With the Corona Virus keeping us quarantined in our homes and Summer just around the corner, there’s no doubt that major geek events like the San Diego Comic Con are going to cancel or postpone until later in the year! That leaves the door open for 2020 becoming the year of the Virtual Comic Convention! Already, several virtual online comic book conventions have started to spring up to give fans their fix… but how do they hope to compare to the real thing? What do they mean to celebrities, exhibitors, fans and indie creators? Luckily, FilmThreat’s Chris Gore guests on a new Geekscape to share his insight on the future of virtual cons! How did last weekend’s virtual WonderCon go? Can SDCC move to later in the year? Can comic book shops, indie exhibitors and publishers survive until then? And how does this change the landscape for film, TV, comics and videogames going forward? It’s all in this episode so enjoy!

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All of us at Geekscape are getting back into our old routines like zombies after the party that was San Diego Comic-Con. Expect more stuff from that in the next few days. But there’s one thing we need to get to right now: If former G4TV host and Film Threat founder Chris Gore is to be believed, there are rumblings that G4TV could be making a comeback in a big way.

Yesterday on the last day of San Diego Comic-Con, I lost my Periscope virginity with Chris Gore at our Geekscape booth right in front of Legendary (I know every word of the Straight Outta Compton trailer by heart now) and he let slip that G4TV could be resurrected.

“I shouldn’t even be saying this, but yeah.”

It’s not long into the Periscope, maybe less than a minute, but somehow that divisive digital cable channel we know as G4TV, the one that caught the rising nerd wave early and, fortunately or unfortunately (I’m the latter) wiped out could come alive once again. You can see me freak out a little.

G4TV is why I got into this crazy business in the first place, so my visceral reaction is total excitement. Though the cable channel couldn’t compete against the Internet — as our own Jonathan London says, the Internet is G4 — it offered something mainstream TV still ignores. For all the cultural impact Marvel and DC and Star Wars and everything in between has now, there’s still no massive coverage of things like Comic-Con, E3, or even Star Wars Celebration. Scouring your favorite blog and stalking Twitter and Instagram is the new G4TV.

But I remember being a restless teenager watching that channel. It kept me sane during the summers I spent stuck at my aunt’s place in New York with no where else to go, thousands of miles away from Comic-Con and everything else they were at. It was like MTV’s Spring Break, but nerdier and kind of better. Yeah, the pandering kind of sucked, but the people that spoke for it were smart, charismatic individuals who (usually) cared about what they talked about.

Bethesda gave gamers a mini G4 reunion when Adam Sessler and Morgan Webb co-hosted Bethesda’s pre and post shows at this year’s E3. Watching those two again with chemistry that remained on point, their years separated showing no damage whatsoever, unleashed a flood of emotions. Memories came back of X-Play and other shenanigans those two maniacs and their equally insane production team did in front of cameras. It was wonderful and sublime.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2KApp699WdE

The pitfall to a geek TV channel is that geeks barely watch TV on TV. They’re downloading and streaming. The culture is too big and too divided now to attract with one cable channel. They’d have to come back with a vengeance, cornering the Twitch-like streaming of live games and producing better, compelling, totally original content. No more COPS.

I don’t know much more to the story, Chris only told me a little and I can’t quite tell you guys what that little bit was. But there’s some hope, so if you care about G4 you’d have to tweet endlessly about it (because that’s how we do things #now). There’s no official hashtag or Kickstarter campaign, so it’s curious as to how whoever is trying to make this dark voodoo work is gauging interest.

I’m going to honestly ask: Would you watch a newly resurrected G4TV? I would.

As a huge fan of DVDuesday’s long, long stint over at G4, I would absolutely love to see it return bigger and better than ever.

But DVDuesday, as great as it is, isn’t the only thing Chris Gore wants to save. Back in high school, Chris created Film Threat, a magazine that would become a website which would grow to be one of the leading sources for independent and underground film on the entire internet.

Now, we’ve known Chris for as long as we can remember. He’s been a guest on Geekscape multiple times, and even ended up on Geekdrome back when I would have been in my early teens. If there’s one thing that I’ve learned about Chris over meeting him at various cons, and watching him for years on Attack of the Show, it’s that he’s passionate as hell about film. So passionate, in fact, that he used the money from his TV appearances for years to continue funding Film Threat.

Now, with television nigh-unrecognizable from what it once was, and the everything’s-free-on-YouTube mindset of today’s internet, Film Threat is in need of saving, and Chris needs our help to do it.

Chris has set a $125,000 goal, and with 28 days remaining is currently nearing $8,000 in pledges. It’s far more expensive to run a website such as Film Threat than one could ever imagine (before considering things like the new show and podcast network), and Chris has broken down the funding into an easy-to-read infographic:

FilmThreat

For those of you who prefer words, here’s a more descriptive breakdown:

The Film Threat web site was launched in 1996. That’s 19 years worth of content making up more than 80,000 stories on a site that has to be redesigned and reformatted. Relaunching a site of this size with this amount of content is costly and I can’t afford to fund it alone this time. I’ll need money for programmers, designers, and for a new server along with a budget for writers and an editorial team to keep it going. The money will also be used to help fund the production budget for the weekly DVDuesday segments. A budget will also be needed to create a Film Threat app and build a Podcast Network to give our writers a voice beyond the site. The budget I’ve put together should give us the boost we need to continue. And while it seems like a lot of money, anyone who has run a web site with daily content or produced a weekly web show knows that it costs more than one would think. The amount I’ve budgeted covers the site relaunch, a podcast network, an app and a web series. All of this covers Phase One of Film Threat’s return. (I’ll reveal Phase Two initiatives once we get to 90% of our funding goal.) If we exceed our funding goal, we’ll be able to do more episodes of DVDuesday and we can fund stretch goal projects planned for Phase Two.

As always, there are some pretty fantastic rewards available to backers. Everything from 30th anniversary posters, to DVD’s from Chris’s personal collection, to t-shirts, to the ability to hang out on the new DVDuesday’s set, to rare Film Threat collectibles. There’s a ton of great stuff here for Film Threat fans.

We’ll also be having Chris on the show next week to talk about the campaign, as well as the unfortunately necessary cancellation of Chris’s upcoming Fan Fiction panel at WonderCon.

Take a look the the Save Film Threat campaign video below, and head here to back! Even if you can’t help fund the project, be sure to share it so we can help Chris achieve his goal!

High kick!

Head on over to the KickStarter page and help out!

Live from Stan Lee’s Comikaze Expo, our very first LIVE Geekscape from a comic convention! And we’ve got a great one! Chris Gore, ex-WWE Diva Katarina Waters and pro wrestler Christopher Daniels join us on stage to talk about Batman VS Superman, Marvel Phase 3, if Gotham is worth watching and much much more! Is DC and WB just reacting to Marvel’s cinematic universe or is there a plan? How could it work? Are they saturating the market and is there an end in sight? Also, Christopher Daniels gets confused for a major comic book professional!

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