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 Thursday, September 04, 2008
Speaking of Strips, How about Animal Crackers?
Posted by maggie
Once I began to dive into the filing drawers of clipped comic strips for The Perishers, it occurred to me that it'd be fun to remind people of other strips. Rog Bollen created Catfish, Funny Business, and Animal Crackers; he began Animal Crackers in 1967. While there have been a couple of collections of the strip (which he worked on until 1994) in the past, I don't think these from 1969 were included. 
9/4/2008 9:32:31 AM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Wednesday, September 03, 2008
Here's a Perishers Sample
Posted by maggie
I managed to track down a few samples of the strip -- though, oddly, I have no idea where the rest of my strips are. As I recall, they were an odd size and didn't fit in the check file where we kept most of our clipped strips. But I digress. I was a little dismayed to find that individual strips here and there don't sufficiently convey the charm and interpersonal (and interspecies) relationships embodied in the series. These are from July 1969. 
9/3/2008 11:28:03 AM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Monday, September 01, 2008
Ever Heard of The Perishers?
Posted by maggie
I must briefly gloat over the purchase of a Heritage lot in yesterday's auction: an original of a daily Perishers strip. (I have the feeling that someone's cool collection of originals is being doled out at Heritage these days. Just saying.)
Anyway, this particular strip is fairly routine for the feature -- but "fairly routine" for the strip written by Maurice Dodd (1922-2005) and initially drawn by Dennis Collins (and mine was drawn by Collins) -- is still delicious fun. It ran in The Daily Mirror from 1958 to 2006 and basically featured a gang of kids wandering about what Wiki says "resembles an industrial Northern town."
I'm a bit stymied by the realization that there's no easy way to describe the strip. (Go ahead. Describe Peanuts in a couple of sentences that convey that long-lived strip about "a gang of kids.") Looks as if I'll have to try to locate a couple of choice examples.
In the meantime, I continue to gloat over my purchase.
9/1/2008 3:01:54 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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It's a New Month, and I'll Try To Increase Activity
Posted by maggie
Sorry for my general lack of posting. One post for the entire month of August is a new low (though I clearly didn't do particularly well in May, either). Nevertheless, I'm often torn between posting on the more general CBGXtra website (where I think people check more often), posting here (where I think people check less often), and posting on my own website, www.maggiethompson.com (though I try to limit that to non-comics conversations). In any case, my personal website is down while it's being dragged to a new server, so ... On the other hand, that has meant I've been thinking less of blogging in general, which translates to less blogging here, too.
In the meantime, though, I'm still out and about and have actually been spending considerable time: trying to get original art framed and hung; watching DVDs I'm about to review; reading books I'm about to review; shoveling random piles of clutter into carefully sorted piles of clutter; and getting into the routine of daily exercise (regarding which, it's about time).
I thought, though, that I'd quickly pass on a gambit my brother has recently employed. Given (1) that he wanted a friend to read Watchmen but (2) that Watchmen can be something of an indigestible lump when taken as one big novel: He's razored apart the paperback and is giving it to the friend one segment (i.e., one of the original "issues") at a time. We frequently find these days that it's more fun to read a story arc as one collected volume. But I think he's right that Watchmen was so crafted as to be best appreciated with a "thinking time" between installments.
What do you think?
9/1/2008 2:48:05 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Sunday, August 10, 2008
Heritage Sunday Auctions
Posted by maggie
There are some cool things about which there's a temptation to keep secret. For a number of years, I didn't tell most people about the two Starbucks locations in and about the San Diego Convention Center that didn't have such long lines. (Oh, well, this year, they were clearly no longer a secret.)
It's not that I've suddenly turned unselfish; it's just that I've decided to restrain my yearning to accumulate these treats. So I'm letting you know that the Heritage Auction that ends this evening has a bunch of treats for collectors of the McKay Large Feature Books. I haven't seen many of these turn up in this sort of profusion in a long time. Obviously, they were in someone's collection, and now they're available at what seem at the moment to be bargain prices. Check them out. Wow.
8/10/2008 3:08:48 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Wednesday, July 30, 2008
Post-Con Information Overload
Posted by maggie
So my participation in the issue of Comics Buyer's Guide that's going out the door any minute is over, proofreading is done, captions for the San Diego photo pages are written, and I can go back to trying to head off the cold that's lurking in a slightly sore throat and stuffed-up head. I've taken all my massive ordinary vitamins and sprinkling many Vitamin C tablets on top -- and things aren't too bad. But I hope all and sundry will forgive the many lapses here.
Stream of consciousness, then:
! Surely you can tell that SuperPhone, while capable of blogging here, is not fast to use, what with typing with my thumbs and being slow to post. And, in the midst of things, I'd sometimes have to cut off the post in order to accommodate other activities. Sorry, sorry, sorry.
! I have hours of convention video -- which will be trimmed back to minutes of what I think are the most interesting moments. For example, there's a Darwyn Cooke press conference I think you'll find informative, a Frank Miller keynote speech you may find incendiary, and a magic trick that will show you the sort of thing you miss, if you bypass the Eisner Awards every year.
! Speaking of bypassing, at least one person who's featured in the CBGXtras videos wasn't even aware we have videos. We have videos. Take a look. The link is on our home page. Gee whiz.
! I was sorry, in the midst of pre-con furor, not to let blogreaders know about Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog, a pioneering project by Joss Whedon that will be of special interest to comics fans -- featuring, as it does, The Evil League of Evildoers. Just before the con, it was released in three acts, doled out a day at a time, free at www.drhorrible.com. However, it quickly morphed into a pay-per-view iTunes event at that site. But today, Joyce Greenholdt pointed out that, at www.doctorhorrible.net, it's available for free viewing again. (Note: Judging from my attempts to watch it there twice, I think it has set up cookies so that your computer can only play it once. I used another computer to hook a friend into viewing it, but if you have access to only one Internet hook-up, you should probably plan to set aside three-quarters of an hour to view the whole thing in one enjoyable shot.) Word on that second site is that the DVD (complete with sung commentary) should be out for holiday buying at the end of 2008. It's hard to wait.
! Biggest problem of the convention for me was not the crowds. I'm used to those -- and it doesn't take a prohibitively long time to figure out that the fastest way to go from one end of the 12-acre exhibit floor to the other is via the lobby that extends the length of the building. The biggest problem was the lines. I've always felt that waiting in a line is one of the biggest drains on human activity, whether you're waiting for gasoline, bread, or a celebrity autograph. There were con attendees who stood in line for four hours and still didn't get in to see a specific panel -- and that's flat-out nuts, benefitting no one. (And, by the way, that's pulling potential purchasers away from expensive exhibitor booths with nothing to show for it.) It shouldn't be impossible to compute: X seats in a hall, X number of people get in, Y number of people don't have a chance. But few counted lines -- and there were even many instances (thanks to crowd control that required entrance halls separate from exit halls) in which potential attendees approached room doors only to find the room closed and were then unable to walk the 20 feet back to where they'd come into the hall. Sucked in like lobsters in a lobster trap, they could only walk the entire length of the hall, through a continuing corridor, and then back the entire length of the parallel exit hall. Would it have really been so much of a challenge to post a sign at the entrance of the hall to advise, "Room 6 is full for the 1:30 p.m. program item"?
! Bob Chapman at the Graphitti booth (books, action figures, T-shirts) seemed to be bowled over by his sales; Preview Night did better for him all by itself than the previous two cons at which he'd exhibited this year. Sales of the Alex Ross design "Obama: Time for a Change" shirt were apparently at about the 1,000 level for the convention as a whole.
! For the first time, I attended (and shot some video) of one of the convention's "Talk Back" sessions. It's a panel in which convention organizers field questions and complaints about the event. It was a fascinating demonstration that (a) there are many considerations that go into every con decision and that (b) few, if any, decisions are made lightly. You'll see, soon's I can get the material transferred to DVD and posted.
! I remember a time when pros and exhibitors used to ask where the women and young fans were at comics conventions. No one asked at this show. It's a family event, and the women are as well-informed as the men.
! "We've won!" and "The Geeks are 'in'!" were comments expressed by many attendees.
More later. Time to take more Vitamin C.
7/30/2008 2:38:27 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Monday, July 28, 2008
3 Hours' Sleep, and I'm Ready to Go!
Posted by maggie
Catching a plane home after a con that filled more'n a page of USA TODAY..
Sitting on the floor at Gate 29, I note many Comic-Con bags, T-shirts, and poster tubes on or about the persons of my fellow travelers. The frenzy of the show may be exemplified by the cut-off and non-resumption of my previous posting. ... And now I've boarded the plane. (By the way, I'm lucky, heading to Chicago. Peter David's NY flight was canceled yesterday, and I noticed a NY flight this morning was canceled, too. Considering the number of comics folks heading to NY today, well...
7/28/2008 7:42:30 AM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Saturday, July 26, 2008
This Chair Is Mine, I Tell You, Mine!
Posted by maggie
As I searched for a place to occupy while waiting for dinner buddies, I found 6 chairs around a table at the entrance to Lael's, a restaurant at the Hyatt. Eventually, a nice serving person asked if I needed the table
7/26/2008 10:24:47 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Friday, July 25, 2008
I'm Late! Argh!
Posted by maggie
20 minutes and counting waiting for the shuttlebus. The FCBD morning meeting has no doubt started, as we wait. Tomorrow morning, I'll do the $10 cab ride, but I can't brng myself to throw away the time already spent. Sigh.
Thursday had so many entertainments, I can't count, winding up with a terrific dinner with our VIP guests and Steve Rude.
And now it's a couple hours later, and the Free Comic Book Day meeting has determined that FCBD in 2009 will be May 2 and that the process of solicitations will start earlier.
Info from yesterday included that Marv Wolfman's Homeland: The Illustrated History of the State of Israel (a graphic novel form) won The National Jewish Book Award.
A friend told me that, while there's not an official actors' strike at the moment, there have been some problems with voice artists not showing up for some animation recording sessions.
7/25/2008 9:55:10 AM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Thursday, July 24, 2008
Delayed CNBC Coverage
Posted by maggie
Just heard that today's stock-market twinges have led to the NON-airing of Comic-Con coverage However, it will be online at the CNBC website, probably tomorrow.
7/24/2008 3:26:08 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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Comic-Con Onward!
Posted by maggie
According to the call just received, today's "Closing Bell" on CNBC will air a bit recorded at Comic-Con with me. It's to be at about 1:45 p.m. Pacific Time.
7/24/2008 1:17:51 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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Comic-Con Preview Night
Posted by maggie
Well, it's happened: the so-called preview is now as wildly packed as the show used to be on Saturday. Just getting from one spot to another on the 12-acre exhibit floor was a challenge. IDW had a mini-press conference to announce that Darwyn Cooke is in the process of adapting the first four Parker novels (huzzah!) by "Richard Stark" (aka Donald E. Westlake), and I have video of the press conference. And Heidi MacDonald commented that it seemed to be the only COMICS press conference at the show. Dang! I think she's right!
Wrap-up of the evening was a meal at the LOUD Dick's Last Resort with Christine Valada, Len Wein (who had his own con announcement; he's editor in chief of the 10-year-old comics publisher BloodFire Studios), Melinda Snodgrass, and Peter David. Our conversation would have been worthy of the Algonquin Roundtable -- IF we'd been able to hear each other. As it was, it was lively and fun to be with them.
I may (or may not) be on CNBC tomorrow discussing the economics of the comics biz. I seem to have acquired a new tagline (picked up by my boothmates), based on the interviewer's repeated remark: "That was wonderful! Now say it again -- but make it shorter!"
Now it's late. Tomorrow, I hear, is another day. Zzzzzzz.
7/24/2008 1:23:32 AM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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