Twitter Updates for 2011-03-14
- Mix March Madness Webcomics Tournament: Round 1 voting ends in 1 hour! Last chance! Vote now! http://t.co/OvqOIeL #
- RT @HighMindedMW: @theisb Smallville:Posession::Maury:Paternity #
Strong female super-heroine characters from all walks of life are included in this stellar anthology: a parking valet, an archeologist, a bike messenger, a nurse, a holocaust survivor and many more. Also new stories featuring Lady Action and Domino Lady are included in this fantastic collection!
This volume collects the first five issues of the hilarity-packed and thrill-
inducing series, Zombies vs Cheerleaders, including every hot cover
Round 1 of our March Madness Webcomics Tournament ended last night at midnight, and we have the updated brackets showing who moves on to the next round– and who they battle next.
We now move on to Round 2! The next 16 contests will start going up Monday morning, with four each day. Again, voting will end on Saturday at midnight, so we expect some last minute vote getting at C2E2 this weekend– hey, what’s a trip to Chicago without ballot stuffing voting irregularities?
Will Axe Cop beat Dr. McNinja? Will Theater Hopper and Multiplex make it to the next round and go head to head? Only you can tell us!
Thanks to everybody’s who’s voted so far, and we hope you vote in the next rounds!
Good luck to all the competitors!
It’s always nice to see comic artists getting respect in places outside of the clubhouse, and so they were as the eighteenth annual Spectrum awards for excellence in science fiction and fantasy art were chosen Saturday evening. Spectrum is widely considered one of the most influential art awards in the genre.
Comics
Gold: Rebecca Guay for A Flight of Angels
Silver: David Palumbo for Sleep
Silver: Joao Ruas for Fables #96 cover
Concept Art
Gold: Kekai Kotaki for Riven Earth
Silver: Tomaz Jedruszek for Legends of Norrath
Dimensional
Gold: David Meng
Silver: Akihito
Books
Gold David Palumbo for God’s War
Silver: Dan Dos Santos for White Trash Zombie
Advertising
Gold: Ryohei Hase for Narco Americano
Silver: Sam Weber for The Fisherman’s Wife
Editorial
Gold: Andrew Jones for Share One Planet
Silver: Brom for Redd Wing
Institutional
Gold: Richard Anderson for Knight March
Silver: Donato Giancola for Mind Machine
Unpublished
Gold: Rebecca Guay for Pandora
Silver: J. S. Rossbach for White Heat
Silver: Scott Brundage for Tigers Have Striped Skin
Awards were chosen by jury members Nathan Fox, Gregory Manchess, Shena Wolf, Jarrod and Brandon Shiflett, Boris Vallejo, and Julie Bell.
Photos and video of the judging can be seen on the Spectrum website. Congratulations to all the artists!
via Announcing the Spectrum 18 award winners. | tor.com | Science fiction and fantasy | Blog posts.
This is disturbingly depressing– this is what we have to look forward to in movie theaters this summer:
Four adaptations of comic books. One prequel to an adaptation of a comic book. One sequel to a sequel to a movie based on a toy. One sequel to a sequel to a sequel to a movie based on an amusement-park ride. One prequel to a remake. Two sequels to cartoons. One sequel to a comedy. An adaptation of a children’s book. An adaptation of a Saturday-morning cartoon. One sequel with a 4 in the title. Two sequels with a 5 in the title. One sequel that, if it were inclined to use numbers, would have to have a 7 1/2 in the title.
And it gets no better in 2012:
Here’s what’s on tap two summers from now: an adaptation of a comic book. A reboot of an adaptation of a comic book. A sequel to a sequel to an adaptation of a comic book. A sequel to a reboot of an adaptation of a TV show. A sequel to a sequel to a reboot of an adaptation of a comic book. A sequel to a cartoon. A sequel to a sequel to a cartoon. A sequel to a sequel to a sequel to a cartoon. A sequel to a sequel to a sequel to a sequel to a movie based on a young-adult novel. And soon after: Stretch Armstrong. You remember Stretch Armstrong, right? That rubberized doll you could stretch and then stretch again, at least until the sludge inside the doll would dry up and he would become Osteoporosis Armstrong? A toy that offered less narrative interest than bingo?
And what’s truly horrifying? I looked at his list of titles and he missed a bunch. There’s at least one movie with $200 million dollar budget based on a game that springs to mind. Not a computer game, mind you– a board game.
Hell, I’m expecting a movie version of Minesweeper any day now. (Having said this, I just looked on YouTube, and lo and behold…)
Luckily, no one’s made a movie of Hungry Hungry Hippos yet, although now that I have committed this to pixels, somebody inevitably will make it.
I’d say this is just a movie phenomenon, but really– how much streamlining is going on in the comics industry themselves? Both DC and Marvel seem to be streamlining everything down to seven major brand lines each, leaving precious little room to breathe and make something new.
The worst takeaway from the article:
The good news is that the four-quadrant theory of marketing may now be eroding. The bad news is that it’s giving way to something worse—a new classification that encompasses all ages and both genders: the “I won’t grow up” demographic.
Does that sound like the current hardcore fanbase of comics to you too?
Gotta love the name checks in this one, folks. From Poison Ivy and Dr. Doom to Elmer Fudd… just watch.
DOWNLOAD THE MP3: http://tinyurl.com/ClubVillain
Lyrics and vocals by Ray Johnson
http://bit.ly/hkgd8U
Produced by Mavrick
http://bit.ly/ebiM30 (more…)
Due to several changes and additions going on as well as just general maintenance, ALL PULP will be inactive from this post until Monday, March 14th, 2011! Catch up on your favorite ALL PULP stories until then and come back Monday to see what ALL PULP has in store!! but for now we are….

Donald Trump (along with Meatloaf) weighs in on the success of CELEBRITY APPRENTICE, the “villain” Richard Hatch and his cut on the whole Charlie Sheen mess. Plus Spider-Man gets spanked (again) on Broadway.
Don’t forget – Pop Culture never sleeps (and neither do we). Catch the latest 24/7 on The Point Radio.
TIPPIN’ HANCOCK’S HAT-Reviews of Things Pulp by Tommy Hancock
THE SEA GHOST #1 (ONE SHOT)
Written and Illustrated by Jay Piscopo
Nemo Publishing Group
This is my third review in as many days of a Jay Piscopo work. The previous two reviews had words in them like ‘nostalgic’, ‘cutting edge’, ‘reminds me of Saturday morning cartoons’, etc. They were both digest sized graphic type novels that read extremely easily and were filled with great, fun stuff. The third item I’m reviewing from Jay is a straight up comic book spotlighting a character from Piscopo’s CAPT’N ELI universe and opened it expecting a totally different experience than reading the previous two works.
Thankfully for me, I was dead wrong.
THE SEA GHOST is a human given great powers by an undersea race in an effort to save his life. He fights during World War II as the Sea Raider, but after some tragedy, takes on the role of The Sea Ghost. He is well established in this role, working with his children as a hero as this comic opens.
I could get fancy and say all sorts of cool things about how Jay achieved what he wanted to, according to his own piece in the book, about a great homage to characters, especially Space Ghost. That feel is definitely here. But I think I’ll simply say that this story is just plain FUN. I opened it and swore I was looking at a Gold Key comic from when I was a kid. And that is a COMPLIMENT! I enjoyed the ‘independent’ comics even then because the styles were so different and experimental. THE SEA GHOST harkens back to that as well as back to the great Silver Age books where literally anything could happen. The Sea Ghost can investigate a strange ship and get sucked in and be on another planet and it works! (That happens, by the way). The focus is definitely on the Ghost in this issue, but there are cool threads and supporting characters that pepper this thing like bullets from a Tommy gun. I particularly want to see more of a trio of characters who show up toward the end!!
THE SEA GHOST is a rollicking tale that has a ton of stuff in it, but also stays very true to the ‘undersea’ nature of the character as well as evokes comic tales of times past, the ones that were full of wonder and excitement and just had the intention of telling one heckuva tale.
FIVE OUT OF FIVE TIPS OF THE HAT-This one hit with me on all cylinders.