Weekend Window-Closing Wrapup, Christmas 2009
I’m trying to avoid declaring an end-of-year window closing bankruptcy, wherein I just close every window and never look back, and then keep no more than ten tabs open.
Okay, twenty.
Thirty.
Stop me before I ctrl-click again.
- I love this take on GI Joe and Cobra. Via Rob MacDougall.
- How repetitive humor works.
- And we shall call this Moff’s Law: Of all the varieties of irritating comment out there, the absolute most annoying has to be “Why can’t you just watch the movie for what it is??? Why can’t you just enjoy it? Why do you have to analyze it???” If you have posted such a comment, or if you are about to post such a comment, here or anywhere else, let me just advise you: Shut up.
- How repetitive humor works.
- How not to get comics work: make an idiot of yourself in public while insulting one of the nicer guys in comics. (How rude!)
How repetitive humor works.- E-book pricing from an insider: While some houses like Simon & Schuster and HarperCollins are
experimenting with windowing ebook releases, we’ve tried a more
controversial method. Ebooks are released the same day as the
hardcover, but the pricing is determined by those numbered balls you
see on lottery drawings. If the three balls come up 981, then the ebook
is $9.81. (Or $981, depending on how we’re feeling.) - How repetitive humor works.
- If I am ever a romance heroine, I will not…
- How repetitive humor works.
- People say that comics fans are crazy, but they’ve got nothing on sports fan craziness.
- How repetitive humor works.
Anything else? Consider this an open thread. Tell us what you got for Christmas!

Kars4Kids
Today is December 7th, a day that will live in infamy as the anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor that ushered the United States into the second World War.

Super hero costumes are often criticized by fans and non-fans alike. In particular, the female costumes can sometimes seem a bit too revealing or impractical. Even Wonder Woman is occasionally given guff and there are those who say that if they ever made a new movie with her, her swimsuit-like battle armor would have to go.



Back in the days before direct sales and specialty shops overwhelmed comic book sales, you couldn’t find a new comic book on the newsstands to save your soul. The theory was, nobody buys magazines between Christmas and New Years Day, and even now “weekly” magazines like Time and Newsweek skip that week. The fact was, the newsstand distributors and shippers thought that would be a swell week to take off, so they did.
