As COVID-19 burns around the world, the Geekscape team is quarantining at home! In the spirit of Social Distancing, Matt and Derek report in to talk about their quarantine experiences from Philadelphia and Vancouver while I share the news from Los Angeles! Matt talks about how his father has one of the most essential jobs of all and Derek is worried about living with a full time nurse… but not enough to stop snuggling. Meanwhile, I’m just trying to keep myself sane! It’s a new Geekscape podcast! Enjoy!

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Welcome to Weekend Reads! It’s your little, weekly dose of comic book goodness that focuses on some aspect of my weekend reading!

I pretty much punted comic book reading this weekend for what should be obvious reasons; a little Netflix show called Daredevil. Anyways, let’s get into the reads! Well… read:

Extraordinary X-Men (2015-) 008-000
Extraordinary X-Men #8 by Lemire & Ramos

It begins. That’s right, the big X-Men crossover, “Apocalypse Wars” kicks off in the 8th issue of Extraordinary X-Men and so far, so good! The issue serves as a setup for events to come but Lemire offers enough action pieces and character moments to make it a worthwhile read. We have some sweet fight scenes, old villains, and big reveals! Ramos’ art is hit and miss for me, but I’ve been liking what he’s doing with the X-Men, mostly because it gives him a chance to draw non-human characters (something I think he excels at). Cerebra looks so damn good!

I don’t know if this crossover will be awesome or not but it’s off to a good start, and I’m going to keep up with it… but first I’m going to finish Daredevil!

#QOTD Is there a Marvel franchise around right now (any medium) that is better than Netflix’s Daredevil?

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I have a confession; since Marvel’s Secret Wars began back in May I have pretty much taken a break from reading all of their properties. However, just like any addict, I began to get the itch to jump back in again. The options of short series’ to read right now is overwhelming so I decided just to pick one and go with it. That’s how I started reading Brian Michael Bendis’ and Andrea Sorrentino’s Old Man Logan.

Old Man Logan was originally conceived as an eight-issue arc by the creative team of Mark Millar and Steve McNiven that ran through Wolverine #66-72 and ended in Wolverine: Old Man Logan Giant-Size. It received high praise from fans and reviewers alike so it goes without saying that Bendis and Sorrentino have big shoes to fill, and so far they haven’t quite been able to.

In this version of the tale, we meet Logan who has been ruined by two major events in his life. First, from Mysterio secretly manipulating him into killing all of his fellow X-Men and second, the Hulk and his gang murdering his wife and child. The first issue was promising. There were a few necessary pages of setup but for the most part it rolls at a pretty good pace and is dripping with potential by the end of the issue. Unfortunately, that potential has yet to be fulfilled.

As I continued reading into the second, third and fourth issues a problem surfaced, the story fails to gain any substance. It lacks an overarching story arc and feels like a realm of the week with Logan, usually literally, being thrown into a different setting every issue. Bendis does little to make any of Logan’s interactions with other characters have meaning as they are seemingly forgotten in the next issue. The book isn’t all bad though, what it lacks in storytelling it makes up for with it’s art.

There is no doubt that the best part of Old Man Logan is Sorrentino’s art. While Logan jumping from setting to setting lessens the quality of the story, it allows Sorrentino to really show off his artistic range. He transitions Logan from the futuristic Technopolis to the hell-like, symbiote and zombie covered Deadlands with ease. His take on each of the many characters Logan meets along the way, from Sabretooth to Iron Man, are all well handled. I was blown away by his ability to capture Apocalypse’s intimidating and god-like presence. Can someone please reference this while trying to translate him onto the big screen? Please. While I favoured Sorrentino’s larger panels and two page spreads, he did a great job of managing the small, quick action panels that frequently appeared during battle sequences.

Apocalypse
The way Apocalypse should be.

Technopolis
The futuristic Technopolis.

At the end of the day, there’s enough in this series for me to check out the fifth and final issue. Sorrentino’s pencils more than make up for the book’s lack of substance. Hopefully Bendis introduces some sort of payoff to wrap series the up but if not, at least it will be pretty to look at. If you’re reading this, and haven’t read Millar and McNiven’s Wolverine: Old Man Logan, I’d strongly suggest skipping this version and picking that up but if you’ve already read it and want more Old Man Logan, you’ll probably be able to find something you like here.

X-Men: Apocalypse news has been popping this past week!  Today new photos of the characters have been released by 20th Century Fox and we are getting our first good look at Nightcrawler, Cyclops, and Jubilee!  Check out the new photo’s released below:

Boy do these pictures look 80’s (the decade Apocalypse will take place)! And I absolutely love it.  The punk Storm look, the attention to detail on Nightcrawler, and Sansa Stark, portraying Jean Grey, not being covered in bruises all add up to a lot of awesome.  X-men: Apocalypse hits your local theater May 27, 2016.

Roger Ma’s The Zombie Combat Field Guide, a Coloring and Activity Book for Fighting the Living Dead, came out this week and it’s a blast. Is it for adults? Is it for kids? This is tough to say, but anyone interesting in surviving the zombie apocalypse should check it out.

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Just like similar coloring and activity books, except maybe a bit more adult themed, this one has all kinds of fun pages.

For example…a zombie is attacking you and your first thought is to pull on hair to keep their mouth from chewing on your face. Good idea? Bad? Check it out:

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Not only do you have fun coloring, you can also learn! Did you know the decomposed scalp would rip away so easily? Neither did I!

The book also assists in the zombie apocalypse decision making process with fun pages such as this one:

the_zombie_combat_field_guide_4

It’s never an easy decision…right?  These are just some of the really fun pages to check out.

The illustrations by Y.N. Heller are also awesome. It’s so cool seeing such graphic imagery in the format of a coloring book.

The book includes sections on physique, how the zombies attack, and some interesting tips and tricks. Plus, you get to color while you learn. Who doesn’t love coloring?

For ordering information, check out this link. The book is available now!

 

Geekscape author Dennis Finocchiaro covers everything from Legos to movies, and even writes his own stuff. Check out his collection of flash fiction that take place during the zombie apocalypse here.

 

So about a year ago I got introduced to Thrilling Adventure Hour and I was hooked. It was funny, it was smart, it was a nostalgic homage to the old radio plays that my father used to play on long road trips. It was a old- way of storytelling on a completely new media, and I started thinking about writing a story-telling podcast because I loved the idea, and, to be brutally honest, it seemed like a less-expensive, less time-consuming (HA!) venture than doing a web-series while still being creative and fun.

By Halloween I knew it was going to be about zombies, which may or may not have had something to do with The Walking Dead‘s newest season premiering.

By December Jonathan London had green lit it to go on Geekscape.net. You know, if I ever wrote it, recorded it, edited it, etc. January was spent ‘researching’ if researching were to read ‘me on the internet doing f*ck-all.’ I’ve borrowed a chart of the creative process to illustrate:

Courtesy of toothpastefordinner.com
Courtesy of toothpastefordinner.com

It’s clearly very scientific.

In early February, I got a producer who made things like deadlines and budgets and asked if I had a cast? A website? Artwork? Or a, you know, script?

Being a writer, I immediately started work on the most important part: the website. GoDaddy wanted money for a .com (ha!) so we’re now a proud family of the .net family. (.net is the .best!).

The site went live in 4/18 and is just amazing, thanks entirely to my website designer. All I did was send wildly random ideas at 2 a.m. that she managed to distill into coherent design concepts, and even more amazing, managed to make them look good.

Next, clearly, was the artwork. Four hours in photoshop convinced me that I needed to find someone with actual, you  know, design sense, and that’s where my phenomenal poster and logo designer came in. I mean, have you seen these posters?

Artwork done by the amazingly talented Tiffany Shin. Want one? Pledge to our Kickstarter!
Artwork done by the amazingly talented Tiffany Shin. Want one? Pledge to our Kickstarter!

So now February is half gone and after some gentle urging from my producer, episode one got written. Bam! Well, more like, bam-stare-at-the-computer-while-half-watching-The-Good-Wife. But characters started to happen, and stories started to come clear and, I realized, each episode would have music (which resulted in another eight hours of not having to write because I was researching music. For the show. Couldn’t write until I knew the song! It would define the whole episode!).

I always knew there’d be a Survivor. Long conversations with the significant other and my producer convinced me that the Survivor was a woman, that is was five years after the Fall, and that while zombie-like things existed, the show wasn’t about the sad, slow, suffering of the people who were still alive (because so many other shows are doing that so well) but rather the frustrating, funny, fatuous (because alliteration) ways people would still be people, even after the end of the world.

A Survivor who finds an abandoned compound with a still-broadcasting radio tower, and the myriad personalities that she ends up interacting with. Overshadowed by the mysterious cult that abandoned the compound–why? Wow. That actually sounds like it was written by someone who knows what they’re doing.

So, episode one got written (I’d like to say that I never, ever procrastinated that much again, but episode two got written a day before we recorded it and I am currently writing this instead of episode four–what? I’m letting my mind rest!) and then we started casting. 162 open-call auditions later, we cast Mouzam Makkar as the Survivor (and, if you haven’t listened to her yet, she has got the most amazing voice) and Craig Anton as Right Reverend Timmons (who’s just amazing all around). Ironically, neither Mouzam nor Craig were part of the 162 auditions–both were friends I had worked with before, who were kind and gracious enough to offer their phenomenal talent.

So, episodes written. Artwork done. Website done. Found a sound designer (who’s also amazing, again, if you haven’t listened to episode one, I’m just going to keep shamelessly plugging it until you do), and had about a dozen people over for a day-long recording session. In my garage.

 

That'd be my garage.
That’d be my garage.

Which was all very exciting, great-things-start-in-garages except I live under a small plane flight path. Stay tuned for that blooper reel, it’s hi-larious.

So remember, way back in the beginning of this article, where I said podcasts would be easier than a web series? Yeah. To quote a friend “If you don’t show it, you gotta hella tell it.” The whole world is sound. Layered, realistic-sounding world building. Footsteps, door creaks, room tone. I got a whole new vocabulary.

Five days in the editing suite (also my garage), we had a rough cut of episode 1…

Editing suite. AKA, my garage. Pictured: Jessica Westerfield, sound designer extraordinaire.
Editing suite. AKA, my garage. Pictured: Jessica Westerfield, sound designer extraordinaire.

Now part of that was my own learning curve (does that sound like a button push? does that? does that? does that, if we drop the pitch and EQ it? What’s reverb? Oh, god, turn off the reverb…) and part of that was the whole recording in a garage thing, and part of that is just the nature of the beast (to be fair, episode two, which is actually slightly longer, only took a day and half, so we’re either getting better or getting too tired to care).

So, episode one and two written, recorded and editing, website up, posters done…now we needed some funding. Not a huge amount, but some. Do you have any idea how much food a group of actors can consume? Craft services is expensive! So, time for Kickstarter. Easy, right? Just copy and paste from my treatment, throw up a picture, do some rewards, and send it out to friends and family for the clearly glowing feedback I was going to get.

The first response, from my graphic designer sister-in-law, boiled down to ‘tl;dr’ and then she gave me advice. Awesome advice. Great advice. Totally took the Kickstarter to a whole new level advice. Took a month to implement whilst considerably adding to my stress level advice. But–I got rid of the paragraphs of world building and had a graphic novelist friend to panels instead.

Panel One, by Shauna Bauer. Like? Also available on our Kickstarter!
Panel One, by Shauna Bauer. Like? Also available on our Kickstarter!

And I decided to shoot a series of small vignettes, showing the Fall and short little stories about people trying to survive. We just wrapped on those, so stay tuned! We should be releasing them this week.

One of the things you do when in pre-production is storyboard the scripts, so that each shot is clear. Mark la Cour, who did the storyboards for us, did such a fantastic job that I had to share them.

Storyboard for vignette 4, by Mark la Cour. Also, just saying, available as  reward on Kickstarter!
Storyboard for vignette 4, by Mark la Cour. Also, just saying, available as reward on Kickstarter!

Just as we were getting all the final touches done–episode one final cut finished, a Soundcloud RSS feed, published on Stitcher, all our Social Media ducks in a row, etc., Geekscape told us that we would be sharing their booth at WonderCon (which was AMAZING) and San Diego Comic Con (so make sure to find us there!).

So that’s where we are. Episode one is out, epsiode two comes out on May 9th. We’re recording episode three and four later this month–look for a new episode every three weeks–and if the Kickstarter is successful we’ll have a a whole season of Radio Zed to do over the summer, as well as another short (premiering at Geekscape’s ComiCon booth!).

So, take a listen. Leave a comment. What do you think–is the Zombie thing dead? Or will it never die? Have a burning question about Radio Zed? Ask away!

Radio Zed is a storytelling podcast (a newfangled way of saying radio play) set five years after the fall of civilization. Radio Zed follows a lone Survivor, who finds a mysteriously abandoned compound with a still broadcasting radio tower. Through the radio she finds other survivors, who converge on the compound and begin the sometimes frustrating, sometimes frightening, but usually really funny, process of restoring civilization to their small corner of the world.

“A survivor of the apocalypse starts broadcasting on an abandoned radio station, discovers other people, then remembers why they hated other people.”

Just in case “zombie radio play” didn’t hook you, here’s five reasons you should tune in:

Disclaimer: these five reasons are the totally unbiased opinion of the creator/executive producer of the series who just happens to be writing this article.

1. With a colorful cast of characters and a quirky look at the apocalypse, Radio Zed presents its stories with tongue firmly in cheek—after all, just because the world ended doesn’t mean people stopped being, well, you know, people.

“As if the end-of-the-world wasn’t enough, now there’s news and propaganda and *groan* musical-themed quiz shows.”

2. It was written by one of Geekscape’s very own, SJ Borger (that’s me!) because a podcast sounded easier to make than a web series. Emphasis on ‘sounded.’ To quote a friend “If you don’t show it, you gotta hella tell it!”

3. There’s some seriously awesome voice talent involved, like Craig Anton (MadTV, Phil From the Future), Mouzam Makkar (Sirens, Sober Companion), Sirena Irwin (SpongeBob SquarePants, Adventure Time), Mark Fite (Rizzoli & Isles, Grey’s Anatomy) and Ron Lynch (Bob’s Burger, Adventure Time).

4. There’s a really cool backstory with crazy cultists and abandoned compounds and the fall of civilization–which is explored in a series of graphic panels and video shorts available on the website.

Graphic panels detail the world of Radio Zed.  Art by Shauna Bauer.
Graphic panels detail the world of Radio Zed.
Art by Shauna Bauer.

5. Its sort of like Thrilling Adventure Hour and Welcome to Nightvale, only with, you know, post-apocalyptic biker gangs and hordes of mutant zombie creatures as the backdrop. Later episodes feature handy self-help talkshows (Ten Ways to Die Fast in a Nuclear Winter) and community round tables (How to Use a Weapon So As Not to Be Danger to Yourself and Others).

Like Radio Zed on Facebook, follow us on Twitter, Soundcloud, and Instagram for exclusive access to new episodes, behind-the-scenes footage and free things (what things? Who knows? Follow us to find out!). You can also add the podcast to your favorites and/or playlist on Stitcher and Blubrry to make sure you never miss an episode.

Check out our behind-the-scenes video below:

Geekscape is proud to announce its first foray into storytelling podcasts with Radio Zed: For the Discerning Apocalypse Survivor. We’re super excited about this—a radio play about zombies! Why did it take so long for this to happen??

Episode one, “Then God Saw the Wickedness of Man” is now live!

Check out episode 1 “Then God Saw the Wickedness of Man” below–it’s also live on  Soundcloud and Stitcher; Episode two “Rocky Mountain High” goes out on May 9th.

…and the best part is: it’s FREE!

With the upcoming season of The Walking Dead just around the corner, AMC has partnered with University of California, Irvine to offer a new class called Society, Science, Survival: Lessons from AMC’s The Walking Dead.

Faculty members of the university will take turns lecturing students virtually, including experts in the Social Sciences, Physics, Astronomy, Public Health, and Mathematics. Each professor will combine their knowledge with what would really happen in an apocalyptic setting.

Each class will take place the Monday after each The Walking Dead episode, and will include discussion of the show as well. The lecturers will have access to the cast of the series to add another twist on the classes.

While tied into the show, this class will tackle real-life scenarios that include lessons on Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, social order and structure, public health and the CDC, and many other topics.

Here is the course description from their website:

“From understanding social identities to modeling the spread of disease, this eight-week course will span key science and survival themes using AMC’s The Walking Dead as its basis. Four faculty members from the University of California, Irvine will take you on an inter-disciplinary academic journey deep into the world of AMC’s The Walking Dead

This program is serious. It even comes with student standards:

At the end of this course, you will be able to:
• Describe how infectious diseases—like a zombie epidemic—spread and are managed
• Apply various models of society and Maslow’s hierarchy of needs to existing and     emerging societies as a means for understanding human behavior
• Analyze existing social roles and stereotypes as they exist today and in an emerging world
• Debate the role of public health organizations in society
• Describe how mathematical equations for population dynamics can be used to study disease spread and interventions
• Apply concepts of energy and momentum appropriately when analyzing collisions and other activities that either inflict or prevent damage
• Summarize multiple methods for managing stress in disaster situations

I, for one, have already signed up for the class, which starts October 14th, the day after the season premiere, and ends December 20th. And if you don’t really enjoy school, you might be happy to learn the class isn’t graded.
Come back for updates from Dennis on the class and what they’re learning, starting October 15th.

the-walking-dead-season-4-poster

• X-Force land themselves somewhere you’ve never seen them.
• A new member joins the team!
• Rising star Julian Totino Tedesco (VENOM: CIRCLE OF FOUR, JOHN CARTER GODS OF MARS covers) joins the best creative team in comics for two issues!

UNCANNY X-FORCE #27
Written by Rick Remender
Pencils by Phil Noto
Cover by Jerome Opena

My guest this episode is author Matt Mogk, the head of the Zombie Research Society. Even if you’re not into zombies, this is a pretty fascinating episode. Matt talks about the origins of the modern day zombie, what the best zombie movies are and how to really survive a zombie apocalypse. And then Matt proceeds to scare the hell out of everyone by talking about what would actually happen in a zombie apocalypse and how close we might actually be to it happening! Plus! A free song from our friends in Punchline!

Find it on iTunes