Saturday, March 15, 2008

Don't Turn Into A Pumpkin - Buy Your NYCC Tickets!

Midnight Sunday is the cut off to have NY ComicCon tickets mailed to you. After midnight, you'll turn into a pumpkin - or at least a guy who has to stand in a long line at the con to get his tickets.

Also, if you already bought your tickets and you're wondering where they are and you are thinking of submitting an Ask The Show Manager question to find out from me, let me save you (and me) the typing- you will have them in about 2 weeks. Once we cut off mailing tomorrow night all of us NYCC Elves will stuff like 10,000 envelopes with your tickets and mail them to you.

Do you see the things we do for you?

-L

Friday, March 14, 2008

Order Your Tickets! Now!

Ladies and gentlemen, fanboys and fangirls, this is a gentle reminder from the kindly New York Comic Com team. If you'd like us to mail your NYCC 2008 ticket to you, you've got to order it by midnight on Sunday night. If you don't, you're out of luck, and you'll have to pick it up at the Javits Center. So, order your ticket now at newyorkcomiccon.com.

T.M.Revolution Call for Questions Ends!

That's it, kids! The T.M.Revolution call for questions is over. Look for his answers soon. Also, look for some additional interviews that may or may not be in the works.

Thursday, March 13, 2008

T.M.Revolution Q&A Almost Over!

You've got just over 24 more hours to ask T.M.Revolution a question. You can submit questions to the pop star until noon tomorrow. After that, we'll be selecting 21 to ask T.M.R over the weekend.

You can ask T.M.Revolution a question here...

http://www.mediumatlarge.net/2008/03/q-w-tmr-experiment-in-democracy.html

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

NYCC Featured Guests Jim Steranko & J. David Spurlock Remember Dave Stevens

It is a very, very sad day.
I thought the world of Dave Stevens. Besides creating the Rocketeer, Dave ochestrated the Bettie Page comeback and looked after her quite a bit. He was very supportive of my Space Cowboy strip and there was talk about him doing a Space Cowboy cover. I told him he had let Adam Hughes runaway with his King of Cheesecake crown by slowing down so, in the last decade. I knew he suffered from Leukemia for years but we wouldn't talk about it.

Though we discussed various book projects: Art books, Rocketeer collections, etc., the only times we really worked together were when, on rare occasion, I'd represent him as a booking agent for some personal appearance like the Creation convention in Pasadena a few years ago. I look back warmly on many great times we shared--frequently in social occasions with other Art Pack types including his idols Jim Steranko and Carmine Infantino, and contemporaries MW Kaluta, Bill Stout, Bob Burden...and even decades back to the Doug Wildey days (I remember Doug saying Dave had single-handedly brought cheesecake back to comics)! There were usually a few great looking women with us too. I still have a sketch Dave did on one such occasion in Atlanta. Great times with a brilliant artist. I was proud to call him friend and I will always remember him.
-
Love,
--
J. David Spurlock
------------------------
Dave Stevens died today and the art world lost one of its most passionate practitioners. Our loss, as friends and fans, was infinitely greater. With the exception of Kirby and a few others, one would be hard pressed to name anyone in the field who was more admired and beloved.

Those who knew him will also confirm that, even though he was a superb draftsman and a rendering perfectionist, there wasn't an erg of pretension in him. Who had more right?He was easily one of handsomest, best-dressed, and well-spoken men that could be found behind a drawing board or on a convention floor. Although he may have taken ten minutes to comb his hair and make certain his shirt hung well, there was not a hint of ceremony or conceit in his manner or attitude.

Although he was completely accessible to anyone offering a comment or criticism, Stevens was an extremely private individual. He gave a massive amount of his time, effort, and creativity to those who loved his work. No speed demon, he'd meticulously deliberate over each panel, each figure, each line, until they were as perfect as he could make them. It was an expensive habit, with a killer toll taken from his personal life. He was driven by his professionalism and it showed in the work.
What did not show were the internal processes and sometimes the turmoil in the man behind the work. Stevens was essentially self-educated in artistic techniques and his desire for perfection kept him relentlessly on that track. The result was that no one was better at creating a certain kind of adventure, atmosphere, and anatomy than Stevens. But making it look so easy was only a mask that concealed hard work and serious sacrifice. He kept all that to himself.

And when he was diagnosed with a rare, terminal illness, he kept that to himself, too. His closest friends were aware of the condition, but he had no interest in community—or even private—sympathy, and went to considerable lengths to conceal the problem from his public. Most of his associates were unaware of what he endured physically, mentally, and spiritually because he kept such an inexorable focus on his aesthetic vision. Even the punishment of year-after-year chemo treatments, only deepened his commitment to his art; he began attending sketching sessions (after being a celebrated, successful pro) and eventually enrolled in painting classes, to help his skills transcend the line tradition to the tonal. He was moving from cartoonist to painter, a goal few artists seriously attempt in their 40s, let alone with a terminal sentence hanging over them.

Several years ago, Stevens confessed that his physician had given him about ten to twelve months—to February 2007—to live, based on a calculation of his leukemia's progression. Rather than be ignited by rage, self-pity, or other negative emotional reactions as most of us would do, he opted to go on with his life as though no end was in sight. We frequently talked about business, about our work, about other's work, about film, about music, about food, about the woman we
loved, about our artistic discoveries, about new theories, about the forces that shaped our universe and we sparred, scolded, wisecracked, and laughed, just as we had throughout our 35-year+ relationship.

It led to a point that puzzled me deeply. He knew that unless some miracle cure materialized (insiders scoured the net periodically for clues and news of such a cure), the end was in sight. Yet Stevens' behavior was more normal than mine. I didn't understand how he could awaken every morning and face a doomsday countdown, a personal Armageddon, so cavalierly—and questioned him about it. He revealed that he had no intention of allowing a fatal prognosis to corrupt whatever remained of his life, that he was living every day as naturally as possible.

I was stunned, not by his comment, but because he made it happen—in his terms! He was exhibiting the kind of unbridled courage that generally doesn't exist off the comicbook page. The chips were down and the kid showed his moxie! I never admired him more than at that moment and told him that for a pretty boy, he had plenty of nerve! Stevens' philosophy endured until the end. We spoke a few weeks ago. His voice was faint and he was exhausted, but he made our late-night conversation continue for ninety minutes, heavily punctuated with laughs, each of which generated a coughing fit. Nerve!

I knew the end of the story for a long time, but wasn't prepared--and maybe never will be--to accept the terrible finality of his death. It is painful to start every day knowing there will be no new Stevens images to savor. Or all-night conversations fueled by trivia duels, arcane experiences, esoteric insights, and ongoing laughter. I'll add him to my list: no new Wes Montgomery solos, no more Bob Peak posters, no additional Mickey Spillane thrillers. Life goes on, just the way
Stevens wanted, except he won't be here to make it more interesting.

I can tell you, however, that he'll live in my heart as long as I can take a breath. See you around, pal!

Jim Steranko

Jeff Bezos to Speak at BEA

Amazon.com founder and CEO Jeff Bezos will participate in an Upfront and Unscripted Spotlight conversation with Wired magazines Chris Anderson on Friday afternoon at 3pm during BEA. I gotta say, I’m pretty excited about this – a major goal of BEA is to bring the entire book industry together in one place, and Amazon.com is a big part of our business. Jeff will certainly discuss the launch of the Kindle and his perceptions of it’s impact on our industry but he’s promised to delve into larger industry maters as well.

The decisions Amazon makes internationally in particular have an immense impact on our global industry. The question on the mind of any publisher doing business internationally is, “Where is Amazon going next?” To wit, BEA consultant Ruediger Wischenbart points out on his blog that he estimates that Amazon.com is the #3 largest bookseller in Germany – read it here.

The conversation should prove to be most enlightening on the present and future of the book business from the Amazon.com perspective and I’m always thrilled when BEA can bring an industry leader of this stature to the show and provide them a forum.

Upfront and Unscripted (UU) is a series we launched in 2006 where we pair compelling figures in the books business with an equally compelling questioner, such as Twelve’s Jonathon Karp interviewed by Carl Lennertz or Borders CEO George Jones interviewed by Shelf Awareness’s John Mutter. The UU Spotlight is a new platform to call attention to the entire UU series and it’s a similar strategy we also used with our Conference Keynote to call attention to BEA’s world class conference (this year Thomas Friedman in the conference keynote, last year was Alan Greenspan). Pretty cool having a guy like Jeff Bezos to christen the new event!

We’ll release to full schedule of UU programs in just a few weeks and almost all of them will be vid casted this year as part of the BookExpo Cast pod cast series.

-L


PS - After some issues, all special event tickets for BEA are now available for purchase (or to add onto a badge you've already bought) on our web site. Buy early and buy often!

The Girl Who Leapt For NYC!

I'm very pleased to announce our friends at Bandai Entertainment will premiere The Girl Who Leapt Through Time at New York Comic Con. The Girl Who Leapt Through Time is a 2006 film from Japan following a high school girl who gains the power to (literally) leap back and forth through time. She uses the ability to make her life a little bit more comfortable, yet when she realizes her power is limited and there are unexpected consequences to her each and every leap, she strives to make the world right before her ability runs out.

Does it sound a bit like The Butterfly Effect? Maybe. But it's good. Really good. It's based on an acclaimed 1965 novel by Yasutaka Tsutsui and animated by MADHOUSE. And it took Japan by storm. No, that's not right. The Girl Who Leapt Through Time is a simple, unassuming story and it didn't storm anything. Japan fell in love with it. I'm very pleased to be presenting it for the first time in the US, and I'm very pleased to be working again with Bandai Entertainment.

(Although, I should say it did technically screen in the US before -- at the New York International Children's Film Festival last year, but this was before Bandai licensed it, and this is the first screening with Bandai. I was at the Children's Film Festival screening, too. Afterwards, Anime News Network founder Justin Sevakis, Anime Jump boss man Mike Toole, and I had dinner at a little Vietnamese dive near Chinatown. I got some kind of spicy tofu and vegetable soup. It was really, really spicy. I'm getting off topic here, aren't I?)

New York Comic Con will be screening Bandai Entertainment's The Girl Who Leapt Through Time, and I'm jumping with joy.

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

NewYorkComicCam.com

I love this photo.

I think I saw the ghost of Norman Mailer on the subway.

I think I saw the ghost of Norman Mailer on the subway. I told my girlfriend, but she just stared at me for a moment before asking if he was the guy who wrote that Hitler book. It's odd that she's not familiar with his mountain of work and instead jumps directly to The Castle in the Forest, which is sitting on my nightstand now. Autographed, too. I met Mr. Mailer at, I believe, his last book signing before he passed away.

Probably wasn't actually Norman Mailer's ghost, though. I'm working on some of New York Comic Con's literary panels now and locking in a lot of the speakers -- all authors of comics without pictures. The big names are Peter David and Terry Brooks, and they'll be joined by a number of Science Fiction and Fantasy scribes including Danielle Bennett, Kate Brallier, Isamu Fukui, Felix Gilman, Nina Harper, Jaida Jones, David Keck, Naomi Novik, Brian Slattery, and Alissa Torres.

At the same time, I'm working to confirm some Guests of Honor for the New York Anime Festival in September and am close (I think) to getting a major Japanese author there. Who? Not telling. He should be a hit, too. If not, I can keep him busy by signing all my copies of his books.

I'm going to presume my typically-oppressive workload along with the authors I'm speaking with for both NYCC and NYAF resulted in the Norman Mailer apparition. Or, I just saw a cranky old guy.

I've also got some more literary good news. You know that novel I've been writing? The one that I haven't touched for the past five months because of work? Well, I wrote a paragraph this week and really want to write more. Of course, rather than writing more, I'm right now writing this. Maybe I could steal enough time to start writing in earnest again by saying I'm writing for the blog but actually producing the next great American novel. With vampires.

If you're a publisher or literary agent and would like to talk about buying the book or representing me, let me know, because if you like these trite, little diary entries, just imagine what I'm capable of when I put effort into it.

That's right, pretty much this, just longer.

Monday, March 10, 2008

Frank Miller and Eva Mendes at NYCC!

Expanding upon Lance's original Frank Miller post, written briskly between drinks while touring the Irish countryside...

Lionsgate will be at New York Comic Con 2008 promoting its upcoming The Spirit based off of the classic comic by Will Eisner. Lionsgate will present a first look at the film on Saturday, April 19 in New York Comic Con's IGN Theater with guests including Frank Miller and Eva Mendes.

Frank Miller -- if you didn't know -- is the man behind The Dark Knight Returns, Sin City, and 300. Eva Mendes can be seen in films including Training Day, Once Upon A Time in Mexico, and Ghost Rider. She plays Sand Saref in Liongate's The Spirit.

The Spirit, which debuted in 1940, chronicled the adventures of a masked vigilante working on behalf of the police and is still regarded today for its deep and diverse narratives spanning film noir and crime drama as well as adventure, mystery, horror, comedy and romance.

In addition to panelists Frank Miller and Eva Mendes, Lionsgate will present The Spirit's teaser poster for the first time -- and both Mr. Miller and Ms. Mendes will be available to sign copies for New York Comic Con attendees.

New York Comic Con welcomes the legendary Frank Miller with open arms, and we're delighted to have an actress of Ms. Mendes's caliber join us. It is a true honor to have Frank Miller and Eva Mendes with us, and we earnestly thank all our friends at Lionsgate who are making this spectacular event possible.

Neil Gaiman at NYCC!

Here is my big announcement for the morning, Neil Gaiman will be doing an event at NY ComicCon this year! We've been working for a few months now with our buddy Charles at the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund to do an event and it's finally now a reality.


We're calling it "An Evening With Neil Gaiman" and it will be his only appearance at The Con. We are going to do it on Friday, April 18 and Neil will do a reading and there may be an auction of some rare stuff as well. All of the proceeds from the event will go directly to CBLDF and it will be a ticketed event.
General admission tickets to the reading are available for $20, while supplies last. Tickets for a VIP reception are strictly limited to 100, and will include access to meet Mr. Gaiman and receive two signatures, plus a gift bag of exclusive Neil Gaiman oriented items from CBLDF, and preferred seating at the reading. VIP reception tickets are available for $500 and the reception will take place before the event begins.
Tickets will go on sale today by visiting the special events ticket page at NYCC.com and you'll also need a pass to The Con to attend the Gaiman event.
-L

Sunday, March 9, 2008

Belgium and A Few Big Announcements (and one non-announcement)

I’m home from Belgium as of tonight and instead of boring you with tales of my travels, I’ll give you a few incomplete sentence highlights:

- If you received an email from me the last few days, the picture to my left is what my “office” most often looked like. Cigarette, trapist beer and blackberry, which left me one hand short.
- 53% of all books exported from Belgium are comics
- I don’t like eating eel
- I had a great talk with Belgian editors and publishers while there. The national export association is wanting to launch a large comic focused event next year and we plan to discuss cooperation. Cool. Now I can expense all that trapist beer.
- Framboise beer is made w/the same bacteria that causes athlete's foot (Pedeacoccus) but it makes the beer taste super-fruity. My brother taught me that one.


Cliffs Notes


VIP Lithograph – Check out the limited Marvel lithograph. They will only make about 400 of these and the first 100 will be signed by Joe Q. How do you get one? Buy a NYCC VIP package, that’s how!

More Big Names at NYCC - Eva Mendes and Frank Miller will be at the show and singing on Saturday at 3:30! We’ll have more info about this ASAP but this is again part of Hollywood’s NYCC invasion, cool on Lion’s Gate!
My Lips Are Sealed – BIG announcement for NYCC first thing tomorrow. Due to strict embargoes I cannot say a word tonight, but I’ll blog it first thing tomorrow and a formal announcement will follow.
Ticket To Ride – Seriously, BEA special event tickets are available for purchase, so don’t delay! NYCC VIP tickets and Ultimate Experience tickets are also available, buy em for God’s sake!

Dates – We’ve extended the volunteer sign up to 3/21, fill out the form online to be a NYCC volunteer. Make sure and buy your tickets by 3/13 if you want them mailed to you!!!!!

Short and sweet tonight, I’m jet lagged and need to blog up my super secret announcement for tomorrow morning.
- L