Category: News

The Geek Hierarchy

The Geek Hierarchy

So a bunch of us Mixologists were having dinner in a suburb of Chicago having what EIC Gold claims are the best hamburgers in the world (pretty good, but that’s another post) and we started talking about  who looks down on whom — Doctor Who fans looking down on Dark Shadows fans, who in turn look down on Forever Knight fans, and so on — and I mentioned that the Geek Hierarchy already existed. Multiple Michaels Davis, Gold, and Raub were all disbelieving that such a hierarchy existed, let alone that it had standing.

Doubt me, eh? Gentlemen… this link is for you. Presenting The Geek Hierarchy. (All ComicMix readers can elevate themselves one level on the chart.)

COMICS LINKS: Completely Random

COMICS LINKS: Completely Random

Comics Links

Eddie Campbell tries to define what a graphic novel is. (Illustration of Campbell deep in thought by Campbell.)

The LA Times has an article about the webcomic A.D.: New Orleans After the Deluge.

Publishers Weekly interviews Satoru Kannagi, writer of Only the Ring Finger Knows.

PW also reports on the massive Japanese convention Comiket.

Comic Book Galaxy interviews the always-sunny Harvey Pekar.

Comics Should Be Good takes their usual monthly look at Marvel’s December covers.

Newsarama talks with the creators of Punks: the Comic.

Comic Bloc interviews Mike Baron.

The CBC interviews For Better or Worse cartoonist Lynn Johnston.

Comics Reviews

Dana of Comics Fodder reviews this week’s Marvel comics.

Sequart’s Rob Clough reviews three volumes of Graphic Classics.

Sequential Tart reviews the new The Spirit comic.

Reviews from The Savage Critics:

 

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Battlestar Galactica Goes Unrated For Christmas

Battlestar Galactica Goes Unrated For Christmas

There’s this great scene at the very beginning of The Simpsons Movie where Homer is at the movie theater watching Itchy and Scratchy – The Movie and then asks why anybody would want to pay for something they’re used to seeing for free. Then they cut to the opening titles.

The Sci Fi Channel is doing the same thing, only backwards. The two-hour Battlestar Galactica: Razor movie will be broadcast on November 24, 2007. On December 4, NBC Universal will release the Battlestar Galactica: Razor Unrated Extended Edition. Hmmm… were I a BG fan – and, well, I am – I’d just wait the ten days and watch the real thing, if for no other reason than in hope that there’s some seriously X-rated material in the unrated extended edition. When it comes to "extended," perhaps I misunderstand their meaning. But if I were buying ad time on the Sci Fi broadcast, I’d want a discount.

By the way, I’d love to see Itchy and Scratchy – The Movie.

Sarcasm aside, our correspondent Robert Greenberger adds significant detail to this story:

The DVD, retailing for $26.98, is said to contain an additional fifteen minutes of footage in addition to the usual assortment of extras. Among the extras will be the eight mini-episodes the channel will begin airing in October. The lead-in material, which will also be available at their website, will set up events seen in the movie and edited into the home video version. The miniseries features young William Adama, to be played by Nico Cortez and is likely to be about the early Cylon War with glimpses of the original Cylon designs from the ABC series.

The telefilm’s story is told in present day and will feature the entire Galactica cast but will have extensive flashbacks to a mission of the other Battlestar, the Pegasus, which was helmed by Admiral Helena Cain (Michelle Forbes).  As a result, familiar faces from that ship will appear as guest stars, including Steve Bacic as Colonel Jurgen Belzen.

What’s a razor, you ask? In “Resurrection ship, Part 1” Cain told Fisk she needed people who were,"…completely reliable. Completely loyal. Razors."

Producer Ronald D. Moore has indicated the story is an important piece of the bigger picture and elements introduced here will pay off in the fourth and final season, which Sci-Fi is expected to schedule to debut in January. Much of Cain’s background will be explored including a hint of romance with Gina. Additionally, part of the story shows Lee Adama in charge of the Pegasus and his search for an XO which introduces Stephanie Chaves-Jacobsen as Kendra Shaw.

Two trailers for the event have already run on Sci-Fi and can be found on their website.

DENNIS O’NEIL: The Senator is Golden

DENNIS O’NEIL: The Senator is Golden

If a man is to be judged by his enemies, Patrick Leahy is golden. He was, as was widely reported, told to do an anatomically impossible act on himself by our always-classy Vice President, the Honorable Dick Cheney, and badmouthed by James Dobson, leader of Focus on the Family. Great foes to have.

Mr. Leahy, as most of you probably know, is Senator Leahy of Vermont, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, currently trying to get a couple of friends of The Honorable George W. Bush to obey the law by telling the truth and honoring subpoenas.

I like Pat Leahy’s politics and especially his humanitarianism and I liked Pat Leahy before I knew much about either because he invited me to lunch a few years ago, along with my wife and a number of other comic book guys. Senator Leahy, it turns out, is a Batman fan and not shy about saying so in public. Lunch was in the Senate dining room that day, and although my mistrust of what we’re forced to call The Establishment is reasonably sincere, I have to admit that this butcher’s kid from North St. Louis was pretty impressed with himself, sitting at a big table with a living, breathing senator, surrounded by the nation’s movers and shakers. Later, our host wrote an introduction to a collection of comic book stories and later still, had cameos in two of the Batman movies.

According to the Journal News, my local Gannett paper, and reported by ComicMix last week, the senator will have an actual part in the next batmovie, The Dark Knight, and will donate his acting pay to a children’s library in Montpelier. (No word yet on whether Cheney or Dobson will be in the cast, but don’t get your hopes up.)

I mentioned the senator’s humanitarianism, which brings me to our second encounter with him. In 1996, at the instigation of Jenette Kahn, then DC Comics’ publisher, we did some comic books about the landmine problem. Before Jenette dragooned me into a meeting full of impressive people, I hadn’t known there was such a problem. But there was, and is, and it consists of the existence of millions of small explosive devices scattered throughout the planet. In theory, their targets are soldiers, but in practice, they kill and maim many, many civilians, especially children. So the Superman guys did a book, to be translated into the appropriate languages, which showed what landmines are and what to do if you see one, and we Batman guys did a book, in English, designed to raise awareness. And that’s where we reencountered the senator. Every year, he works to help landmine victims. You don’t hear about this much, and he makes no political capital from it; having spoken with him about those victims, I’m convinced that he does what he does sincerely, because it needs doing.

Anyway, to finish the story, the senator and I eventually found ourselves sharing a rostrum as we worked to publicize our comics and the landmine problem they addressed.

I’ve done nothing about the problem since. Not so the senator, and that’s one of the reasons he’s a genuinely good guy.

I’ll bet he’ll be just fine in the movie, too.

RECOMMENDED READING: The Tipping Point, by Malcolm Gladwell

Dennis O’Neil is an award-winning editor and writer of comic books like Batman, The Question, Iron Man, Green Lantern and/or Green Arrow, and The Shadow, as well as all kinds of novels, stories and articles.

Klattu Barada Nik-whoah

Klattu Barada Nik-whoah

According to Variety, Keanu Reeves will be there the day the earth stands still– no word whether he will tell us where to stand. Presumably, on our feet.

Twentieth Century Fox has set Reeves to star in "The Day the Earth Stood Still," its re-imagining of the 1951 Robert Wise-directed sci-fi classic. Reeves committed over the weekend to play Klaatu, a humanoid alien who arrives on Earth accompanied by an indestructible, heavily armed robot and a warning to world leaders that their continued aggression will lead to annihilation by species watching from afar.

The robot, of course, will be the robot double of Ted from Bill & Ted’s Bogus Journey.

COMICS LINKS: Monday Again

COMICS LINKS: Monday Again

No links came with obvious top-of-the-post illustrations today, so, instead, let’s focus on the Monday-ness of today, and think demotivation.

Comics Links

Comic Book Resources looks at webcartoonists at Wizard World Chicago.

Wizard talks to Avatar Press artist Jacen Burroughs.

Comic Book Resources interviews Hugh Sterbakov, writer of Freshmen.

CBR also chats with artist Adrian Alphona, soon to take over Spider-Man Loves Mary Jane.

Comics Reporter interviews Comic-Con Director of Marketing and Public Relations David Glanzer.

Newsarama has the second half of an interview with Douglas Wolk, author of Reading Comics.

The New York Times’s Paper Cuts blog interviews cartoonist Dan Clowes.

Comics Reviews

The Joplin Independent reviews Modern Masters, Vol. 7: John Byrne.

Blogcritics reviews The Architect by Mike Baron and Andie Tong.

Comics Reporter reviews Satchel Paige: Striking Out Jim Crow.

Brian Cronin at Comics Should Be Good reviews Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man #23.

Living Between Wednesdays reviews this weeks’ comics, starting with The Immortal Iron Fist #8.

Graeme McMillan of The Savage Critics reviews Battlestar Galactica: Season Zero #1.

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MIKE GOLD: Dangerous Old Farts

MIKE GOLD: Dangerous Old Farts

Our popular culture likes to mock young celebrities such as Lindsay Lohan, Paris Hilton and that Federline guy. That’s fine; there’s no reason to take our celebrities seriously. But I think we’re showing our ageist leanings by making it look like these children differ from their parents and grandparents. There are a lot of old fogies up to no damn good, and they deserve to be outed as well.

For example, last week actor Bill Murray was arrested for DWI. While driving a golf cart. Down the middle of a public road. In Sweden. As it turns out, he “borrowed” the golf cart from Stockholm’s Café Opera, although the owner is not pressing charges. In fact, he’s milking it for all it’s worth.

Well, Lenny Bruce pointed out society perceives a difference between dirty screwing and fancy screwing, and I’ve got to admit, getting busted for driving a golf cart down the middle of a public road in downtown Stockholm is fancy screwing. Or it’s the plot to one of Murray’s earlier movies; it’s kind of hard to tell.

William Shatner evolved from the butt of jokes to my personal hero. Nobody has turned his image around like Bill, thanks to a wonderful self-effacing sense of humor and a great role in Boston Legal, an amazingly iconoclastic teevee series. But even Bill has his meltdowns.

At a Star Trek convention in Las Vegas Hilton earlier this month, Shatner publicly railed against producer J.J. Abrams for casting Leonard Nimoy in next year’s Star Trek movie – but not him. According to the New York Daily News, “Shatner was so manic onstage that Leonard Nimoy actually said, ‘We’re worried about you.’”

Then there’s George W. Bush. He’s always good for a few laughs. Rick Oliver, my old friend and successor as First Comics’ EIC, sent along this priceless quote: “One unmistakable legacy of Vietnam is that the price of America’s withdrawal was paid by millions of innocent citizens, whose agonies would add to our vocabulary new terms like ‘boat people,’ ‘re-education camps’ and ‘killing fields…’”

So much for “no child left behind.” George’s reference to the killing fields had nothing to do with Vietnam; that was Cambodia, under the petit-Hitler Pol Pot. Proportionately speaking, he was the greatest monster of the 20th Century, having slaughtered through slave labor, malnutrition, poor medical care and execution some two million of his people – fully one-third of Cambodia’s population.

Pot’s killing fields and re-education camps were brought to an end in 1979 by the Vietnamese – the same Commies Bush and his friends like to point to as an excuse for their continued gang-rape of Iraq. For the record, the world has the Vietnamese to thank for putting his career to an end. Pol Pot was kept under close house arrest for twenty years, until the day he died.

Nice going, Georgie. In comparison, President Paris Hilton doesn’t sound so bad.

Or should that be President Freedom Hilton?

Mike Gold is editor-in-chief of ComicMix.com.

A week of winners

A week of winners

Two of our comic friends’ posts follow up on news we reported here earlier on two ongoing contests.  Becky Cloonan notes that she was selected as one of the 18 finalists in the first-ever International Manga Awards, first mentioned on ComicMix back on May 25.  Way to go, Becky!  The winners are listed at the Japanese Consulate’s website.  And Heidi MacDonald lists the winners in the Life Without Fair Courts contest, first mentioned on ComicMix back on February 25.  Congratulations to all the participants and winners!  Speaking of winners, Glenn Hauman rejoined our ComicMix columnists this past week; here’s our weekly wrapup:

The ever-dependable Mellifluous Mike Raub is still helming our terrific Big ComicMix Broadcasts:

Winning entries all!

MIKE RAUB: Behind the Broadcast!

MIKE RAUB: Behind the Broadcast!

The week long look at the toy scene on The Big ComicMix Broadcast gave us a stack of sticky notes to pass on. Grab your mouse and dive in!

• We were only able to touch on the vast quantity of exclusive figures offered by Time And Space toys. There is a lot to see at their online store here . Make sure you have some time to spend when you go there as you will get lost in the virtual aisles – and it won’t hurt to have your wallet handy either.

• If getting your prize toys graded and preserved is of interest, then here is where you should go to explore the services of Action Figure Authority. One thing we found of interest is that they offer "plexicases" that open and close if you just prefer to get your prizes something cool to be stored in rather than have them sealed and graded.

• News on Mattel’s plans for the DC Universe heroes is coming out a bit at a time and the best place to get advance looks at the new lines are on the better action figure bulletin boards. Those include Action Figure Insider, Action Figure Times and Action-Figure. These are also excellent places to interact with Mattel’s marketing people and let them know just who you would like to se on the shelves in 2008 (repeat after me "JSA! JSA! JSA!")

• It’s hard to believe that Vampirella has been around for nearly 40 years, but then again we are talking one of the undead. If you’d like to catch up and see what’s going on in the series these days, you can see that full issue of Vengeance of Vampirella free here.

• NBM/Papercutz revival of Classics Illustrated is also previewed online. Set to premiere in a soft and hardcover version in November, you can see some of French artist Michael Plessix’s work on Wind In The Willows here.

Catch us The Big ComicMix Broadcast Tuesday with our rundown of the newest comics and DVDs and later in the week we talk to a creator who has one of the biggest "buzz" books out there. It involves girls, comic stores and panties!

Mike Raub is the producer of The Big ComicMix Broadcast.

Opus banned for the next two weeks

Opus banned for the next two weeks

Twenty-five newspapers (and counting) have decided not to run the next two weeks of Berke Breathed’s Opus because of its content– Lola Granola is experimenting with alternate religions again, having decided that Amish nudism isn’t a viable lifestyle, and she tries… well, look to the right.

Luckily, this is the age of the Internet, so the strips will still be available online at Salon.

Joan Walsh, editor of Salon, comments: "I thought the strip satirized loopy American seekers who customize world religions for their own needs, not Islam. But either way, it’s cowardice to shun the strip. And newspapers wonder why they’re dying?"

Several years ago, a similar situation occured with the Bongo-produced Simpsons Sunday newspaper strip. Ultimately, it did not survive the purge.