Author: Glenn Hauman

What did Mark Waid REALLY say at the Harvey Awards? Listen for yourself!

It’s already become a bit legendary this week– the self-described “long vodka-fueled rant” that Mark Waid delivered as the keynote speech at the Harvey Awards. However, unless you were one of the two hundred or so people in the room, you didn’t actually hear his speech. You might have read the speech Mark intended to give, but Mark himself said he almost immediately went off his notes.

So what was actually said? And was there really booing from some audience members?

Now you can listen for yourself. After a brief intro by Scott Kurtz, we have the full speech from Mark Waid here, as caught by Phil Merkel.

And after you’ve heard it, discuss what he had to say about publishing, filesharing, and making a living in the future in the comments.

Mark Waid’s speech and the Napsterization of comics

Mark Waid’s planned Harvey speech on copyright, piracy, digital distribution, and the like is now posted at CBR. Please note that this is his Platonic ideal speech, not what I heard in the room– as I recall it and he himself noted, the speech he gave was significantly, shall we say, rougher. Sadly, no one has posted an actual transcript or video yet, which is a shame as I think that may have been even more important. (And yes, I have a lead on a copy.)

A while back, I wrote about a meeting I had with DC Legal talking about comics piracy, and I talked about how comics were being Napsterized. In the light of Mark’s call to start a dialogue on these topics, I’d like to revisit that topic– sadly, five years on, the issues are still with us.

Seth Godin recently talked about what publishing should have learned from the music industry:

1) We have a fresh slate at HarperStudio. What’s your advice?

The huge opportunity for book publishers is to get unstuck. You’re not in the printing business. The life and death of trees is not your concern. You’re in the business of leveraging the big ideas authors have. There are a hundred ways to do that, yet book publishers obsess about just one or two of them. Here’s the news flash: that’s not what authors care about. Authors don’t care about units sold. They care about ideas spread. If you can help them do that, we’re delighted to share our profits with you. But one (broken) sales channel–bookstores–and one broken model (guaranteed sale of slow-to-market books) is not the way to get there. If you free yourself up enough to throw that out, you’ll figure out dozens of ways to leverage and spread and profit from ideas worth spreading.

2) If everything is free, how is anyone going to make any money?

First, the market and the internet don’t care if you make money. That’s important to say. You have no right to make money from every development in media, and the humility that comes from approaching the market that way matters. It’s not “how can the market make me money” it’s “how can I do things for this market.” Because generally, when you do something for an audience, they repay you. The Grateful Dead made plenty of money. Tom Peters makes many millions of dollars a year giving speeches, while books are a tiny fraction of that. Barack Obama used ideas to get elected, book royalties are just a nice side effect. There are doctors and consultants who profit from spreading ideas. Novelists and musicians can make money with bespoke work and appearances and interactions. And you know what? It’s entirely likely that many people in the chain WON’T make any money. That’s okay. That’s the way change works.

3) How do you think publishers and authors could work more productively together?

Publishing is far too focused on the pub day. The event of the publication. This is a tiny drip, perhaps the least important moment in a long timeline. As soon as publishers see themselves as marketers and agents and managers and developers of content, things change.

4) What’s the most important lesson the book publishing industry can learn from the music industry?

The market doesn’t care a whit about maintaining your industry. The lesson from Napster and iTunes is that there’s even MORE music than there was before. What got hurt was Tower and the guys in the suits and the unlimited budgets for groupies and drugs. The music will keep coming. Same thing is true with books. So you can decide to hassle your readers (oh, I mean your customers) and you can decide that a book on a Kindle SHOULD cost $15 because it replaces a $15 book, and if you do, we (the readers) will just walk away. Or, you could say, “if books on the Kindle were $1, perhaps we could create a vast audience of people who buy books like candy, all the time, and read more and don’t pirate stuff cause it’s convenient and cheap…” I’m a pessimist that the book industry will learn from music. How are you betting?

So let’s think about the state of the industries– where music’s been the last few years, and where comics could be heading.

Recession? Check.

Screwed up and weakened distribution channels? Check.

High studio costs? Check.

Nearly free, widespread distribution system that the fans use? Check.

Major industry execs and creators that are either clueless about the Internet, or are years late to the party? Check.

A newly empowered bunch of creators doing it themselves and distributing online? Check, check, check.

So is there a solution? Yes, but there are some big hurdles to overcome. Start discussing it in the comment threads, and we’ll be back in a bit with more.

Baltimore Comic-Con 2010 summed up in three pictures

Even though the show is still very family friendly, you still get creepy old guys and fruits showing up…

…and by the end of the day, your kids look like this:

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‘No Ordinary Family’ online preview for first 50,000 visitors

no-ordinary-family-8968780Kryptonsite reports that ABC has made the pilot of No Ordinary Family available online and legally over a month before its September 28 premiere… but only if you’re one of the first 50,000 people.

Visit NoOrdinaryScreening.com and put in the password “Extraordinary.” (Please note that this is case-sensitive.) There, ABC is screening the pilot with limited interruption.

This password/screening apparently has a tie-in to Best Buy stores, and was originally discovered by the Stitch Kingdom website.

Because this is apparently limited to 50,000 viewers, we cannot guarantee how long this password will work. Please remember that the Extraordinary password is case-sensitive.

Dean Haspiel wins Emmy for ‘Bored To Death’ titles

The Beat caught this one: At Saturday’s Creative Arts Emmys, Dean Haspiel won the Outstanding Main Title Design Emmy for HBO’s Bored To Death, along with collaborators Tom Barham, Marci Ichimura and Anthony Santoro. Haspiel is shown here with series creator Jonathan Ames and their Emmy. The Zach Galifianakis character, graphic novelist Ray Hueston, may also be based on Dean.

If you don’t have HBO and have never seen the show, here’s the opening sequence:

Congrats to Dean, and here’s hoping that Galifianakis doesn’t make him look too goofy next season– which starts next month on HBO.

Knock me over with a feather: ‘Star Wars’ in Blu-Ray in 2011

Wow. Who could have foreseen that George Lucas, who has skillfully exploited every single new video format to come along in the past 33 years for maximum financial gain, would release Star Wars on Blu-Ray sometime in 2011 with even more clips that we never saw before? And only as a box set for all six, so you can’t cherry pick your favorites?

Impress me, George. Put both editions of the original trilogy on there.

Ray Bradbury will be turning 90 on Sunday…

…which, I suppose, is why some people made a video saluting him.

(DEAR GOD NO NOT SAFE FOR WORK)

What’s amazing is that I know a bunch of women who have expressed similar sentiments about the man’s writing. Now if only other comic book writers got the same treatment…

Crazy Sexy Geeks: New Episodes and More to Come

Due to Comic-Con and, frankly, the economy, “Crazy Sexy Geeks: The Series” has been on hiatus for a short while. But thanks to a few fan donations, the show is coming back with new episodes.

These episodes will cover such topics as “gays in mainstream comics”, more on “women superheroes”, a look at “what you should be reading” featuring author Victoria Laurie and comic writer Jimmy Palmiotti, and chats with celebrities such as Paul Wesley of “The Vampire Diaries” and Emma Caulfield of the recent movie Timer and “Buffy the Vampire Slayer.”

Tim Gunn has also promised to come back for further fashion discussions on superheroes, due to the high positive response of his last visit to the show that got rave reviews from many, including NPR. If you didn’t catch that special two-part discussion on the fashion of Superman, Robin, the Hulk, Power Girl, Black Canary, Catwoman and others, then check them out!

For those of you who missed the last couple of episodes of Crazy Sexy Geeks, we’ve got them for you right here.

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The latest Pixar-Marvel Crossover: Bullseye!

bullseye-2486099

Marv Wolfman writes:

A few weeks back on Twitter, referring to Toy Story 3, writer Gail
Simone
made a funny comment on Bullseye, the horse, and in her deadpan
Twitter-humor style referenced Daredevil’s Bullseye. In turn, I wrote
back saying whoever created that Bullseye had to be a genius. Needless
to say, I created him. As usual, other folk got involved, too, and R.J.
Carter just sent me this, drawn by his friend, Darren Goodhart. It is
great and I had to share it.

So now we share it with you. Enjoy.

Now all we need is Woody in Deathstroke’s costume and Buzz Lightyear as Cyborg. (Beast Boy can already turn into Nervous Rex.)

Jane Badler returns to ‘V’

jane-badler-then-and-now-3311528She’s baaaaaack… hide your mice.

Jane Badler, who played Diana on the original V series is joining the cast of ABC’s present series V as a recurring guest star. Badler’s character Diana is the mother of Anna (Morena Baccarin) who is the new leader of the Vs. Badler’s role begins during the season two premiere.

Now everybody starts figuring out how this is going to link the two series in continuity…