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The Point Radio: Why ‘Scrubs’ Came Back

TV fans and critics alike were pretty vocal when ABC announced a revamped SCRUBS was headed back to prime time. Series creator Bill Lawrence gives us the frank answers on why that decision was made, plus a little  news about CLONE HIGH (remember that?) Meanwhile. Marc Guggenheim is looking for some ACTION and Katee Sackhoff joins the world of comic professionals.

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Don’t forget that you can now enjoy THE POINT 24 hours a Day – 7 Days a week!. Updates on all parts of pop culture, special programming by some of your favorite personalities and the biggest variety of contemporary music on the net – plus there is a great round of new programs on the air including classic radio each night at 12mid (Eastern) on RETRO RADIO and COMICMIX’s Mark Wheatley hitting the FREQUENCY every Saturday ay 9pm.

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The Walrus Is Batman: A Paired Review

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Superheroes die. It’s one of their best tricks – dying, tragically, to stop the Big Bad from doing whatever it is he’s doing. Luckily, another one of their best tricks is to come back from the dead – which they need to do, of course, since someone needs to star in their monthly comics, and you can’t let Jean-Paul Valley or John Henry Irons have the spotlight for all that long. (No one would stand for that.)

Batman died recently, more or less. (It’s always “more or less” when a character like Batman dies. Complication cling to them like barnacles.) And these are two of the books in which he did, or didn’t, die:

Batman: Whatever Happened to the Caped Crusader?
Written by Neil Gaiman; Pencils by Andy Kubert
DC Comics, July 2009, $24.99

Gaiman is a powerful and original writer, but he’s also drawn, again and again, to pastiches and homages, to working in the tradition or shadow of previous stories and creators. Even when he describes his original work, one will be the “Lafferty story,” or (more than once) a Lovecraftian tale. And so Gaiman’s Dead Batman story is explicitly the Dead Batman story of all of his favorite comics creators, influenced by Dick Sprang, Jack Burnley, Gardner Fox, Dennis O’Neil and everyone else. Gaiman’s introduction to the fancy-pants collected edition explains this; his very sensible starting point was that Batman will be dead and alive multiple times in his history, and that he (Gaiman) wanted to write a Dead Batman story that would transcend this particular death to be the Platonic ideal of the Dead Batman story, one that would apply to any Batman of past or future, dead or alive.

At the same time, “Whatever Happened to the Caped Crusader?” was conceived to be the Batman equivalent of Alan Moore’s 1986 tombstone to the Silver Age Superman, “Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow?” – a two-issue story, published in the “last issues” of the character’s two iconic titles, before the decks were cleared for a major revamp. (Or, in Batman’s case, an extended absence due to temporary death.) But when Moore took on the end of Superman, revamps were a rarer and more tentative thing – superhero comics characters changed costumes and some life circumstances (married, team, solo, outcast, criminal, etc.), but hadn’t yet taken up the modern round of radical origin changes and multiple deaths on a seasonal basis. Moore had the benefit of novelty, and of being there at the right time – the Silver Age had ended, so he was able to eulogize it. Gaiman has no such advantages; no one would want an eulogy for the current era of mainstream comics, and it hasn’t even had the good grace to die.

But Gaiman does his best with what he has, and what he has is primarily Batman’s supporting cast. Batman has perhaps the best and most recognizable crew of villains in long-underwear comics – plus a fair number of sturdy supporters on the heroic side – and Gaiman lets each of them have their turn in the spotlight. What Gaiman has done in “Whatever Happened to the Caped Crusader?” is what DC probably expected, and what Gaiman has done often – perhaps too often, as it’s getting to be a stylistic tic – to tell a story about stories, a story made up of stories, a Rashomon of comics that adds up to that Platonic Dead Batman story Gaiman was aiming for. So a Golden Age Catwoman explains how Batman died, and then Alfred tells a very different story, and then Gaiman, getting into the second half of his tale, sketches quickly the outlines of a dozen other characters’ versions of Batman’s death. It’s The Wake all over again, or yet another cry of “the King is dead; long live the King!”

Behind and above that – first as a pair of off-page narrators, and then coming onstage in the second half – is a conversation between Batman and a mysterious female figure (luckily, not the one that we immediately suspect), which leads into Gaiman’s version of the core mythology of Batman towards the end of the story. It does not quite edge into metafiction – does not exactly imply that Batman is a comic-book character who will continue to have adventures, to win and lose and die, over and over again – but Gaiman does nod in that direction. It gets rather more Moorcockian than one would have expected, but it all makes sense during the reading.

And, at the end, Gaiman once again appropriates someone else’s work of fiction – I guess I can call it fiction – though he either didn’t get permission to use it explicitly or didn’t want to be that on-the-nose with the real thing. Whatever the explanation, if you grew up in North America in the last seventy years, I expect you’ll recognize it. And so Gaiman is here attempting to tell an emotionally-based story about one seventy-year-old corporately-owned character by using a parallel with a sixty-year-old book also owned by someone else. It’s a nice conceit, reinforcing his Batman-as-Eternal-Champion motif, but it also tends to pull even tighter the Ouroboros of superhero comics – that all references, and all supposedly “new” ideas, are versions and re-imaginings of thoughts that our grandfathers had. “Whatever Happened to the Caped Crusader?” is an excellent Dead Batman story, but – given that Batman and his ilk will never stay dead – one does have to question why we need to keep adding to the endlessly proliferating, self-referential taxonomy of Batman Stories to begin with.

The book Whatever Happened to the Caped Crusader? is filled out with a few sketchbook pages from Andy Kubert – I didn’t mention him above, because he’s the Grace Kelly in this book, doing everything impeccably without ever calling attention to himself, following Gaiman’s lead at all times – and with four shorter Batman stories from earlier in Gaiman’s career. Those stories don’t aim as high as “Whatever” does, and are more successful and more frivolous – a quick look at Batman and the Joker in the green room of comics, origins of Poison Ivy and the Riddler, and a framing story attached to that Riddler story. The Poison Ivy story, in particular, shows what Gaiman can do when given the freedom to invent and not hobbled by expectations and requirements.

I doubt Gaiman’s “Caped Crusader” will ever match the iconic status of Moore’s “Man of Tomorrow,” but attempts to match earlier achievements usually do fall short, so that’s only to be expected. As a classy, evergreen Dead Batman story, it’s about as good as we could expect.

(more…)

Review: ‘Robot Chicken Season 4’ on DVD

robot-chicken-s41-9662355I don’t know how I missed [[[Robot Chicken]]] when it debuted several years back. I heard the buzz, I saw the ads in the comics and still, I somehow never got around to watching. When the Cartoon Network sent over their second [[[Star Wars Special]]] for review, I finally indulged and was delighted.

Now, they sent over the two-disc set collecting the complete fourth season, which goes on sale Tuesday, and watched with great delight. The season, which ran from December 7, 2008 through December 6 (last week!), has 20 episodes and the set also includes [[[The Robot Chicken Full-Assed Christmas Special]]].

The show is a riotous tour through the pop culture zeitgeist, presuming the viewers know the players from Tila Tequila to the torturous relationship between Thor and Loki. Many of the episodes are loosely connected vignettes while others feel entirely like a collection of whatever was finished in time got included. When handling a single theme, such as Christmas or [[[[Star Wars]]], they manage to make that work as well, with a broad array of talents coming together to keep things loose and very, very funny.

To me, many of the funniest bits shows the before or after events from favorite scenes such as the natives building the temple deathtraps we saw Indiana Jones avoid in [[[Raiders of the Lost Ark]]] or the day in the life of Jason Voorhees.

Seth Green and Matthew Senreich have certainly developed an eclectic following which has allowed them to bring onboard writers and performers to work with them. In fact, one of the best Video Blogs included in the Extras shows the range of actors who come in and let loose. I can’t decide who was having more fun, Billy Dee Williams or Katee Sackhoff. Among the writers to contribute, beyond the usual suspects from previous seasons is comic book darling Geoff Johns.

Back during [[[Star Trek]]]’s 20th Anniversary, there was talk of an Opera which was partially written before wiser heads canceled the project. But, thanks to one bit, we have a good idea of what it would have sounded like. The hysterical [[[Star Trek II: The Opera]]] is one of the highlights.

No, not every bit works and some episodes feel wildly uneven, but in
each episode I find myself laughing out loud at the absurd
juxtaposition of elements or seeing revered icons poke fun at
themselves.

No one and nothing is sacred to these creators so[[[ Babar]]], [[[Hannah Montana]]], [[[James Bond]]] and just about everyone else you’ve grown up with is fair game. The DVD presents the episodes without censorship so there’s additional graphic violence, nudity and many instances of foul language.

In addition to the 21 episodes, there are Chicken Nuggets (the creators offer commentary), appearances at 2008’s Comic-Con International and 2009’s New York Comic-Con plus when the team promoted the show across Australia. There are way-too-brief Day in the Life glimpses at the many talented technicians who take the wacky scripts and bring them to life. There are a handful of deleted scenes with introductory material to explain how anything manages to get cut plus deleted animatics, early tests showing how a script might look. If you like, the show, these Extras continue the entertainment and are commended to your attention.

The Point Radio: Behind The Scenes At ‘COUGARTOWN’ and ‘FAMILY GUY’

They are the architects of some of the funniest moments on TV from COUGAR TOWN and SCRUBS to FAMILY GUY and THE CLEVELAND SHOW Bill Lawrence and Seth McFarlane share a look into their creative process plus DC digs back again, GLEE goes out with a bang and Nic Cage stars as Mickey Mouse!

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And be sure to stay on The Point via iTunes - ComicMix, RSS, MyPodcast.Com or Podbean!

Follow us now on and !

Don’t forget that you can now enjoy THE POINT 24 hours a Day – 7 Days a week!. Updates on all parts of pop culture, special programming by some of your favorite personalities and the biggest variety of contemporary music on the net – plus there is a great round of new programs on the air including classic radio each night at 12mid (Eastern) on RETRO RADIO and COMICMIX’s Mark Wheatley hitting the FREQUENCY every Saturday ay 9pm.

CLICK HERE TO LISTEN LIVE
FOR FREE or go to GetThePointRadio for more including a connection for mobile phones including iPhone & Blackberrys

 

 

Happy 80th birthday, Fandom!

Patrick Nielsen Hayden at Tor.com reminds us that on December 11, 1929, the world’s first
club devoted to science fiction met for the first time in a Harlem apartment. They called
themselves the Scienceers and within three years would count Mort Weisinger and Julius Schwartz among their members, along with the original Ray Palmer. Years later, in 1961, one of their original
number recalled those days in a fanzine article which can be read here.

And within a year, there was already a schism in the group, starting a tradition that continues to this very day.

Manga Friday: Down the Rabbit Hole with ‘Pandora Hearts’, ‘Karakuri Odette’ and ‘Night Head: Genesis’

Most of us, it’s safe to say, will never be told that our sin is our very being. (Unless we were brought up in the Deep South, in which case we’ve heard it twice a day and five times on Sunday.) We’re also not going to learn that the odd new girl in our high school is actually an android. Nor will we find that we’re trying to stop the extinction of mankind, along with our brother, with only our innate psychic powers to guide and aid us. That’s what manga is for – in a manga, those things are only to be expected, and it would be a bland story without something like that happening by page five.

Pandora Hearts, Vol. 1
By Jun Mochizuki
Yen Plus, December 2009, $10.99

Oz Vessalius, scion of one of the four great dukedoms, has arrived at the mansion that his family uses only for coming-of-age ceremonies to be officially proclaimed heir to his non-present father, along with a large semi-feudal entourage. (Though this book is set, as best I can tell from the floppy, ornate manga clothes and the background details, no earlier than the late Victorian.) It seems like an awfully big place to only use for a few days every generation, but I’ve learned not to let logic get in the way of my enjoyment of a manga story.)

However, all does not go smoothly – there are signs, portents, and other weird events that don’t make a whole lot of sense – and the ceremony is interrupted by a group of knife- and chain-wielding hooded figures, who seem to be about to kill Oz for the sin of existence. But he’s saved, sort-of, by a girl named Alice, who is also a giant black rabbit, and both of them are cast into the Abyss, a punishment dimension from which no one ever escapes.

Pandora Hearts skitters about like a bean on a griddle, so it doesn’t then do anything as predicable as settling down to tell the story of how Alice and Oz travel across the Abyss for a few dozen volumes and come to trust and confide in each other. No, they get out of the inescapable Abyss in time for afternoon tea – with Oz still very suspicious of Alice’s intentions and power (and rightfully so) to meet and confront the hooded folks, who are some manner of secret police.

This is a confusing book, with explanations shouted during battles and other confrontations that don’t actually explain much, and are often written in manga shorthand that substitutes Ominous Capitals for clarity. The Alice in Wonderland parallels so far seem limited to Alice’s name and other form, and there’s no particular significance here to Oz’s name, either. Pandora Hearts is messy and loud and disheveled, like a sorority girl at 3 AM on a Friday, but it – like that sorority girl – remains oddly attractive even then. It’s not a great story, but I have hopes that it will make sense, one day. (more…)

Frazetta break-in update

Continuing from our earlier article: Frank Frazetta’s son breaks into father’s museum using backhoe, attempts to take $20 million in paintings

See this? It’s Frank Frazetta’s “Berserker”, used as the cover to Conan The Conqueror. It hung in the Frazetta Museum for ten years until about a month ago, when it was sold to a private collector for one million dollars.

That link is interesting, because it also mentions that Frazetta contradicted himself at times… so if he told his son to get the art and then later said he didn’t, well… that could put his son’s words in a new light.

Heidi MacDonald has been doing great work on this story, and she adds a connection I didn’t make: one of the people who assisted in the break-in was Kevin Clement, who lived next door to the Frazetta museum. Clement is a familiar figure to east coast fantasy fans are the organizer of the Chiller Theatre Expo horror conventions held twice a year in New Jersey. Clement, it is important to note, has not been charged with any crimes.

She also reports:

Over the years Frank Frazetta Sr. has held on to his artwork,
refusing huge sums to sell such iconic works as his Conan covers.
However, after Ellie’s death, Frazetta’s three other children, Heidi,
Holly and Bill retained art dealers Robert Pistella and Steve Ferzoco
to start handling the artwork, licensing and other business matters.
The two formed Frazetta Management Corp. and the way Frazetta’s art was
being handled began to change — in November for the first time one of his legendary Conan covers was sold for $1 million. Not chump change and just the beginning of a likely goldmine.

It’s not exactly a secret that there are a lot of legal questions regarding Frazetta’s iconic artwork — the Frazettas had a legal entanglement
with David Spurlock/Vanguard productions, for instance. With mentions
of a family lawsuit, and other infighting it’s clear that just how to
run the family business has become a matter of contention to the point
where a backhoe was brought in.

This story is just getting started, I think.

So let me ask all the creators who are reading this: have you updated your will yet? How about your power of attorney? When writer John M. Ford died, Neil Gaiman was extra saddened to discover that his good friend and favorite writer had not made out a will to deal with his literary estate. So he went and commissioned a simple boilerplate will that anyone could use so no one would have to suffer this grief and creators’ works would be handled the way the creators would want.

US Justice Department won’t support ‘Original Johnson’ pardon

From the AP via Yahoo: Justice Dept. won’t support Jack Johnson pardon

The Justice Department is refusing to back a posthumous pardon for Jack Johnson, the black heavyweight boxing champion who was imprisoned nearly a century ago because of his romantic ties with a white woman.

In a letter obtained Thursday by The Associated Press, the department’s pardon attorney, Ronald L. Rodgers, told Rep. Peter King
that the Justice Department’s general policy is not to process
posthumous pardon requests. In cases like Johnson’s, given the time
that has passed and the historical record that would need to be
scoured, the department’s resources for pardon requests are best used
on behalf of people “who can truly benefit” from them, Rodgers wrote.

The letter was in response to one that King, R-N.Y., and Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., had sent to President Barack Obama
in October urging a pardon. In that letter, the two lawmakers noted
that both houses of Congress has passed a resolution calling for a presidential pardon
and said they hoped the president would be eager to “right this wrong
and erase an act of racism that sent an American citizen to prison.”

Rodgers
wrote that notwithstanding the department policy, Obama still has the
authority to pardon whomever he wishes, “guided when he sees fit by the
advice of the pardon attorney.”

And he did cite two cases of posthumous pardons: President Bill Clinton’s
1999 pardon of Lt. Henry O. Flipper, the Army’s first black
commissioned officer, who was drummed out of the military in 1882 after
white officers accused him of embezzling $3,800 in commissary funds;
and President George W. Bush’s
2008 pardon of Charles Winters, who was convicted of violating the
Neutrality Act when he conspired in 1948 to export aircraft to a
foreign country in aid of Israel.

In Winters’ case, Rodgers said, the pardon request was not processed by Justice’s Office of the Pardon Attorney, due to the department’s posthumous pardon policy.
King said in a telephone interview that he and McCain probably will continue to urge Obama to issue the pardon.
“What they’re doing here is bucking it back to President Obama,” King said. “So I would respectfully urge him to grant the pardon. This is the president’s call.”
The White House had no immediate comment on whether Obama would consider the request.

To read more on the life and times of Jack Johnson, read The Original Johnson by Trevor Von Eeden. The latest installment has just been posted today, or you can start from the beginning.

The first volume will be out in print before Christmas, and you can preorder the book now from Amazon.com, or request it from your local comic book store.

Frank Frazetta’s son breaks into father’s museum using backhoe, attempts to take $20 million in paintings

This may be one of the strangest stories in comics of the year– and potentially very sad.

Pennsylvania state police charged Frank Frazetta Jr. with theft, burglary and trespass after he and two other men used a backhoe to pull the door off the hinges of the Frank Frazetta Art Museum. Police said once inside, Frazetta stole about 90 paintings and was loading them into a truck when he was caught by police.

The elder Frazetta is known for his work on characters including Conan the Barbarian, Tarzan and Vampirella. He was in Florida at the time of the theft.

His son’s motive stems from a family feud over assets. Frank’s wife and Alfonso’s mother, Ellie, died earlier this year. According to Frank Jr.’s wife, Lori Frazetta, Frank Jr. and Ellie ran the family business until Ellie’s death, when the infighting over Frank Sr.’s paintings began. Frank Sr. is said to be suffering from dementia.

Frazetta Jr. was arraigned and sent to the Monroe County jail. Bail was set at $500,000. Officials didn’t know whether he had a lawyer yet.

A trooper who responded said Frazetta claimed he had been instructed by his father “to enter the museum by any means necessary to move all the paintings to a storage facility,” according a police affidavit.

The elder Frazetta told police that his son did not have permission to enter the museum or to remove any artwork. Frank Frazetta’s attorney, Gerard Geiger, said the stolen paintings were insured for $20 million, according to court documents.

Here’s the news story from WNEP:

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