Actress and host Marisha Ray makes her much deserved Geekscape debut! She talks about her projects ‘Super Power Beat Down’ and ‘Batgirl: Spoiled’! And of course, because drama should follow any good actress, this could be the end of ‘Batgirl: Spoiled’ since Warner Bros just sent them a cease and desist! What are they going to do now!?! Also, how wearing a spirit hood absolutely makes you less of a man and Marisha and I review ‘Thor 2: The Dark World’!

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And listen to the full conversation here:

Hot off the heels of Stan Lee’s Comikaze, Jon Schnepp drops in to Geekscape to talk about the status of his Kickstarted documentary ‘The Death of Superman Lives: What Happened?’ and his new project ‘Unicrom: The Unicorn Barbarian‘, which is a project so amazing you’ll just have to check it out for yourself! Also, my parents sit in as guest co-hosts and we talk about writing, how video games as a kid almost drove them crazy and what comic books to read. PLUS! Jon and I talk about the amazing possibilities of Marvel’s newly announced Netflix series based on Daredevil, Iron Fist, Luke Cage, Jessica Jones and The Defenders!

Subscribe to the Geekscape podcast on iTunes!

And listen to the full conversation here:

Here’s a clip from the Lion Forge Comics panel at the 2013 Stan Lee’s Comikaze Expo in which my editor Shannon Denton and I talk a bit more about what’s coming up in our Miami Vice comic book series! Is it in continuity? What characters will be included? What’s being changed and what’s staying the same? And of course, will there be any sex? Rampage Jackson himself (who was sitting next to me during the panel) chimes in on that one!

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And listen to the full conversation here:

From The Walking Dead to Left 4 Dead and World War Z to Rob Zombie,Zombies are everywhere these days (well, at least in pop culture). But could they actually make the transition from fictional monsters to fact? In this panel, we sit down with Matt Mogk, Zombie specialist and head of The Zombie Research Society, Gavin Hignight from FEARnet and Shawn Kirkham from Skybound Entertainment (The Walking Dead) to talk about the science, history and social ramifications behind our biggest undead sensations, all in the hopes of separating the zombie facts from the zombie fiction (before it’s too late)!

Subscribe to the Geekscape podcast on iTunes!

And listen to the full conversation here:

Everyone loves Godzilla, Power Rangers, Ultra-Man, Rodan, Kamen Rider and Giant Robots! And recently, Hollywood has gotten in on the act with Kaiju and Giant Robot films like Pacific Rim and next summer’s Godzilla film. Are these Japanese mainstays the next big thing in American pop-culture (or is it just another Hollywood trend)? I’m joined by working Hollywood professionals like F.J. DeSanto (Cyborg 009), Tommy Yune (Robotech), George Krstic (Star Wars: The Clone Wars) and Gregory Snegoff (Robotech) for an in-depth discussion on the past, present, future and Americanization of Kaiju and Japanese Men in Suit properties. These properties have long since taken over Japan. Are we next!?!

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And listen to the full conversation here:

On the main stage at the 2013 Comikaze Expo, I got a chance to sit down with actor and director Edward James Olmos and talk about Battlestar Gallactica, Miami Vice, Blade Runner and more! As a surprise addition, actor Michael Hogan joins us to talk about playing Colonel Tigh to Olmos’ Captain Adama and doing voice work on Skyrim and Mass Effect!

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Subscribe to the Geekscape podcast on iTunes!

And listen to the full conversation here:

Comikaze is this weekend! It’s been a long time coming… and nobody knows Comikaze better than the cast of Syfy’s ‘Fangasm’, who served as Comikaze interns this past spring! This is a really solid episode as we discuss issues like Cosplay is not Consent with Molly McIsaac, what got us into being geeks with Kristin Hackett and Paul Perkins and Marvel VS DC with Mike Reed! Also, what REALLY went down between Sal and Dani when the cameras weren’t rolling? Plus! Guest co-host Andrew Duvall brings his girlfriend Lisa Best by the show to talk about their new web series ‘The Apartment’! And I definitely have a Fangasm!

You know that old piece of advice “you are your friends”? Well, great. Because honestly, I’ve always tried to live by it. But then I read the first three issues of the controversial comic book series ‘Pregnant Bitches of War’ (gee, how could that be controversial!?!) and realized I might need to keep better company. This book, co-written by our Doc of the Dead director Alexandre O. Philippe, is pretty fucked up. It revolves around five women who happen to be at the wrong pregnancy support group at the wrong time (and space) in the wrong building when almost 100 years in the past Nikola Tesla triggers a time machine that sucks them into adventure… and pre-Nazi Germany!

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I’ll sum up issue 1 by telling you that it includes a pre-dictator Hitler as well as some mammary sucking and a ton of guns and bullets. There really were moments in the book where I looked at the page and said to myself ‘now that’s really fucked up’ only to turn to the next one and find that it had just been topped. But that’s not to say that this is shock just for shock’s sake. This is actually a pretty good book! It’s really well written, the plot is insane yet the artwork and the pacing keep things very clear and engaging. A lot of comics over the past decade have tried their hand at becoming the next ‘Preacher’, with its outrageous story yet captivating characters. Only ‘Pregnant Bitches of War’ has gotten close. So it’s fitting that ‘Preacher’ cover artist Glenn Fabry did one for the series.

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Issues 2 and 3 maintain the same breakneck insanity that issue 1 delivered and they actually notch it up a few times. Alexandre and his co-writer Clay Adams do a really great job of starting each issue with a disorienting reintroduction to the plot then yanking the merry-go-round to a stop right as you’re about to hurl only to start the insanity up again in a few panels. I’ll be honest. The ending to issue 3 made me queasy and it’s been a while since a book did that. Through all of the titty sucking, time traveling and rampant violence of the first three issues I found myself realizing that I cared about these characters and experienced their horrors alongside them. And the book does get pretty dark even as it’s careening around each turn. It’s one of the most unpredictable things I’ve ever read.

And again, this is not shock for shock’s sake. This is a really fun book with defined characters and a unique voice. Could it have skirted controversy by having a female creator on board (Issue 3 doesn’t have a cover due to creative objections by the artist)? Would this book have happened with a female creator on board? Well, Alexandre’s French so that has to count for something…

I urge everyone reading this to click through to the Fried Comics page where you can find the full first issue to try out. Hell, they’re only 99 cents, so if you don’t like it I haven’t even cost you a Snickers bar. Honestly, give it a read and try and tell me you’ve ever read anything like this book. Then also try telling me that you didn’t like it even in the least bit. It’s wrong, it’s twisted but it’s well done. You’ll probably find yourself as surprised as I did. Pregnant Bitches of War is a sweet title and one that’ll sure leave a taste in your mouth (and that taste is the taste of Nazi breast milk). Now if you’ll excuse me, I have to go rethink my friendship with Mr. Philippe.

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Longtime friend Canyon Prince returns to Geekscape, hot off the heels of finishing his first two films as part of ‘2 Guys And A Film‘! This time he brings along fellow filmmaker James Thomas and actor J Michael Briggs! They break down the successful productions of ‘Hard Sun’, which I loved, and ‘Run Like Hell’ and talk about the next step… a slate of FIVE back to back productions! If you’re an indie filmmaker, and even if you’re not, this is a pretty interesting conversation about just going out and doing it!

The next game in the Batman Arkham series hits next week with ‘Batman: Arkham Origins’! But this time there are some changes! Developer Rocksteady Games has given way to Warner Brothers Montreal and both Kevin Conroy and Mark Hamill have been replaced as Batman and The Joker! Luckily, I think we’re in really good hands, as new Batman voice actor Roger Craig Smith can attest to on this episode as he talks about becoming the Dark Knight, the difference in playing him as opposed to Captain America on Disney’s ‘Avengers Assemble’ and how he got into voice over work to begin with! There’s also a ton more, include a call from ‘Airwolf’ writer David Gorden to talk about the new comic’s release and guest co-host Andrew Duvall from SyFy’s ‘Fangasm’!

I hope it hasn’t become annoying to you Geekscapists since we announced it here back in July, but we are basically family with the Lionforge folks (one of their head honchos is our very own longtime Geekscapist DJ Hyjak!) so you’ll be hearing a bit more about their original titles and the NBCUniversal TV properties they’ve licensed to develop into comic books! And starting today, you can check out 2 of those titles, Airwolf and Knight Rider, on the Comics Plus App and will be available soon on Amazon, Google Books and more.

I’m excited for these books. I know that I have my own horse in the race (Miami Vice comes out next month) but I’ve become friends with Airwolf and Knight Rider writers David Gorden and Geoffrey Thorne over the past few months and also a fan of their work. David and I spent the past weekend at NYCC doing interviews and promotion for the books and when we weren’t at the convention we could be found wolfing down wings with Big Yanks at the Geekscape NYCC Meetup, rooting for David’s Saint Louis Cardinals or hunting ghosts on the streets of New York (really, we found some green ectoplasmic evidence… and I have proof!). He’s a good friend and I can’t wait to see what he does with the property. Geoffrey Thorne was a regular at the Geekscape booth at San Diego Comic Con and I even had a dream a few weeks ago that he had cast me in an adaptation of The Greatest American Hero (really, I had this dream and I do not understand it… and there is no adaptation of The Greatest American Hero that I know of).

Suffice to say, beyond our personal ties here at Geekscape, they are great creators, they are indie creators, and I urge you all to show them your support by checking out these books. There’s more that I could say (and probably will in the coming months) but I’ll let the artwork from the books’ covers and interiors speak for themselves! The press release about the books follows!

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LOS ANGELES and ST. LOUIS – Oct. 16, 2013 – Digital publisher Lion Forge Comics launched two new digital comic books today based on the celebrated 1980s TV shows “Airwolf” and “Knight Rider.” Lion Forge acquired the licensing rights to the properties from NBCUniversal Television Consumer Products earlier this year, along with three additional properties that are set to launch this quarter.
 
Airwolf is developed as a fresh take on the original series, which centers around a high-tech military helicopter named “Airwolf” and its crew, led by pilot Stringfellow Hawke, as they embark on a variety of highly dangerous, international missions. The comic is written by David Gorden (Catalyst Prime: Accel and Catalyst Prime: Quincredible), with Koi Turnbull (Fathom) handling artwork.
 
Knight Rider, written by Geoffrey Thorne (Leverage, Ben 10), focuses on crime fighter Michael Knight, the character made famous by actor David Hasselhoff, and his Knight Industries Two Thousand (K.I.T.T.), an artificially intelligent and technologically advanced Pontiac Firebird Trans Am. Jason Johnson (Wetworks, Godstorm) is on board as the artist for the comic.
 
“We can’t wait to let fans relive the action-packed experiences of these iconic shows not only as digital comics, but with contemporary events, technologies and other details incorporated,” said David Steward II, founder and CEO, Lion Forge. “We know readers will appreciate experiencing these stories with a modern twist, while still feeling like they’re reliving past shows.”
 
“It’s always gratifying to see our television properties reimagined in new and unique ways,” said Chris Lucero, director of Global Consumer Products Licensing for NBCUniversal Television. “With exciting artwork that complements updated storylines, I know fans of our shows will enjoy new adventures with these beloved TV icons.”
 
The comics are available now via the Comics Plus App and will be available in the future through the Amazon Kindle Bookstore, Google Books and other e-book stores.
 
Lion Forge will also be releasing the first digital issues of popular NBCUniversal properties “Miami Vice,” “Punky Brewster” and “Saved By the Bell” over the next two months.

This was my first New York Comic Con so I didn’t really know what to expect. I’m a veteran a of San Diego Comic Con, the various Wizard World’s, WonderCon and now Comikaze and each convention has its own personality; a unique combination of its location, attendees and exhibitors. And upon arriving on Thursday at the Javits Center and walking the floor for a few hours, New York Comic Con’s was a bit hard to pinpoint.

All of the regular exhibitors were there, including Lion Forge, the company I’m the writing Miami Vice comic book for, who brought be out to promote the book (coming this November!). And of course there were plenty of cosplayers (like my dog Chappy, who stopped crowds in his Chewbacca costume) and fans! But the personality of NYCC remained elusive, like a tough uncle to the west coast’s Wonder Cons or a compact version of San Diego Comic Con. Early on, I really found myself wondering ‘what’s the difference?’

My dog got caught by security...
My dog got caught by security…

Then I discovered Artist Alley, an almost separate convention in a distant section of the Javits Center. It took some searching (go outside of the main hall, take a right down a long hallway past the panel rooms and into a completely separate building) but I found it… and now I knew what people meant when they called this “the real con”. Major artists like Humberto Ramos, Jim Cheung and Jerome Opeña were doing commissions and selling prints alongside more indie artists like Freddie E Williams II and Ben Templesmith. And those well known indie artists were signing alongside lesser known artists like Matthew J. Fletcher and Christopher Uminga. The spirit of both excitement and potential collaboration was in the air, something that many folks claim has been missing for years at San Diego Comic Con.

Art by Christopher Uminga
Art by Christopher Uminga

I spent a lot of time there, walking the rows, discovering new artists and just letting the energy surround me. I talked at length with my friend Dave Parkin, who was selling his modern western The Devil is Due in Dreary and introduced myself to Jim Mahfood, a friend of the Lion Forge guys who is working on a project I can’t wait to talk about here on Geekscape. Super Action Man artist Ace Continuado had a booth and was showing his work to potential employers from the big two! There was Chrissie Zullo, who made incredible Miyazaki pieces (I obviously asked for a Ni No Kuni one) and Brad Abraham, whose comic series Mix Tape is a love letter to a specific era of music, with each issue being centered around a different song from late 80s/early 90s!

Legend of Korra by Chrissie Zullo
Legend of Korra by Chrissie Zullo

The commissions were all pretty reasonable and all of the artists were unique and talented. Unlike any other con I’d attended, NYCC’s artist alley was what going to a con was all about, a convention experience that true to its roots as an art form almost completely uninterrupted by any mass media co-opting. As I sat on the plane back to Los Angeles, I couldn’t help but bring some of that contagious excitement back with me, a head filled with new and dynamic images and a notebook filled with contact information and drawings from some of the most talented artists around. Forget the people who tell you that New York Comic Con is just an east coast version of the west coast cons. NYCC’s Artist Alley makes it a true experience separate from the glitz and glamor of Hollywood and worth the trip alone!

If you’re going to NYCC 2013 (like we are), let’s meet up!

Sure, there’ll be plenty of things going on at the Javits Center during the day, but what about meeting some of your Geekscapists for dinner and a hang out once the Con ends?

Here are the details:

Friday, October 11th!

We are meeting at Lansdowne Road! They’re a few blocks North of the Con, a short walk or shorter taxi ride!

599 10th Ave  New York, NY 10036

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Check out their menu (it’s affordable and good).

Dinner – 7pm (everyone handles their own tab)

Hanging Out – 8pm and on!

It’s early, so you’ll have plenty of time to visit the parties after Matt Kelly regales you with endless stories about the crappiest VHS movies in his collection!

 

A packed episode! In the first half hour, we have the cast of the hilarious ‘Bitter Party of Five’! If you haven’t watched an episode yet, go to Blip.tv and check it out. They are amazing! Mary Birdsong, Greg Cromer, Tricia O’Kelley and Romy Rosemont talk failed pilots, the ups and down of being a Hollywood actor and spider impregnation… don’t worry… it makes perfect sense!

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Then, in the second half of the show, ‘Zero Charisma’ directors Katie Graham and Andrew Matthews drop by with star Sam Eidson to talk role playing games, finally having the movie released and the sincerity of being a geek! I would say that’s a pretty action packed episode right there!

‘Zero Charisma’ finally comes to VOD this coming Tuesday!

Briefly: Warner Bros. has just reminded us how incredible Middle Earth can be, and just how excited we are to jump back into it.

An action-packed new trailer for The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug has just debuted online, and things look to be shaping up nicely. The preview is chock-full of new footage, showing off Bilbo discovering the ring, hiding that fact from Gandalf, and giving us our first taste of Benedict Cumberbatch’s phenomenal portrayal of Smaug.

Seriously, we can’t wait. The Desolation of Smaug is going to look damn pretty in 48FPS 3D. Take a look at the newest trailer below, and let us know if you’re excited. The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug hits theatres on December 13th!

The second in a trilogy of films adapting the enduringly popular masterpiece The Hobbit, by J.R.R. Tolkien, “The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug” continues the adventure of the title character Bilbo Baggins (Martin Freeman) as he journeys with the Wizard Gandalf (Ian McKellen) and thirteen Dwarves, led by Thorin Oakenshield (Richard Armitage) on an epic quest to reclaim the lost Dwarf Kingdom of Erebor.

GTA Online has launched and you need a crew to watch your back. So you might as well join the official Geekscape crew on the Rockstar Games Social Club so you can roll the streets of Los Santos with people who will actually watch your back!

We’re young but we’re sprung. And we’ll be pulling heists all over Los Santos.

If you’re a member of the Rockstar Social Club, click here to join the crew and find other Geekscapists in GTA Online.

Last week, Brian Tee got us rooting for ‘Mortal Kombat: Legacy 2′ as Liu Kang! Now, on the day of the new series’ release on Machinima, director Kevin Tancharoen joins us in the studio to talk video games, Mortal Kombat and Hollywood adaptations! On top of that, our friend Andrew Duvall from SyFy’s ‘Fangasm’ joins me as as co-host to talk about Geek Sincerity VS Reality TV! This is a great episode, which includes talk of video game adaptations we’d love to see, the best parts of GTA 5 and giant Kaiju monsters! PLUS! The challenge of bringing Mortal Kombat to screen (of course)!

Actor Brian Tee is the latest actor to take on the role of Liu Kang in Machinima’s ‘Mortal Kombat: Legacy’ Season 2. And this summer, we saw Brian get tossed out a window by Hugh Jackman in ‘The Wolverine’. So of course I jumped at the chance to have him on the show to talk comics and video games! In this episode, we talk about how his character D.K. in ‘Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift’ was actually a good guy, growing up as a football player and discovering your inner theater geek and how Brian used to play Mortal Kombat in the pizza shop where he worked. And of course, what is it like to step into the shoes of a beloved video game character? PLUS! I talk some GTA V! How is it already the best GTA game?

Destin Pfeff and Rachel Federoff are best known as castmembers of the reality show ‘Millionaire Matchmaker’, but they’re actually huge, passionate geeks. This episode, they bring to Geekscape their specific sense of style, educate me on the ins and outs of Cyberlesque and talk about growing up geeks. Destin gives his opinions on the new Robocop trailer and we discuss the plus and minuses of Hollywood remakes. Also, what advice would they give to geeks out there, searching for some love? Plus! Ben Dunn hangs out in the studio to find out if he and I can pull off some new style accessories (I bet you can bet the answers to that one)!

PAX Prime is over and it’s time to sift through the ashes! The brain trust of Noah Roman, Garrett Medina and Ash Paulsen join me this week to discuss everything that they witnessed in Seattle! What were the highlights from the weekend? How is PAX different than E3? Is the 2DS still a joke? What games are we looking forward to the most? Were there any indies that jumped out? Does Garrett play too much Pokémon? And Ash and Garrett talk about meeting Mega Man creator Keiji Inafune! It’s a packed episode of video game talk so you’re not going to want to miss it!

Jacob Lopez is Geekscape’s longest running videogame writer! Six years ago, Jacob (known as Jake108 around these parts) asked to do a preview of Halo 3 for the site and the rest is history. Now on the verge of GTA 5, Batman Arkham Origins and the rest of the Fall releases, Jake and I sit down to talk about what’s exciting and not so exciting. We also provide an update on the PS4 vs XBox One debate and discuss the drawbacks of buying on Day 1 Also, Josh Jackson calls in to offer his 2 cents on the debate and talk about why he’s not going to replay Wind Waker and a familiar Geekscapist calls in to talk about removing my skin! Yippee!

 

F.J. DeSanto is a film producer whose credits include Frank Miller’s ‘The Spirit’ (but I love him for producing the animated ‘Turok: Son of Stone’)! But he’s also a comic book writer! Now he’s on Geekscape talking about his new Archaia comic book ‘Cyborg 009’, based on the classic manga from legendary creator Shotaro Ishinomori! I also talk some Turok (because Turok is awesome) and F.J. helps to explain the new climate of creator ownership in comics, including the BOOM! and Archaia acquisition! PLUS! Ian Kerner calls up to talk about Ben Affleck being cast as Batman in Man of Steel 2!

 

This is it! Geekscape 300! Joining us for this super-sized Geekscape spectacular is Clerks star Marilyn Ghigiotti, who not only brings us lasagna (which made my head explode), but also catches us up on her post-Clerks work and talks about the process of finding out she’s going to be in ‘Clerks 3’! Gilmore, Ben Dunn and Ian Kerner appear to reenact the first Geekscape! Witney Siebold and Jason Trost talk ‘Elysium’, with Ian Kerner and Jon Schnepp (who gives us an updated on ‘The Death of Superman Lives’ documentary)! Stan Lee’s Comikaze organizer Regina Carpinelli previews what’s in store for this year’s Comikaze and Geekscape writers Juan Carlos Marquez and Josh Jackson tell us why ‘Pikmin 3’ is definitely worth picking up! PLUS! ‘Airwolf’ comic writer David Gorden calls in along with longtime Geekscape writers Jacob Lopez, Shane O’Hare, Matt Kelly and Derek Kraneveldt! JUAN CARLOS!!!

 

It’s Shark Week! So of course we have to have ‘Sharknado’ writer Thunder Levin on the show to talk about the biggest TV hit of the summer! Among the things we’ll be covering: where did the idea come from, why writer Sharknado but not ‘Shark Storm’ and the revelation of Ian Ziering as a big time action hero! Was anyone prepared for the Sharknado craze (could they ever be!?!)? Also, what’s with all of the remakes and comic book adaptations and it is killing the movie going experience? Is VOD the new VHS? What’s the story behind ‘Mutant Vampire Zombies in the Hood’ and how can we bring it back?!?

 

This is it, the best breakdown of ‘The Wolverine’ that you’re going to get from the best source around. X-Pert Ian Kerner cuts through The Wolverine and dissects what works and doesn’t work in this fun entry in the X-Men saga. Did they have to deviate from the comics? How did the movie have more in common with the X-Men storyline than the Claremont and Miller mini-series? Were the Silver Samurai or Viper depictions up to snuff? How does The Wolverine fit in and rank with the rest of the X-Men films? What’s coming up in Days of Future Past? Here are all the answers, in complete Ian Kerner glory!

That’s all she wrote for the 2013 San Diego Comic Con, Geekscape’s 4th as exhibitors and 8th in a row! Now it’s time to recap the misadventures with first time attendees Johnny Ice and Crippled Kenny with running commentary by my wife Laura! Was Johnny’s mind completely blown? What were the must things that he discovered? What did he take away from it the most? Kenny fills us in on just how far Comic Con has to go to make things better for their handicapped attendees! Shane O’Hare calls in to recap a drunken night of horror during Geek Spring Break! Were all the parties worth it? Matt Kelly calls up to tell us about his new 2-part podcast conversation with his brother about addiction and Derek Kraneveldt helps us filter through all the memories of the best SDCC ever! PLUS! ‘Doc of the Dead’ producer Kerry Deignan Roy calls up to give an update on Geekscape’s co-produced zombie doc!

 

San Diego is upon us! And just like in years past, the Geekscape booth has become a cool place to meet all sorts of creators and personalities (beyond our own)!

As SDCC 2013 starts up, here’s the signings and appearance schedule for the Geekscape booth #3919! Be sure to drop by not only to meet some great people but also to see what the folks at Lionforge Comics have brewing, get your first look at our Miami Vice comic book (in addition to LionForge’s Knight Rider, AirWolf and a ton of others) and see the first footage from Paul London: The Hero of the Prophecy!

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Thursday 18th
1pm – Pinup Star Claire Sinclair
2pm – Adult Personality Tanya Tate

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3pm – The Cupcake Quarterly Signing

Friday 19th
12pm – 1:30pm – Orlando Jones

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2pm – Carl Reed and Lorenzo Lizana Free Sketch Break!
4pm – Blood Kiss Signing (Amber Benson, writer Michael Reeves and perhaps a special guest!)
5:30pm – Ballistic Signing with Artist Darick Robertson and Writer Adam Mortimer

Saturday 20th
11am – 12pm – Orlando Jones
1:30pm – 2:30pm Noon – Space Command (Doug Jones, Bill Mumy, creators from Star Trek, Babylon 5 etc.)

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3pm – Rampage Jackson
4pm – Female All Shapes and Sizes Post-Panel Signing (Miracle Laurie, Adrianne Curry, Leah Cevoli, Helena Santos Levy, Dani Lennon and more!)

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Sunday 21st
11pm – Carl Reed and Lorenzo Lizana Free Sketch Break!
2pm – Carl Reed and Lorenzo Lizana Free Sketch Break!
3pm – Comic Book Writer Josh Dysart

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The 2013 San Diego Comic Con is right around the corner! We’re old veterans here at Geekscape, but that doesn’t mean we’re any less excited when Comic Con rolls around each year! To help us prep, 20 year SDCC veteran Matt Raub is in the studio breaking down the Must Dos and Must Avoids, as well as sharing some of his greatest, and worst, Comic Con memories! Also joining us is Nick Gregorio, longtime Geekscape friend but first time Comic Con attendee! Plus! Sci Fi master Marc Zicree calls in to give us an update on Space Command and give some great Comic Con advice and author Marcus Sakey calls in to geek out with us, talk about his new book ‘Brilliance’ and discuss his insane job hosting The Travel Channel’s ‘Hidden City’! See you in San Diego!

 

If you aren’t following comics legend Jim Steranko on Twitter, you shouldn’t be using Twitter. If you’re not using Twitter, reading Jim Steranko’s tweets make it all worth it. In the last 2 days alone, he’s regaled us with stories of pimp slapping Batman creator Bob Kane at a San Diego Comic Con (a must read) and using an ice-pick to draw a full body portrait of a woman onto the hood of car! The man’s stories are as larger than life as he is!

This morning I found a Steranko story on Twitter that I had to share, both as a Steranko fan and a dog lover. I won’t spoil it for you here, but I was so moved by it that I had to piece it together as prose and post it for you all.

When I was in my early teens, I was in a neighborhood gang, generally a reasonable group of guys. And we often did good things for the neighborhood. But darkness falls regularly and it’s easy to become part of it. Old man Krott fell into that category. He was a blight on even my neighborhood. Burly, thick-lipped, with a European accent, he ruled his household like a tyrant. His wife (who was never heard to have said a word in public) trundled off to a factory before dawn every morning, always walking no matter what the weather to save busfare. Their only child was not allowed to play with the other kids. Krott had no job and stayed home listening to the radio during the day, except when taking walks to nose into other people’s business. He was shunned by neighbors fed up with his twichy, noxious rants. His face was a scowling mask and and he only seemed pleased when he was bullying someone—primarily his family. He was a coward in confrontations.

The Spartans initially ignored the hulk, but I had a growing concern I could not ignore, one that deepened my anger on a primal level. In Krott’ s cluttered backyard, he kept a dog on a four-foot chain, a dark Newfoundland-Mastiff mix, a beautiful animal whose entire world was an eight-foot semi-circle and whose meals consisted of whatever garbage Krott threw him. Dogs are born to chase, play, explore, catch. This one was never allowed to run, never taken for walks. Gaunt, ungroomed, never bathed, but still noble, the animal spent his entire life a prisoner of his sadistic master. Any approach from the back alley was greeted with a savage attack that not only tested the chain’s strength, but threatened to break the animal’s neck as well. Krott would burst from the back door, grab a shovel or rake, rush to the fence to intercept any intruder; if he saw no reason for the outburst, he’d crack the dog over the head or spine with the tool, yelling at him to shut up.

The dog was never taken inside, even in freezing rainstorms or blizzards that would blanket an open-front shed, his only retreat from weather and the brutal master who had obviously terrorized him from the time he was a pup. Krott was committing a crime against nature, the most reprehensible aspect of which was that he never gave it a second thought. He had turned a fine animal into a snarling beast. Although the dog had never heard a kind word or experienced a gentle touch in his life, a strange rapport began to develop between the animal and me. I walked the alley often and, when possible, would talk to the dog, whose attacks eventually subsided to a few warning barks. I helped my cause by saving half a hot dog or a few crusts from dinner and throwing them into his area.

As his aggression subsided, the dog seemed to look forward to my attention—not to mention the small snacks offered. He quieted down, and in doing so, gave me an opportunity to take a better look at him. Between fence railings, I watched the dog for a long time, staying very still and finally realizing that the animal, head as huge as a small bear’s, had the kindest eyes I had ever seen.

The visits continued unabated, with Krott often running into the backyard, shouting, “Get the hell out of here or I’ll break your neck, you little bastard!” Sometimes I’d would just continue walking: sometimes I could not overcome the urge to respond: “If I looked like you, I’d let you do it!” or a simple, elegant “Kiss my ass, gorilla-face!”

Predictably, Krott developed a run of bad luck. His old car, rarely used because gasoline cost money, frequently had its tires go flat and its door locks become impassible. In the summer, toothpicks were wedged into them and broken off. In the winter, water—which froze instantly—was somehow squirted into the keyholes. Limburger cheese would be tucked neatly into the engine block to be melted & smelled after any drive.Sugar & Draino were found in the gas tank. Roadkill would mysteriously appear wedged into the glove compartment, sometimes undiscovered for several very hot days. Poison ivy was mysteriously rubbed onto the backyard fenceposts where Krott often leaned. Small stones, apparently dropped by passersby a handful at a time, would transform his front yard into a rock quarry by the end of every week. At times, when he was watching a certain gang of kids create what might be called a diversion in the back alley, something nasty would occur in front of his house. A sizable pool of tar materialized on his front porch one night. His windows were painted black from the outside another time.  Once, when he could not open his front door, he discovered that it had been glued with resin epoxy to the door frame. Notes, with words cut from magazines, were slid under his front door, saying, “Move out or die, Nazi!”

Krott spent many sleepless nights behind his window shades hoping to intercept the phantom who was making his life as miserable as he was making those around him. He was cursed and everyone in the neighborhood sensed it. What no one knew was that someone was gradually able to enter the back yard without the dog barking, although he did not pet the animal, something he very badly wanted to do. They needed more time, so the dog could trust the stranger. Meanwhile, he could stand in the shadows without being seen from the house. Moving out of them would, of course, reveal his presence, but he always knew when it was safe or not because the dog, using a sense that cannot be explained, would always look at the back windows when Krott was hiding there. The dog became the stranger’s ally and his instincts never failed.

The following winter, after a brutal snowstorm, the dog was discovered one morning frozen to death, curled up in his shed. Part of me also died that night. That spring on one dark night, someone apparently removed all the nails holding Krott’s back-porch steps together and he broke his hip falling from them into a pile of rubble. Not long afterward, he vacated the house and the neighborhood forever.

Not really earth shattering news, but cool nonetheless, especially for fans excited about ‘Days of Future Past’ and the appearance of Magneto’s kids, Pietro and Wanda Maximoff. Magneto’s kids are showing up and director Bryan Singer just tweeted a picture of the family’s lovely abode, appropriately 70s style.

And we think it’s pretty awesome. Take a look:

MaximoffHouse

Now, how could a family growing up together in such a quaint little house get so screwed up? I guess we’ll have to wait and see!