Ming Chen and Mike Zapcic on AMC’s Comic Book Men are the excited opposites to the subdued, sarcastic Bryan Johnson and Walt Flanagan. Unlike Bryan and Walt, according to Kevin in my other interview, Ming and Mike soak up their newfound geek celebrity at Comic-Cons around the country. Who can blame them?

“I love the travel. I’m an adventurer so I think it’s fun,” Ming tells me at this past New York Comic-Con. “I’m visiting cities I never thought I’d be able to go to. The fact that there are fact so many cons now. It’s just fun. Me and Mike come back from a day where guys were in church basements or at the mall or some little closet somewhere. Now, they’re in filled convention halls.”

Mike Zapcic, his co-worker and co-star, chimes in. “Take a look at this,” he gestures in the press room. “This is the entire Javits Center.”

“They take over cities,” Ming adds. “New York Super Week has taken over New York City. San Diego takes the whole city. It’s fun. It’s not grueling at all. It’s more of an adventure to me. It’s like Lord of the Rings, sort of.”

But like a journey to Mordor, it takes its toll.

“It’s a little tiring,” Mike admits. “Don’t get me wrong. I love going to the cons. I love our fans. First and foremost to me, that’s what it’s about. It’s going out and we’re like ambassadors for Comic Book Men, as stupid as that sounds. We still have entire families coming up and saying, ‘We love watching you guys. You teach us something every week. We’re not afraid to let our kids sit and watch this.’ That’s essential what it is for us, for me.

“For him,” Mike gestures to Ming, who begins to laugh. “He is a party animal. Now if you guys had said, ‘What are you doing later on tonight?’ His itinerary is open. He’ll meet you there.” One wouldn’t assume the Asian guy out of a group of comic book nerds would party up, but that’s just because you haven’t seen Ming at hotel parties after conventions.

But cons remain sacred ground. Mike adds: “I recently talked to a friend of mine. She was recalling the first time she went to a con. I think it was Dragon*Con, maybe five or six years ago. She literally broke out in tears. She was like, ‘These are my people. I didn’t know things like this existed. I’ve been going around, I couldn’t find people like me. And, here’s a whole three, four day weekend full of people just like me.’ She got so emotional. Literally it brought her to tears. I’m just like, welcome home. This is it.”

The fifth season of the AMC reality series for dweebs has drummed up a dedicated fan following that stays tuned in after The Walking Dead. Because of that, notable names in geek culture have waltzed through the doors, from Nichelle Nichols to Daryl McDaniels of Run-D.M.C. Season five will be no different.

“Stan [Lee] drops by again which is always a pleasure,” Ming says. “We had Jim Lee also.”

Mike Zapcic: “What a great guy,” Mike gushes. “Just the nicest guy you’d ever want to meet.”

When asked about favorite moments out of the four seasons thus far, Mike replies: “I loved the drag race.”

In a recent episode, the gang drag races Adam West’s Batmobile against the Green Hornet’s Black Beauty. As a fan of the Green Hornet, it was one of my favorites too.

“I’m a big fan of Bruce Lee, for the obvious reasons” says Mike. I show him my phone wallpaper, which was actually Alex Ross’ cover for Kevin Smith’s Batman ’66/Green Hornet #1 cover. I didn’t plan it that way.

What works about Comic Book Men is the guys themselves. Bryan, Walt, Ming, and Mike are like a married couple of four, bickering and giving each other shit but never making any of it malicious. Most reality TV manufacture drama. Comic Book Men has impromptu, hilarious pop culture debates.

“We’ll never stop that,” Mike says. “I’ll be 85 and I’ll be talking about, ‘You know who’d have a really cool wheelchair? Batman would have a really cool wheelchair!’ I’ll still be complaining about the three prequels when I’m 85. I mean, no doubt.”

Working in reality TV have also informed the gang just what goes in to making these shows. They get it: it’s manufactured. But they can’t stand to watch other reality TV, but not for reasons you think. “There’s the whole Wizard of Oz,” Ming says. “We’ve seen behind the curtains. You can see little details.”

Mike adds: “Oh, yeah. I’m not going to name names, but you watch that and you’re like, ‘Holy crap, are you fucking wooden?’ I mean, I know I am wooden. These guys take it to another level. I’m watching Rick just try to be pissed off like, ‘Chum Lee!’ That’s horrible. Get really pissed at the guy and throw something as him.”

Being a “Pawn Stars for geeks,” the guys are still waiting to see their dream items.

“The one things that are like truly one of a kind are I think are movie props. Anything from like the first three Star Wars would be incredible. Although, sometimes you look at stuff like that and it’s so beat up and I was like, ‘This is it?'” The magic goes away. “Like Han Solo’s blaster pistol was like rubber.”

Mike brings up Adam West’s utility belt in *Batman*. “It’s a piece of pleather and some wooden dowels spray painted yellow. That’s like, wow. I want something cool.” Mike then spoils a cool item that they see in season five. “I even saw the Batcopter this season. They had the shark repellent. All it was, was a bunch of canisters strung up. That just sucks. Come on! I want it to be shiny.”

Despite being roughly the same age, Ming and Mike splinter in a generation gap when it comes to their pop culture diet. “He’s more late ’70s,” Ming says referring to Mike. “I’m an ’80s kid. As much as you love the ’80s as well, I think our toys and collectibles are still from different. It’s only maybe, five years apart but it’s still a different. It seems like a whole world.

“You can literally tell time by toys,” he adds. “It’s great.”

Being a fanboy show, surely they don’t have their pulses on everything. I ask them if there are any fandoms that surprise them by their sheer existence, and I can’t say I’m surprised.

My Little Pony” Ming replies quickly. “Those guys are insane.”

Mike recalls the episode they hit up BronyCon. “When we went down to Baltimore to the BronyCon, I got booed off stage. I thought I just being kind of clever.”

Mike went as a veterinarian. A bloody veterinarian. “Sometimes, the ponies don’t always make it,” he says with a smile.

Someone naturally brings up Star Wars. Because of course. Male:

“I have no mixed feelings. It’s J.J. Abrams. I’m giving him my full confidence. I am very excited. I got chills,” Mike says. Ming echoes.

“Yeah, beyond excited. Once that John William’s score kicks in and you see the X-Wings back again. ‘Chewie, we’re home.’ Come on. You must have a black heart if that doesn’t get you a little bit.”

Comic Book Men premiers Oct. 18 at midnight EST on AMC.

Being from Jersey, I can’t stress enough how much of a hero Kevin Smith was to me. Even if I don’t always find the quality of his work pleasing, and I’ll be the first to admit his record is spotty, he still remains a hometown hero. He’s proof that no one can be too lazy to find success, and every day I wonder if I’d ever have enough guys to max out a dozen credit cards just to make a movie that may or may not be worth it.

At New York Comic-Con, I had the pleasure of sitting right next to the man himself and hear him talk about the next season of Comic Book Men. While he’s always more of a standby guy, just hearing about what happened in the store, the man is still hands-on with the show, thus making one of the few reality TV shows I find myself ever tolerating.

To any Kevin Smith fan, you should know how much the dude loves talking. He’s built an entire career on it. At the press rooms of New York Comic-Con, he was no different.

On the unique construction of Comic Book MenDidn’t even create it, happened by accident because we wanted to include the podcast and one of the only reality shows where there’s never a moment where you’re the camera and somebody is fucking looking at you going, “You know what happened? I hate this guy.” Or, “Fucking, I was there.” Like the podcast table allows us the device of they have to tell me the stories as opposed to telling it to the camera. One thing I really love [about the show] in terms of the medium, I thought that as clever in terms of, “Wow, we got away with what they call OTF, on the flight, talking to the camera.” I’ll sit there for three days and record and then come out, we do that two more times. The editors go produce it. I start seeing cuts like I started seeing cuts maybe five weeks before. And then basically watch the episode; note it if there’s stuff to cut. And I’m first and foremost, more than anything even more than a writer anymore, I’m an editor.

That’s what I love to do and I got a good sharp attention for it. So I’ll go through an episode and watch it and they’ve done all the heavy lifting, it’s all there but then I’ll just be like, “Cut 12:10 to 12:15.” It’s a strenuous work. There was one I first cut it the episode of Shatner was like, he didn’t show up till the last five minutes and I was like, “Are you kidding me, we spoke for two hours and he did some wonderful shit.” We went back in and it’s one of the best episodes we ever did. So I’m going like, “I made that happen.”Sometimes you just the person on the outside who’s like, “Come on dude. I was there and I know we got more with this guy and if we’re going to sit down with Will Shatner, let’s fucking sit down.” So that episode took a nice jump. So that’s what I doubt really it’s those dudes, and I keep pointing at, those four dudes, produced all the material.

I know it’s an unscripted show, [but] we’re not reality. They’re aware of cameras, they’re fucking everywhere. Otherwise why would they agree to do the show? So some people in season one got shitty about that but, look it’s not reality, it’s of course not. But we never called it that. It’s unscripted. Those cameras show up and then Brian will say, “Okay, the transaction will start.” And they start bringing him through and it just happens that way. And if they’re doing a story episode he sets them in a four shot and then he goes, “Okay, start talking.” And they start generating conversation.

I give them all props, all the content of that show is on their minds, they’re paid as on-camera performers of themselves because it’s not technically performance, they’re playing themselves. But they’re writers as well and those are my friends like the dudes least likely to be writing TV fucking writers and they back doored into it. They generate same thing a writer’s room would do for a bunch of actors so, they get to be themselves but come up with the material. And all their bickering, like Brian and Walter, they’ve been practically married for 40 years.

All that bickering and shit talking became this show, like it became their podcast first on Steve, Dave and that podcast became this show. So I don’t know, it’s a real testimony to everyone else, it may be the most successful I’ve ever been involved with and that’s because I have very little to do with it other than show up and be myself sometimes but, it’s a joy, I love it so much.

How his expectations from the first season have changed now that they’re on season five: I’ve always had zero expectations in regards to the show at all, came together organically and accidentally. If I tried to make it happen, it wouldn’t happen, this dude Charlie Collier wanted original media. I met him through Ellis Siden one of the producers on the show and he said, “AMC is looking for a geek program, cheap geek program.” I said, “Why?” It was because they had, The Walking Dead that worked very well, but they got to go shoot season two and they’re afraid that the audience that showed up is going to lose interest and go away. So they want to keep the geek attention and they thought, “You might know how to do that.” I was like, “Never, oh my God. No.” And so I said, “If you were ever going to do something inexpensive,” I said, “If you put Pawn Stars in a comic book store, that’s be amazing.” As I grew up watching Antiques Roadshow I always fucking watched it with my father, no comics. Toys, every once in a while.

And every time they did it, you’re fucking [gestures excitedly] and you wished for an All Berries episode where it was nothing but toys and fucking comics and so that’s what I pitched. I was like, “Do that man, because I know my audience would watch that, I’d fucking watch that.” So, didn’t even pitch my store or my friends, just pitched that idea. So I had no expectations that it would be some of my store or these guys would be it, eventually it wound up being those dudes. What I said to this dude Charlie Crewman, I was like … he said, and “AMC is interested in shooting a pilot so you’ve got 10K to do it. So is that good?” He goes, “Well, we’ll eat up most of that in location fee, and I was like, “What do you mean location fee?” He goes, “Well, we got to pay a comic book store to shoot there.” The idea was to find the most acerbic comic book store staff in America in a nationwide search and then go shoot there. I said, “Well, I got a comic book store.” And that’s the first time I’d said it in one month that we’d been talking about this fucking show. And he goes, “You’re serious?” And was like, “Yeah, I’m right behind New Jersey, I got a comic book store.” He goes, “Why didn’t you ever say anything?” And I was like, “I don’t know, I guess it sound braggy if I say bit out loud.” [laughs] And he goes, “Really?”I said,”Yeah, and the dudes that work there are very, very funny. Like they do this podcast together called Tell ‘Em Steve Dave so, they could stand in for however is going to be the most acerbic comic book store and staff that we find in our nationwide search.

And he said, “Well, how can I see ’em and hear ’em?” I said, “Here’s a link to their podcast.” And then next day Charlie calls up and he goes, “You’re a fucking idiot, this is the show.”

I never thought to put them forward because they’re not interested in this shit.” Like Ming loves this. and was like, “Oh my God let’s do this of course.” Bryan and Walter, no interest. Like they come up from straight up Jersey style, where they’re terrified of somebody making them look stupid and that was the reason they didn’t want the show. I called Walter, “You want to do the show? AMC, they do Mad Men, they do Walking Dead. They could do a show at Secret Stash.” I was like, it’d be amazing. And Walter was like, “No, I don’t want to do it.” And I said, “Why?” And he goes, “Because I don’t want to be Snooki.” [laughs] Which just shows you how far back this shit started man.

And I was like, “Dude, why wouldn’t you want to be Snooki? She made a lot of money last year.” And he didn’t want to do it for any reason other than I’ve talked him into it because the store was like, I said like years prior, “We’ve got about two years left on that store. So ride it out because I ain’t making anymore Jay & Bob movies so we’re not making anything that would make anyone come into the store anymore.” Most places are going digital, brick and mortar’s dying and shit. We’ve had a great run over ten years, we’re going to shut it within the next two or three. And so as I was talking to him on the phone and like almost at the two year mark, I was like, “I’ll tell you what dude; having a show in fucking AMC is like a commercial for the fucking store, it might make people come into the store.” And that’s the only reason he did it, he goes, “Well, if it keeps the store open, I’ll do it.” And now look at him, his the fucking star of the show it’s fucking crazy.

So I had no expectations then it organically just fucking happened. If I went pitching this and tried to make it happen have my heart in it, I know this business, it wouldn’t happen, This happened by accident and shit.

The fact that it happened by accident and then found a little audience at night with a million people watching, helps that we have two juggernaut shows leading in, in front of us and what not. It’s a gift every year when they renew it and then when do renew it, since I’ve really never had the biggest influence on the show I’ve always hesitated to be like, “All right, this is what we’re doing this year.” It best when I let those dudes do it.

The show kind of works the way it works the way it works, where it’s like I come in, I don’t know what the fuck happened and they tell me a story. And so I never wanted to interrupt that flow. Every once in a while I’m like, “Oh, we should do this.” Like if we go to season six, I know for a fact there’s an episode where I desperately want to do. Years ago I got into my alma mater, Henry Hudson Regional High School, they have this like dopey wall of fame, like hall of fame shit. It’s like me and ten other people. And the boys have been on TV for like five years, so I was there the other week and, I was like,“Oh, my God. You should induct the boys.” And the school was like, “Yeah, we’ll totally do that next year.” So I was like, “Oh my God, if we can go back to high school with this TV show, like I’ll drop the mic, I’ll walk away.” So if we get to season six maybe we’ll get too do that but other than that, I’m just happy to be the guy who comes in. The exact role I play on the show is the exact role I play off camera as well.

Comic Book Men premieres Oct. 18th at midnight EST.

Saturday, December 13, roughly 1:30 PM. It’s a brisk December afternoon, the kind where the sun warms you but the cold air bites the skin. I’m sitting in the backseat of my friend’s SUV, his wife is sitting in the passenger seat. We drive past MetLife Stadium, and I tell them about seeing WrestleMania XXIX there last year.

Going to the convention, I didn’t know what to expect. Walker Stalker as far as I knew was a convention tour started by two dudes of The Walker Stalkers podcast. As a moderate fan of The Walking Dead, I was looking forward to being amongst other fans of the show and meeting a few of my favorite stars. I thought it would just be a fun way to spend the afternoon. I was looking forward to just kick back a few weeks before Christmas.

Yeah, no.

In hindsight I was an idiot. The Walking Dead is the highest-rated basic cable show today, and I live in a major metropolitan area. Did I actually expect to kick back and have a relaxing chat with Lauren Cohan about, like, Rutgers fat sandwiches? What the fuck was I thinking?

As the sole New Jersey/New York resident of Geekscape, it was practically my obligation to attend the first-ever Walker Stalker NYC/NJ convention at the Meadowlands Expo Center last weekend. I went in expecting a fun convention in the off-season. I came in to a live episode of The Walking Dead.

People are pouring out of the entrance. It’s a mess. On the far end there is a line wrapping around the edge of the sidewalk. On the other, another chaotic line wrapping itself on the ramp. In between, people are crowding around, standing and looking over each other’s shoulders. People are calling friends still parking blocks away. I sought someone who was a volunteer to ask where press registration was. Three words and my heart sank. “Inside the building.”

This was my view for thirty minutes.

https://twitter.com/EricTheDragon/status/543830058390269953

I don’t have a problem with waiting. I do the occasional midnight release, I wait in tons of lines at Comic-Con, and I once waited two hours under a burning San Diego sun to take an awful picture with Jessica Alba. But what I saw from others was frustration, demands for refunds, and the worst side of people trying to get in. Perhaps because I’m used to conventions running like poorly-oiled machines, but it was clear my fellow attendees were not as experienced. I felt sorry for the lone volunteer who had to man the door, who you can see in my tweet is the gentleman in the navy blue baseball hat and brown jacket. He had the unfortunate job of maintaining order. “Fire marshall just locked out the building,” he said. “I can’t let anyone in unless people come out.” Yeah, that won’t happen for a while. Minutes later, police were posted behind the doors.

It sounds worse than it actually was, but I stress that I’m an idiot and did not expect this kind of attendance density. No one was killing each other trying to get in, but when everyone is trying to get Norman Reedus’s autograph you can bet people will bring out the worst of themselves.

Soon enough, somehow, we were allowed in. I planned to bum-rush to media registration and waltz my way into the con.

It would be another half hour before that could happen.

Shoulder to shoulder like it was Vietnam, I become uncomfortably comfortable with fellow New Yorkers and New Jersiyans sweating through my jacket, feeling the body heat of cosplayers, families, and hormonal teenagers. The media registration booth was empty, only a volunteer there and no one else registering. I was twenty feet and 500 people away. Welcome to hell. Fate, you cruel bastard.

I looked behind me, through the heads and shoulders to the entrance. Hordes of people were in front waiting to get in and being stopped by security. It was then that it hit me: This was an episode of The Walking Dead. I skipped that day in junior high English, but does this qualify as irony?

The Walker Stalker conventions are pretty akin to Wizard World, right down to the relentless touring, but their laser focus is on the AMC television show and tangentially related interests. Like Wizard World, the attraction here are the stars, and Walker Stalker had them in spades; almost all of the actors who play or have played a crucial part in the show were in attendance signing autographs and doing photo-ops. Noticeably absent were Andrew Lincoln (Rick Grimes) and Danai Gurira (Michonne). I stood in line only for Lauren Cohan, the English actress from Surrey who plays southern belle Maggie and was now signing autographs off Exit 16. (Just did some quick research, apparently she was born in Cherry Hill. Huh.)

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When I finally got in, winter coat draped over my arm, I began to see shades of what I expected before becoming an involuntary extra on the show: a medium-sized fan convention. The usual stuff was there, like the toy vendors, custom t-shirts, overpriced hot dogs, and long lines to meet the stars. But the flavor here was different, and even now I fail to accurately capture it. This wasn’t Comic-Con for sure — this is a dwarf to the giant that is Comic-Con. It was something else.

There was a noticeable absence of anything related to the comics. Outside of a few vendors selling issues and trade paperbacks, it is clear that the television show has dwarfed anything Robert Kirkman originally penned (and still continues to). I reiterate that I’m not a major fan of the franchise in any way, be it the comic book or TV show, and so perhaps I failed to recognize any comics-original cosplayers (in my defense, due to the seasonal weather any sort of cosplayer was easy to spot and the vast majority were TV-inspired). I say this not to mourn the diminishing value of comic books in pop culture, rather I see it from an almost anthropological perspective. It’s utterly fascinating.

The true legacy from the monster success of The Walking Dead television series will be its masterful marriage of two seemingly disparate communities: horror fans and survival enthusiasts. The pop lore of the zombie monster started by George Romero nets all the horror fanatics, while the apocalyptic premise promises a nihilistic wonderland for those who feel typing on a laptop before bed is too boring. These communities were never that far apart; it wouldn’t be uncommon to encounter an outdoorsman with a taste for the macabre, or a horror fanatic who likes to be close to nature. Chris Jericho talked in his second memoir about Eli Roth’s creepy home on the outskirts of a woodland area. Yet, The Walking Dead has managed to make these communities more than just friends. In the middle of Walker Stalker con, I’ve noticed just how much they have become lovers.

As far as the convention experience itself, it is about what you would expect for a niche fandom in the off-season. No, this isn’t Comic-Con, and I reiterate as only a moderate fan of anything Walking Dead that I’m kind of bummed the comic series that started everything is only passively remembered. Instead, space is devoted to autograph booths for maybe the two dozen actors who played a zombie for an hour.

Panels are a waste. There is only one big space for the entire convention, and there are no separate rooms or anything. Panels took place on the main stage, which was roped off with approximately two or three hundred folding chairs for attendees. There is so much noise happening at once, even with the microphones and loudspeakers it was extremely difficult to make out anything anyone was saying. Having experienced something like this at Florida Supercon this past summer, I didn’t even bother. It was a great-looking stage, however.

Lines for autographs were long, but if they were what you wanted they were manageable. Norman Reedus had the biggest line of the entire convention, which legitimately shocks me considering how many Wizard World shows he goes to. Prices were high, but not unfamiliar if you attend conventions. I paid $60 for Lauren Cohan’s autograph (and it’s personalized), but it would be another $60 for a photo op and I wasn’t allowed to take any cell phone photos with her. Policies change from guest to guest, all depending on their manager. Some of the bigger marquee guests, for example Manu Bennett (The HobbitArrow) had management that wouldn’t allow it, but you totally could with Jon Beranthal (Shane) or the dudes from Comic Book Men. Again, if you attend conventions on even a semi-regular business you know what to expect. I didn’t bother with photo-ops, I kind of wanted to eat that weekend.

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Overall, if you really love The Walking Dead attending Walker Stalker isn’t a bad way to spend a weekend if they pass by your city. I wouldn’t kill to go, but if it happens to be in town and nothing else is going on, it’s a cool thing to check out. The convention organizers probably still don’t know what kind of a beast of an event they have, and so their choosing of medium-sized buildings for a growing convention may cause some crowding problems like I experienced in the near future. But if you can stand that, it’s a fun time. Besides, I said if you really love The Walking Dead chances are you don’t care and actually want to pay an obscene amount for your favorite characters’ autograph anyway. So treat yourself.

December 13th, roughly 6:30 PM. My friends and I regroup and our feet hurt. This isn’t the most time I’ve spent at a convention nor the worst, but I had enough of zombies and people who would wish the apocalypse would occur just to kill a few. Some of the speciality food vendors like the empanadas restocked maybe an hour ago and are officially sold out. And here I am standing, ready to buy a dozen. My friends take one last look through the artist’s alley — by that I mean like three booths — before we call it quits for the night. We would spend the rest of the day drinking at their place, playing giant Jenga (that they made themselves from Home Depot wood) and watching WWE NXT on the WWE Network.

Pro tip: Go with friends.

Check out the gallery below for more of Walker Stalker NYC/NJ 2014!

So, ever want to see a reality show about what happens behind the scenes at a comic store? Now you have your chance! Wait…what do you mean that has already been done?! I guess National Geographic has never seen Kevin Smith’s ‘Comic Book Men’. Now we will have another show focusing on New York’s ‘Midtown Comics’.

The press release describes the one-hour show as “a documentary-style show that will follow the lives of staffers Gerry, Thor, and Alex as they deal with all sorts of geek and enthusiast customers while simultaneously planning their booth at the New York Comic Con. Can these pop culture mavens answer the pointed and detailed questions of their comic-centric clientele and still manage to produce a major presence at their largest hometown comics-oriented event?”

The big question is: do we really need this? And what makes it different than this:

Eh. I’ll stick with AMC on this one.

Source: Comics Alliance