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 Wednesday, November 14, 2007
A Footnote
Posted by maggie
It suddenly occurred to me that I never did specify what that radio interview on Sunday was all about. The show was Harry Rinker's Whatcha Got? It's on about 50 affiliates in 25 or so states, airs Sundays from 8 to 10 a.m. Eastern Time, streams live, and is archived on the Internet.
11/14/2007 10:37:08 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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 Tuesday, November 13, 2007
More TV: November 23
Posted by maggie
As if the Simpsons show coming up weren't enough for TV-centric comics buffs (see prior posting), the episode of Numb3rs for Friday, Nov. 23, is titled "Graphic" and features theft of a rare comic book at a comics convention. Christopher Lloyd guest stars.
11/13/2007 8:22:06 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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Heads up, TV Watchers!
Posted by maggie
Kathy Li has just alerted me to a TV show coming up Sunday, Nov. 18.
Going by the listings at TVGuide.com, which begin, "Marge opens a gym for real women," there's no hint of what's disclosed on the Wikipedia.org site: that the Simpsons episode "Husbands and Knives" will focus, too, on comics, complete with guest voices Alan Moore, Art Spiegelman, and Dan Clowes as themselves, not to mention Jack Black as the owner of a comics shop in direct competition with Comic Book Guy.
Mark your calendars, folks.
11/13/2007 8:13:22 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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 Sunday, November 11, 2007
Mid-Ohio-Con 2007 and Me
Posted by maggie
The program for the 2007 Mid-Ohio-Con (Nov. 24-25) in Columbus seems to be pretty well settled, and it looks as if I'll be almost as busy as Mark Evanier is at Comic-Con International: San Diego every year.
Judging from the advance look I've had at the program book, I'll be on three panels on Saturday and two on Sunday, with each day providing a back-to-back presence.
Saturday from 11 a.m. to noon, I'll be part of a group kicking off general convention chat. It says it'll be "the scoop on what's happening" at the show; my contribution will probably be more muddled than that, but I'm looking forward to the fun. I'll lay low, since there will be other people at the table who know what they're talking about with regard to the convention: Gary Herrmann, Jeff Martin, Bob Corby, Scott Crawford, and Layne and Peri Toth.
That afternoon come the back-to-back challenges. A bunch of us expressed the desire to play host to guest Margot Kidder -- so it looks as if three people will be slobbering over the delightful performer. With Michael Davis, Chris Yambar, and me telling her how much we've enjoyed her work, she'll be lucky to get a word in edgewise, despite the fact that she's involved with four movies now in post-production -- and that she first caught my eye in the wonderful Nichols series in 1971 (which was by no means the start of her career).
And immediately following that (in the same room, Ms. Kidder having made her escape), I am to be roasted by an assemblage of people I've known for decades. I'd hoped that I could persuade Mark Evanier to craft hilarious responses for me -- only to learn that he'll be the roastmaster! Yikes! Others involved are scheduled to be Michael Davis, Bob Ingersoll, Tony Isabella, Carolyn Kelly, Bill Messner-Loebs, Brian Pulido, and Steve Rude.
Sunday, it's back-to-back sessions again, opening with a 10 a.m. chat with CGC President Steve Borock regarding comics grading, CGC, and the like.
And then I jaunt from Panel Room A to Panel Room B to celebrate Walt Kelly, Pogo, and more with Carolyn Kelly and Mark Evanier.
See you at one or more of the above?
11/11/2007 11:46:17 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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The End of Volume 2 of Heroes
Posted by maggie
I see that, no matter what happens with the writers' strike, Heroes will wrap up what it's calling Volume 2 with that Dec. 3 episode. So, whether or not it's the end of the season, it's the end of the second story arc.
In the midst of the chaos that is the current entertainment negotiations (and I gather from Mark Evanier -- you are reading his blog, right? -- that "negotiations" is actually the wrong word, since the producers haven't even made an offer that the writers could reject), this was an uncommonly kind gesture to the fans. Wrapping up events with a closure that provides a logical pause to continuity must have been (a) incredibly complicated and (b) unusually thoughtful.
Thanks, Heroes folks! Here's hoping you'll be back with new stories soon. (And, in the meanwhile, I'm looking forward to the rest of the storyline up to and including Dec. 3.)
11/11/2007 10:49:28 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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So I WAS on the Radio This Morning
Posted by maggie
You may have noted in my Thursday posting that I had marked 7:30 this morning for some sort of event but couldn't remember what it was.
My clock radio went off this morning at 7, which is my usual wake-up, a leisurely perusal of National Public Radio news as I return to consciousness. And I lazed in bed, enjoying Weekend Edition Sunday -- until the phone rang.
Ak! So there was something at 7:30 a.m. -- not to mention that a half-hour of lolling about was less than productive! I grabbed the phone and was told I'd be on the air shortly, so I managed to sound coherent and was enormously relieved to hear an on-air apology that the host wanted to wrap up a couple of phonecalls before getting to me. Huzzah!
I staggered downstairs to grab my wireless handset -- only to knock the unit on the floor (disconnecting the power cord, as I found out later; all I could determine at the time was that the cordless handset didn't work), so I ended up grabbing the wall phone, rounding up a chair to settle onto, and throwing a couple of reference books nearby in case they were needed. Then I was on the air, and it was (as ever) delightful, with topics ranging from slabbing to what you'll find in antique malls to rolled spines to the website.
And next time I arrange to go on the air for an interview, I'll either write more informative notes to myself or beg the arranger to give me a reminder call a couple of days before. Still: much fun.
11/11/2007 10:41:47 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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 Saturday, November 10, 2007
Fun at the Antiques Mall
Posted by maggie
I suddenly realized yesterday, when I ended up in Appleton (an hour's drive away), that it had been ages since I'd visited the town's antiques mall. No sooner thought than done (well, actually, it required a drive of four blocks), and I shortly found myself in the midst of scary shelves filled with carnival glass, rhinestone jewelry, and thousands of statuettes.
The shelves were scary because of the universal "you break it, you bought it" rules and the fact that I was wearing a fairly bulky jacket. An attempt to take a closer look at an old magazine took me by glassware displays. Yikes!
What was sobering was the fact that, by the time I'd wandered through half the mall for way over an hour, I'd found a total of five beat-up comics for $1 each and nothing more. You need to understand that I'm a sucker for certain kinds of elderly collectibles. (Anyone out there know where I can buy the card game of the 1920s -- or thereabouts -- called Excuse Me or have an idea of how I can filter for it online?)
I quickly did notice that many of the battered paper items were tagged, "Never read," and "Near mint." And there was one comic of passing interest that I quickly discovered was too repellant to pick up.
Then I discovered the other half of the mall -- with more and more (and more) booths filled with dinnerware, bar signs, and fishing lures. But here there were also some booths to which I shall head the next time I'm in town. One had some cool fossils and geodes I may revisit. I'm especially tempted by a huge chunk of Moroccan rock with many polished portions featuring fossil shells. (What would I do with it? Heck if I know. But it's fancy.)
And back in a corner were a bunch of shelves loaded with a strange variety of keen items interspersed with such why-bother items as Tom Clancy novels. I'd already found a hardcover with dust jacket: Stork Bites Man: What the Expectant Father May Expect with text by Louis Pollock but (delightful cartoon) art by Carl Rose. And spotted the hardcover Sound Off! Soldier Songs (1942, collected by Edward Arthur Dolph) just as a loudspeaker somewhere far off announced, "Mrsfh phlfgsh nim smarf!" I glanced at my watch and suddenly realized that I'd seen a sign somewhere about the place closing at 6 p.m.
Dang! Finally a spot I wanted to investigate thoroughly and not enough time to do so. I grabbed a copy of the mapback Dell Mystery Cold Steal by Alice Tilton. I already had it, but it's one of my favorite mysteries. (Alice Tilton was the pen name of Phoebe Atwood Taylor. The Tilton books featured Leonidas Witherall, a detective who resembles Shakespeare and who begins each adventure by being plunged into wild circumstances that require him to solve the murder he discovers. Zany whodunits.)
And so to the checkout line. But I'll be back.
11/10/2007 12:49:17 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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 Thursday, November 08, 2007
No Mail on Monday
Posted by maggie
Just a reminder, folks. If you want to ship items via the Postal Service (or are waiting for something), you'll want to keep that info in mind.
(And I continue to try to remember what the heck is the reason I marked 7:30 a.m. Sunday on my calendar. I have the uneasy feeling I agreed to appear on a radio show at that time, but I'm not sure -- and no one has sent me a reminder of whatever the heck it is. Dang.)
11/8/2007 5:08:16 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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All Things Considered features Persepolis
Posted by maggie
National Public Radio's All Things Considered show for Nov. 8 features a portion devoted to the film that is based on the graphic novel Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi.
The animated film (currently in French) is receiving international attention, as it focuses on the writer-artist's Iranian childhood and what happened to her and her family during and following the Iranian revolution.
11/8/2007 5:02:09 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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 Wednesday, November 07, 2007
More on Heroes
Posted by maggie
I noted the variant Heroes covers on TV Guide.
In that issue, there are a few hints about upcoming events (such as that, at the moment, Christopher Eccleston may not be back in the second season, not because they don't want to involve Claude again but because Eccleston is so busy on other projects).
As you may know, I'm big on Spoiler Warnings, so I'm not giving things away here (in fact, I try to keep myself way out of the loop on this show, so's to let myself enjoy it as it evolves) -- so I didn't read the primary article, which looks as if it may be getting a bit specific. But I note a general plot direction indicated in this issue: Jeph Loeb referring to the Dec. 3 episode as "when we do our big housecleaning," when the topic of having too many characters was raised.
The episode is titled "Powerless," and we have a month to wait for it.
And then?
Well, my guess is that the writers' strike may put off further developments for some time. I hope I'm wrong, but Mark Evanier (check his link to the left) doesn't seem optimistic.
11/7/2007 8:50:08 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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Now That We Can Post Videos ...
Posted by maggie
... It's time to go back through the camcorder tapes I've been recording starting in February. At the moment, I'm part of the way through a Comic-Con International: San Diego tape that's a strange anthology of moments from the summer. For example, I have an extended conversation with Peter David, brief looks at several different booths, and a lengthy look at upcoming Cars toys. So I'll be excerpting the talk with Peter but saving the Cars footage for my grandsons. Unless, of course, you yearn for shots of car after car after car. (Even if you do, there's a lot of other material that will get my attention first.)
The Skilled and Helpful Dan Halverson prepared the Hagenauer video posting yesterday with an incredibly speedy turn-around, so my current goal is to toss an increasing number of clips his way. And, as noted, that requires that I index the tapes that to this point have had only the most general of labels. I have a wide variety of footage, though it's often a matter of what I could record when. (I have an hour-long tape of the Eisner Awards ceremonies, for example. But, naturally, it ran out before The Smooch Moment.)
I just want to make it clear that what you've seen is the tip of the proverbial iceberg. Wait till we have 10 or more loaded, please -- and then let us know which (if any) is the sort of material of which you want to see more.
11/7/2007 6:56:12 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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 Tuesday, November 06, 2007
When I Don't Bother to RSVP
Posted by maggie
It's when I get a card asking for a response by Nov. 2 and the postmark is Nov. 3. I can take a hint. On the other hand, the preview to which I was sort of not invited was there to kick off what sounds as if it's a neat exhibit at the Norman Rockwell Museum (Route 183, Stockbridge, MA 01262): "Lit Graphic: The World of the Graphic Novel." The exhibit runs from Nov. 10 till next May 26 and will clearly be worth a look.
11/6/2007 3:33:16 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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