Faith-Based Entertainment, by Elayne Riggs
White rabbits, and L’shana tova! My favorite season has finally arrived, and October is probably the best month in that season. There’s a delicious chill in the air, the leaves are already starting to turn, the Yanks have faded and the Mets have blown it (albeit on the last day this year, instead of crashing in the spectacular fashion of ’07), and I don’t much care because the new TV season is in full swing.
Not that I’m watching it much, mind you. I’ve become a not-ready-for-prime-time viewer. I spend about an hour to 90 minutes each weekday evening watching MSNBC (specifically Keith Olbermann then Rachel Maddow) on DVR delay, and the rest of the time trying in vain to catch up on my other DVR’ed programs. Between the food-themed reality shows, a few sci-fi trinkets, a smattering of sitcoms and the obligatory Stewart/Colbert one-two punch, when I finally do get up to date it’s already the weekend. I don’t even seem to have that much time any more for comics reading, considering I’ve been using my public transit commute more for light dozing than for funnybook perusal.
None of this is a complaint, it’s just an observation that, if there are any specific trends afoot, I may be slow to recognize them. But Robin thinks he’s spotted one that has me wondering if it’s not a part of a bigger shift in thinking about our entertainment.

HBO has announced the development of Americatown, a new drama series project from writer Bradford Winters and producers Tom Fontana, Barry Levinson, Frank Marshall and Kathleen Kennedy.
Ridley Scott’s Nottingham project has taken an odd as Russell Crowe confirmed for MTV that he remained not only committed to the film but was likely to play both Robin Hood and the Sheriff as "a good old clever adjustment of characters. One becomes the other. It changes."
If you thought that The Dark Knight‘s IMAX footage was impressive, wait till you get a load of this one. Today, IMAX Corporation announced that Michael Bay will shoot certain key scenes of Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen with IMAX cameras. After all, if Christopher Nolan could do it for The Dark Knight then so can Mr. Action Adventure. Director Jon Favreau called TDK‘s scene a game changer and clearly he was right.
It used to be that Hollywood types were found slumming by writing comic books but the new option for creators between films may be creating video games.
If you’re the owner of PC manufacturer Dell, and you’re looking for a way to compete with the Apple owned online retail giant iTunes, who you gonna call? Venkman and the gang ain’t gonna cut it this round. You gotta go with the big gun: mother-frakkin Iron Man.
If they had their way, the folks at Amblin Entertainment would enjoy nothing more than to use that memory-scrubbing flash doohickey to make you forget all about Men in Black II.

Before rushing to the store today to pick up Iron Man in standard or Blu-ray, you might want to consider the various variant exclusive editions that were also released today.
Rob Cabrera, best known as the author of United Media-syndicated comic
Marvel celebrates a record breaking Jeph Loeb series, while we point out some key comics that will probably be flying off the shelves this week a, plus:
