The huge San Diego Comic-Con International has lined up an astonishing number of movie and teevee previews this year. The partial list includes Alien vs. Predator 2: No Peace on Earth; American Gangster; Babylon AD; Balls of Fury; Battlestar Galactica; Beowulf; The Bourne Ultimatum; Coraline; Fred Claus; Get Smart; The Golden Compass; Hellboy 2: The Golden Army; Heroes; I Am Legend; The Incredible Hulk; Indiana Jones 4; Invasion; Iron Man; Lost; National Treasure 2; Resident Evil: Extinction; Speed Racer; The Strangers; Stardust; Star Trek XI; Sunshine; Sweeney Todd; 30 Days of Night; Trick ‘r Treat; Wanted; Where the Wild Things Are and White Out.
Don’t be surprised if many of the actors and creative personnel are there to hawk their efforts. Good grief; I remember all the way back when the San Diego show was actually focused on comic books.
This year’s show will be held at the San Diego Convention Center July 26 through 29. If you don’t already have hotel reservations, make certain you take your passport or birth certificate.
I haven’t talked that much yet about being what my life is like being married to one of the relatively few lucky and talented people able to make a living as a comic book artist. There are a few reasons for this, among them being stuff I’m not allowed to reveal in a public forum because of various confidences. (For instance, it’s driving me nuts not being able to talk about Robin’s next inking assignment, and ComicMix readers will understand why once it’s been officially announced.) I walk a fine line between wanting to crow about the comics I see in their formative stages and realizing that any specifics thereof will often require massive doses of pre-approval before I talk about them.
But I can still indulge in generalities, one being a topic on which I’ve briefly touched before — the blurry line between being a fan and being a pro. Today I want to talk specifically about dealing with pros from a fan’s point of view.
What brought this on was my musings after attending the Dave Cockrum memorial last week. I was acquainted with Dave and Paty from the days when they used to appear at NYC comic shows, mostly the Fred Greenberger ones but I think they were also at some of the "church cons" that Mike Carbonaro held before those shows moved across the street from Penn Station. When Dave was at the VA hospital a bus ride away from my apartment, I visited him once in the bitter winter because it was the right thing to do, not because he was This Big Name. I’ve been lucky enough to get to know a lot of luminaries from those old cons as people and friends before I really knew any of their work. And I remember when I used to mention their names in Usenet posts, the way I’d mention other friends and acquaintances, I’d often receive nasty accusations of "name-dropping" from my fellow comic fans, with an attitude of "how dare she talk about these Names as though they were — people!"
It seems far simpler for many fans to think of pros as abstracts on whom they can project their own entitlements than to interact with them as fellow human beings. And whether this consists of treating fictional characters as more important than the real people who create and work on them, or erecting pedestals and shrines to the objects of your affection, the result is much the same.
52 year-old Pac Man designer Toru Iwatani is retiring from the racket, but he’s going out with a bang. The game designer has created the Pac Man Championship Edition for the final round of the Xbox 360 Pac-Man World Championship in New York City. It will be available tomorrow as a $10.00 download on Microsoft”s Xbox Live online service.
According to Reuters, this version is a faithful interpretation of the 27-year-old original game. Iwatani created Pac Man Championship Edition as a two-dimensional game, like the original. "I wanted to stay with the original simple rules of Pac Man," he said. There are no plans for another version of Pac Man, but Iwatani might work with rights holder Namco Bandai Holdings in a supervisory position or work on a new version with his students at Tokyo Polytechnic University.
Just because it remains 2-D, Pac Man Championship Edition isn’t exactly stuck in the dark ages. It has challenging and innovative levels, including a dark mode where much of the maze is hidden and players are guided only by a flashlight lighting Pac Man’s path.
Well, here’s a crossover for you. According to a Marvel press release:
The New Fantastic Four (Black Panther, Storm, Human Torch and The Thing) have faced Galactus and the Silver Surfer, but now they face an even larger threat in Black Panther #28: The Marvel Zombies! Imbued with the power of Galactus from their recent tussle – they say he tasted like chicken – the Marvel Zombies are intent on devouring the Skrull home planet. Our heroes have two problems: they’ve landed on that same planet…and they’re in an alternate dimension with no way home! Writer Reginald Hudlin and artist Francis Portela invite you to jumponboard for the beginning of the latest New Fantastic Four adventure, as T’Challa confronts an enemy even he may not be able to defeat!
The story was written by Reginald Hudlin, penciled by Francis Portela with a cover by Marvel Zombies‘ Arthur Suydam and goes on sale at the end of this month. Sound to me like a fun story, the sort we haven’t seen too much of in superhero comics lately.
Artwork copyright 2007 Marvel Characters, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
From AP: An appeals court said a new federal policy against accidentally aired profanities on TV and radio was invalid, noting that vulgar language had become so common that even President Bush has been heard using expletives.
The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Monday in favor of a Fox Television-led challenge to the policy and returned the case to the Federal Communications Commission to let the agency try to explain how its policy was not "arbitrary and capricious." The court said it doubted the FCC could.The broadcasters had asked the appeals court last year to invalidate the FCC’s conclusion that profanity-laced broadcasts on four shows were indecent, even though no fines were issued. The FCC said the "F-word" in any context "inherently has a sexual connotation" and can be subject to enforcement action.
The appeals court said some of the FCC’s explanations for its new policy, reversing a more lenient policy in place for nearly three decades, were "divorced from reality." The court noted that even President Bush was heard one day telling British Prime Minister Tony Blair that the United Nations needed to "get Syria to get Hezbollah to stop doing this s—."
FCC Chairman Kevin Martin told The Associated Press that the ruling will make it difficult to impose fines for indecency. "Practically, this makes it difficult to go forward on a lot of the cases that are in front of us," he said. An appeal was being considered, he said.
The FCC found its ban was violated by a Dec. 9, 2002, broadcast of the Billboard Music Awards in which singer Cher used the phrase "F— ’em" and a Dec. 10, 2003, Billboard awards show in which reality show star Nicole Richie said, "Have you ever tried to get cow s— out of a Prada purse? It’s not so f—— simple."
In a majority opinion written by Judge Rosemary Pooler, the appeals court questioned whether the FCC’s indecency test could survive First Amendment scrutiny. "We are sympathetic to the networks’ contention that the FCC’s indecency test is undefined, indiscernible, inconsistent and consequently unconstitutionally vague," she wrote.
Fox Broadcasting praised the ruling, saying "government regulation of content serves no purpose other than to chill artistic expression in violation of the First Amendment." It said viewers can decide appropriate viewing content for themselves, using parental control technologies.
The new policy was put in place after a January 2003 NBC broadcast of the Golden Globes awards show, in which U2 lead singer Bono uttered the phrase "f—— brilliant."
FCC Commissioner Michael J. Copps said the decision was disappointing to him and millions of parents but "doesn’t change the FCC’s legal obligation to enforce the indecency statute." "So any broadcaster who sees this decision as a green light to send more gratuitous sex and violence into our homes would be making a huge mistake," Copps said. "The FCC has a duty to find a way to breathe life into the laws that protect our kids."
Why do we mention this? Well, we’re all really big First Amendment types over here at ComicMix, and Thursday is the 36th anniversary of Cohen vs. California, the Supreme Court ruling that overturned Paul Cohen’s conviction for wearing a jacket that read "F— the Draft", but mainly it’s a great excuse to run this:
Cadet Kai reporting in from Splicer Facility on Atlantia in the Vision Quest World. My main trait is camouflage and have an aura for passion.
That sounds a wee bit like a personal ad, but it’s my character on Deborah Pratt’s (of Quantum Leap fame) newest endeavor TheVisionQuest.com. The Emmy-nominated writer and voice of Ziggy for the hit sci-fi series Quantum Leap, Pratt has created a major new multi-platform science fiction series. An actress with starring roles in popular TV series such as Airwolf and Magnum PI, Pratt brought a new creation to life: The Vision Quest – Book One: The Age of Light. The book will be released on August 1st.
The first book in a trilogy, The Vision Quest tells of an Earth set 130 years into the future as experienced through the adventures of hero Cole "Lazer" Lazerman and his friends. I could tell you more about this fantastic journey, but you would be missing out the experiencing it yourself, so log onto TheVisionQuest.com, read the book and look for other formats of Deborah’s new world that will covered in multiple platforms including games for Nintendo’s Wii and Microsoft’s Xbox, on-line webisodes, short animated features and a the complete trilogy in feature films.
You can see a picture of Deborah and hear the first of Mike Raub’s three-part interview withher on the Big ComicMix Broadcast. In addition to discussing Vision Quest, Pratt "reveals" what’s next for Quantum Leap.
It’s the start of a new week and The Big ComicMix Broadcast is more than loaded up with Pop Culture goodness! We start our week-long visit with Quantum Leap actress & head writer, Deborah Pratt, on the verge of a major new sci-fi venture, and we cover buckets o’ news, this week’s latest comics & DVDs, chat with Omega Flight’s Mike Oeming & Wayne Faucher from Detective Comics, and then take a minute for a song that EPSN just loves!!!
The second spin-off from the revived Doctor Who teevee series, The Sarah Jane Adventures, has finally completed casting and is now being written.
The show, starring Elisabeth Sladen as former Doctor Who companion Sarah Jane Smith (she co-starred with Jon Pertwee and Tom Baker from 1973 to 1976) plays an investigative journalist with a passion for extra-terrestial stories. Her previous life is only known to a trio of neighborhood children. Whereas the Doctor’s robotic dog K-9 appeared in the pilot, he/it is not expected to have a regular presence in this new series.
The pilot aired in England at the beginning of this year with a somewhat different cast. The Sarah Jane Adventures is oriented towards children in the way Torchwood is oriented towards adults, and is executive produced by Who honcho Russell T. Davies. No air date has been confirmed by the BBC.
Sladen has also played Sarah Jane in eight original full-cast audio adventures by Big Finish Productions.
Thirty years ago today, the first Apple II went on sale at the West Coast Computer Faire.
It included color, sound, paddles for Pong and Breakout, a 6502 microprocessor running at 1 MHz, 4 KB of RAM, an audio cassette interface for loading programs and storing data, the Integer BASIC programming language built into the ROMs, a video controller that displayed 24 lines by 40 columns of upper-case-only text on the screen, with NTSC composite video output suitable for display on a monitor or on a TV set. The original retail price of the computer was US$1298 with 4 KB of RAM and US$2638 if you went for the maximum whopping 48 KB of RAM.
Not gigabytes, not even megabytes. 48 kilobytes.
By today’s standards, that’s what’s included in a cereal box giveaway. The computer I’m typing this on has a microprocessor that’s over two thousand times faster, with over forty-three thousand times more RAM. And it’s not even top of the line anymore, hasn’t been for almost a year.
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