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Showing posts with label Comic Mix. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Comic Mix. Show all posts

Monday, March 01, 2010

More Man-Crotch Than You Will Ever See In One Comic


ComicMix presents...a Thomases/D'Orazio/Breyfogle production...Munden's Bar in "Good For The Goose."

I've always been a big fan of Norm Breyfogle's comic work, so I got a big kick out of working on this.

Yeah, that's me in the t-shirt.

Bonus question: what Marvel heroine did Martha Thomases co-create in the 1980s?

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Comicon.com's The Pulse Plot Point In Comic Mix's EZ-Street

click for full-size

Okay, this is a first --

Comicon.com's The Pulse, a popular comics news website, was recently featured as a plot point in Comic Mix's webcomic EZ-Street,

Plus, Neil Vokes is called an "asshole" by one of the characters.

You know what this means, don't you?

Petition Comic Mix to get my blog on EZ-Street as a plot point!

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

"Comic Books Will Destroy You"


How many times have I heard variations of this theme from old-time collectors, veteran comic book writers, jaded editors?

How many times?

That's what I thought about as I read EZ-STREET by Robert Tinnell & Mark Wheatley on Comic Mix. (The entire graphic novel is being serialized there for free, by the way).


I quoteth from EZ-STREET:

...I'm trying to save you from a lifetime of misery.

See -- you can be really, really good at something-- anything-- when it comes to the arts-- and it won't matter.

It's all about networking and ass-kissing and--

Frankly, it's about surviving. Winning the war of attrition. Which takes resources...

I'm not being mean. I'm telling you this because I like you...

You need to give this shit up right now. Before it's too late.

Do you want to be thirty-five years old owning nothing but deft on a credit card? Trying to break into a business you love? And finally realizing the dirty little secret--

That it doesn't love you back?!

Compare this to other off-the-record quotes I've heard in my career:

"Once you hit a certain age, you're not the flavor-of-the-month anymore. They want the flavor-of-the-month. The editors, they want to be rock stars. They want to hang out with beautiful, interesting people. And it doesn't matter if you can do the job, or what you did for them in the past. You're nothing to them anymore."

*** *** ***

"Look, if Michelangelo stepped into this office right now, I couldn't give him work unless he was a big name. I can only use big names."

*** *** ***

"Sorry I didn't make it in for the meeting today, but my arm just got numb for no reason. Doctor wanted to check it out. It was weird."

and later, the same person,

"They found me unconscious on my bathroom floor. For no reason. One moment you're awake and the next you're not."

and later, the same person,

"I'm just going to put my time in, and get out. Just another couple of years is all."

*** *** ***

"The problem is that they think comic books owes them. That's the problem with hiring fans."

*** *** ***

"I don't hate the man. But he was an alcoholic and bi-polar and he made the lives of everyone around him miserable. And yeah, I guess I hated him."

*** *** ***

"He never recovered from having to do that. He was too nice."

*** *** ***

"And then after she was fired she had all her belongings put out in the hallway for people to take."

"Did she give her time to take her stuff?"

"Nope. I think there's still stuff there. Do you want to come see if there's anything left?"

*** *** ***

"And nobody even had the decency to tell me about the new team. I had to find out on Newsarama."

*** *** ***

"And I asked them why I wasn't being hired anymore, give me a reason. I mean, what else am I good at?"

*** *** ***

(gesturing to his office)

"One day I'm getting out and selling all this on eBay. And I'm going to live like a king. I may even go to the Bahamas."

*** *** ***

"F**k that s**t, I do commercial art now."

*** *** ***

About a fairly famous comic writer:

"He's not that great a writer. But he's a great networker. He knows just what to say. And that's how he built this."

*** *** ***

"So everybody gets laid off except the same core people who have been drinking with each other every week. Funny how that works out."

*** *** ***

"I made him what he is today. Back then, he was just this greasy, nerdy fan. Didn't know how to dress. I had to teach him how to dress!"

"I-isn't that him two tables down?"

"S**t!"

*** *** ***

"I remember he picked up this desk and just threw it into the wall. And he was the type of quiet, serious guy who didn't do things like that."

*** *** ***

Heard multiple times about numerous persons:

"He's a brilliant artist. Too bad he's on the coke."

*** *** ***

"So one day he calls three of us into his office. And my friend tells me, 'you know, he's going to fire us. And I'm okay about it, but I'm worried about BLANK. I think BLANK, when he hears this, is going to break his neck. And so I need you to do something. If BLANK makes a move like he's going to break his neck, you gotta help me hold him back. You hear me? I'm serious, man. BLANK's gonna kill that mother f**ker. Promise me you'll help me hold him back!'"

*** *** ***

"I'm going to put these letters back here. And so if I die, you'll have proof of who did it."

*** *** ***

(announced multiple times)

"That's it. Today's the day I'm going to quit. I mean it. You'll have to do all this stuff yourself for now on, sorry. You'll have to tell them I moved on."

(never did it)

*** *** ***

"Great artist, horrible human being."

*** *** ***

"Great writer, horrible human being."

*** *** ***

"Great editor, horrible human being."

*** *** ***

"Have you ever heard the one about Wally Wood?"

*** *** ***

Advice on writing comics:

"Read books, dammit! You already read enough comics. Read some f**king books!"

*** *** ***

"But when all is said and done, I really believe he loves those characters."




Tuesday, October 02, 2007

The ComicMix Webcomic Revolution Is LIVE!


Geez, what a difference a day makes, huh?

I click on ComicMix this afternoon and all of the sudden they're with the purdy layout, they got free comics, tabs, all sorts of stuff is happening...

"The name Is John Gaunt, A.K.A. GrimJack, and I'm the guy you hire when you need an a**hole on your side."


See, I like GrimJack already because he's @#%$#& honest.

The first webcomic to launch on ComicMix is "GrimJack: The Manx Cat" #1. You can read 6 pages of it right here. And if you come back the same time next week, 6 more will be waiting for you. After a month, you'll have read issue #1.


A little bit of background on GrimJack for the uninitiated:

1. GrimJack was co-created by John Ostrander ("The Spectre," "Suicide Squad," and a ton of other DC titles) & Timothy Truman ("Hawkworld," Vertigo's "Jonah Hex," "Tarzan")

2. GrimJack is a sword-for-hire, ex-paramilitary, war veteran and ex-child gladiator. That means he's one tough muther.

3. Science fiction/fantasy author supreme Roger Zelazny was a GrimJack fan and paid homage to the character in his The Chronicles of Amber series.
So basically, you get the latest miniseries of this acclaimed title for free. So it's a win-win.

Here is the ComicMix schedule so far:
I'll have some more previews coming up, including an exclusive sneak-peak of "Munden's Bar" tomorrow just in case you can't wait until Friday, and "Simone & Ajax" just in case you can't wait until Saturday.

So give the comics a shot, and bookmark ComicMix and check in every day. And if you like 'em, don't forget to drop a line in their "comments" section and tell the ComicMix crew. They're a great bunch of people working with some great talent & they've worked really hard to put this together for you.

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

The "Comic Mix" Webcomic Revolution

a page from John Ostrander & Tim Truman's "GrimJack,"
appearing exclusively at Comic Mix "Phase 2"
(click for bigger image)

I've been hearing whispers about an intriguing "Phase 2" to the comic book blog/consortium Comic Mix ever since I ran into Glenn Hauman at Kyle Baker's charity baseball game. Glenn was pretty tight-lipped about the whole thing but I thought I heard "original content" uttered but for a second.

Well, at the Baltimore Comic Con, where I attended Comic Mix's press announcement regarding "Phase 2" -- which launches October 2nd -- I got to learn the full extent of the company's publishing plans.

More specifically, webcomic publishing.

"Let's face it, the traditional comic book format is a 15-minute, 20 minute experience," Comic Mix Editor-In-Chief Mike Gold told the audience. "Four bucks is a lot for a 15-minute experience."

Is there more than a bit of irony that legendary former DC Comics group editor & First Comics founder Gold and the other comic book veterans that make up Comic Mix's staff and creative roster would turn to this up-and-coming new medium to showcase their stories?

"The webcomic allows us to be free of many of the publishing constraints that we faced with the traditional format," Gold explained. "With webcomics, we don't need artificial cliffhangers at the end of an issue. We can just let the story tell itself."

And the other thing? The content is free.

Mike Gold: "You don't have to pay a penny."

The list of talent Comic Mix has on-board is impressive, including Mike Baron, Rick Burchett, Chris Burnham, Michael Davis, Ian Gibson, Dick Giordano, Mike Gold, Stuart Gordon, Mike Grell, Bo Hampton, Glenn Hauman, Marc Hempel, Lovern Kindierski, Linda Lessman, Jay Lynch, Frank McLaughlin, William Messner-Loebs, John Ostrander, Andrew Pepoy, Bob Pinaha, Michael H. Price, Bill Reinhold, Nick Runge, John K. Snyder III, Joe Staton, Martha Thomases, Robert Tinnell, Timothy Truman, Trevor Von Eeden, Mark Evan Walker, Matt Webb, Mark Wheatley, Skip Williamson, Marv Wolfman, and John Workman.

It's a lot of familiar names, with familiar properties like "GrimJack," "Jon Sable," "The Adventures of Simone and Ajax," and more.

But Comic Mix "Phase 2" is also about giving a voice to comic creators to tell the stories they've always wanted to tell.
a page from Comic Mix's "Demons of Sherwood," written by Robert Tinnell & painted by Bo Hampton (click for bigger image)

For example, Trevor Von Eeden's graphic novel "Jack Johnson: The Great Black Hope," about the first African-American heavyweight prize-fighter. It's a project that Von Eeden has wanted to publish his whole career. With Comic Mix, he gets that chance.

But what are my personal views on "Phase 2"?

By watching their presentation at Baltimore and just talking to Mike Gold and the other Comic Mix staff, I felt a great deal of energy and excitement coming off of them, an excitement that was quite contagious. They are obviously so passionate about the project.

But also, in their dedication to their talent -- and specifically to established talent some of whom, in my opinion, have been relatively ignored by the mainstream as of late -- I got a real sense of the way comics used to be. It's a family. It's looking at your talent and your staff as a big family. It is looking at the pool of comic book creators and editors who have helped make comic books what it is today -- issue-by-issue, character-by-character -- as a family, a family of people who just want to tell great stories.

And I think that spirit is very important. I think maintaining that continuity is important.

a page from "EZ Street," a graphic novel serialized on Comic Mix by Robert Tinnell & Mark Wheatley
(click for larger image)

But far from looking backward, Comic Mix is about moving forward with new technology that will revolutionize the way we read comics, technology that makes these stories accessible to a wider audience.

Of course, one topic that always comes up in these discussions about webcomics and new comic book publishing ventures in general is the topic of rights.

Gold confirmed that all the creators on Comic Mix will retain both their copyrights & trademarks.

The company will get their revenue from advertising and eventual "hard copy" trade-paperbacks of the stories they serialize on the site.

Related to the topic of the eventual trade-paperbacks, Comic Mix contributor Tim Truman wanted to point out is that "retailers have not been left out of the mix in this." He went on to make an analogy regarding DVD collections of TV shows. "When a show first comes out you don't want to watch all the episodes in one shot. But later, if you really like the show, you can purchase the DVD collection."

I for one am very much looking forward to what the company has to bring to the table (and my screen) come October 2nd. And my blog will be looking at specific Comic Mix projects in future posts.