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Showing posts with label RIP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label RIP. Show all posts

Friday, October 23, 2009

October Sad Month For Pop-Culture Fans

While nowhere as prolific as this year's infamous "summer of death," October has been a sad month for pop-culture fans, with several passings that I wanted to take note of but haven't had the chance to until now.

First, kiddie TV host Soupy Sales has just passed. By the time I was a child of TV-viewing age (you know, three months+), his show had been off the air – but I got to know him through his many appearances on talk shows, game shows, etc. The Soupy Sales show was like interpretative jazz for youngsters...I don't know how else to explain it. He never talked down to his viewers, and often seemed to be maintaining a private joke with his crew.

In this clip, an older Soupy explains the importance of "micro-payments":


Second, as I'm sure you are well aware, pro wrestling legend Captain Lou Albano died. It was my privilege to meet Lou at a comic book convention several years ago, and he was an extremely nice guy. Yes, as a child I regarded him as an Italian role-model on national TV. By the time I was old enough to be embarrassed at the portrayal of Italians in the Super Mario Bros game and TV show, the role-model thing had lessened a bit. But I'd take Lou over Bob Hoskins any day of the week. As a recent South Park episode spotlighted, a lot of the best pro wrestling involves more acting than wrestling; Lou could do both, and it's as an excellent and entertaining performer that I will remember him.

And Addams Family composer Vic Mizzy died! I always remember Mizzy's name in the old Addams Family TV show closing credits:

Did those closing credits, where the cast had to stand still through the entire thing, make you nervous? I was a very sensitive kid: it made me nervous, watching the actors twitch and fidget slightly as they tried to stay still.

Joseph "Dr. No" Wiseman also passed on. He played the first Bond movie villain, and the last surviving actor to have played a Bond villain in the Sean Connery era.
Finally, comic book great George Tuska died on Oct. 15th at the age of 93. There's an oft-quoted description of his work from A.V. Club that patronizingly/derisively refers to his art as follows: "Tuska was perfectly competent, and his art for titles like Iron Man and The Incredible Hulk is decent, though unspectacular. But his drawing was so quickly assayed, and so essentially flavorless, that he became the King Of The Fill-In Issue, hopping in to provide bland, forgettable work whenever someone else blew a deadline."


And I really want to say: that opinion is crap! Artists like Tuska not only brought in the work on time, but their renderings and page compositions were of a superior illustrative quality that you just don't see much of anymore. Maybe some would call it "classic," and say that this style just isn't relevant anymore; I hope not. I appreciate the work of people like Tuska a hell of a lot more now than when I was a kid and buying books from "flavor of the month" artists.

As for A.V. Club's assignation to Tuska of the "King Of The Fill-In Issue" title – as a former comic book editor, I THANK GOD for pencillers and inkers who can turn around clean, tight, well-composed comic art quickly for whatever reason. Some of these artists work on such crazy break-neck schedules that it would make your head spin. And I think they are often taken for granted because they seem like they're always there and ready to take the work.

And that's it. Let's hope that the last week of October proves not to be as "busy" as the first three weeks. I want my childhood idols alive, dammit!

Thursday, August 06, 2009

RIP John Hughes

John Hughes – director of such 80s classics as "Ferris Bueller's Day Off," "Sixteen Candles," and "The Breakfast Club" – has died. Him and Chris Claremont pretty much defined my early teen years. Hughes was only 59. I forgot how much those movies influenced me. I mean, they were both totally the essence of high-school, and totally unrelated to the realities of my particular high-school experience. He had a knack for presenting me the version of adolescence I really wanted; he even sold me on the bad parts of it. Quentin Tarantino is to me now what John Hughes was to me then; not just a movie-maker, but the creator of a whole alternate universe of cool.

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Ed McMahon RIP

I fondly remember Ed McMahon as part of the fabric of my pop-cultural landscape growing up.

I'm feeling OLD again...

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

RIP Virgin Comics


Journalista reacts to the death of Virgin Comics:

"The Direct Market caters primarily to a closed network of 25-35 year old men who’ve been reading Marvel and DC Comics for over a decade, and have next to no interest in buying anything that doesn’t cater to their narrow set of interests. You can occassionally snag a moderate number of readers by producing work that grabs them by the fanboy short-hairs — vampires, zombies and licensed versions of characters or creative works that they fondly remember from childhood are usually required — but anything else is slow death where money is concerned. Treat the Direct Market as though it were a healthy, diverse and dependable sales environment and you might as well be jumping off a cliff."

In general, Virgin Comics seemed like a high class operation with beautiful art and high-quality production (not to mention: big name celebrities!). But it didn't have men in tights. Ergo: the masses didn't buy them. Ergo: the line failed.

Is this true? If so, whose fault is it? The Big Two? The direct market? Are the fans just too close-minded?

Can there be a big comics publisher on the level of DC or Marvel who puts out non-superhero comics? Isn't Image like this, a little?

Will superheroes and comics be synonymous until the end of time?

Um...wasn't some of those Virgin Comics sorta superheroey anyway? Are the capes a must?

Was counting on the Direct Market audience to know who Deepak Chopra was, and be impressed that he was writing a comic book, too much a gamble?

Now where will Hugh Jackman write comic books?

Saturday, August 09, 2008

Bernie Mac RIP


This coming so soon after George Carlin...

Comedian Bernie Mac just passed away at the age of 50 from complications from pneumonia. He starred in TV series The Bernie Mac Show, and appeared in Charlie's Angels 2, Transformers, Friday, and the Ocean's Eleven series.

Like his idol Bill Cosby, Mac wasn't just a comedian but a storyteller. In one skit he describes taking care of his drug addict sister's small children after they are taken away from her. It is an incredibly politically incorrect and even harsh narrative. He does away with the sentimentalities you usually hear in such stories. But the genius is that it is also clear he really loves those kids.

In this clip, Mac describes the need to have love in your comedy, and how listening with his dying mother to Bill Cosby changed his life:

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Thursday, October 11, 2007

The Jokester: RIP, Funny Man


No, maybe he wasn't as well known as his evil counterpart.

Maybe he didn't have a "Ha Ha Hacienda."

Maybe he was just a throwaway "Countdown" character that Sean McKeever & Jamal Igle invested far too much wonderful writing and art to.

But he was somebody, dammit!

And now he's gone.


I don't know...

First Puppet Master dies, then Jokester. Now I received an e-mail that somebody died in the new issue of "Captain Carrot."

Stop this world, I want to get off!

(sniff)

Anyway...

Jokester, I have one thing to say to you. And that is:

GOODBYE, FUNNY MAN!

And...

Thanks...for the memories.