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Online Comics Cannibalizing Print Sales? One Creator Says “Nope”

  • Posted on May 10, 2012 at 6:00 am

A few months ago I linked to Brian Wood’s post on how comic creators were caught in the cross-fire between publishers and comic shops over digital publishing sales.

But here’s some more evidence of what Warren Ellis already found out with Freak Angels. Jim Zubkavich, creator of Skullkickers from Image Comics, started serializing his comic online for free. The results:

Good news: Serializing the issues hasn’t negatively affected our sales one bit. Our trade sales through comic and book stores are up, steadily climbing. Making more people aware of the series has made them want the current material more, not less. Quality and good word of mouth is helping build our readership in shops bit by bit.

Better news: At conventions I’m selling a lot more. I’m not twice the sales person I was last year, but I’m selling more than double the number of books since we started serializing online. 9 times out of 10, I’m selling it to people who read the series online. I asked almost every person who came to my table if they’d heard of Skullkickers before. No word of a lie, when they said “yes”, 90% of those folks also said they were reading it online. It shocked me.

Jim Zubkavich: Everybody Wins

(via Comics Worth Reading)

This doesn’t mean, though, that paid digital downloads through tablets wouldn’t cannibalize comic shop sales, but this is indeed good news for creators, publishers and retailers.

From http://technoccult.net/archives/2012/05/10/online-comics-cannibalizing-print-sales-one-creator-says-nope/

Zen Pencils

  • Posted on May 2, 2012 at 2:52 pm

Gavin Aung Than illustrates quotes from historical figures as comics. For example, here’s Hunter S. Thompson’s “Buy the Ticket, Take the Ride”:

The most popular are:

  • 12. CARL SAGAN: Make the most of this life
  • 17. FRANK HERBERT: Litany against fear
  • 21. RUDYARD KIPLING: If
  • 40. CALVIN COOLIDGE: Never give up
  • 33. EDGAR MITCHELL: A global consciousness
  • 13: The DALAI LAMA answers a question
  • 36. BRUCE LEE: There are no limits
  • 41. AYN RAND: The question
  • But don’t forget the Bill Hicks one.

    It may seem that these skew towards touchy feel good inspiration and affirmation, but there are some darker ones, like George Carlin on assassination.

    I love how certain characters recur in the strips.

    Some of the navigation is confusing, but you can head straight to the archives to find all the strips.

    (via Metafilter)

    From http://technoccult.net/archives/2012/05/02/zen-pencils/

    Another Brandon Graham Interview

    • Posted on April 13, 2012 at 11:50 am

    Brandon Graham self-portrait
    Above: “The Current State of Me” by Brandon Graham

    Great interview with Brandon Graham by Gavin Lees, where Graham talks about the origins of King City and whether there will ever be a follow-up:

    I began working at The Strand bookstore in Manhattan, unloading trucks and everything. That’s when I started King City, only at the time it was called Cat Master. I just drew it entirely for myself. I drew the first 40 pages on my lunch breaks, not even planning, just doing it page-by-page. I remember I had a rule that I would tell myself, that if there was another element that didn’t advance the plot, then that’s what I needed to spend the most amount of time and pages on. If something advanced the plot, then I wanted to ignore that as much as possible and get it out the way. [...]

    Yeah, the book feels very free — very creatively liberated. Was there ever a worry that people wouldn’t get it, and Tokyopop would tell you to rein that in and make it more conventional — put all the things that advance the plot back in?

    BG: Actually, Tokyopop was doing that the whole time. I think that it pushed me to develop what King City was even more, because they would bring up these things like, “What’s this character’s motivation? What’s this?” It just made me react the opposite direction. I always joke about this one thing when this guy called up — this is when it was getting really autobiographical — and he’s just like, “What’s Joe doing? The guy’s a total loser! What’s he going to do with his life? We need to give him an arc where he becomes a better person in the end.” And I was thinking, “I’m not going to become a better person by the time I finish this book!” [Laughter] I think it’s disingenuous to think that the characters have to change in 200 pages. It’s cool if they do, and maybe there is some character change in that, but I certainly didn’t want to force it.

    In the second half of the book, I actually had a really good editor at Tokyopop, this guy Troy Lewter who had read the first one as an assistant editor, and then they moved him over. The first editor I had — whose name I never remember — was really difficult. I remember we got nominated for an Eisner and he didn’t care. He was like, “Eisners won’t sell books.” But Troy was fantastic to work with because he had a different take on it, he was throwing these basic plot-points at me, and I came up with so many great ideas with him being like, “What about this?” and it gave me an understanding of what the reader might expect in a standard adventure story. Also, a fantastic thing is reading people’s reaction to the book, and reviews, and what they expect to see next. I read some comment online where somebody said, “Oh, I can’t wait to see where Cat Masters come from!” and it had never occurred to me to show that. So, I started the second half of the series with that because I was like, “Oh shit!” and I was really happy with that and it would never have come out of my own head.

    Bleeding Cool: Brandon Graham – Manga In The Microwave

    From http://technoccult.net/archives/2012/04/13/another-brandon-graham-interview/

    Beautiful Old Moebius-esque Nintendo Comic

    • Posted on April 7, 2012 at 2:08 pm

    “Howard and Nester” was a comic in the magazine Nintendo Power. I read it as a kid but I’d forgotten how gorgeous the Moebius-style/”frenchmanga” style art was:

    Howard and Nester

    Nintendope has archived the entire series, but it’s not clear who drew these strips.

    Howard and Nester Comics Archive

    (via Brandon Graham)

    From http://technoccult.net/archives/2012/04/07/beautiful-old-moebius-esque-nintendo-comic/

    Technoccult Interivew: King City Artist/Writer Brandon Graham

    • Posted on March 27, 2012 at 10:50 am

    King City cover by Brandon Graham

    King City by Brandon Graham is a comic book about a guy named Joe and his cat Earthling in a far future metropolis run by spy gangs and evil sorcerers. It’s full of weird drugs, black magic, luchador masks and oddball humor.

    This month Image Comics published a collection of all 12 issues of King City, which was originally serialized from 2007 to 2010. After a battle with testicular caner Graham literally gave his left nut to finish the book. He’s now working on Prophet for Image and Multiple Warheads for Oni Press. I caught-up with him to talk about Moebius, graffiti, technology in science fiction and more.

    Brandon Graham

    How many details about the city were conceived in advance? Did you create maps, or list of facts and details about the world the book takes place in, or did you just make it up as you went along?

    I had some rough ideas about the characters but I pretty much made up the city as I went along. I was always trying to base places off of somewhere I’d been. I think of Joe and Pete’s place in the 2nd half of KC as being in Seattle’s China town. The diner where Pete meets Exiekiel to get information about the alien lady was me trying to draw a diner in Queens.

    King City Board Game

    King City, to me anyway, has a very spontaneous feel. I imagine you just making up each page as you went along, packing them with as much detail as possible. Or did you have a more structured plan for each issue?

    I had a real rough structure for everything but I try to allow for a lot of drawing what I’m in the mood to draw. And I usually lay out the book in 4 or 5 page chunks as I go along.

    It’s nice to just follow your mood with a page and try to find new ways to stay interested in what you’re doing. I like to think about what’ll be fun to draw on the next page forcing me to speed up on what I’m doing because I’m so excited about what’s next. And then there’s days where I’m just not thinking about what comes next and I’m just having fun making lines on paper.

    King City appears to take place in the far future, and there are references to certain technological advances like nanotechnology. But in some ways it seems really low tech – I’m not sure we ever see anyone use a cell phone or the Internet. For example, Anna seems to have no way of reaching Joe or Pete remotely, she has to walk to their apartment to find Joe. Did you consciously decide to avoid having the characters use certain technologies or was this  just the way the story worked out?

    Yeah, it was on purpose. I avoid certain things like cell phones or the Internet or anything too modern that would seem dated really soon. I was trying to make it feel like it was happening now but with all the sci-fi fantasy elements I felt like throwing in. Excluding all the crazy sci-fi-ery, the technology is probably at the technological level of the early 1990′s because that’s about what I can wrap my head around.

    I think a lot about different eras of science fiction and how they portrayed the future. The sci-fi that reflects modern technology seems sleeker and smaller, and it makes sense but it doesn’t look as cool to me. I’m a big fan of the look of big clunky utilitarian 70′s sci-fi. But maybe KC is “20 minutes in the future” of 1992.

    Brandon Graham "The Long Goodbye"
    Graham’s tribute to Moebius

    King City actually reminds me a lot L’Incal by Jodorowsky and Moebius and other old European sci-fi/fantasy comics. Moebius recently passed away, can you talk about his influence?

    Yeah, Moebius is probably the artist whose work has influenced me the most. Him and Howarth, Shirow and Barlow. I like the Incal all right, but I’m really obsessed with the work he did alone.

    I feel like he took a lot of the freedoms American underground comics were doing in the 60s and pushed them to a whole new level adding all kinds of elements from science fiction novels and really creating something new.

    I’ve always been so impressed by the joy he seemed to put into everything he did. His comics read like he’s having a great time working on them and the nerve in some of the stuff he pulled off is fantastic. How he’d allow himself to change a character’s look so dramatically in the middle of a story or jump from something completely serious to the ridiculous. I could go on forever about all the elements of his work and his life that have impressed me.

    I know you haven’t done graffiti in a long time, but did being involved in the graffiti scene in Seattle as a kid affect the way you perceive the urban environment? Do you think you’d draw cities the same way if you hadn’t been a part of that?

    Yeah, I think it definitely affected how I think about cities, certainly the way you interact with your environment when you’re running around drawing on it. It’s nice to be able to fuck with the world around you – changing signs or just writing a response to an ad directly on the ad or having to draw something to fit on the surface you’re drawing on.

    Bigger than that, I think graffiti really influenced how I think about the scene I’m in.

    Can you expand on that?

    The graff writers I was around really pushed the idea that the culture has to be treated with a fair amount of respect. You’re expected to know the history and you have to earn your place in it.

    I think the comic industry gets dirty because people make the excuse that it’s a job. For me it’s that if it’s where I’m going to spend my life then I want to make it a scene that I’m proud of.

    The pillars of hip hop influenced you when you were younger – what, outside of comics, influences you now?

    Still a lot of hip hop, I think in the last couple years the wordplay in rap has really driven a lot of what I put into my stuff.

    I think I’ve been really influenced by some of the authors I’ve been reading. Robert Heinlein’s way of rethinking the way future relationships work and his whole out look on life being so different from mine. I’ve been influenced with how William Gibson structures his books and certainly the way Haruki Murakami writes about food and music.

    My misses Marian has been a huge influence as well. She’s coming at art from a much more fine art/literary way of looking at it than I was used to. She’s really good at challenging my ideas and helping me think about what it means to be a life long artist and how I talk about art. A big thing I learned from her early on was the idea of talking about the quality of work not from a “this is the best” but rather “this is my favorite”.

    Prophet cover by Marian Churchland
    Prophet cover by Graham’s wife Marian Churchland

    Given the amount of improvisation in your work on King City, how different is it to be a writer, instead of an artist, on Prophet?

    The whole approach is pretty different. It puts a lot of the weight on the guy drawing it, plus we go back and forth on the layouts and script. I do the text after the art is done so there’s lots of room to improvise.

    I think it uses the same skills that I use in my solo work but it feels like a different animal.

    Multiple Warheads by Brandon Graham

    Other than Prophet what are you working on?

    My main thing is Multiple Warheads that’ll be coming out later this year from Oni press. It’s a fantasy comic set in a fictional Russia. and I’m putting together an 80 page book of my sketches.

    See Also

    The Comics Journal’s interview with Graham

    Inksuds’ video interview with Graham

    Graham on what it’s like working with Liefeld, and the matter of how women are portrayed in comics

    From http://technoccult.net/archives/2012/03/27/technoccult-interivew-king-city-artistwriter-brandon-graham/

    6 Essential Moebius Books

    • Posted on March 20, 2012 at 10:13 pm

    Joe “Jog” McCulloch rounds up the top six most essential Moebius books that you actually stand a chance of finding in the U.S. His picks are:

    1. The Airtight Garage
    2. The Incal [with Alejandro Jodorowsky]
    3. Arzach
    4. The Gardens of Aedena
    5. The Long Tomorrow
    6. Mississippi River

    Six essential Moebius books

    What are your favorites?

    From http://technoccult.net/archives/2012/03/20/6-essential-moebius-books/

    Video: Alan Moore Reads from His Forthcoming Book Jerusalem

    • Posted on March 16, 2012 at 4:45 pm

    Also, there’s a long new interview out with Alan Moore by Kurt Amacker.

    (via Leah Moore)

    From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/RmY426L2CUo/

    Covers From Ah ! Nana, the All Female Creator Version of Heavy Metal

    • Posted on March 15, 2012 at 5:49 pm

    Cover of Ah ! Nana # 1

    From the Women in Comics Wiki:

    Ah ! Nana was a French comics magazine published from October 1976 to September 1978, running nine issues. It was published by Humanoïdes Associés, best known as the publishers of Métal Hurlant, or Heavy Metal. It was the first French publication featuring work entirely by women (though each issue invited one man to contribute) at a time when comics were still almost exclusively male environments. It included work by such French cartoonists as Chantal Montellier, Florence Cestac, and Nicole Claveloux, as well as Americans such as Trina Robbins. It sold 15,000 copies on a print run of 30,000, before the ban on sales to minors proved fatal, due to its frequent taboo and controversial material.

    Women in Comics: Ah ! Nana has covers and a history of the publication.

    (via Popjellyfish)

    Previously: Leah Moore on Women in Comics

    From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/v5xZosnb80M/

    Leah Moore on Women in Comics

    • Posted on March 15, 2012 at 10:31 am

    Great rant from Leah Moore, co-author of comics such as Raise The Dead Hardcover and The Thrill Electric (and, yes, Alan Moore’s daughter):

    Everyone knows fangirls rule the world, they pay for most of it. Drifts of Twilight cushions and Harry Potter scarves, Legolas action figures, obscure game character cosplay outfits, nyancat lunchboxes and kitten mittens. The world is literally awash with Things Girls Like. We are surely never further than 2m from a Hello Kitty.

    So what is it about comics that’s different? What makes comics suddenly this great thrusting phallus of masculinity? [...]

    If comics is to survive the financial turmoil we are all suffering under, it doesn’t matter if it’s paper comics or digital, trade paperbacks or floppies, it’s about “ARE THE COMICS ANY FUCKING GOOD?” and “ARE WE SELLING THEM TO AS BROAD A MARKET AS POSSIBLE OR ONLY 50% OF IT?” If we continue to try and sell crappy comics to half the population based purely on what they keep in their underpants and nothing else then we are totally doomed.

    What is required is an all hands to the pumps mentality. Action stations! Let’s find some new blood, let’s find some new ideas, new characters, and most importantly new readers kind of plan.

    I honestly think that anyone who doesn’t see women as a rich untapped potential source of ideas, or labour, or cold hard revenue must be delusional. Why should comics sit in a sweaty locker room of ignominy when novels and films and games skip about hand in hand with wealthy teenage girls? Doesn’t that make comics feel a bit sad?

    Leah Moore: Thank Heaven for Little Girls

    As I’ve mentioned before I don’t even think the current comics model is addressing 50% of the addressable market for comics. There are a lot of men who don’t give a flip about objectification of women in media, but still find the idea of being caught with a pile of garish floppy books full of bizarre female anatomy quite embarrassing. And more importantly, how many parents want their kids buying that stuff, or even going into comic stores? The youth market, both male and female, is getting pushed out as well.

    I have no problems with sex or nudity in comics, or even flat out pornographic comics. The trouble, as many have pointed out, is a lack of variety, or at least a scenario where much of the variety gets swept under the rug while publishers and retailed double down on a dwindling demographic. Comic stores have been man caves for far too long, and even the men are getting embarrassed about it.

    Maybe it’s all for the best and the collapse of the big two and the current retail model has to happen (the big two are supposedly quite toxic environments for women. That sort of crash would put a lot of people out on the streets though.

    Anyway, like Moore says trying to run a comic company that’s run comics “for girls” is probably not a viable option at this point, but comics that appeal to a broader audience, I think, is.

    Previously:

    Escher Girls: Redrawing Embarrassing Comic Book Women

    If Male Superheroes Were Drawn Like Female Superheroes

    From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/wWKI_tMq6Zk/

    Moebius Career Chronology

    • Posted on March 12, 2012 at 9:40 am

    Quenched Consciousness curator Ian MacEwan is doing a career chronology for Moebius/Jean Giraud: “Instead of a memorial entry(because I feel weird about it), I started a series of career timeline posts,” he wrote.

    From the first entry, featuring art from 1958:

    Over the next week, I’m going to focus on posting pieces of Giraud’s work in chronological order. Ideally, there will be at least one post of something that he drew for every year of his professional career. My hope is to give a clear and thorough presentation that will help give people(myself included) a better understanding of Jean Giraud’s life work. To that end, if any of you find that I am missing something, I would love to hear from you. So far, I am missing a few key things from his early years. Primarily, any of his work on a western strip called Frank et Jeremie for Far West Magazine, and any work he did for the French Army magazine 5/5 Forces Françaises, while serving in Algeria.

    Career Timeline: 1958

    Previously: RIP Moebius/Jean Giraud (1938 – 2012)

    From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/l27o_REVHZ4/

    Escher Girls: Redrawing Embarrassing Comic Book Women

    • Posted on March 8, 2012 at 10:49 pm

    Escher Girls redraw

    As a follow-up to my post about male superheros drawn like female superheros here’s a blog documenting all the paradoxical anatomy that shows up in comics. But most interesting are the redraws showing a clear alternative to how many of these comics are drawn.

    Escher Girls

    (via Lupa)

    See also this:

    A “re-shoot” of a “sexy photo.”

    Leah Moore on Women in Comics

    From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/o79JXolDUws/

    Right Wing Group Threatens Toys R Us Over Gay Wedding in Archie Comics

    • Posted on March 1, 2012 at 7:50 pm

    A right wing group called One Million Moms is threatening a boycott against Toys R Us for carrying

    Toys R Us didn’t respond to HuffPo’s request for comment, but here’s what they got from Archie Comics CEO Jon Goldwater:

    As I’ve said before, Riverdale is a safe, welcoming place that does not judge anyone,” he wrote. “It’s an idealized version of America that will hopefully become reality someday. We’re sorry the American Family Association/OneMillionMoms.com feels so negatively about our product, but they have every right to their opinion, just like we have the right to stand by ours. Kevin Keller will forever be a part of Riverdale, and he will live a happy, long life free of prejudice, hate and narrow-minded people.

    Huffington Post: One Million Moms Threatens Toys ‘R’ Us With Boycott Over Archie Comics’ Gay Wedding Issue

    Bill Whitcomb, who brought this story to my attention, says “Obviously, I haven’t been keeping track of Archie, but I’m surprised that they are this progressive.” Same here, but I do remember seeing this on Boing Boing.

    From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/2TpoGZOrC0s/

    If Male Superheroes Were Drawn Like Female Superheroes

    • Posted on February 28, 2012 at 6:39 pm

    Metafilter has a great round-up of depictions of male comic characters depicted the same way female characters typically are (See here if you don’t understand why all those beefy Hulk-like characters aren’t equivalent to the way women are portrayed in comics, though yes I do think there are pop cultural portrayals of men that are also problematic).

    For example, this one by kevinbolk:

    … which is a parody of this Avengers poster.

    There’s also a gallery at Gammasquad, which features gems such as these:

    I’ll add to this list these images from a great Comics Bulletin article:

    Green Lantern objectified

    Also, this was a real New X-Men cover:

    I wonder what the mainstream fan reaction was. Anyway, it seems to be a real outlier.

    So why does this matter? Marvel and DC are free to publish whatever trash they see fit, and the fans are free to buy it. And if males are having their perceptions of women warped, actual pornography is probably much more damaging. And for females, there are far more damaging portrayals of women in mass advertising campaigns, where women actually see them. Can’t avoid seeing them, actually. And really, not that many women will ever see most many of these comic book images.

    I guess that’s what bothers me – seeing the comics industry slit its own throat. Here’s a great comic from Shortpacked about why the Starfire reboot was stupid from a business perspective. That Comics Bulletin piece breaks it down as well.

    But would comics with less absurd women actually sell? Well, first of all even as a male comics reader you could be put off by this stuff, even if you’re not in the least bit gender progressive. As someone pointed out in the Metafilter comments, stuff like the Starfire comics would be downright embarrassing to be seen reading in public in a way that something like a Sandman comic wouldn’t. You could be the most sexist, body-negative mofo on the planet and still not want to buy this stuff.

    Also, let’s take a look at some (relative) recent comics history. Look at these covers from Harbinger from the early 90s (actually that last one is the cover to a more recently published collected edition, I think):

    Harbinger, now nearly forgotten, was one of the hottest titles of the early 90s. Yes, there’s a scantily clad woman there, but there’s also a bigger girl – something that wasn’t often seen then or now (though the fact that her name was Zepplin ["blimp," get it?] doesn’t really help matters). The Valiant Comics line had a meteoric rise, with both commercial and critical success. Those books sold well in a climate where comics it competed with stuff like this:

    I don’t know the history of Valiant’s demise, but it was after it was sold to the video game company Acclaim. Even before the sale, the company was starting to “Image-ize” its comics with titles like Bloodshot and Ninjak. But those old Valiant books, from before the acquisition and before the Image-ization, had a huge following and proved that there was a market comics featuring something other than the cartoonishly distorted anatomies of the Image founders.

    I suppose, given the recent shabby treatment towards creators on Marvel’s part and the history of abuses by DC, I should be happy to see those companies self-destruct. It’s probably just nostalgia keeping me from wanting to see these corporations get eaten in the market. On the other hand, the comic industry in general hinges in a lot of ways on those two big companies and I don’t think it would necessarily be a good thing for smaller publishers to see Marvel and DC implode any further.

    From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/Zp_Hu3OynjQ/

    New Electric Sheep Comic: First Word

    • Posted on January 28, 2012 at 12:55 pm

    First Word

    Patrick Farley’s Electric Sheep is back with a new comic First Word, a psychedelic meditation on the origin of language.

    WARNING: NSFW and contains strobing imagery.

    Here’s a favorite old one: The Guy I Almost Was.

    From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/Q6SCcRKdHSY/

    New Online Comic: The Yankee by Jason Leivian and Ian MacEwan

    • Posted on January 19, 2012 at 2:11 pm

    The Yankee (probably not safe for work) is a new serialized online comic by former Arthur Magazine comics editor and Floating World Comics owner Jason Leivian and artist Ian MacEwan (aka Popjellyfish).

    “The Yankee is a dumb American. He’s Cosmo Vitelli. He’s Prince Rogers Nelson. He’s a Richard Pryor monologue. Psychedel-economic fiction set in the Nation States of America.”

    From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/kZrRG6c_OnU/

    New Online Comic: The Yankee by Jason Leivian and Ian MacEwan

    • Posted on January 19, 2012 at 11:52 am

    yankee01 New Online Comic: The Yankee by Jason Leivian and Ian MacEwan

    The Yankee (probably not safe for work) is a new serialized online comic by former Arthur Magazine comics editor and Floating World Comics owner Jason Leivian and artist Ian MacEwan (aka Popjellyfish).

    “The Yankee is a dumb American. He’s Cosmo Vitelli. He’s Prince Rogers Nelson. He’s a Richard Pryor monologue. Psychedel-economic fiction set in the Nation States of America.”

    From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/kZrRG6c_OnU/

    New Online Comic: The Yankee by Jason Leivian and Ian MacEwan

    • Posted on January 19, 2012 at 11:52 am

    yankee01 New Online Comic: The Yankee by Jason Leivian and Ian MacEwan

    The Yankee (probably not safe for work) is a new serialized online comic by former Arthur Magazine comics editor and Floating World Comics owner Jason Leivian and artist Ian MacEwan (aka Popjellyfish).

    “The Yankee is a dumb American. He’s Cosmo Vitelli. He’s Prince Rogers Nelson. He’s a Richard Pryor monologue. Psychedel-economic fiction set in the Nation States of America.”

    From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/kZrRG6c_OnU/

    Alan Moore and Will Contribute to Occupy Comics Anthology

    • Posted on December 7, 2011 at 9:27 pm

    godkiller occupycomics blackflag Alan Moore and Will Contribute to Occupy Comics Anthology

    Wired reports:

    Nearly 30 years after publishing V for Vendetta, writer Alan Moore and artist David Lloyd are throwing their support behind the global Occupy movement that’s drawn inspiration from their comic’s anti-totalitarian philosophy and iconography.

    Moore will contribute a long-form prose piece, possibly with illustrations, to the Occupy Comics project. His writing work will explore the Occupy movement’s principles, corporate control of the comics industry and the superhero paradigm itself.

    Lloyd signed onto the growing Occupy Comics project last week, as did Madman’s Mike Allred and American Splendor’s Dean Haspiel. Occupy Comics will eventually sell single-issue comic books and a hardcover compilation, but an innovative arrangement with Kickstarter means that funds raised through pledges of support can be channeled directly to Occupy Wall Street’s populist ranks now.

    Wired: V for Vendetta’s Alan Moore, David Lloyd Join Occupy Comics

    You can check out the Occupy Comics website and the project’s Kickstarter for more details including a full list of contributors.

    See also:

    Moore’s takedown of Frank Miller regarding Occupy

    Alan Moore on the use of the Guy Fawkes mask in Occupy protests

    From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/BBNLe3J00dI/

    Invisible Babies = Codename: Kids Next Door

    • Posted on December 7, 2011 at 12:00 pm

    invisible kids next door Invisible Babies = Codename: Kids Next Door

    Danny Chaoflux on the similarities between The Invisibles by Grant Morrison and the Cartoon Network show Codename: Kids Next Door.

    1: The leader, bald, wears shades, really into spy stuff.

    2: Inventor/Shaman, always cracks jokes, “the weird one”, overweight [ie: Future Fanny].

    3: Shes nuts.

    4: Street thug with thick accent and hoodie.

    5: Cool headed, laid back tomboy, specialty is stealth and investigation.

    Theme : Worldwide loose knit cells operate in secret to protect and encourage freedom from tyranny.

    The Antagonists : ‘The Old Gods’ and their lesser manifestations.

    This has been brought up a number of places on the internet, but I wanted to shop an image to go along with it paired with a breakdown.

    Sure you could say its a blatant rip off, but I think its more interesting to think of it as a starter set of key memes.

    Stop Making Sense: Invisible Babies = Codename: Kids Next Door

    Official Codename: Kids Next Door website.

    From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/BFQ-nyPCFWo/

    Creators Are Caught in the Cross-Fire Between Publishers and Comic Shops

    • Posted on December 6, 2011 at 7:37 pm

    demopage1 Creators Are Caught in the Cross Fire Between Publishers and Comic Shops

    Brian Wood, of Channel Zero and DMZ fame:

    Everyone I know loves comic shops. Everyone I know who makes comics, especially creator-owned comics, is hurting, financially. EVERYONE is bleeding, its a bad time. So to what extent does digital as a publishing format represent an additional revenue stream, one on top of print sales through shops, one that can ease some of the suffering? [...]

    Over the last few days Dark Horse was compelled to clarify what their digital plan was, in terms of pricing, correcting the perception that their comics would be sold digitally at 1.99, much less than the print versions. I have access to the CBIA, a retailers forum, and the pushback was intense, and included overt threats of drastically lowered orders and even total boycotts of the line. Did I mention everyone is bleeding? I get the frustration. [...]

    Not sure if this plan is scrapped or not, but I am not the boogeyman here, and when I see these boycott threats, still being issued even after Dark Horse clarified their plans… well, its hard not to feel like an innocent bystander, a bit of collateral damage. My new books at risk even before they launch. Christ, I’m just trying to make it all work out for everyone.

    Brian Wood: The digital question mark

    From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/ImxI1971k6E/

    Grant Morrison Working on Rogue Trooper Film?

    • Posted on November 1, 2011 at 10:05 am

    rogue trooper Grant Morrison Working on Rogue Trooper Film?

    Empire Online reports Grant Morrison is attached a film based on the 2000AD character Rogue Trooper:

    With all eyes on the incoming Judge Dredd movie, it makes sense that savvy producers would be looking to legendary British comic 2000AD for further inspiration. Hence the news this morning that a Rogue Trooper film is in development at Sam Worthington’s production company, and that cult comics writer Grant Morrison (Arkham Asylum, Final Crisis, Superman) is at work on the screenplay. [...]

    Morrison never wrote for the strip, but did provide copious Future Shocks, Zenith, and a handful of Dredds, so has plenty of 2000AD heritage. The news of a film and of Worthington and Morrison’s involvement is buried in a Daily Record story that mostly concentrates on Dinosaurs vs Aliens, the property that Morrison is currently working on with Barry Sonnenfeld. It’s an aside so sketchy that it doesn’t even come with a Morrison quote to back it up, so whether Worthington is developing the film with a view to personally slapping on the blue paint remains to be seen. We’ll bring you further details as they emerge.

    Empire Online: Grant Morrison Writes Rogue Trooper Film

    Rogue Trooper has already had a few video game adaptations.

    From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/o95W37M2Y9Q/

    Barnes and Nobles Drops DC Collections, Fills the Gap with Pre-DC Alan Moore Books

    • Posted on October 30, 2011 at 12:09 pm

    futureshocks Barnes and Nobles Drops DC Collections, Fills the Gap with Pre DC Alan Moore Books

    CBR reports:

    DC Comics collections have been disappearing from shelves at Barnes & Noble stores over the past few weeks, but not for the reasons DC would like. In response to the publisher’s exclusive digital partnership with Amazon and the recently announced Kindle Fire, B&N pulled all copies of the titles involved in the deal from their shelves until the Amazon.com window of exclusivity expires, though they do remain available for order through the bookseller’s retail website. Of course, part of what this means for Barnes & Noble is that many best-selling graphic novels, such as “Watchmen,” “The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen” and “Top 10″ are not currently available for its brick and mortar stores to sell, leaving a sizable gap in their inventory.

    Comic Book Resources has learned exclusively that, rather than wait for DC’s exclusive deal to expire before re-filling the open space on its stores’ shelves, Barnes & Noble has struck a deal with 2000 AD publisher Rebellion, massively increasing the available stock of a number of 2000 AD releases in B&N storefronts.

    Comic Book Resources: Barnes & Noble Fills DC Comics Hole with 2000 AD Alan Moore Titles

    From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/WVkHjtptTec/

    RIP Comics Code Authority

    • Posted on October 16, 2011 at 12:20 pm

    The Ten Cent Plague RIP Comics Code Authority

    Whoa, just saw Archie dropped the Comics Code Authority seal at the beginning of this year (yeah, I’m pretty late with this one):

    With time the moral panic subsided, the rules softened, and a new wave of adult-oriented titles appeared. In 2001 Marvel Comics adopted its own rating system and dropped the code altogether. In January 2011 the other major comic book publisher, DC, did the same thing. And a day after DC’s decision, Archie Comics followed suit.

    Reason: The Comics Code Goes Cold

    And last month the Comic Book Legal Defense fund acquired the Code’s intellectual property:

    The Comic Book Legal Defense Fund today announces that it has received the intellectual property rights to the Comics Code Authority Seal of Approval in an assignment from the now-defunct Comic Magazine Association of America, which administrated the Code since the 1950s.

    The Comics Code Seal comes to the CBLDF during Banned Books Week, a national celebration of the freedom to read, and just a few months following a decision in the U.S. Supreme Court where Justice Scalia cited CBLDF’s brief addressing the comics industry’s history of government scrutiny and the subsequent self-regulation the Comics Code represented. Dr. Amy Nyberg, author of Seal of Approval: The History of Comics Code has prepared a short history of the Comics Code Seal and the era of censorship it represents exclusively for CBLDF that is available now in the Resources section of cbldf.org.

    CBLDF Receives Comics Code Authority Seal of Approval

    See also:

    The Ten-Cent Plague: The Great Comic-Book Scare and How It Changed America by David Hajdu.

    The New Yorker’s lengthy coverage of the above book.

    Online text of Seducing the Innocent (with different illustrations from the original print version).

    From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/bM6yezVOyH8/

    littlegothicgirl: pcapopcultureaddict: People have been asking…

    • Posted on September 24, 2011 at 2:01 pm


    littlegothicgirl:

    pcapopcultureaddict:

    People have been asking about the girl in my facebook profile picture.  This is Shrill, a new character from Archie Comics that made her debut earlier this year.  She hasn’t been used very much yet, but she is Riverdale’s resident goth girl - a girl who doesn’t seem to fit in with the other kids at school and has a bit of a chip on her shoulder.  Personally, I think shes adorable, and she reminds me of a lot of the girls I had crushes when I was in high school, and that I dated in university.  Archie and Reggie could fight over Betty and Veronica - Shrill is more my type.

    But Shrill will be stepping into the spotlight next week in the 70th anniversary special - Archie #625 - where writer Alex Simmons and artist Dan Parent delve into her back story and introduce readers to her family including her single father and her little sister who is suffering from cancer.  I hope this is the beginning of seeing a lot more of Shrill in the Archie books!

    I think I am going to get the comic JUST for her

    From http://morbidfashion.tumblr.com/post/10609797622

    A.D.D: Forthcoming Vertigo Comic by Douglas Rushkoff

    • Posted on August 16, 2011 at 2:40 pm

    ADD A.D.D: Forthcoming Vertigo Comic by Douglas Rushkoff

    DC has posted details about Douglas Rushkoff’s forthcoming collaboration with Goran Sudzuka and Jose Marzan, Jr, scheduled for January 2012:

    The Adolescent Demo Division (A.D.D.) are the world’s luckiest teen gamers. Raised from birth to test media, appear on reality TV and enjoy the fruits of corporate culture, the squad develop special abilities that make them the envy of the world—and a grave concern to their keepers.

    One by one, they “graduate” to new levels that are not what they seem. But their heightened abilities can only take them so far as the ultimate search for their birth families proves to be a most harrowing discovery.

    DC Comics: A.D.D

    Note: I’m on vacation until August 22, so I may be slow responding to comments or making corrections.

    From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/diFl8eWKKCM/

    Alan Moore Talks League of Extraordinary Gentlemen 1969 and More

    • Posted on July 22, 2011 at 6:24 pm

    alanmoore gavinwallace hoax Alan Moore Talks League of Extraordinary Gentlemen 1969 and More

    In a lengthy interview at Wired, Alan Moore talks about the latest installment of The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, the 60s, The Prisoner, his novel Jerusalem and more:

    So my perspective upon that era has changed. You can find that in bits of the dialogue, such as when Mina Murray tries a bit too hard to embrace the ’60s. As she, Allan Quatermain and Orlando make their way to the Hyde Park festival, she says that they are all looking to the future and being incredibly progressive. And Orlando, who’s been around a lot longer than Mina, points out that no, they’re not. They’re just nostalgic for their own childhoods. Which, looking back, was a big part of the ’60s. It was reflected in a lot of the haunted nursery rhymes of that period, especially in the music of Pink Floyd’s Syd Barrett.

    So my actual feelings about the ’60s are that, yes, of course we had limitations. We talked a lot of shit, and we didn’t have the muscle to back it up. For the most part, we had good intentions. However, we were not able to implement those intentions. And when the state started to take us seriously and initiated countermeasures, the majority of us folded like bitches. Not all of us, but a good number. We weren’t up for the struggle that had sounded so great in our manifestos.

    Moore mentioned again his multimedia project, which is indeed the project with Mitch Jenkins:

    It’s getting out of hand in the best possible way, and might be expressed in any number of media, and across platforms. So we’re going to start shooting that in August, so expect a release date before the end of the year at which point I’ll be able to tell you much more about it.

    Wired: Alan Moore Takes League of Extraordinary Gentlemen to the ’60s

    Also: Moore’s magazine Dodgem Logic is going to be an online-only publication moving forward.

    From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/k17DE-knHgo/

    Alan Moore Hints That He May Be Making a Video Game

    • Posted on May 6, 2011 at 2:11 pm

    alan moore Alan Moore Hints That He May Be Making a Video Game

    The revelation came during a Q&A at an event celebrating his fine magazine Dodgem Logic last night in London, where Moore was asked if he had considered making video games. [...]

    Moore revealed that he is now looking at a project created with a number of different mediums in mind. While it’s evidently not settled yet, he said there may be “possibly some surprising stuff happening in the next 12 months”

    Shack News: Alan Moore hints at making video game

    One shouldn’t read too much into this, he could just be referring to Jimmy’s End, which is supposed to be both a film and a television series.

    (via Matt Stags)

    From http://technoccult.net/archives/2011/05/06/alan-moore-video-game/

    Grant Morrison’s Book on Super Heroes Gets a Title, Release Date

    • Posted on March 31, 2011 at 10:21 am

    According to Amazon.com, Grant Morrison’s forthcoming book on super heroes will be called Supergods: What Masked Vigilantes, Miraculous Mutants, and a Sun God from Smallville Can Teach Us About Being Human. It’s scheduled for July 19, 2011. Here’s the description:

    The first superhero comic ever published, Action Comics #1 in 1938, introduced the world to something both unprecedented and profoundly familiar: Superman, a caped god for the modern age. In a matter of years, the skies of the imaginary world were filled with strange mutants, aliens, and vigilantes: Batman, Wonder Woman, the Fantastic Four, Captain Marvel, Iron Man, and the X-Men—the list of names is as familiar as our own. In less than a century they’ve gone from not existing at all to being everywhere we look: on our movie and television screens, in our videogames and dreams. But why?

    For Grant Morrison, possibly the greatest of contemporary superhero storytellers, these heroes are not simply characters but powerful archetypes whose ongoing, decades-spanning story arcs reflect and predict the course of human existence: Through them, we tell the story of ourselves. In this exhilarating book, Morrison draws on history, art, mythology, and his own astonishing journeys through this alternate universe to provide the first true chronicle of the superhero—why they matter, why they will always be with us, and what they tell us about who we are.

    It’s now available for pre-order. No cover art yet, though.

    (Thanks Ian!)

    From http://technoccult.net/archives/2011/03/31/grant-morrisons-book-on-super-heroes-gets-a-title-release-date/

    Al Columbia Finally Reveals What Happened to the Big Numbers # 4 Artwork

    • Posted on February 14, 2011 at 10:35 am

    sebadoh cover Al Columbia Finally Reveals What Happened to the Big Numbers # 4 Artwork
    Sebadoh cover with Al Columbia’s Big Numbers art

    In an interview on the Inkstuds podcast, artist Al Columbia reveals what happened to the artwork for Big Numbers # 4. Comic Book Resources transcribes the reveal:

    I was roommates with all the guys in this band called Sebadoh, which were particularly large back in the day — Lou Barlow, Eric Gaffney, and Jason Loewenstein, they were all hanging out. And Eric Gaffney was gonna put out this single, this little split single with somebody, and he wanted artwork for it and he wanted me to do something. He was big into collages and stuff like that, and we got the idea that I would chop up all this Big Numbers artwork and make a collage out of it for his album cover. I don’t know how I got the idea, but I just hated [Big Numbers] — I didn’t want anything to do with it, I had already quit it or I was going to, I knew I wasn’t going to have anything to do with it. So we put every page on a chopping block, one of those big slicers, and I just chopped it up madly for about a half hour — just sliced the whole thing up with a chopper. And Marc Arsenault, who’s the Wow Cool guy — I don’t know if anyone knows who he is, the minizine guy — he was a good friend of mine, he came over and just looked horrified. He stood in the doorway and watched me chopping up all the artwork and just went “Oh my God!” I think he must have told somebody I’d done it, and that’s how that [story] got started. But I think even before that, there was something [going around] to that effect. That might have been what influenced me to do it: “Well, they’re saying I did this, I might as well.” I can’t remember, though. But it wasn’t like “Oh my God, I’m gonna flip out, I can’t stand this!” It wasn’t this breakdown. It was just like, “Oh, this’ll make a cool record cover.” That’s it. That’s all it was.

    Comic Book Resources: The day indie rock defeated Alan Moore: Al Columbia reveals what happened to Big Numbers #4

    See here for some background on why this is a big deal.

    From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/WbHdwJRFZPU/

    Long, New Interview with Michael Moorcock

    • Posted on February 9, 2011 at 10:16 am

    michael moorcock Long, New Interview with Michael Moorcock

    In contrast to the rural decencies of Tolkien, Moorcock’s writing belongs to an urban tradition, which celebrates the fantastical city as a place of chance and mystery. The wondrous spaces of M John Harrison, China Miéville, Fritz Leiber, Gene Wolfe and Alan Moore are all part of this, as are Iain Sinclair’s London, Judge Dredd’s Mega-City One, the part-virtual cyberpunk mazes of William Gibson and the decadent Paris of the Baudelarian flâneur. Like these other urban fantasists, Moorcock delights in a kind of sublime palimpsest, in imagining an environment that through size, age, scale or complexity exceeds our comprehension, producing fear and awe. Crucially, the city isn’t a place of moral clarity.

    Moorcock’s dislike of authoritarian sentiment has led him in many directions: Jerry Cornelius’s ambiguity is sexual, social and even ontological; one of Moorcock’s most popular heroes, Elric, was written as a rebuke to the bluff, muscular goody-goodies that populate so much fantasy fiction. Elric, a decadent albino weakling, is amoral, perhaps even evil. As a not-so-metaphorical junkie, Elric allowed Moorcock to revel in unwholesomeness, and helped return fantasy to its roots in the late romanticism of the decadents, a literary school close to Moorcock’s heart. In a recent introduction to The Dancers at the End of Time, which is set in a decadent far future, Moorcock claims to have sported Wildean green carnations as a teenager, not to mention “the first pair of Edwardian flared trousers (made by Burton) as well as the first high-button frock coat to be seen in London since 1910″. Elric, much less robust than his creator, who admits his dandyish threads gave him “the bluff domestic air of a Hamburg Zeppelin commander”, is part Maldoror, part Yellow Book poseur and part William Burroughs; within a few years of his first appearance in 1961, British culture suddenly seemed to be producing real-life Elrics by the dozen, as Keith Richards, Jimmy Page and others defined an image of the English rock star as an effeminate, velvet-clad lotus-eater. Moorcock was very popular among musicians, and it’s tempting to see him as co-creator of the butterfly-on-a-wheel character, which still wanders the halls of English culture in guises ranging from Sebastian Horsley to Russell Brand. I ask him whether he felt at the time that the 60s rockers were living out a role he’d imagined. He’s too modest to agree, but tells an anecdote that seems to sum up psychedelic London’s openness to fantasy of all kinds. “I’m in the Mountain grill on the Portobello Road, where everyone used to meet to get on the tour buses. I’m sitting there, and this bloke called Geronimo is trying to sell me some dope. He says ‘have you heard about the tunnel under Ladbroke Grove?’. He starts to elaborate, about how it’s under the Poor Clares nunnery, and you can go into that and come out in an entirely different world. I said to him, ‘Geronimo, I think I wrote that’. It didn’t seem to bother him much.”

    The Guardian: When Hari Kunzru met Michael Moorcock

    From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/fqq4h0N-yfk/

    Psi-Fi: The Feedback Loop Between Pop Culture and Paranormal Experience

    • Posted on February 6, 2011 at 11:30 am

    Temple51 Psi Fi: The Feedback Loop Between Pop Culture and Paranormal Experience
    A painting from the Wat Rong Khun Buddhist temple in Chiang Rai, Thailand from FEEL

    Interesting article by Professor in Philosophy and Religious Thought at Rice University and author of Authors of the Impossible Jeffrey J. Kripal on the feedback loops between paranormal experience (or what Susan Blackmore calls “exceptional human experiences”) and popular culture:

    A Buddhist temple featuring Superman and a Marvel comic reproducing an actual UFO photo? A pulp fiction editor using his own precognitive dreams to write short stories and a sci-fi master getting zapped by an alien space machine? What is going on here? It would be easy to fall into an either-or mentality, as in “This happened, and that didn’t.” or “This is true, and that is false.” That, I want to suggest, is precisely what is wrong with much of our thinking about popular culture and the paranormal. Much better to pay attention to all the back-and-forth loops, that is, the incredibly messy, “loopy” ways in which popular culture informs paranormal events, which in turn informs popular culture, which in turn informs … well, you get my point. I mean, where exactly are we supposed to draw a line between the real and the unreal in, say, a graphic novel and an actual UFO sighting? It would be easy to suggest that the graphic novel is pure fiction and the UFO—whatever it was—non-fiction, except for the uncomfortable fact that the UFO encounters of the second half of the twentieth century often followed, down to precise details, the pulp fiction fantasies of the first half (for more on this, see my discussion of Bertrand Méheust in Authors of the Impossible). It would also be easy to call it all fiction, except for the uncomfortable fact that people really experience such things, all the time. There were F-16s chasing that floating Wal-Mart. Not your typical piece of fiction.

    Boing Boing: Psi-Fi

    This reminds me a lot of Erik Davis’s book TechGnosis. Erik, incidentally, is now a student at Rice.

    From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/3I2WI5Ytblo/

    Image to Publish Ziggy Marley’s Marijuanaman Comic

    • Posted on February 5, 2011 at 3:52 pm

    marijuana man cover Image to Publish Ziggy Marleys Marijuanaman Comic

    The series, created by Ziggy Marley, will be written by Joe Casey with art by Jim Mahfood:

    Reggae star Ziggy Marley announced Thursday that his creation will be the latest superhero introduced to the comic-book lexicon.

    According to a release from Image Comics, the company that’s putting out the book, Marijuanaman is a “noble extraterrestrial champion, who has arrived on Earth to deliver an important message and at the same time save his own planet.”

    Spinner: Ziggy Marley Saves the Planet With ‘Marijuanaman’ Comic Book

    (Thanks Mark!)

    From http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Technoccult/~3/JNnQQKjPJ74/