even 40-year-old businessmen) are served by seinen manga with many art styles (from avant-garde to pornographic) and themes. Seinen means guys and is the male equivalent to josei manga. The best seinen are:

* 3×3 Eyes by Yuuzou Takada

* Addicted To Curry by Funatsu Kazuki

* Berserk by Kentaro Miura

* Black Lagoon by Hiroe Rei

* Chobits by CLAMP

* Genshiken by Kio Shimoku

* Hellsing by Kouta Hirano

* Maison Ikkoku by Rumiko Takahashi

* Oh My Goddess! by Kosuke Fujishima

* Psychic Academy by KATSU Aki

* Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou by Ashinano Hitoshi

Western fans know little of seinen manga for its scarce publishing outside Japan and hardly distinguish it from shonen. Old Japanese men often read convenient shonen magazines in commuter trains.

Ecchi manga is famous for eroticism. Unlike hentai with its explicit sex, ecchi shows erotic scenes with a hint at sexual relations varying in openness depending on the target audience age.

The main art device in ecchi is a fun service (a free bonus). It uses hints at eroticism like showing characters (primarily girls for the male target audience) in ambiguous poses, foreshortening for viewers to see the character’s underwear (pantsu shot), exaggerating breasts and buttocks, various awkward situations for a male character like accidentally appearing at a women bath or checkroom or falling on a girl, etc.

The most well-known ecchi manga are:

* AIKI by Isutoshi

* DNA2 by Masakazu Katsura

* Futaba-kun Change by Hiroshi Aro

* Girl Saurus by Kei Kusunoki

* Ichigo 100% by Mizuki Kawaa

* I’s by Katsura Masakazu

* Love Hina by Ken Akamatsu

* Mx0 by Yasuhiro Kano

* Pastel by Toshihiko Kobayashi

* To-LOVE-Ru Trouble by Saki Hasemi and Kentaro Yabuki

As a whole, apart from a fun service, ecchi aims to give the plotline certain scenes and angles that don’t create the plot but ask for some feedback from the target audience to increase its interest and/or attract potential viewers.

Ecchi and fun service elements are present virtually in all anime and manga targeting juvenile audience of 16-25. For example, a usual fun service for seinen anime are erotic hints (ecchi) or colorful battle scenes.

Hentai manga features erotic and porn scenes. The softest hentai version without explicit sex is ecchi above. Underlying ecchi, a fun service has nothing to do with hentai though.

Hentai (ugliness or pervert in Japanese) pornographic scenes can be of different content and type. The variations include yaoi, yuri, horrors and other. But classifying hentai only by erotic content would be wrong since like any other anime hentai can include comedy, mysticism, fiction, fantasy, romance, etc.

Japanese hentai makers have to censor their opuses like any other porn. However American anime releases have no inguinal region curtains thus enjoying great popularity in Europe.

The most famous hentai are:

* God of black tights by Hiroki Tsukiyoshi

* Dawn of the Silver Dragon by Masayoshi Mukai

* Love Selection by Gunma Kisaragi

* My Lovely Ghost Kana by Yutaka Tanaka

* My Slave by Distance

* Shoujo Material by Hanaharu Naruko

Japanese manga differs greatly from American comics in drawing style and plot. Supermen and zombies are rather rare in manga. It mostly has a complicated but appealing plot and a lot of a fun service doesn’t leave its audience indifferent.

Alex Scott is a big fan of manga. You can find seinen manga online on AnyManga.com - Read Manga Online.


Rome: Fuoriserie from 18th to 19th of April 2009

By Michele De Capitani

  The fair includes many sections, and it hosts various interesting events, which are meant to celebrate not only Italian cars, but all those period cars that keep attracting car lovers of all ages, who every year stay in 2 star hotels in Rome. A section of the exhibition is dedicated to the most important car clubs in Italy and to the most precious and rare models, as well as to the racing stables that take part in various races. Many historical models will be celebrated in this section: Lancia Thema (this year is its 25th anniversary), has been the symbol car of the ruling class for years, and those who appreciate this car will have the possibility to admire a very rare model of Lancia Thema Limousine (only 24 of these cars were produced). Another historical mark, Maserati, will be at the fair with an exhibition of its most prestigious models, while the Roman racing stable La Tartaruga will display some of the best cars of its collection, like a Balilla of 1935, a Bianchina cabriolet of 1964, a Guzzi Falcone and a Lambretta 150. In an Italian motor show some spaces dedicated to two of the most loved car models in Italy, like Topolino and Fiat 500, cannot miss: Fuoriserie will host, indeed, the Topolino Autoclub Italia and the Fiat 500 Club, the latter celebrating its 25 years displaying some historical 500.

Another section of the fair is dedicated to the main Italian and international car traders (Ferrari and Porsche, just to name two famous marks) and to the sales between private individuals, which give people the possibility to display their own cars. This section has achieved a great success in the past editions, attracting many prospective buyers in the cheap lodgings of Italys capital city.

The fair is the place to go also if you are looking for spare parts for your own period car: over 4000 m in the exhibitory space will host original spare parts and accessorises for cars and motorcycles.

Besides these sections, which are entirely devoted to the world of cars, Fuoriserie features also many other cultural events, highlighting that the world of motors has often met other worlds, like that of comics: to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the English car manufacturer Morgan, Fuoriserie will host an exhibition on Julia Kendall, the main character of a famous comic strip created by Giancarlo Beraldi for Bonelli publishing, who was often portrayed in her Morgan of 1967.

Tickets: 13,00 euro, reduced 10,00 euro

Date: 18th 19th April 2009

Location: Rome, Italy

This article was written by Francesca Tessarolo with support from Youth Hostels in Rome for any information, please visit Travel in Rome or for travel information have a look to 2 stars hotels in Rome.


Alzheimer Disease Symptoms

By Eladio Rivera

  Alzheimer disease progresses to brain diseases, which alzheimers could be inherited, since doctors found that RNA and DNA unpaired function link to the chaos. A head damage; or high blood pressure may perhaps put one in the high-risk grade.

Millions of inhabitants are diagnosed annually of Alzheimers disease. The disease frequently is diagnosed aged citizens, those of as those over 60 years of time. The disease progresses to brain diseases, which alzheimers could be inherited, since doctors found that RNA and DNA unpaired function link to the chaos. A head damage; or high blood pressure may perhaps put one in the high-risk grade.

By Eladio Rivera from http://www.diseasesreview.com

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traditional comic books

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Lois Lane came off as a complete snob and competitively obessed, sort (new york city comic book store) of like Monica Geller from “Friends” except without the charm.

Admin April 20th, 2010

Lois Lane came off as a complete snob and competitively obessed, sort of like Monica Geller from “Friends” except without the charm.

Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.


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I do fondly remember the great quality infested peak of DC Comics back in the seventies as a kid, which somehow did still continued around (how to make a comic book) in the eighties somewhat, giving their own brand of a distinct mark which perhaps are not found in the more commerci

Admin April 20th, 2010

I do fondly remember the great quality infested peak of DC Comics back in the seventies as a kid, which somehow did still continued around in the eighties somewhat, giving their own brand of a distinct mark which perhaps are not found in the more commerci

Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.

The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.

Buy A Gps System

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If you were to ask many long time comic book fans what they know of Supergirl’s history you might be surprised to hear them ask which Supergirl you were talking about. Just thinking about all (world famous comic book store) the twists and turns this character has gone through is enough

Admin April 19th, 2010

If you were to ask many long time comic book fans what they know of Supergirl’s history you might be surprised to hear them ask which Supergirl you were talking about. Just thinking about all the twists and turns this character has gone through is enough

Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.


CR Review: Captain America: The Truth

Creators: Robert Morales, Kyle Baker
Publishing Information: Marvel, hardcover, 168 pages, February 2009 (series originally published 2003), $24.99
Ordering Numbers: 9780785136668 (ISBN13), 0785136665 (ISBN10)

Captain America: The Truth came out during a time I wasn’t directly involved in comics and certainly not in a way I could afford to buy seven issues of $3.50 comics. I was aware of the series’ basic premise, that it was a re-telling of Captain America’s origin that folded in a Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment-style chapter involving black men and the super-soldier formula. I had a brief discussion with writer Morales, evidence of whom before and after a run on the Captain America title I can find almost nothing on the Internet, and remember I thought him smart. I’m a great fan of artist Kyle Baker. One of the things that occurred during comics while I stepped aside from daily focus on industry matters was a relative creative playfulness, since mostly locked down, that I’ve enjoyed when I’ve read other comics from that period. It made an impression, despite my either not having read it or having read it in cursory fashion.

Reading it now reveals one very deeply odd comic book series. I mean “Whoa, Nellie” odd. The first thing I have to mention is that I was wrong about the series’ concept. Despite major press claiming otherwise before and even reviews after, the story wasn’t about the first Captain America but about a scramble to duplicate the super-soldier formula that created Captain America, using black soldiers in that effort. This gets explained in the appendix in that the book was take from outside Marvel continuity into Marvel continuity, which meant that its post-Pearl Harbor story put it after the appearance of Captain America back in that time. Although since the entire story seems directed that way, you couldn’t blame a rational reader for suspecting that a more direct protection of the character was worked into the series while it was ongoing.

While this move/development/whatever takes away the juice of creating Captain America himself from the Tuskegee Experiment-style set-up, it also places the spotlight even more directly on the treatment of African-American soldiers during that period, with the American upper-class embrace of eugenics as a minor undercurrent. History tells us the treatment of black soldiers was routinely abominable, and in The Truth those abuses become the relentless, dour drumbeat of the narrative. In other words, Marvel traded an imaginary story that might have made a black man the first Captain America for an in-continuity one that super-sizes some of the worst behavior of the US government in its long history. Captain America is safe, but the government for which he works has a truckload of explaining to do. The better and more observant histories tell us the real-world abuses were horrible, but I don’t think they were quite as over-the-top horrifying as the exploding bodies and entire units massacred for the control of minor state secrets we see here. That in no way diminishes the real-world aspects, I hope (I could be wrong), but as presented here it’s hard not to see Captain America’s moral obligations as something much greater and more self-critical than the character could bear. If I were this Captain America, I might need to dig up FDR and punch his skull.

There are some clumsy aspects to the story throughout, particularly the pacing within and between scenes. I liked Morales’ scripting and dialogue work, for the most part, but his cast member remain types in a way that it’s hard to afford them the greater sympathy we might with more idiosyncratically realized characters. I’d be surprised if someone out there didn’t find the “and this is all this had an effect on the white/real/more important Captain America” take a little bit of a downer after the vivid world that was created around the black characters. That was surprisingly okay with me, especially as it was counter-balanced by this notion that black cultural history is so ignored that everyone except people like Steve Rogers have known this story all along. Baker’s work is uneven. In general he nails the scene-setting and the character aspects, and there’s something a little bit wicked about a story that is supposed to be a forgotten, buried by history chapter being expressed through a forgotten, buried by history way of making superhero art. Some of the later comics sequences lost me, though, particularly the way that Captain America’s body language is expressed. Some of the more wild caricatures had a fizz that took me out of the story, too, and the combat scenes didn’t flow the way action has in other Baker works.

In the end, this is a hard story to parse because it’s really about the history involved — and the notion of retroactive continuity as it gets portrayed in the press — more than it is a tight, well-paced story of its own. It’s fun to read something this ruthlessly negative about American history coming out during the Bush years, and some of the ideas are enjoyable to mull over, but it’s not something I regret having missed the first time around. It’s admirably odd, that’s for sure.


Collective Memory: C2E2

Links to stories, eyewitness accounts and resources concerning C2E2, held April 16, April 17 and April 18, 2010 at McCormick Place in Chicago.

This entry will continue to be updated for as long as people


Go, Look: Perez And Day Splash Pages

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Popularity: 16% [?]

(Marvel vs dc comic book) But inexplicably, as Clark grows up he discovers that, just like Superman in the comics, he is developing super powers. He has to learn to master these new abilities, how to hide them from others, and just what he should do with them. In a world where s

Admin April 16th, 2010

But inexplicably, as Clark grows up he discovers that, just like Superman in the comics, he is developing super powers. He has to learn to master these new abilities, how to hide them from others, and just what he should do with them. In a world where s

If you want to read a good Superman story read anything Dan Jurgen wrote afterwards. Read the entire saga of the death and return of Superman. Sure it was over hyped and just a retarded way to boost sales and boy did it work but the writers still did th

Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.

Body Thermage

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(Www old comic books) The scene with Krypto, short as it is, is worth the price of the book by itself! Wonderful!

Admin April 14th, 2010

The scene with Krypto, short as it is, is worth the price of the book by itself! Wonderful!

Lois Lane came off as a complete snob and competitively obessed, sort of like Monica Geller from “Friends” except without the charm.

Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.


Len Shaffer honored by NAPIM with the Printing Ink Pioneer Award.: An article from: Ink World


Of that total, 77 per cent were “genuine” cartridges, about 13 per cent were compatibles discount inkjet cartridges and the remainder were counterfeits or so-called “parallel imports”. About inkjet online inkjet online has no affiliation with discount inkjet cartridges any store or brand and are not a franchise. privacy statement designed by web to discount inkjet cartridges market corp. So if you want to make huge savings on your epson printer ink cartridges then click discount inkjet cartridges onto one of the links below.

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(My old comic books) If SUPERMAN: DAY OF DOOM a narrative penned by Dan Jurgens, the genius behind “The Death of Superman” storyline should be remembered for anything, it’s in igniting the desire to go back and reread and relive the events of the entire “Death” s

Admin April 14th, 2010

If SUPERMAN: DAY OF DOOM a narrative penned by Dan Jurgens, the genius behind “The Death of Superman” storyline should be remembered for anything, it’s in igniting the desire to go back and reread and relive the events of the entire “Death” s

Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.


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Still, this is a fun comic with some dark tones that should entertain serious DC Comics fans. (comic books displayed)

Admin April 12th, 2010

Still, this is a fun comic with some dark tones that should entertain serious DC Comics fans.

So much for all of these prattle, however in every case there’s a propagator about it all and for this instance, i do recall that the main man responsible behind all of these revisions is a second rater comic book writer/artist whom DC Comics hired to

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The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.

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If you would have two Superman books to buy, I would recommend “Whatever Happened to the man of tomorrow” and this one, hands down. (comic book art cartoon)

Admin April 11th, 2010

If you would have two Superman books to buy, I would recommend “Whatever Happened to the man of tomorrow” and this one, hands down.

The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.

Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.

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I tried to tolerate it personally as a comic book fan back then in spite of all the changes, and try to accept them as a very clever and valid means to revise the characters thus in particular to the SUPES conundrum, Lois Lane’s not as doty dumbness an (traditional comic books)

Admin April 11th, 2010

I tried to tolerate it personally as a comic book fan back then in spite of all the changes, and try to accept them as a very clever and valid means to revise the characters thus in particular to the SUPES conundrum, Lois Lane’s not as doty dumbness an

Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.


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(Over comic book store) As the final part of Greg Rucka’s Ruin trilogy which started with Unconventional Warfare and continued in That Healing Touch , Ruin Revealed brings the story full circle as Lois sets out to determine the identity of her shooter and Superman weeds throug

Admin April 9th, 2010

As the final part of Greg Rucka’s Ruin trilogy which started with Unconventional Warfare and continued in That Healing Touch , Ruin Revealed brings the story full circle as Lois sets out to determine the identity of her shooter and Superman weeds throug

I got the opportunity to read the guide, and it was a magnificent and mesmerizing quick read; with pages upon pages of beautiful photography from the film admittedly for those of you who’ve spent the last year following the film’s production via the in

The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.


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Illinois Harley Spring Open House April 2
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This trade collects issues 8 13 of the Superman/Batman series. The story opens as Batman is diving in (comic book subscription) the waters off Gotham City collecting remnants of a recently destroyed Kryptonite asteroid. While arguing with Superman over a comm link he finds a recen

Admin April 7th, 2010

This trade collects issues 8 13 of the Superman/Batman series. The story opens as Batman is diving in the waters off Gotham City collecting remnants of a recently destroyed Kryptonite asteroid. While arguing with Superman over a comm link he finds a recen

Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.

The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.


Police send Big Ben investigation to DA’s office

MILLEDGEVILLE, Ga. (AP) — Authorities in Georgia have finished their investigation into a 20-year-old college student’s claim that Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger sexually assaulted her at a nightclub, police said Wednesday.


Ex-Buckeye Clarett could be released in 6 months

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Former Ohio State football player Maurice Clarett is in county jail and awaiting a judge’s decision on Wednesday that would release him to a community-based correction facility after spending 3 years in prison.


WBC to discipline father of Japanese boxer Kameda

TOKYO (AP) — The World Boxing Council has summoned the father of Japanese flyweight Koki Kameda to appear before a disciplinary committee following an outburst after his son’s defeat to Pongsaklek Wonjongkam last month.


FBFW: Lineup position can make, break fantasy year

It has been said many times that you’re only as good as the company you keep. Within a baseball context, a player’s place in the lineup is largely indicative of that player’s overall talent; further, the lineup in which a player bats can dramatically impact that player’s performance.

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All in all, a fun read for (free comic book appraisals) light or heavy comic book fans.

Admin April 6th, 2010

All in all, a fun read for light or heavy comic book fans.

If you would have two Superman books to buy, I would recommend “Whatever Happened to the man of tomorrow” and this one, hands down.

Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.

The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.


CR Review: The Man With The Getaway Face

Creator: Darwyn Cooke
Publishing Information: IDW, oversized pamphlet, 24 pages, 2010, $2
Ordering Numbers:

From a production, value and conceptual standpoint, The Man With The Getaway Face works with the lean efficiency of its famous lead. A prologue that will be included in this summer’s new Darwyn Cooke Parker volume, it’s been drafted into service as a stand-alone story on fancy paper at a bigger-than-usual size (think “Rubber Blanket mini-comic”) for $2. I’m not privy to the corporate strategy, but I’m guessing it’s more of a promotional item than a comics-reading one. That’s not exactly genius-level work on my part, as for now it’s only available for sale at cons and this summer will be subsumed back into the larger work where it belongs. It’s hard to imagine any adult reader of comics at one of these conventions where money flows so freely not being willing to give up less than the price of a vendor soda to pick up one of these suckers.

The Man With The Getaway Face finds Parker coming off plastic surgery and looking for a new score to bolster his fading bankroll. The post-surgery design for Parker isn’t just more visually appealing, it looks like Cooke boiled the last vestiges of humanity off of his lead’s skull. The story itself proves fairly straightforward — one can see why the work is a lesser favorite for Cooke — but there are compelling details. Just to provide one example, it’s hard not to like the idea of older thieves serving as network of go-betweens connecting practicing ones looking to assemble crews. The matter-of-fact way Parker sorts out whom he can trust and whom he can’t is a lot of fun to watch as well. The mini-book reinforces that the Parkers are vehicles for entertainment in Cooke’s view. While the wider thematic frameworks one can place on the characters and make use of to examine his push through life might be of interest in gauging how the character has hit so hard with so many folks over the years, that’s not the cartoonist’s primary focus. Nor will it likely be yours.


Notes On WonderCon, 2010

By Tom Spurgeon

* This is a series of notes about or inspired by WonderCon 2010, which took place April 2-4 at the Moscone Center in San Francisco. WonderCon is a comics and related media show that’s been going about 20 years constructed mostly along the lines of mainstream North American comics, taking place in one fo the world’s hot spots for alternative culture. Notes on other comics-related events taking place outside of the convention center but scheduled for WonderCon weekend to take advantage of the extra folks in town are included here, at least as much as I was able to attend them.

* Just to be as clear as possible, I was flown out as a media guest for this show and given a hotel room. Although why the offer was tendered wasn’t discussed, I imagine the Comic-Con staff made this offer in order to help bring greater attention to this show. As I would not be able to afford to attend the show otherwise, and because the show interests me, I was happy to take them up on their offer. There was absolutely no suggestion on their end as to how I should cover the show or whether I should cover the show. I could have spent the entire weekend squirreled away at the hotel watching filthy pay-per-view until the credit card by which I was paying for incidentals reached its spending limit.

* Comic-Con is also an advertiser on this site, which I usually don’t mention because it’s, you know, right there. Anyway, I guess there’s a big chance for biased, compromised nonsense this time out. Read carefully.

Thursday

* first of all, to be absolutely clear: WonderCon paid to fly me out to their show and put me up for the weekend. They asked for nothing in return, although I assume they wanted me to cover the show and be able to speak about it in the future from the vantage point of having experienced it first-hand. I should also note that WonderCon’s parent company is a prominent advertiser at CR. Hopefully, what follows is worth reading despite these massive, potential conflicts of interest.

* no one really wants to hear another person’s travel horror stories, but I’ll give you mine: I showed up at the airport Friday morning to take the first of three flights. The first flight was canceled for mechanical reasons. I couldn’t make it by car to pick up the second flight but the folks at the first airport offered to re-book me through Tucson, 3.5 hours away, for a flight that would still get me to San Francisco that day. They even showed me paperwork and gave me a code. Turns out that while this flight existed, the nice folks at the first airport didn’t do any of the actual re-booking. To have them re-do the flight in Tucson would cost $500. I don’t know about you, but that’s my entire Thunderstrike back-issues buying budget. The guy at the next desk eventually felt sorry enough for me he booked me a new flight on his own authority. But thanks, original airport people, for several moments of dread.

* it wouldn’t be classy to name the offending airline, but I will say it rhymes with “Montier.”

* the cab driver I used from SFO hadn’t heard of WonderCon. I thought that was an interesting contrast from the bemused groans I usually get from San Diego’s taxi-driving legions, at least enough that I’d mention it here.

* one thing I saw on the highway was a big Iron Man billboard for Oracle. Don’t know exactly what for, but it was definitely ol’ Shellhead. I flashed on the kind of thought that writers with a greater sense of what mainstream comics mean tend to make routinely and with a lot more verve: as much as our first reaction would be to pooh-pooh it, it must be cool on some level to work near the creative fulcrum for such iconic characters, these temporary icons of cultural shorthand. I concentrate so much on the downside of that that it probably behooves me to address the positives every now and then.

* my WonderCon-ignorant cab driver did say he’d never seen that much activity at the Marriott Marquis on a weekday evening, as a number of cabs and cars were crowding their short driveway. In fact, I walked in just as a short line of DC power players barreled past me, on their way to dinner. Comics-town!

* that’s a fine hotel, by the way. I have no idea where it rests in the constellation of WonderCon hotels, but it’s nice. My room was very large and comfortable, with a huge desk on which to work. Most writers love most hotel rooms, and this definitely had most of the reasons why. The lobby is airport terminal spacious, with a bar that feels like the place you might get a last drink before taking off.

* I fully intended to walk to the Walgreen’s and come back and go to bed. But instead I enjoyed a three-hour lobby bar conversation with IDW’s Scott Dunbier, who was hoping to catch some people coming back from dinner to transfer some original art to one of them. That original art? An entire comic book by an old master, which was about as ridiculously gorgeous to look at as you’d imagine. Most people that stopped by took the time to take at least a peek, oohing and aahing all the way.

* coming in and out of our vicinity were a variety of comics folks and convention regulars: Mark Evanier, Sergio Aragones, James Robinson, Pam Noles, Jim Chadwick, Annamaria White, Heidi MacDonald and a number of folks whose names I’m way too terrified to wing. I saw Joe Kubert in the lobby proper, at one point talking to I believe Dan DiDio. I saw Team Isotope on the other side of the bar. The reason I mention all this is because a) it’s always a lot of fun to talk about comics face to face with other people when you spend nearly all of your time typing about them at home, b) this is a very mainstream comics-focused show, and I don’t know a lot of mainstream comics people. These would be my personal themes for the weekend.

* as many people as were roaming about, a few expressed nostalgia for WonderCon’s original, Oakland-area potency as a bar con, as in “best bar con ever.” There wasn’t a lot of what we in college called “shuttling” in term of old memories, but there was definitely some fondness expressed for the original hotel’s bar and the shenanigans that developed there. Smaller shows have more intimate backstage scenes generally, and while this show is a bit too big for there to be one single scene, it came close: in whatever circle you traveled, you tended to see those people over and over.

Saturday

* yet another thing that makes this con different from Comic-Con is that walking over to the show the street didn’t begin to coalesce into a WonderCon crowd until about 40 yards from the front door. At Comic-Con I always get a sense I’ve entered the convention center’s sphere of influence about three blocks away, like Peter Weller getting joined by the other Buckaroo Banazai cast members in the end credits.

* downtown San Francisco seems to have some sort of Walgreen’s problem. One of the neighborhoods where I lived in Seattle for several years offered two Starbucks within 40 yards of one another, and Market Street was kind of like that, only with the opportunity to buy two-liters of Sunkist and a rotary fan rather than espresso. I always like walking around San Francisco, though. Even more than New York it offers the sight of people absolutely put together right next to people absolutely falling apart. I come from a town where the mayor is just as likely as anyone else to be standing in line in his sweatpants at 12 PM on Sunday with an 18-pack of Bud Ice, so the sharp distinction the big cities bring fascinates.

* registration was great. Christopher whose last name I don’t remember and who takes care of that for Comic-Con said they get about 650 pre-registered press members and about 800 total (the walk-up addition may have only been Friday’s). The lines for individual registration looked long but survivable.

* I caught a glimpse of David Glanzer going the other way down up the world’s longest escalator. When I tried to go up and see him I couldn’t find him. I went down the escalator again and noticed he was in this open air little circular lounge behind the registration area and over the outside of the hall. It was like a little Star Wars social space. I really liked it. Best staff-only area maybe ever.

* the convention hall is pretty big, appropriate to the show: I’m thinking maybe 2.5 times the size of a HeroesCon? In the size-sense the show really is like San Diego from 15-18 years ago. I thought it looked fairly crowded on Friday, although maybe not so much at the far ends of Artist’s Alley, the lanes against the walls where folks like cartoonist Justin Thompson and the writer Matt Maxwell were located. They actually had some of the bigger AA names on the ends of rows rather than in the rows — I don’t know if that’s a typical thing or not — guys like Ethan Van Sciver and David Finch and Frank Cho.

* I saw both of my convention buddies — by which I mean guys with whom I’m friendly that I only ever seem to see at conventions, year after year. Joel Meadows is readying another print issue of his handsome Tripwire for release in July. Justin Norman is in the midst of a hopefully long, ongoing run on DC The Spirit, first issue to come out soon. He admitted that the pedigree of creators to work on that character gave him some pause. Norman’s one of my favorite people in comics and it’s great to see him work his way into this new opportunity. It’s been a long time coming and I hope he kills it. He’s working with writer Mark Schultz on the initial issues and Editor Joey Cavalieri generally.

* I saw only two celebrities; and only one of them was a sure thing. I swear I saw Jeff Garlin there, although I haven’t double-checked yet and pretty much 17 percent of all dudes at a convention look like Jeff Garlin. I definitely saw Michael Chiklis at his signing, which was big enough to cause Bob Schreck to do that ambulatory scarecrow thing where you slowly walk into a crowd waving your arms gently to get people to scatter. There were a lot of young men at the Chiklis signing. You could do much worse than emulate the determination he’s displayed in shaping his career. For what it’s worth, I felt almost none of the Hollywood presence, even less than the 10 percent of it that I feel in San Diego.

* there were a lot of celebrities signing autographs and the like, although I didn’t spend much time in their section. I saw an actor who apparently played an African-American sheriff on Dukes of Hazzard that I couldnt remember at all (my dad, inexplicably, was a fan of the show; he also loved Hee-Haw). My favorite show business related thing on the floor was a booth in which sat a fan club for the small town community-affirming, post-domestic nuclear terrorism show Jericho. I loved watching Jericho when I could remember to go look for it because it was so terribly, terribly weird. The ladies at the booth were selling show-related clothing.

* most improved booth: IDW. Booth I didnt’ really understand: Aspen. Booth that wasn’t actually their real booth: DC Comics. Company I didn’t expect to be here that wasn’t: Marvel. Company I had sort of expected to be here for some reason but wasn’t: Top Shelf.

* people talk about the graying of the comics readership, but it felt to me like very few people in attendance happened to be my age or older, and most looked like they came from the same age group — 25-35 year olds — that to my memory dominated convention crowds 15 years ago. I felt old more than a few times. There seemed like a lot of women there, including a number attending on their own, which maybe wasn’t the case when I started going to these things. I also saw a lot of kids, including kids that seemed just as into this stuff as the parent, if not outright escorted by one. Also, the crowd seemed quite diverse.

* never in my life will I understand the costume impulse, even less so in terms of people my age and older wearing them (nearly all teenager activities are designed around sex; jumping in and out of costumes and acting out a bit while in them is not the worst idea to push young people in that direction), but I was surprised to see only a modest amount of them on the floor this first day. My favorite was a Dove costume, as 1) it’s weird, 2) that one doesn’t make a whole lot of sense once you see someone actually wearing it, 3) it cracks me up when someone does a costume where you’re paired with someone else and not do the other costume.

* saw two folks from the Pacific Northwest with cons of their own: Jim Demonakos of Emerald City and Shannon Stewart from Stumptown. Demonakos seemed pleased with the success of his 2010 show, and from all reports — including unsolicited raves from three pros I talked to — he should be. Emerald Con passed that threshold this year where it’s going to be hard not to have it now, if that makes any sense. Stewart said that Portland’s finest indy comics show just announced Paul Pope as its last special guest, and that the mayor has named April comics month in that great funnybook city for the fourth year in a row. I haven’t been to Emerald City yet, but Stumptown is a fine show of that type.

* watching Jeremy Atkins of Dark Horse and AnnaMaria White at IDW operate a little bit, it struck me how the publicity operations in comics might have changed in recent years, without our really noticing, to more significantly favor people that are personable and presentable along with those able to carry out media relations duties. This is the kind of thing that might only matter to me, I admit. And it’s not like there was ever a time when PR in comics was run by disagreeable, beastly folk. Still, the current generation seems slightly more telegenic, if that makes any sense.

* I watched some of the Dark Horse panel; it was fun to gauge the various contrasts between Atkins and Dark Horse/comics old guard member Randy Stradley. They had presentational tool malfunctions that would have sent me screaming from the building and into a new career. One thing they mentioned that I hadn’t noticed is that Joss Whedon’s brother whose name I can’t remember (Zack?) is doing more and more writing for the company. Also: Ron Glass anecdote, and you can’t have enough of those.

* a fit-looking, earnest and personable Geoff Johns ran his moderator-less panel like he was hosting an MTV special; appropriate to that comparison, three or four questions were about how good-looking he is (he deflected these questions). Johns had to negotiate not being able to discuss Blackest Night #8, as a significant number of people in the audience had yet to read it. His new corporate position brought with it a bunch of questions that helped compensate. Johns said he worked very closely with the writer on the Green Lantern film script, and rattled off a significant number of weird alien things that we’re likely to see in the movie, now filming. The crowd, maybe three times the size of the Dark Horse panel, seemed to enjoy the heck out of themselves.

* back on the floor, I saw the writer Joe Casey, who refused to let me take his photo because he said his new look afforded him a disguise for conventions. By the time you read this, they will have announced a new title for Casey at Image Comics called Officer Down.

* I ran into Charles Brownstein, who informed me that the wire services had picked up on the death of Burton Joseph, the lawyer and free speech activist who lent his energy and prestige to the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund in some of its most important cases. A full obituary will appear at CR soon. He was right around 80 years old.

* the general health of Generation Direct Market was a recurring topic throughout the weekend. I also talked to a number of people about the mounting costs of the Recession on businesses within comics and on individual careers. The basic idea with the talk about money was that just because the last 18 months were not as apocalyptically bad as folks a lot of people still took major hits.

* personal note: it would be nice to go through an entire convention season where I didn’t have to say to at least one person: “Wow, I totally screwed you on that. I’m sorry.”

* a lot of folks expressed enthusiasm for the $2 Darwyn Cooke Parker preview; it was also by far the single item that people mentioned when I asked what I should go look at. I ran into a couple of people that gushed over being able to catch up with Long Tail Kitty. After that, opinion fractured markedly.

* I stopped in for some of two company panels: the DC Nation panel — which is somehow different from the DC Universe panel in a way I don’t care enough to understand — and IDW’s. The DC Nation panel featured three of the new company executives in Dan DiDio, Jim Lee and Geoff Johns, and all were enthusiastic about their new roles although not in a way that extended past general platitudes. They also all wore baseball caps, which I trace back, likely in improper fashion, to being one of Image Comics enduring gifts to the funnybook world. The IDW guys struggled on as fog kept the rest of the IDW editorial team from getting on planes early that day. This left those in the room without their cheat sheets. There were 22 people in attendance, most of whom got to laugh at the enthusiastic, earnest musing of Max Brooks on his GI Joe work.

* my sampling consists of exactly two people, but if Brooks and Johns are representative of the slightly younger creators coming to the fore now, that kind of earnestness may be on the rise while the slightly snarky remove of the older creators may be on the decline. That’s a ridiculously broad statement, of course, but I wonder if there isn’t perhaps a trend of some sort there.

* one thing I like about comics conventions is you can pepper your conversation with li living sight gags. Two different people with whom I discussed my forthcoming plans were treated to me saying, “or maybe I’ll just stand here and watch Erik Larsen read a comic book.” And as they looked up through not 20 feet away was Erik Larsen reading a comic book. I could do stuff like that all day.

* I ran into retailer and Direct Market industry advocate Brian Hibbs on the convention’s main floor. He’s someone with whom I’ve been dealing since 1994 — almost always in friendly fashion; sometimes on different ends of an issue, never angrily — but hadn’t met face to face, so that was nice. He was still beaming from the recent ComicsPro meeting in Memphis, particularly in how responsive the companies in attendance were to hearing back from Direct Market retailers in terms of things they were doing. I remain a big Direct Market guy, although I’m cognizant of their failings. If comic shops didn’t exist we would dream about them. I really like when Brian writes about hanging out with his little kid, so I was glad to hear they made it to WonderCon together and went toy shopping. Hibbs doesn’t exhibit at shows, which never occurred to me before but of course he doesn’t. I wonder if there’s any significant about a generational shift in retailers — Hibbs being a transitional figure, starting his shop in 1989 — and if we might lose comics retailers at show by a decision on their end rather than the conventions’ doing. As a matter of fact, there’s a broad range of issues that comes up when you think of DM Generation One entering their golden years. Item one: who gets their stores?

* went to the Ed Hannigan benefit at the Cartoon Art Museum. I hadn’t been to CAM since I went to an Ed Gorey exhibit there in the mid- to late-1990s. It’s very different space: first floor (rather than a higher one), bigger shop, four largish rooms and a fifth, smaller one furthest away from the street with a small hallway (and bathrooms) sticking out from that. It’s a good space: not as big as the small museums I’ve been to over the years, but certainly half again the size of a strong gallery’s showing area.

* I quite liked the variety of art on display. There was some sort of Batman exhibit that had original pages from Paul Pope, Frank Miller and Jiro Kuwata. The Kuwatas were stunning, imagery presented with a confidence made their inexplicable oddities stand out that much more: I felt an urge to own every third page. The Millers brought on feelings of nostalgia more than any appreciation for the works as original art pages, although that was probably just my mood. For some reason, it was heartening to see the whiteout Miller employed. The Paul Pope pages were ridiculously huge.

* as far as I know, the Museum failed to raise enough money to make Andrew Farago shave a 1989-style Batman logo into the back of his head. I wondered if his wife, the writer and cartoonist Shaenon Garrity, was relieved, but I was told she was filming a public access TV show with Phil Foglio, which is the kind of thing you end up doing on a comics convention weekend.

* the Ed Hannigan stuff was fine. If you’re near my age, you probably bought a lot of comics with Ed Hannigan covers. With the 40 or so pieces on hand, they managed to snag what I think of as his best design — an issue of Batman looking down on an alley way where the Caped Crusader and the Boy Wonder have just beaten down a whole crowd of typical-era punks. When I think of Hannigan’s interior work I think of the first Cloak and Dagger story, which opens with this snazzy, one-panel street setting and contains some fine minimalist cartooning featuring the visually contrasting guest stars. They had that whole story there, so a good job in representing Hannigan’s better work, I think.

* a few pieces of art from the more general part of the exhibit offered several obvious highlights. I’d never seen a Jack Kent (it looked like an original Pogo, naturally) or a William Steig original before (that one baffled me; it looked like no human hands had touched it). I’d seen some Bill Mauldin but I liked the ones they had on display quite a bit. The usual cartoon art show suspects — Crane, Caniff, Kelly, King/Moores, Arriola were all well represented.

* the museum has about 6000 pieces of original art in a permanent collection, which are stored in a different, higher-security part of their property.

* I met Albert Moy later that evening, which I thought a bit humorous given the original art theme to the evening. He’s been working in that field since 1982, which is long for any career in comics let alone a ruthlessly commercial one like that.

* my one “this really isn’t like 15 years at San Diego at all” moment was watching Mark Evanier check his portable device to see if a business-related download he was doing in his hotel room was completed. Don’t remember that from 1995.

* I’ve been given figures ranging from 20-25 people to 125-150 people going on Friday’s Tiki Bar tour. No matter the bottom-line number, several went in full pirate garb.

Saturday

* Saturday: way different than Friday crowds-wise. There were more people stepping away from the convention-center Saturday early afternoon than had been heading there the same time Friday. Most of the tables in the center of the show were jammed with people seeking something. By mid-afternoon I began to collect a wide array of stories about who was making money that tended as a group to trend towards the “things are going very well.” The more elaborate costumes had come out, too.

* the crowds didn’t go everywhere, though. Like San Diego, like various iterations of the Chicago Con, like Heroes Con 2008 and therefore I imagine like most shows, there were dead spots: one such at WonderCon was the outside row of small press artists. I don’t know that there’s anything that can be done about that — people are going to go where they’re gong to go — but I always feel sorry for someone who for reasons of flow not aesthetics is seeing most people chug by without a second look.

* someone told me a few hours afer the face on that the Q&A-driven DCU Editorial panel was “the longest experience” of their life. Just saying.

* I haven’t looked at the reports yet to figure out the content of what was said and its potential newsworthiness, but a bunch of people enthused over Greg Rucka’s spotlight for its long, full and specific answers to questions asked.

* if I had enough money to cover conventions more thoroughly, I swear my first hire wouldn’t be another person to run around the con but someone to stay home and monitor the various news feeds coming out of it. Being so close up I have little idea as to what’s going on, and feel I’ll have some work to do on Tuesday of this week catching up with some announcement-based news for sure.

* my favorite new recurring panel is the CBLDF Live Art Jam, which I just think is a great idea: a group of artists make sketches to auction off on behalf of the CBLDF while answering questions about what they’re drawing or the industry generally. They switch places so that one of them is always working on the overhead. I really enjoyed this at San Diego and except for the fact that at CCI the table set-up made it an endearing lunchtime panel (it’s the future as I once envisioned it to see dozens of teens staring at Mike Mignola drawing while eating from Bento Boxes) I had a better time at this version. When Emily Proctor is done with CSI: Miami, they should hire her to play Colleen Doran drawing in public while sticking it to past dumb editors and the stupidities of work-for-hire production in a southern lilt. I’d watch that show every week. Darick Robertson even told a pretty great Peter Bagge anecdote.

* the two great things about the Boom! panel were 1) its bizarre mix of new comics readers and super-old and jazzed up Disney comics enthusiasts, 2) the fact that Darkwing Duck is out of any definition of my own childhood/adolescence that I have no attachment to it at all and the names of places and characters that thrilled some in attendance cascade off my forehead like water from a shower head. They had about 30 people there.

* the Gail Simone panel was more packed in the same place, bunches of people that seemed genuinely pleased to meet the comics writer. Simone told a funny story about nearly blowing off an early opportunity to work for Bongo; she was generally funny. I thought smart her statement on Wonder Woman that it wasn’t so much about figuring out the one or two things that character did really well but creating a vehicle through which multiple interpretation could be valid.

* Simone wasn’t one of them, but there seemed like a lot of mainstream people talking from vague terms to more concrete ones about forthcoming independent projects. That may just be a function of events like this one, but the sentiment that you’d want to do something of your own seemed genuinely expressed. Geoff Johns was one person who talked about doing his own characters (which might be his first — I don’t follow him closely enough to know — and might be worth noting just in terms of his being able to do so given his current corporate responsibilities); the Amanda Conner/Jimmy Palmiotti team was another.

* I attended a compelling Black Cartoonists as Social Commentators panels, despite the fact that so much time was lost to trying to get the video to work. The one time the video did work, it showed a funny video by Jerry Craft where he basically yells at the black superheroes from the ’70s for various offenses related to their sucking. The best line was after pointing that Black Goliath was routinely beaten up on the cover of his own comic books, the Craft stand-in suggests that BG has to be the only superhero whose utility belt contained nothing but first aid items. The funny thing is, that video had little to do with what was great about the panel, which was hearing Darrin Bell and Keith Knight talk not about their careers, or self-publishing, or a try-anything ethos, but about their work and how people had reacted to it positively and negatively over the years. I don’t know Bell’s work as well as I might, but I’ve already put aside time to go and re-examine a bunch of it. Both guys were smart and funny and had trenchant stories to tell. This is exactly the kind of panel I hope to see at a comics show.

* one cool thing about that panel is they had a professional moderator whose name I can’t remember, a guy that was seemingly used to doing interviews on TV. The great thing about it is that he was absolutely brutal in terms of shutting down questions from the audience.

* if I had greater capability to travel to do comics news stories, I’d love to go with Keith Knight when he hits Slippery Rock to speak about a cartoon that outraged the black students there. Knight spoke with great sympathy about how his cartoon, brutally misunderstood, nonetheless may have been a final straw for many of the students facing some real issues on that campus.

* I went to speak to Shaenon Garrity on the floor after the Knight/Bell panel; she was helping Phil Foglio at the show. I don’t know all that many people at the show, so I kind of relished visiting the few I did, which probably isn’t the best way to orient yourself, but there it is.

* the Darwyn Cooke presentation was mostly packed, even more so at the end when Star Trek people eager to see the next panel crowded into the few remaining seats. Cooke’s a very forthright speaker, and it was interesting how many more of the questions at this show focused on his Parker work as opposed to focusing on superheroes through his work on books like New Frontier. Cooke expressed some general frustration with the amount of time it takes works to be approved in the mainstream comics milieu, and admitted to outright fear shopping the Parker stuff around. He was also quite honest about the primary motivating factor for potentially doing occasional mainstream projects if any were to be offered: money. One thing that was interesting to me is that he spoke of letting his personal reaction to the Parker books set him on a new career path when that was necessary, but that he also still plans to do the original work he was shopping around at one point. One of them may happen sooner than later, the other — a fantasy — may wait until he feels more creatively confident taking it on.

* one thing that struck me was that Cooke was complimentary of Daniel Clowes more than once over the weekend, calling him the best letterer in comics at one point (Eisner being the best all-time and Saladino being his favorite of the mainstream hand-letterers), citing his work with single colors as a factor in his working on the same in the Parker books, and extolling the virtues of Like A Velvet Glove, Cast In Iron as a horror story.

* I’d like to thank the comics journalism panel for making Douglas Wolk and myself feel 10,000 years old. Graeme McMillan’s career was discussed like he was the basis for The Front Page and he started his Fanboy Rampage in 2002.

* all of the panelists came across as articulate and engaged and each presented themselves well, including late addition Laura Hudson. I thought David Brothers was a natural moderator; anyone out there who needs one should ask him. I’d never met Kate Dacey before, so that was nice. She was formidable.

* all that said, when I stopped feeling old I started feeling like I came from a different planet than most of the panelists. There was a lot of talk about generating hits and reacting to readers’ concerns that are flat-out foreign to me. I was glad there wasn’t a lot of time debating over what journalism is or isn’t. All of the panelists clearly practice some form of journalism, even if isn’t of the Woodward/Bernstein — or Groth/Heintjes — variety.

* I saw the sartorially resplendent Phil Foglio making his way back to the convention, dressed like the mayor in a particularly fancy Dahl story. I really thought about trying to do the masquerade since San Diego’s has been such a tough ticket for 10 years now, but I had a couple of verbal commitments. It’s nice to know I probably could have, though.

* walking from the convention center to Comix Experience is a great idea only if you remember that natives don’t consider four-and-half blocks of walking uphill walking uphill at all.

* Comix Experience is a lovely-looking shop, maybe the paragon of a neighborhood store. I got to talk about the general, flushed state of North American comics conventions with some industry heavy-hitters (including Ron Turner), shoot the about Chicago comics retail of days gone by with Larry Marder and what kind of comics hit with audiences and why with Justin Norman, Erik Larsen and Joe Keatinge. That was actually a very engaged discussion for people standing around holding beers and trying not to trip on some of the idiosyncratic parts of the floor, with a sense that there are these really talented people that logic says should have an audience out there and that want to make comics that are absolutely flummoxed by the low sales ceiling for certain kinds of funnybooks right now.

* people at CE were happy to be drinking the fancy beer, and the food truck outside may be the greatest idea for a comics event supplement in the history of comics events. Brian seemed to be enjoying himself, too, which is a great thing. It’s nice to be able to see his space, and 21 years in is an accomplishment in terms of comics retail, retail generally and single-proprietor retail all at once.

* I bummed a ride in Justin Norman’s cab to the Isotope Party. Thanks, Justin. He told a very funny artist talking to his writer after bumping into him in the convention center bathroom story.

* Isotope’s party spilled out onto its sidewalk; several folks that looks like neighborhood people walking dogs or getting off their bicycles stopped nearby or across the street to gape. It wasn’t the biggest party the store had had, James Sime said, but to my eyes it looked very, very respectable. I was frightened to go in.

* that’s a lovely space, by the way. It seems ideal for social events like this weekend’s, but I can imagine being a comics fan in my early 20s and wanting to come and hang out in a space like this one with facilitating my comics being the bonus.

* I have no idea why, but the Isotope party’s comics-name guests (Palmiotti, Connner, Cooke) and their friends were all dressed in western garb. The Canadians were even Mounties. I started having Paul Gross flashbacks. When Palmiotti was giving a couple of the folks in attendance general career advice I imagined him breaking in on a pal’s meeting with DC or Marvel, shooting his pistols until the contracts details were conformed.

* I really need to get to know more people on the mainstream side of things.

* I bummed a ride from Douglas Wolk’s cab back to the hotel. Thanks, Douglas. Douglas is writing for Techland every week now, and they are at the very least keeping him in cab money.

* the hotel bar was once again hopping. And the Butler Bulldogs won. By the way: comics convention? Worst place to find out a basketball score ever.

Sunday

* Easter Sunday. Several people at the show asked me if I thought there would be crowds on Easter or not. No one really knows.

* Turns out they didn’t have a ton to worry about. The crowds fell safely within general Sunday parameters: not as many as the very crazy Saturday but more it seemed than Friday. The floor seemed busy. You mostly noticed the reduction in audience in the non-busy areas pf the building. There weren’t people resting up against random walls on the mezzanine levels like on Saturday, not as many panels (it seems) in danger of being crowded right out to the hallway, not as long of a line (and by 3:30, none at all!) at the eating centers. It was San Diego of 25 years ago.

* I heard that several exhibitors thought they could get in much earlier than they ended up being let in. Don’t know if that’s a big deal or not.

* by the way, the Moscone food stands seem superior in every way to the San Diego Convention Center food stands. I didn’t eat at them, but I bought some water near the end of Sunday and they had actual food-looking food behind the counter. I loved the proximity to the panel room areas, too. Why wouldn’t you want to grab a bite to eat and then go watch cartoons or see Ian Sattler pontificate or whatever?

* when I walked in today a small circle of journalists had surrounded David Glanzer, including one gentleman incensed about the performance of Travel Planners during their initial hotel lottery a few weeks back. An announcement should be coming pretty soon, and I remain convinced that San Diego is the best spot for the show for now.

* it was good to hear that Heidi MacDonald felt as old as I did at that comics journalism panel.

* at least one well-known professional flew home Saturday late to spend Easter with their family and hey, good for them.

* talked to some of the Artist’s Alley folks. Lark Pien was there, holding forth with a table full of stuff that was way more APE and MoCCA than maybe the entire rest of the room combined. I also met Miriam Libicki, which

* I talked to a non-representative mix of about 20 retailers, exhibitors and industry organizations: all seemed pretty positive about the show except two that were in what I would call, looking around, squirrelly locations. People with a specific focus — the retailer that was there to sell newer comics under cost, the artist there to give out cards directing people to their to their web site seemed particularly

* I don’t think there’s a whole lot that can be done about that, incidentally, beyond the kind of baseline realizations that I’m sure shows like this make. For instance: it seems to me that most of the TV and film autograph people leave a couple of hours early — I’m not certain why — so you wouldn’t want to count on them driving traffic to a general location for an entire day. Convention flow is a mysterious beast. I might suggest for this particular show and this particular convention that the far wall — the part of the exhibitor groups that are up against an actual wall, be potentially discounted. You’re just not going to have people on the ends, and that last row in particular was like an express highway by which people went from one place to another.

* I saw one panel on Sunday. The Pogo panel wasn’t Evanier/Kelly driven, so I took a pass. I was going to go to the Jonathan Ross panel, but it disappeared when I went to the bathroom. Not sure what happened there.

* that leaves the one I did attend, the SLG editorial panel. It’s nice to see a familiar face and hear a friendly voice. Dan Vado was in comics long before I was (SLG’s 25th anniversary is next year). I couldn’t tell from most of the video presentations if the comics being promoted were of much interest, but it was good to hear that James Turner’s Warlord Of Io will have trade collection this summer.

* Dan also reported on the designer and cartoonist Scott Saavedra’s health, saying that he had his good periods and bad periods but that he was doing okay. That was good to hear.

* there’s no convention experience that can’t be improved by buying 10-12 comic books you want to read for $1 apiece.

* the talk of the show I’d say is Greg Rucka’s panel and the blunt nature of the statements he made there. I bet that’s googleable, but I’ll link to it with this sentence when I get back.

* here’s something I never experienced at a comics convention before: publishers giving copies of books to press to take home because they didn’t want to pack it and ship it back. That’s a very BEA thing, actually.

* I missed seeing Bob Beerbohm, but the young ladies at the booth said his surgery was successful and that he was roaming around the show somewhere. So that’s good news. Given all the time I talked about first generation retailers this weekend, seeing Bob’s booth was a particularly nice ending point.

* I left the convention at 4:05, with a promise to try and meet up with some folks for dinner — on Easter, I’m thinking this might be more difficult than the usual convention dinner, but we’ll see. As you’re reading this I should be either en route to New Mexico or already there, in time to watch the Butler/Duke game.

* so that was my WonderCon.

* overall, I think WonderCon’s a pretty good show, or at least my experience of it was pleasurable. It seems to have benefited a great deal from the general surge in the public’s appetite for conventions. I mean, seriously, 10 years ago we had like 1.5-2.5 conventions in terms of super-healthy geek-focused mainstream shows. Now we have at least 10 that do okay enough that it doesn’t seem ridiculous for a person to spend a weekend reporting on them. My guess is that in an entertainment world driven by geek phenomena, those who like them are encouraged to have their own experience with as many of them that hold interest. It’s a very different impulse than why my friends and I visited Chicago in the late ’80s — that was mostly to buy comics we couldn’t find anywhere else.

* a number of people asked me if I thought WonderCon was a big regional show or a smaller national. It feels to me like a smaller national show. 1) If I walked into the big room from some sort of magic portal and didn’t know what city I was in, I would not be able to guess. 2) Companies with national reach made announcements here. 3) There were enough guests of high enough quality that it seemed — barely, but still — that my gut feeling said national show. It just seemed smaller.

* many folks have asserted the virtues of WonderCon being a smaller show. Many of those good things are obvious, I think: greater ease of access to certain creators and experiences, more cohesions amongst the pros in attendance, a general reduction in hassle and cost, a greater opportunity to make a splash with a project that would be denied the stage at an established, larger show.

* in doing a final analysis, however, you also have to take into consideration the down side of a smaller show. There were two big ones for me. The first is that the show was focused primarily on the expression of mainstream comics and the pop culture that resembles mainstream comics. There was very little in the way of comics of the kind I tend to regularly buy on hand, and no natural programming I would follow. This wasn’t a hassle because I have broad tastes and it’s fun to do all sorts of thing on a comics weekend, but I really couldn’t recommend the show to my friend Bob Levin, say, or the vast majority of my Seattle comics reading friends, or even my family members. It might be nice if the con forged a relationship with one or two of the bigger art-comics publishers just to have a more pronounced presence like that at the show. The legendary Ron Turner was there, but he didn’t feel there-there. Given San Francisco’s big presence on the art comics scene and identity as the underground comix capital, this seems like a wasted opportunity.

* the other thing about a smaller show is that there are fewer surprises, I think. The show’s just not big enough for there to be this gigantic pool of undiscovered things and people and talents for you to stumble into by accident — at least not without a super- super-broad screening process. If you don’t see something in the announced guests and the announced programming, I’ll suggest you may not enjoy yourself. While I might make initial plans to attend on the strength of past shows, I can’t see making final plans until I double-checked to make sure I had enough to do. For instance, I went to a number of Darwyn Cooke panels this year, and if he weren’t a guest I’m not sure how I would have spent that time.

* I thought there were elements of the show that weren’t sharp. For instance, there was an awful lot of malfunctioning equipment. I saw maybe eight panels over the three days and five of them had significant A/V problems, and in two cases the visual presentation never worked. Considering how smoothly executed the show managed to be otherwise — the security people were pretty great, I thought — the constant stream of friendly guys swarming different podiums proved to be extremely disappointing. There were other things, too, some of which I already mentioned. I thought some of the panels had an awful lot of chatty people in the audience. It might be nice if major announcements and news were posted broadsheet form by the convention organizers; I know I missed a ton of stuff.

* one thing a number of people expressed to me is that the con needs to settle in on firm dates; if it’s a convention center problem they need to play hardball until those dates firm up.

* so I think it was a strong show. I think there’s a sturdy base from which to build an even stronger show. It has natural advantages: a: great city with a convention center right in a traversable neighborhood, strong retailer, a location people want to visit and proximity to the CCI Rolodex with a pre-summer slot to offer film people. It’s still way, way, mainstream comics, though, and I don’t see it like a mini-San Diego as much as a truncated one. To put the whole thing to you another way, C2E2 will have to be significantly formidable right out of the gate to be considered the Spring show, at least for now.

thanks to the good folks of WonderCon; I will polish this up on Tuesday


Happy 54th Birthday, Mark Askwith!

Orlando Fl Real Estate

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I got the opportunity to read the guide, and it was a magnificent and mesmerizing quick read; with pages upon pages of beautiful photography from the film admittedly for those of you who’ve spent (valuable old comic books) the last year following the film’s production via the in

Admin April 6th, 2010

I got the opportunity to read the guide, and it was a magnificent and mesmerizing quick read; with pages upon pages of beautiful photography from the film admittedly for those of you who’ve spent the last year following the film’s production via the in

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Admin April 6th, 2010

Jeph Loeb includes a huge cast of characters heroes and villains alike. One especially impressive battle takes place between Shazaam/Hawkman and Superman/Batman. The arc ends with Lex suiting up in his body armor to help in the battle against his arch e

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Abbey’s Real BBQ in San Diego

Abbey's Real BBQ in San Diego

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Admin April 5th, 2010

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Notes On WonderCon, 2010

By Tom Spurgeon

* This is a series of notes about or inspired by WonderCon 2010, which took place April 2-4 at the Moscone Center in San Francisco. WonderCon is a comics and related media show that’s been going about 20 years constructed mostly along the lines of mainstream North American comics, taking place in one fo the world’s hot spots for alternative culture. Notes on other comics-related events taking place outside of the convention center but scheduled for WonderCon weekend to take advantage of the extra folks in town are included here, at least as much as I was able to attend them.

* Just to be as clear as possible, I was flown out as a media guest for this show and given a hotel room. Although why the offer was tendered wasn’t discussed, I imagine the Comic-Con staff made this offer in order to help bring greater attention to this show. As I would not be able to afford to attend the show otherwise, and because the show interests me, I was happy to take them up on their offer. There was absolutely no suggestion on their end as to how I should cover the show or whether I should cover the show. I could have spent the entire weekend squirreled away at the hotel watching filthy pay-per-view until the credit card by which I was paying for incidentals reached its spending limit.

* Comic-Con is also an advertiser on this site, which I usually don’t mention because it’s, you know, right there. Anyway, I guess there’s a big chance for biased, compromised nonsense this time out. Read carefully.

Thursday

* first of all, to be absolutely clear: WonderCon paid to fly me out to their show and put me up for the weekend. They asked for nothing in return, although I assume they wanted me to cover the show and be able to speak about it in the future from the vantage point of having experienced it first-hand. I should also note that WonderCon’s parent company is a prominent advertiser at CR. Hopefully, what follows is worth reading despite these massive, potential conflicts of interest.

* no one really wants to hear another person’s travel horror stories, but I’ll give you mine: I showed up at the airport Friday morning to take the first of three flights. The first flight was canceled for mechanical reasons. I couldn’t make it by car to pick up the second flight but the folks at the first airport offered to re-book me through Tucson, 3.5 hours away, for a flight that would still get me to San Francisco that day. They even showed me paperwork and gave me a code. Turns out that while this flight existed, the nice folks at the first airport didn’t do any of the actual re-booking. To have them re-do the flight in Tucson would cost $500. I don’t know about you, but that’s my entire Thunderstrike back-issues buying budget. The guy at the next desk eventually felt sorry enough for me he booked me a new flight on his own authority. But thanks, original airport people, for several moments of dread.

* it wouldn’t be classy to name the offending airline, but I will say it rhymes with “Montier.”

* the cab driver I used from SFO hadn’t heard of WonderCon. I thought that was an interesting contrast from the bemused groans I usually get from San Diego’s taxi-driving legions, at least enough that I’d mention it here.

* one thing I saw on the highway was a big Iron Man billboard for Oracle. Don’t know exactly what for, but it was definitely ol’ Shellhead. I flashed on the kind of thought that writers with a greater sense of what mainstream comics mean tend to make routinely and with a lot more verve: as much as our first reaction would be to pooh-pooh it, it must be cool on some level to work near the creative fulcrum for such iconic characters, these temporary icons of cultural shorthand. I concentrate so much on the downside of that that it probably behooves me to address the positives every now and then.

* my WonderCon-ignorant cab driver did say he’d never seen that much activity at the Marriott Marquis on a weekday evening, as a number of cabs and cars were crowding their short driveway. In fact, I walked in just as a short line of DC power players barreled past me, on their way to dinner. Comics-town!

* that’s a fine hotel, by the way. I have no idea where it rests in the constellation of WonderCon hotels, but it’s nice. My room was very large and comfortable, with a huge desk on which to work. Most writers love most hotel rooms, and this definitely had most of the reasons why. The lobby is airport terminal spacious, with a bar that feels like the place you might get a last drink before taking off.

* I fully intended to walk to the Walgreen’s and come back and go to bed. But instead I enjoyed a three-hour lobby bar conversation with IDW’s Scott Dunbier, who was hoping to catch some people coming back from dinner to transfer some original art to one of them. That original art? An entire comic book by an old master, which was about as ridiculously gorgeous to look at as you’d imagine. Most people that stopped by took the time to take at least a peek, oohing and aahing all the way.

* coming in and out of our vicinity were a variety of comics folks and convention regulars: Mark Evanier, Sergio Aragones, James Robinson, Pam Noles, Jim Chadwick, Annamaria White, Heidi MacDonald and a number of folks whose names I’m way too terrified to wing. I saw Joe Kubert in the lobby proper, at one point talking to I believe Dan DiDio. I saw Team Isotope on the other side of the bar. The reason I mention all this is because a) it’s always a lot of fun to talk about comics face to face with other people when you spend nearly all of your time typing about them at home, b) this is a very mainstream comics-focused show, and I don’t know a lot of mainstream comics people. These would be my personal themes for the weekend.

* as many people as were roaming about, a few expressed nostalgia for WonderCon’s original, Oakland-area potency as a bar con, as in “best bar con ever.” There wasn’t a lot of what we in college called “shuttling” in term of old memories, but there was definitely some fondness expressed for the original hotel’s bar and the shenanigans that developed there. Smaller shows have more intimate backstage scenes generally, and while this show is a bit too big for there to be one single scene, it came close: in whatever circle you traveled, you tended to see those people over and over.

Saturday

* yet another thing that makes this con different from Comic-Con is that walking over to the show the street didn’t begin to coalesce into a WonderCon crowd until about 40 yards from the front door. At Comic-Con I always get a sense I’ve entered the convention center’s sphere of influence about three blocks away, like Peter Weller getting joined by the other Buckaroo Banazai cast members in the end credits.

* downtown San Francisco seems to have some sort of Walgreen’s problem. One of the neighborhoods where I lived in Seattle for several years offered two Starbucks within 40 yards of one another, and Market Street was kind of like that, only with the opportunity to buy two-liters of Sunkist and a rotary fan rather than espresso. I always like walking around San Francisco, though. Even more than New York it offers the sight of people absolutely put together right next to people absolutely falling apart. I come from a town where the mayor is just as likely as anyone else to be standing in line in his sweatpants at 12 PM on Sunday with an 18-pack of Bud Ice, so the sharp distinction the big cities bring fascinates.

* registration was great. Christopher whose last name I don’t remember and who takes care of that for Comic-Con said they get about 650 pre-registered press members and about 800 total (the walk-up addition may have only been Friday’s). The lines for individual registration looked long but survivable.

* I caught a glimpse of David Glanzer going the other way down up the world’s longest escalator. When I tried to go up and see him I couldn’t find him. I went down the escalator again and noticed he was in this open air little circular lounge behind the registration area and over the outside of the hall. It was like a little Star Wars social space. I really liked it. Best staff-only area maybe ever.

* the convention hall is pretty big, appropriate to the show: I’m thinking maybe 2.5 times the size of a HeroesCon? In the size-sense the show really is like San Diego from 15-18 years ago. I thought it looked fairly crowded on Friday, although maybe not so much at the far ends of Artist’s Alley, the lanes against the walls where folks like cartoonist Justin Thompson and the writer Matt Maxwell were located. They actually had some of the bigger AA names on the ends of rows rather than in the rows — I don’t know if that’s a typical thing or not — guys like Ethan Van Sciver and David Finch and Frank Cho.

* I saw both of my convention buddies — by which I mean guys with whom I’m friendly that I only ever seem to see at conventions, year after year. Joel Meadows is readying another print issue of his handsome Tripwire for release in July. Justin Norman is in the midst of a hopefully long, ongoing run on DC The Spirit, first issue to come out soon. He admitted that the pedigree of creators to work on that character gave him some pause. Norman’s one of my favorite people in comics and it’s great to see him work his way into this new opportunity. It’s been a long time coming and I hope he kills it. He’s working with writer Mark Schultz on the initial issues and Editor Joey Cavalieri generally.

* I saw only two celebrities; and only one of them was a sure thing. I swear I saw Jeff Garlin there, although I haven’t double-checked yet and pretty much 17 percent of all dudes at a convention look like Jeff Garlin. I definitely saw Michael Chiklis at his signing, which was big enough to cause Bob Schreck to do that ambulatory scarecrow thing where you slowly walk into a crowd waving your arms gently to get people to scatter. There were a lot of young men at the Chiklis signing. You could do much worse than emulate the determination he’s displayed in shaping his career. For what it’s worth, I felt almost none of the Hollywood presence, even less than the 10 percent of it that I feel in San Diego.

* there were a lot of celebrities signing autographs and the like, although I didn’t spend much time in their section. I saw an actor who apparently played an African-American sheriff on Dukes of Hazzard that I couldnt remember at all (my dad, inexplicably, was a fan of the show; he also loved Hee-Haw). My favorite show business related thing on the floor was a booth in which sat a fan club for the small town community-affirming, post-domestic nuclear terrorism show Jericho. I loved watching Jericho when I could remember to go look for it because it was so terribly, terribly weird. The ladies at the booth were selling show-related clothing.

* most improved booth: IDW. Booth I didnt’ really understand: Aspen. Booth that wasn’t actually their real booth: DC Comics. Company I didn’t expect to be here that wasn’t: Marvel. Company I had sort of expected to be here for some reason but wasn’t: Top Shelf.

* people talk about the graying of the comics readership, but it felt to me like very few people in attendance happened to be my age or older, and most looked like they came from the same age group — 25-35 year olds — that to my memory dominated convention crowds 15 years ago. I felt old more than a few times. There seemed like a lot of women there, including a number attending on their own, which maybe wasn’t the case when I started going to these things. I also saw a lot of kids, including kids that seemed just as into this stuff as the parent, if not outright escorted by one. Also, the crowd seemed quite diverse.

* never in my life will I understand the costume impulse, even less so in terms of people my age and older wearing them (nearly all teenager activities are designed around sex; jumping in and out of costumes and acting out a bit while in them is not the worst idea to push young people in that direction), but I was surprised to see only a modest amount of them on the floor this first day. My favorite was a Dove costume, as 1) it’s weird, 2) that one doesn’t make a whole lot of sense once you see someone actually wearing it, 3) it cracks me up when someone does a costume where you’re paired with someone else and not do the other costume.

* saw two folks from the Pacific Northwest with cons of their own: Jim Demonakos of Emerald City and Shannon Stewart from Stumptown. Demonakos seemed pleased with the success of his 2010 show, and from all reports — including unsolicited raves from three pros I talked to — he should be. Emerald Con passed that threshold this year where it’s going to be hard not to have it now, if that makes any sense. Stewart said that Portland’s finest indy comics show just announced Paul Pope as its last special guest, and that the mayor has named April comics month in that great funnybook city for the fourth year in a row. I haven’t been to Emerald City yet, but Stumptown is a fine show of that type.

* watching Jeremy Atkins of Dark Horse and AnnaMaria White at IDW operate a little bit, it struck me how the publicity operations in comics might have changed in recent years, without our really noticing, to more significantly favor people that are personable and presentable along with those able to carry out media relations duties. This is the kind of thing that might only matter to me, I admit. And it’s not like there was ever a time when PR in comics was run by disagreeable, beastly folk. Still, the current generation seems slightly more telegenic, if that makes any sense.

* I watched some of the Dark Horse panel; it was fun to gauge the various contrasts between Atkins and Dark Horse/comics old guard member Randy Stradley. They had presentational tool malfunctions that would have sent me screaming from the building and into a new career. One thing they mentioned that I hadn’t noticed is that Joss Whedon’s brother whose name I can’t remember (Zack?) is doing more and more writing for the company. Also: Ron Glass anecdote, and you can’t have enough of those.

* a fit-looking, earnest and personable Geoff Johns ran his moderator-less panel like he was hosting an MTV special; appropriate to that comparison, three or four questions were about how good-looking he is (he deflected these questions). Johns had to negotiate not being able to discuss Blackest Night #8, as a significant number of people in the audience had yet to read it. His new corporate position brought with it a bunch of questions that helped compensate. Johns said he worked very closely with the writer on the Green Lantern film script, and rattled off a significant number of weird alien things that we’re likely to see in the movie, now filming. The crowd, maybe three times the size of the Dark Horse panel, seemed to enjoy the heck out of themselves.

* back on the floor, I saw the writer Joe Casey, who refused to let me take his photo because he said his new look afforded him a disguise for conventions. By the time you read this, they will have announced a new title for Casey at Image Comics called Officer Down.

* I ran into Charles Brownstein, who informed me that the wire services had picked up on the death of Burton Joseph, the lawyer and free speech activist who lent his energy and prestige to the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund in some of its most important cases. A full obituary will appear at CR soon. He was right around 80 years old.

* the general health of Generation Direct Market was a recurring topic throughout the weekend. I also talked to a number of people about the mounting costs of the Recession on businesses within comics and on individual careers. The basic idea with the talk about money was that just because the last 18 months were not as apocalyptically bad as folks a lot of people still took major hits.

* personal note: it would be nice to go through an entire convention season where I didn’t have to say to at least one person: “Wow, I totally screwed you on that. I’m sorry.”

* a lot of folks expressed enthusiasm for the $2 Darwyn Cooke Parker preview; it was also by far the single item that people mentioned when I asked what I should go look at. I ran into a couple of people that gushed over being able to catch up with Long Tail Kitty. After that, opinion fractured markedly.

* I stopped in for some of two company panels: the DC Nation panel — which is somehow different from the DC Universe panel in a way I don’t care enough to understand — and IDW’s. The DC Nation panel featured three of the new company executives in Dan DiDio, Jim Lee and Geoff Johns, and all were enthusiastic about their new roles although not in a way that extended past general platitudes. They also all wore baseball caps, which I trace back, likely in improper fashion, to being one of Image Comics enduring gifts to the funnybook world. The IDW guys struggled on as fog kept the rest of the IDW editorial team from getting on planes early that day. This left those in the room without their cheat sheets. There were 22 people in attendance, most of whom got to laugh at the enthusiastic, earnest musing of Max Brooks on his GI Joe work.

* my sampling consists of exactly two people, but if Brooks and Johns are representative of the slightly younger creators coming to the fore now, that kind of earnestness may be on the rise while the slightly snarky remove of the older creators may be on the decline. That’s a ridiculously broad statement, of course, but I wonder if there isn’t perhaps a trend of some sort there.

* one thing I like about comics conventions is you can pepper your conversation with li living sight gags. Two different people with whom I discussed my forthcoming plans were treated to me saying, “or maybe I’ll just stand here and watch Erik Larsen read a comic book.” And as they looked up through not 20 feet away was Erik Larsen reading a comic book. I could do stuff like that all day.

* I ran into retailer and Direct Market industry advocate Brian Hibbs on the convention’s main floor. He’s someone with whom I’ve been dealing since 1994 — almost always in friendly fashion; sometimes on different ends of an issue, never angrily — but hadn’t met face to face, so that was nice. He was still beaming from the recent ComicsPro meeting in Memphis, particularly in how responsive the companies in attendance were to hearing back from Direct Market retailers in terms of things they were doing. I remain a big Direct Market guy, although I’m cognizant of their failings. If comic shops didn’t exist we would dream about them. I really like when Brian writes about hanging out with his little kid, so I was glad to hear they made it to WonderCon together and went toy shopping. Hibbs doesn’t exhibit at shows, which never occurred to me before but of course he doesn’t. I wonder if there’s any significant about a generational shift in retailers — Hibbs being a transitional figure, starting his shop in 1989 — and if we might lose comics retailers at show by a decision on their end rather than the conventions’ doing. As a matter of fact, there’s a broad range of issues that comes up when you think of DM Generation One entering their golden years. Item one: who gets their stores?

* went to the Ed Hannigan benefit at the Cartoon Art Museum. I hadn’t been to CAM since I went to an Ed Gorey exhibit there in the mid- to late-1990s. It’s very different space: first floor (rather than a higher one), bigger shop, four largish rooms and a fifth, smaller one furthest away from the street with a small hallway (and bathrooms) sticking out from that. It’s a good space: not as big as the small museums I’ve been to over the years, but certainly half again the size of a strong gallery’s showing area.

* I quite liked the variety of art on display. There was some sort of Batman exhibit that had original pages from Paul Pope, Frank Miller and Jiro Kuwata. The Kuwatas were stunning, imagery presented with a confidence made their inexplicable oddities stand out that much more: I felt an urge to own every third page. The Millers brought on feelings of nostalgia more than any appreciation for the works as original art pages, although that was probably just my mood. For some reason, it was heartening to see the whiteout Miller employed. The Paul Pope pages were ridiculously huge.

* as far as I know, the Museum failed to raise enough money to make Andrew Farago shave a 1989-style Batman logo into the back of his head. I wondered if his wife, the writer and cartoonist Shaenon Garrity, was relieved, but I was told she was filming a public access TV show with Phil Foglio, which is the kind of thing you end up doing on a comics convention weekend.

* the Ed Hannigan stuff was fine. If you’re near my age, you probably bought a lot of comics with Ed Hannigan covers. With the 40 or so pieces on hand, they managed to snag what I think of as his best design — an issue of Batman looking down on an alley way where the Caped Crusader and the Boy Wonder have just beaten down a whole crowd of typical-era punks. When I think of Hannigan’s interior work I think of the first Cloak and Dagger story, which opens with this snazzy, one-panel street setting and contains some fine minimalist cartooning featuring the visually contrasting guest stars. They had that whole story there, so a good job in representing Hannigan’s better work, I think.

* a few pieces of art from the more general part of the exhibit offered several obvious highlights. I’d never seen a Jack Kent (it looked like an original Pogo, naturally) or a William Steig original before (that one baffled me; it looked like no human hands had touched it). I’d seen some Bill Mauldin but I liked the ones they had on display quite a bit. The usual cartoon art show suspects — Crane, Caniff, Kelly, King/Moores, Arriola were all well represented.

* the museum has about 6000 pieces of original art in a permanent collection, which are stored in a different, higher-security part of their property.

* I met Albert Moy later that evening, which I thought a bit humorous given the original art theme to the evening. He’s been working in that field since 1982, which is long for any career in comics let alone a ruthlessly commercial one like that.

* my one “this really isn’t like 15 years at San Diego at all” moment was watching Mark Evanier check his portable device to see if a business-related download he was doing in his hotel room was completed. Don’t remember that from 1995.

* I’ve been given figures ranging from 20-25 people to 125-150 people going on Friday’s Tiki Bar tour. No matter the bottom-line number, several went in full pirate garb.

Saturday

* Saturday: way different than Friday crowds-wise. There were more people stepping away from the convention-center Saturday early afternoon than had been heading there the same time Friday. Most of the tables in the center of the show were jammed with people seeking something. By mid-afternoon I began to collect a wide array of stories about who was making money that tended as a group to trend towards the “things are going very well.” The more elaborate costumes had come out, too.

* the crowds didn’t go everywhere, though. Like San Diego, like various iterations of the Chicago Con, like Heroes Con 2008 and therefore I imagine like most shows, there were dead spots: one such at WonderCon was the outside row of small press artists. I don’t know that there’s anything that can be done about that — people are going to go where they’re gong to go — but I always feel sorry for someone who for reasons of flow not aesthetics is seeing most people chug by without a second look.

* someone told me a few hours afer the face on that the Q&A-driven DCU Editorial panel was “the longest experience” of their life. Just saying.

* I haven’t looked at the reports yet to figure out the content of what was said and its potential newsworthiness, but a bunch of people enthused over Greg Rucka’s spotlight for its long, full and specific answers to questions asked.

* if I had enough money to cover conventions more thoroughly, I swear my first hire wouldn’t be another person to run around the con but someone to stay home and monitor the various news feeds coming out of it. Being so close up I have little idea as to what’s going on, and feel I’ll have some work to do on Tuesday of this week catching up with some announcement-based news for sure.

* my favorite new recurring panel is the CBLDF Live Art Jam, which I just think is a great idea: a group of artists make sketches to auction off on behalf of the CBLDF while answering questions about what they’re drawing or the industry generally. They switch places so that one of them is always working on the overhead. I really enjoyed this at San Diego and except for the fact that at CCI the table set-up made it an endearing lunchtime panel (it’s the future as I once envisioned it to see dozens of teens staring at Mike Mignola drawing while eating from Bento Boxes) I had a better time at this version. When Emily Proctor is done with CSI: Miami, they should hire her to play Colleen Doran drawing in public while sticking it to past dumb editors and the stupidities of work-for-hire production in a southern lilt. I’d watch that show every week. Darick Robertson even told a pretty great Peter Bagge anecdote.

* the two great things about the Boom! panel were 1) its bizarre mix of new comics readers and super-old and jazzed up Disney comics enthusiasts, 2) the fact that Darkwing Duck is out of any definition of my own childhood/adolescence that I have no attachment to it at all and the names of places and characters that thrilled some in attendance cascade off my forehead like water from a shower head. They had about 30 people there.

* the Gail Simone panel was more packed in the same place, bunches of people that seemed genuinely pleased to meet the comics writer. Simone told a funny story about nearly blowing off an early opportunity to work for Bongo; she was generally funny. I thought smart her statement on Wonder Woman that it wasn’t so much about figuring out the one or two things that character did really well but creating a vehicle through which multiple interpretation could be valid.

* Simone wasn’t one of them, but there seemed like a lot of mainstream people talking from vague terms to more concrete ones about forthcoming independent projects. That may just be a function of events like this one, but the sentiment that you’d want to do something of your own seemed genuinely expressed. Geoff Johns was one person who talked about doing his own characters (which might be his first — I don’t follow him closely enough to know — and might be worth noting just in terms of his being able to do so given his current corporate responsibilities); the Amanda Conner/Jimmy Palmiotti team was another.

* I attended a compelling Black Cartoonists as Social Commentators panels, despite the fact that so much time was lost to trying to get the video to work. The one time the video did work, it showed a funny video by Jerry Craft where he basically yells at the black superheroes from the ’70s for various offenses related to their sucking. The best line was after pointing that Black Goliath was routinely beaten up on the cover of his own comic books, the Craft stand-in suggests that BG has to be the only superhero whose utility belt contained nothing but first aid items. The funny thing is, that video had little to do with what was great about the panel, which was hearing Darrin Bell and Keith Knight talk not about their careers, or self-publishing, or a try-anything ethos, but about their work and how people had reacted to it positively and negatively over the years. I don’t know Bell’s work as well as I might, but I’ve already put aside time to go and re-examine a bunch of it. Both guys were smart and funny and had trenchant stories to tell. This is exactly the kind of panel I hope to see at a comics show.

* one cool thing about that panel is they had a professional moderator whose name I can’t remember, a guy that was seemingly used to doing interviews on TV. The great thing about it is that he was absolutely brutal in terms of shutting down questions from the audience.

* if I had greater capability to travel to do comics news stories, I’d love to go with Keith Knight when he hits Slippery Rock to speak about a cartoon that outraged the black students there. Knight spoke with great sympathy about how his cartoon, brutally misunderstood, nonetheless may have been a final straw for many of the students facing some real issues on that campus.

* I went to speak to Shaenon Garrity on the floor after the Knight/Bell panel; she was helping Phil Foglio at the show. I don’t know all that many people at the show, so I kind of relished visiting the few I did, which probably isn’t the best way to orient yourself, but there it is.

* the Darwyn Cooke presentation was mostly packed, even more so at the end when Star Trek people eager to see the next panel crowded into the few remaining seats. Cooke’s a very forthright speaker, and it was interesting how many more of the questions at this show focused on his Parker work as opposed to focusing on superheroes through his work on books like New Frontier. Cooke expressed some general frustration with the amount of time it takes works to be approved in the mainstream comics milieu, and admitted to outright fear shopping the Parker stuff around. He was also quite honest about the primary motivating factor for potentially doing occasional mainstream projects if any were to be offered: money. One thing that was interesting to me is that he spoke of letting his personal reaction to the Parker books set him on a new career path when that was necessary, but that he also still plans to do the original work he was shopping around at one point. One of them may happen sooner than later, the other — a fantasy — may wait until he feels more creatively confident taking it on.

* one thing that struck me was that Cooke was complimentary of Daniel Clowes more than once over the weekend, calling him the best letterer in comics at one point (Eisner being the best all-time and Saladino being his favorite of the mainstream hand-letterers), citing his work with single colors as a factor in his working on the same in the Parker books, and extolling the virtues of Like A Velvet Glove, Cast In Iron as a horror story.

* I’d like to thank the comics journalism panel for making Douglas Wolk and myself feel 10,000 years old. Graeme McMillan’s career was discussed like he was the basis for The Front Page and he started his Fanboy Rampage in 2002.

* all of the panelists came across as articulate and engaged and each presented themselves well, including late addition Laura Hudson. I thought David Brothers was a natural moderator; anyone out there who needs one should ask him. I’d never met Kate Dacey before, so that was nice. She was formidable.

* all that said, when I stopped feeling old I started feeling like I came from a different planet than most of the panelists. There was a lot of talk about generating hits and reacting to readers’ concerns that are flat-out foreign to me. I was glad there wasn’t a lot of time debating over what journalism is or isn’t. All of the panelists clearly practice some form of journalism, even if isn’t of the Woodward/Bernstein — or Groth/Heintjes — variety.

* I saw the sartorially resplendent Phil Foglio making his way back to the convention, dressed like the mayor in a particularly fancy Dahl story. I really thought about trying to do the masquerade since San Diego’s has been such a tough ticket for 10 years now, but I had a couple of verbal commitments. It’s nice to know I probably could have, though.

* walking from the convention center to Comix Experience is a great idea only if you remember that natives don’t consider four-and-half blocks of walking uphill walking uphill at all.

* Comix Experience is a lovely-looking shop, maybe the paragon of a neighborhood store. I got to talk about the general, flushed state of North American comics conventions with some industry heavy-hitters (including Ron Turner), shoot the about Chicago comics retail of days gone by with Larry Marder and what kind of comics hit with audiences and why with Justin Norman, Erik Larsen and Joe Keatinge. That was actually a very engaged discussion for people standing around holding beers and trying not to trip on some of the idiosyncratic parts of the floor, with a sense that there are these really talented people that logic says should have an audience out there and that want to make comics that are absolutely flummoxed by the low sales ceiling for certain kinds of funnybooks right now.

* people at CE were happy to be drinking the fancy beer, and the food truck outside may be the greatest idea for a comics event supplement in the history of comics events. Brian seemed to be enjoying himself, too, which is a great thing. It’s nice to be able to see his space, and 21 years in is an accomplishment in terms of comics retail, retail generally and single-proprietor retail all at once.

* I bummed a ride in Justin Norman’s cab to the Isotope Party. Thanks, Justin. He told a very funny artist talking to his writer after bumping into him in the convention center bathroom story.

* Isotope’s party spilled out onto its sidewalk; several folks that looks like neighborhood people walking dogs or getting off their bicycles stopped nearby or across the street to gape. It wasn’t the biggest party the store had had, James Sime said, but to my eyes it looked very, very respectable. I was frightened to go in.

* that’s a lovely space, by the way. It seems ideal for social events like this weekend’s, but I can imagine being a comics fan in my early 20s and wanting to come and hang out in a space like this one with facilitating my comics being the bonus.

* I have no idea why, but the Isotope party’s comics-name guests (Palmiotti, Connner, Cooke) and their friends were all dressed in western garb. The Canadians were even Mounties. I started having Paul Gross flashbacks. When Palmiotti was giving a couple of the folks in attendance general career advice I imagined him breaking in on a pal’s meeting with DC or Marvel, shooting his pistols until the contracts details were conformed.

* I really need to get to know more people on the mainstream side of things.

* I bummed a ride from Douglas Wolk’s cab back to the hotel. Thanks, Douglas. Douglas is writing for Techland every week now, and they are at the very least keeping him in cab money.

* the hotel bar was once again hopping. And the Butler Bulldogs won. By the way: comics convention? Worst place to find out a basketball score ever.

Sunday

* Easter Sunday. Several people at the show asked me if I thought there would be crowds on Easter or not. No one really knows.

* Turns out they didn’t have a ton to worry about. The crowds fell safely within general Sunday parameters: not as many as the very crazy Saturday but more it seemed than Friday. The floor seemed busy. You mostly noticed the reduction in audience in the non-busy areas pf the building. There weren’t people resting up against random walls on the mezzanine levels like on Saturday, not as many panels (it seems) in danger of being crowded right out to the hallway, not as long of a line (and by 3:30, none at all!) at the eating centers. It was San Diego of 25 years ago.

* I heard that several exhibitors thought they could get in much earlier than they ended up being let in. Don’t know if that’s a big deal or not.

* by the way, the Moscone food stands seem superior in every way to the San Diego Convention Center food stands. I didn’t eat at them, but I bought some water near the end of Sunday and they had actual food-looking food behind the counter. I loved the proximity to the panel room areas, too. Why wouldn’t you want to grab a bite to eat and then go watch cartoons or see Ian Sattler pontificate or whatever?

* when I walked in today a small circle of journalists had surrounded David Glanzer, including one gentleman incensed about the performance of Travel Planners during their initial hotel lottery a few weeks back. An announcement should be coming pretty soon, and I remain convinced that San Diego is the best spot for the show for now.

* it was good to hear that Heidi MacDonald felt as old as I did at that comics journalism panel.

* at least one well-known professional flew home Saturday late to spend Easter with their family and hey, good for them.

* talked to some of the Artist’s Alley folks. Lark Pien was there, holding forth with a table full of stuff that was way more APE and MoCCA than maybe the entire rest of the room combined. I also met Miriam Libicki, which

* I talked to a non-representative mix of about 20 retailers, exhibitors and industry organizations: all seemed pretty positive about the show except two that were in what I would call, looking around, squirrelly locations. People with a specific focus — the retailer that was there to sell newer comics under cost, the artist there to give out cards directing people to their to their web site seemed particularly

* I don’t think there’s a whole lot that can be done about that, incidentally, beyond the kind of baseline realizations that I’m sure shows like this make. For instance: it seems to me that most of the TV and film autograph people leave a couple of hours early — I’m not certain why — so you wouldn’t want to count on them driving traffic to a general location for an entire day. Convention flow is a mysterious beast. I might suggest for this particular show and this particular convention that the far wall — the part of the exhibitor groups that are up against an actual wall, be potentially discounted. You’re just not going to have people on the ends, and that last row in particular was like an express highway by which people went from one place to another.

* I saw one panel on Sunday. The Pogo panel wasn’t Evanier/Kelly driven, so I took a pass. I was going to go to the Jonathan Ross panel, but it disappeared when I went to the bathroom. Not sure what happened there.

* that leaves the one I did attend, the SLG editorial panel. It’s nice to see a familiar face and hear a friendly voice. Dan Vado was in comics long before I was (SLG’s 25th anniversary is next year). I couldn’t tell from most of the video presentations if the comics being promoted were of much interest, but it was good to hear that James Turner’s Warlord Of Io will have trade collection this summer.

* Dan also reported on the designer and cartoonist Scott Saavedra’s health, saying that he had his good periods and bad periods but that he was doing okay. That was good to hear.

* there’s no convention experience that can’t be improved by buying 10-12 comic books you want to read for $1 apiece.

* the talk of the show I’d say is Greg Rucka’s panel and the blunt nature of the statements he made there. I bet that’s googleable, but I’ll link to it with this sentence when I get back.

* here’s something I never experienced at a comics convention before: publishers giving copies of books to press to take home because they didn’t want to pack it and ship it back. That’s a very BEA thing, actually.

* I missed seeing Bob Beerbohm, but the young ladies at the booth said his surgery was successful and that he was roaming around the show somewhere. So that’s good news. Given all the time I talked about first generation retailers this weekend, seeing Bob’s booth was a particularly nice ending point.

* I left the convention at 4:05, with a promise to try and meet up with some folks for dinner — on Easter, I’m thinking this might be more difficult than the usual convention dinner, but we’ll see. As you’re reading this I should be either en route to New Mexico or already there, in time to watch the Butler/Duke game.

* so that was my WonderCon.

* overall, I think WonderCon’s a pretty good show, or at least my experience of it was pleasurable. It seems to have benefited a great deal from the general surge in the public’s appetite for conventions. I mean, seriously, 10 years ago we had like 1.5-2.5 conventions in terms of super-healthy geek-focused mainstream shows. Now we have at least 10 that do okay enough that it doesn’t seem ridiculous for a person to spend a weekend reporting on them. My guess is that in an entertainment world driven by geek phenomena, those who like them are encouraged to have their own experience with as many of them that hold interest. It’s a very different impulse than why my friends and I visited Chicago in the late ’80s — that was mostly to buy comics we couldn’t find anywhere else.

* a number of people asked me if I thought WonderCon was a big regional show or a smaller national. It feels to me like a smaller national show. 1) If I walked into the big room from some sort of magic portal and didn’t know what city I was in, I would not be able to guess. 2) Companies with national reach made announcements here. 3) There were enough guests of high enough quality that it seemed — barely, but still — that my gut feeling said national show. It just seemed smaller.

* many folks have asserted the virtues of WonderCon being a smaller show. Many of those good things are obvious, I think: greater ease of access to certain creators and experiences, more cohesions amongst the pros in attendance, a general reduction in hassle and cost, a greater opportunity to make a splash with a project that would be denied the stage at an established, larger show.

* in doing a final analysis, however, you also have to take into consideration the down side of a smaller show. There were two big ones for me. The first is that the show was focused primarily on the expression of mainstream comics and the pop culture that resembles mainstream comics. There was very little in the way of comics of the kind I tend to regularly buy on hand, and no natural programming I would follow. This wasn’t a hassle because I have broad tastes and it’s fun to do all sorts of thing on a comics weekend, but I really couldn’t recommend the show to my friend Bob Levin, say, or the vast majority of my Seattle comics reading friends, or even my family members. It might be nice if the con forged a relationship with one or two of the bigger art-comics publishers just to have a more pronounced presence like that at the show. The legendary Ron Turner was there, but he didn’t feel there-there. Given San Francisco’s big presence on the art comics scene and identity as the underground comix capital, this seems like a wasted opportunity.

* the other thing about a smaller show is that there are fewer surprises, I think. The show’s just not big enough for there to be this gigantic pool of undiscovered things and people and talents for you to stumble into by accident — at least not without a super- super-broad screening process. If you don’t see something in the announced guests and the announced programming, I’ll suggest you may not enjoy yourself. While I might make initial plans to attend on the strength of past shows, I can’t see making final plans until I double-checked to make sure I had enough to do. For instance, I went to a number of Darwyn Cooke panels this year, and if he weren’t a guest I’m not sure how I would have spent that time.

* I thought there were elements of the show that weren’t sharp. For instance, there was an awful lot of malfunctioning equipment. I saw maybe eight panels over the three days and five of them had significant A/V problems, and in two cases the visual presentation never worked. Considering how smoothly executed the show managed to be otherwise — the security people were pretty great, I thought — the constant stream of friendly guys swarming different podiums proved to be extremely disappointing. There were other things, too, some of which I already mentioned. I thought some of the panels had an awful lot of chatty people in the audience. It might be nice if major announcements and news were posted broadsheet form by the convention organizers; I know I missed a ton of stuff.

* one thing a number of people expressed to me is that the con needs to settle in on firm dates; if it’s a convention center problem they need to play hardball until those dates firm up.

* so I think it was a strong show. I think there’s a sturdy base from which to build an even stronger show. It has natural advantages: a: great city with a convention center right in a traversable neighborhood, strong retailer, a location people want to visit and proximity to the CCI Rolodex with a pre-summer slot to offer film people. It’s still way, way, mainstream comics, though, and I don’t see it like a mini-San Diego as much as a truncated one. To put the whole thing to you another way, C2E2 will have to be significantly formidable right out of the gate to be considered the Spring show, at least for now.

thanks to the good folks of WonderCon; I will polish this up on Tuesday

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* President Obama is like Reagan!

* super-villain team-up: Julia Wertz and Johnny Ryan. Doing children’s book parodies.

* Bob Temuka imagines the end of comics and finds himself not too sad over such an option, at least from a pretty rigorous creative standpoint. I think there’s something to be gleaned from here about these companies over-publishing, for sure; except in one or two cases these aren’t the greatest concept and it just doesn’t make sense from a long-term resource management standpoint to have folks cranking out more adventures for the Teen Titans when they could be working on something else less tired.

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(Comic book store) In “Superman: Secret Identity,” writer Kurt Busiek and artist Stuart Immonen provide yet another variation on the theme. Busiek took his inspiration from “DC Comics Presents” #87, written by Elliot S. Maggin and pencilled by Curt Swan, which was rele

Admin March 22nd, 2010

In “Superman: Secret Identity,” writer Kurt Busiek and artist Stuart Immonen provide yet another variation on the theme. Busiek took his inspiration from “DC Comics Presents” #87, written by Elliot S. Maggin and pencilled by Curt Swan, which was rele

This is a very deep story that cuts to the core of Superman in a way that canonized stories cannot. Essentially Superman becomes a metaphor for an all intrusive government. Benjamin Franklin once said, “Those who would give up essential liberty to purcha

Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.

The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.


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Lois Lane came off as a complete (resemble comic book drawings) snob and competitively obessed, sort of like Monica Geller from “Friends” except without the charm.

Admin March 21st, 2010

Lois Lane came off as a complete snob and competitively obessed, sort of like Monica Geller from “Friends” except without the charm.

The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.

Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.


CR Week In Review

The top comics-related news stories from March 13 to March 19, 2010:

1. David Coleman Headley pleads guilty.

2. News spreads of Kirby family filing for termination of copyrights with Marvel.

3. IDW attains premier status with DCD, Inc. — first publisher to do so since initial burst of publishers named that way.

Winner Of The Week
Joe Sacco

Losers Of The Week
Fans of Glauco

Quote Of The Week
The only scapegoat and handy corporate employ among the signatures on the freelancer-dominated petition and the January 19 letter, Marv got the corporate boot up the ass.” — Steve Bissette

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Happy 48th Birthday, Mark Waid!

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This was a shame. I think supergirl is a cool character and can be done well, but this just makes clear that DC has no idea what to do with her. There is no characterization, no back up characters and the story can only loosely be called a “story.” The (most comic book store)

Admin March 20th, 2010

This was a shame. I think supergirl is a cool character and can be done well, but this just makes clear that DC has no idea what to do with her. There is no characterization, no back up characters and the story can only loosely be called a “story.” The

I think the worst injustice Byrne commited to this revamping of Superman was the poor characterisation. Awfully done. It’s a shame too, with a rich, strong supporting cast like Superman’s it shouldn’t have been that hard to pull off. But instead the ch

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This story proves that Superman has a great deal of humanity, more than most other superheroes out there. It’s always a good thing to see heroes fail, because it’s their reaction that defines who they really are. (adult comic book anime)

Admin March 18th, 2010

This story proves that Superman has a great deal of humanity, more than most other superheroes out there. It’s always a good thing to see heroes fail, because it’s their reaction that defines who they really are.

It is said that people generally prefer familliarity over change, but this is not the very case for this revision of a classic hero created way back in the 1930’s which pioneered the comic book superhero genre, but rather this only show that there is ind

The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.


Andrea Pazienza, traces Naples and beyond

By Michele De Capitani

  Andrea Pazienza, who was born in San Benedetto del Tronto in 1956, was an early-talented guy, and while he was still attending the High School he realised his first comic-strip and paintings. At the beginning of the 70s his works begins to be displayed in personal and group exhibitions, and Pazienza begins to show to have a very versatile talent: he publishes his first comic-strip, in 1974 (Pentotals extraordinary adventures), but he also founds the reviews Cannibale and Frigidaire, and he works also for other reviews. He also works as a teacher, and it is from this experience that he takes inspiration for his graphic novel Pompeo.

Pazienza is also the cofounder of the Comics and Graphic Arts School Zio Feininger, but his work goes beyond comics. Pazienza, indeed, is also well-known for having realised cinema playbills (for example, the playbill for Fellinis City of Women), music videos, covers of records, advertising campaigns, theatre sceneries and playbills, succeeding in expressing his creativity and his ideas in many different fields.

The exhibition, which will take place from the 14th November to the 13th January, will celebrate the artists eclectic talent offering an overview of his works, and in particular it will be focused on the special relationship that there was between him and Naples, a city where in fact he never lived but which was particularly important for him. The exhibition is intended to gather the traces of this special relationship between the artist and the city, working them out from his drawings and tales. The section Traces of Naples will highlight this aspect of the artists career, and will also include a collection of images representing Tot, the great Italian actor that Pazienza liked to draw in some of his comic streeps.

However, the exhibition is meant to give an exhaustive overview of the artists work, and although it is particularly focused on the comic-strips and quotes which tell us something about his relationship with Naples, it does not leave out other works of this particularly prolific author, displaying more than 200 original plates, as well as sketches and illustrations, which will help visitors to discover all the stages of Pazienzas career, from the first works of the 70s to the more mature works of the 80s. Visitors will have the possibility to admire the satiric comic-strips that he realised for international reviews (in the section Antology), or to stop to watch the drawings of animals and fairy tales realised by him for one of his friends children. Also the works that he realised with his wife Marina Comandino will be displayed, as well as the plates of his most famous graphic novels.

The work, but also the personality of the author, will be even more investigated displaying personal objects, audiovisual aids and pictures, and also thanks to a great number of events like screenings, meetings with artists and books presentations.

Pazienzas works exhibition in Naples makes the city even more attractive for all those who love all forms of art expression. Book a cheap hotel in Naples and immerse yourselves in art.

Tickets: 6 euro

Date: 16th November 2008 13th January 2009

Location: Castel SantElmo, Naples, Italy

This article was written by Michele De Capitani with support from budget hotel Naples for any information, please visit romantic hotels in Naples or for travel insurance visit cheap accommodation Naples.


What Are Ways To Read Comic Books?

By MIKE SELVON

  Once upon a time, youngsters hopped into bed, pulled out their flashlights and settled in to read comic books, soaking up their favorite superhero’s adventures. Today, iPhones, laptops and DVDs have become the new mediums for graphic novels.

Comic books DC and Marvel have created are being converted into digital formats slowly but surely. While the paper sale of graphic novels in the North American market is still a healthy $705 million (quintupling since 2001), there is still the desire to modernize and change with the times, just as the characters in the comic books have. Some call it “evolution,” while others just call it “business.” Either way, given the enduring success of the hero narrative, comic book series aren’t likely to go anywhere anytime soon.

Many fans just want to read comics for free. After all, that’s what the internet and peer-to-peer is all about, right? There are a few databases offering graphic novels for free. Manga comics, like Naruto, Bleach, Love Junkies, Pokemon and Vampire Knight can be found at Mangafox and Mangavolume, for instance. More than three hundred conventional classics from DC, Marvel, Dark Horse, Vertigo, Wild Storm and Oni can be found at Lorencollins.

Fans looking for “Golden Age” comics can find comic book series like “Tales of Horror,” “Out of the Shadows,” “Jumbo Comics,” “Exciting Comics” and “The Perfect Crime” (with characters like Ibis the Invincible and Blue Beetle) at Comicweb. Other comics from that time period, like “Baffling Mysteries,” “Strange Fantasy,” “Underworld,” “Famous Funnies,” “Forbidden Worlds” or “Whiz Comics” can be viewed at Goldenagecomics. Additionally, for fans of DC comic book characters, the first five issues of each major series are being offered as free PDF downloads at Ugo.

Of course, not everyone feels like sitting inside to read comic books in their rooms all day long. Now fans can take their favorite comics graphic novels outside, on the bus, into the lunchroom or on break at work with Nintendo DS portable players, iPods and iPhones. “Comic Book DS” is a neat application that can be downloaded at 4colorrebellion, so that comics can be read on Nintendo DS systems.

For the iPhone or iPod Touch, fans will need the “ComicZeal” program, which can be purchased for $1.99 at Igoapps. To read comics on a laptop, a program like Adobe Acrobat Reader will likely be required.

So where does this take the future of comics? Marvel Comics Publisher Dan Buckley says they want people to read comic books using new formats, but they’re still undertaking research to see where their time and efforts are best spent. “We’re still quibbling about what the primary form of revenue will be,” Buckley said, relaying that some comics can be found online for free.

“We don’t want to do anything to hurt anybody in the short term,” he added, meaning the independent comic book store. In general, the comic book industry agrees that the internet can be a great way for comics to gain a larger audience.

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How To Maximize The Value Of Your Comics - Comic Book Values-00-1085

By shojul

  Investments mean putting down your money now for greater returns in the future. With this logic in mind, comic book collections then become a long-term investment. Just ask the old-timers who are selling their collections for three or four digits a set.

Converting them to todays standards, the average comic book values for a collection would cost a few hundred dollars. The pay-off after a few decades could reach ten or even a hundred times their original value. This is definitely worth considering, especially if youre an avid comic book fan.

However, how can you get the most for your buck? How can you earn the most that you can from your collection? How do you maximize the value of your comics? Here are a few ways for you to do just that:

Put a balance between niche and mainstream. Selection of titles to preserve for years to come plays a pretty big role in maximizing the value of your comics. Comics that are too popular will have a large following that will be stockpiling their comics, causing comic book values to stay low since many people have copies readily available. On the other hand, comics that are too niche or small-scale wont have many buyers, and youll be hard-pressed to find someone who wants to buy something that no one really wants.

So if you want to get the most return for your money, choose to store comics that are in between the two extremes: popular enough to warrant an audience, but niche enough that not many would hoard these comics.

Preserve the comics. A zip-lock bag may seem like its good enough to store your comics in the long run, but it sure as hell isnt. Comic book values depend greatly on the condition of the comic: a slight discoloration or crease on the paper will result in its value being cut by more than half of its original value.

As much as possible, try to find copies that are in air-tight containers and dont open them, even when the end of the world comes knocking on your door. Keep these sealed copies out of direct sunlight and in well-ventilated and controlled environments. Specially designed containers designed to preserve important documents are the best option in order to keep your copies in mint-perfect condition.

Monitor the prices. In a way, comic book values function a lot like the stock market: they go up and down with the passage of time. To get the best deal for your collections, you will need to sell your comics at the peak of their demand, before people start to forget about the existence your collection altogether and lose interest in it.

Buying comic book price guides and checking up on the prices on the Internet will allow you to track the prices of your comics. Try to read the trends and if youve got a background in stock analysis, sell when the value is at its best. If youre not an expert in stocks, set realistic comic book values for your collection and wait until the market price hits the mark. Dont make these values too high, though, or you may find yourself waiting for nothing.

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SUPERMAN: EXILE is a worthwhile read for any kind of Superman fan. Both pre and post Crisis aficionados will find something to like in this story. And hey, it occurs prior to Superman’s exaggerated death, (find comic books) so that’s a plus either way you look at it.

Admin March 16th, 2010

SUPERMAN: EXILE is a worthwhile read for any kind of Superman fan. Both pre and post Crisis aficionados will find something to like in this story. And hey, it occurs prior to Superman’s exaggerated death, so that’s a plus either way you look at it.

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The series starts with news that a meteor is headed to earth, and President Lex Luthor is convinced Superman is responsible read the (book comic marvel movie) books for details , and puts out an enormous bounty for whoever brings in the caped crusader. Batman helps his alien frie

Admin March 16th, 2010

The series starts with news that a meteor is headed to earth, and President Lex Luthor is convinced Superman is responsible read the books for details , and puts out an enormous bounty for whoever brings in the caped crusader. Batman helps his alien frie

He would count as a repaint, but the Batman? NO WAY.

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(Comic books to buy) The only good that came out of this storyline was the excellent follow up trade collection THE RETURN OF SUPERMAN, which provides more story and higher quality art for your dollar.

Admin March 13th, 2010

The only good that came out of this storyline was the excellent follow up trade collection THE RETURN OF SUPERMAN, which provides more story and higher quality art for your dollar.

As the final part of Greg Rucka’s Ruin trilogy which started with Unconventional Warfare and continued in That Healing Touch , Ruin Revealed brings the story full circle as Lois sets out to determine the identity of her shooter and Superman weeds throug

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He’s Clark Kent. That’s what his parents named him. Growing up, the other kids made fun of him. He’s heard every possible joke that can be imagined about having the same name as the comic book character Superman; but he’s never considered them funn (list of the tick comic books)

Admin March 12th, 2010

He’s Clark Kent. That’s what his parents named him. Growing up, the other kids made fun of him. He’s heard every possible joke that can be imagined about having the same name as the comic book character Superman; but he’s never considered them funn

SUPERMAN: EXILE is a worthwhile read for any kind of Superman fan. Both pre and post Crisis aficionados will find something to like in this story. And hey, it occurs prior to Superman’s exaggerated death, so that’s a plus either way you look at it.

Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.


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The series starts with news that a meteor is headed to earth, and President Lex Luthor is convinced Superman is responsible read the books for details , and puts out an enormous bounty for whoever brings in the caped crusader. Batman helps his alien frie (comic book art gallery)

Admin March 12th, 2010

The series starts with news that a meteor is headed to earth, and President Lex Luthor is convinced Superman is responsible read the books for details , and puts out an enormous bounty for whoever brings in the caped crusader. Batman helps his alien frie

The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.


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Admin March 10th, 2010

I got the opportunity to read the guide, and it was a magnificent and mesmerizing quick read; with pages upon pages of beautiful photography from the film admittedly for those of you who’ve spent the last year following the film’s production via the in

I should have known when their was no image for this set, that something was wrong. I ordered this solely for the repainted figures.

Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.


How to Trade, Sell, or Buy Comics Online

By Phoenix Delray

  Ever since we were introduced to Spiderman for the first time in 1938, millions of people across the globe have scrambled to buy comics from trade shows, shops, and private sellers. The books have remained popular with readers of all ages, and there are thousands or even millions that have been printed all over the world. Comic books owe much of their glory to commercialization, publicity, and the allure of imagination.

Once the first shop opened for fans to buy comics from, it didnt take long before the popularity of the thin, illustrated books spread like the flu in the middle of winter. In the beginning, these books cost enough for people that they would often really have to put forth an effort to save their money to buy one that they really wanted. These days, however, they can be found for cheap, as long as they are not yet one of the coveted collector editions. Many experts these days agree that the best avenue for finding and buying great comic books is found in the world of online shopping.

To buy comics online, youll have to first find the most reputable sellers. There are some things that you can look for to safeguard yourself against crooks like searching out customer feedback, looking to see if they are members of the Better Business Bureau, seeing if they have a secure web site, and so on. There are tons of valuable deals that are available on every kind of site from the sites of the private sellers to international auction sites.

Those websites that have established themselves as safe, prominent places for shopping are the most recommended pages to browse through. Some of the deals and discounts that sellers make available when you buy comics are things like bulk discounts, shipping discounts, and many also have email mailing lists for those avid fans who would like to receive special preferred member sale announcements and bonus buys.

The heroes and heroines that are found in the books continue to fill imaginations from young to old, and although there are many new characters that are born into the comic book world, there are the everlasting, infamous, and invincible ones that will seemingly continue on forever. As stated before, Spider Man is more popular than ever, which is amazing considering that he is now at least 71 years old! If you are thinking of investing in the world of these magazines and books, they are as close as your fingertips online, which makes it easier than ever to find and buy comics of all kinds at all price ranges.

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Anime Comics Has Increased In Popularity In America

By MIKE SELVON

  Gen-X’ers and older Gen-Y’s grew up in the 1980s, when comic book series cartoons like “The X-Men,” “Justice League,” “Captain America,” “Teen Titans,” “Spider-Man,” “Batman,” “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles” and “The Transformers.” As these kids aged, they became adults in their 20s and 30s, creating comic book movie blockbusters to keep the legacy going.

The next generation of younger Gen-Y’s would look to Japan and China for their comic book series. They grew up with “Dragonball Z,” “Pokemon” and “Sailor Moon.” Anime comics came to America with surprising fervor and it’s not likely to dissipate anytime soon.

The DC and Marvel Comic fans sometimes view anime fans as the ultimate nerds, the plot lines as “cheesy” and the characters as “daft” or “annoying.” Older Americans often scratch their heads and ask, “Why are anime comics so popular among today’s youth?”

Some could argue it was a massive advertising campaign that came over from Japan, who saw America and Europe as large, untapped markets. The challenge was to rework their material into exportable goods with English sub-titles and over-dubs.

They farmed enthusiasm with several different products, with movies like “Ghost in the Shell” or “Akira” and cartoon series like “Dragonball Z,” “Pokemon” and “Sailor Moon.” The basic business model was to keep costs low, try a little of everything and see what works.

Once their endeavors showed great success, the merchandise, the manga comics and the graphic novels made their way over as well. It was the basic economic edict of supply and demand. Give the fans what they want in every capacity, such as with figurines, costumes, backpacks, t-shirts, manga comics, DVDs, downloads and comic book series.

Moreover, the messages in anime comics reach today’s youth at a level that traditional DC or Marvel comic books missed. Anime focuses more on emotions, relationship struggles, introspection, adventurous personal quests and the hero’s journey; all in surreal, magical surroundings.

Unlike cartoons for kids, anime characters will die and complex relationships are formed. Nothing is off-limits in the anime world, not even sex or violence. People are confronted with deep concepts and provoked to think about the meaning of life.

In a way, it’s the softer, psychological side of Marvel, blended with the magical, omniscient qualities of a DC superhero: the best of both worlds. For the male fans, some manga comics are adapted to show sexier heroines — some in their coy school girl uniforms, others with more Westernized curves and futuristic apparel. Yet for the female fans, plots center on soap opera type stories of love, longing and character development. In fact, women make up half the attendees at the anime comics conventions.

Some of the most-viewed anime comics today include Fullmetal Alchemist, Cowboy Bebop, Bleach, Neon Genesis Evangelion, Naruto, Death Note, FLCL, Princess Mononoke (movie), Trigun, Inyuasha and The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya. The most critically acclaimed anime film of 2007 was “Paprika,” where researchers developed a device that allowed them to go inside people’s dreams for psychotherapeutic treatment purposes.

Often the subject matter of anime graphic novels and series looks at science-fiction type materials or include evolved species, monsters and zombies in their series. The adult topics of sex and violence mature and grow with viewers, keeping them life-long fans.

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List of Marvel Characters

By Roberto Garabell

  Overview

There is not a child or adult alive today that does not know at least one Marvel character. But to get a full list of Marvel characters would first require us to segregate the many different types of creations that Marvel has introduced. The list of Marvel characters is voluminous but lets take a closer look at how they have and how they have been distinguished from one another.

List of Marvel Characters Aliens

These aliens are found in the comic series of Marvel and they enjoyed air time in several publications including cross over from one story line to another. We all know about the Silver Surfer but in the comics, there is a character there called the Badoon, a reptile alien who lived on a planet called Moord while their female counterparts lived in Swampworld. The story of Badoon is about gender warfare, resulting in men eventually winning over the women. The special power of these aliens is that they can travel faster than the speed of light.

X-Men also has an interesting list of Marvel characters which includes Phalanx, from the Greek word meaning military formation made up of spears and spiky objects. Essentially, Phalanx is made up of contiguous parts that form a single unit aimed at assassinating mutants.

List of Marvel Characters - Mutants

This list is the longest of all Marvel characters but well only be taking a look at a couple. Bloodlust is Polish that has vampire and werewolf like features, that is, sharp fangs and claws. Bloodlust is known for her exceptional speed and extreme agility.

Changeling is another Marvel mutant also known as Kevin Sydney who is a shape shifter. Although the character of Changeling was short lived, this was later on replaced in the early 1990s by Morph.

Darwin is a Marvel character that we dont often hear about but is an interesting one with powers of evolution in the interest of self-protection. According to the comics, Darwin became an energy fuse and merged with Vulcan, the latter later on leaving planet Earth for space.

List of Marvel Characters Golden Age

The Masked Raider is based on an American comic first published before the 2nd World War. The Masked Raider, together with his talented horse fought the lawless and dedicated his life to making sure there is justice in the world.

The Human Torch adds to this list of Marvel characters and this one was a robot created by a scientist also from the fictional world of Marvel. The Human Torch had little presence in the comic world but is very well known for fighting with Captain America and Namor.

Please click these links if you want to know more about list of marvel characters or list of cartoon characters in general.

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(Comic book quotes) Bottom line.as the years pass, I predict this will be a seriously sought after collector’s item. So buy it soon or now .before someone on “Amazon Marketplace”, “Ebay”, or some “other seller” in the next 20 years tries to sell you a used copy of i

Admin March 8th, 2010

Bottom line.as the years pass, I predict this will be a seriously sought after collector’s item. So buy it soon or now .before someone on “Amazon Marketplace”, “Ebay”, or some “other seller” in the next 20 years tries to sell you a used copy of i

Writers have relied on three techniques to limit Superman. First is to have Superman conveniently forget his own powers in particular his near light speed movement. The second limitation is Superman’s own Boy Scout morality and third is the annoyingly ex

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(How to color comic books) What would you do if you suddenly discovered that you could fly? The answer for this Clark Kent is to spend every spare moment flying. But then he sees someone in danger and saves their life. The good deed does not go unnoticed and Clark has to decide

Admin March 8th, 2010

What would you do if you suddenly discovered that you could fly? The answer for this Clark Kent is to spend every spare moment flying. But then he sees someone in danger and saves their life. The good deed does not go unnoticed and Clark has to decide

I do fondly remember the great quality infested peak of DC Comics back in the seventies as a kid, which somehow did still continued around in the eighties somewhat, giving their own brand of a distinct mark which perhaps are not found in the more commerci

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Popularity: 17% [?]

There are many twists and turns that are (examples of comic books) easier to follow when the story is collected in a TPB.

Admin March 7th, 2010

There are many twists and turns that are easier to follow when the story is collected in a TPB.

Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.

The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.


Pierre la Police @ Squadro

el bradipo posted a photo:

Pierre la Police @ Squadro

Herbal Medicine

online pornographic comic books

Popularity: 18% [?]