Tag: PCS

Me, in a green "Freed Between the Lines." hoodie.

LINK: NY Comic-Con Update

Things are starting to come together rather quickly for the New York Comic-Con…a mere 19 days away!?!?! The above image is the flyer Jon designed, which we’ll be distributing at the Con, and possibly some other places. It’s worth $2 off the cover price so make sure to track one down! And feel free to

Me, in a green "Freed Between the Lines." hoodie.

INFO: PCS & NY Comic-Con

Mark your calendars, people, because Buzzscope/PopCultureShock is taking the New York Comic-Con by storm! More info here.

Me, in a green "Freed Between the Lines." hoodie.

LINK: Making Comics Better

Jason Rodriguez is a man on a mission. Realizing talking about comics doesn’t make them better, he’s taking action on two different fronts. 1) The Hive: A collaborative brainstorming project to create new markets for comics. Yeah, in a way, it’s “talking” about comics, but instead of the usual message board whining and gnashing of

Me, in a green "Freed Between the Lines." hoodie.

Buzzscope Comics: Best of 2005

What’s good? What’s worth the money? What will leave you satisfied when it’s done, and not wishing you’d bought a copy of Entertainment Weekly, or rented Batman Begins instead? Fear not, loyal reader, because we here at Buzzscope have read way more comic books this year than, say, Andrew Arnold – plus, we don’t self-consciously spell comics with an annoyingly pretentious “x” – slogging through some of the worst comics to hit the shelves, in order to bring you the Best Comics of 2005.

Me, in a green "Freed Between the Lines." hoodie.

COMMENT: On 2006, and Some Greatest Hits

Personally, 2005 has been a pretty damn good year, from a comics perspective. CBC’s barely a year old, quickly evolving from being a total lark to something central to reformatting my writing chops post-poetry slam era. (Not surprisingly, the activist angle of my work has transitioned intact.) Plus, I went from contributing reviews and the

Me, in a green "Freed Between the Lines." hoodie.

COMMENT: Who Cares About Journalism?

The response to yesterday’s article reminds me a bit of how minorities often tend to be more accepting of a lesser quality product made by one of their own, simply happy to have something they can relate to. (ie: UPN comedies, Wayans brothers’ movies, Hudlin’s Black Panther, etc.) Because there’s such a lack of real journalism in the comics industry, anything resembling it becomes worthy of praise.

Me, in a green "Freed Between the Lines." hoodie.

Late-night Journalism?

I hesitate to call it journalism – though I guess, technically, it is – but last night I wrote up what is now my second favorite contribution to Buzzscope, surpassed only by my Charlie Huston interview (primarily because that was in person and over beers). Check it out: In the Scope: Speakeasy Shakes Things Up

Speakeasy Comics

In the Scope: Speakeasy Shakes Things Up

Fledgling independent publisher Speakeasy Comics sent another ripple throughout the industry with their “announcement” of their own internal cutoff policy, raising the bar more than three-and-a-half times Diamond’s 500-copy threshold to 1,750 copies, and, judging from recent sales figures as reported by ICv2, placing the futures of several of their titles in doubt.

Me, in a green "Freed Between the Lines." hoodie.

COMMENT: One Year Later Preview

Thanks to Jason Richards for boiling down the DiDio interview over at NEWSarama: Plastic Man is CANCELLED.Gotham Central is CANCELLED.Batman: Gotham Knights is CANCELLED.Batgirl is CANCELLED.JLA is CANCELLED. (wha? huh?!)Adventures of Superman is being CANCELLED and the Superman title is being reverted back to its original numbering (starting with #650).Flash is ENDING (not yet sure

Me, in a green "Freed Between the Lines." hoodie.

Buzzscope/CBC Editorial Office

My “inbox”: The stack on the top left is everything I’ve read recently but not reviewed, either for Buzzscope of CBC Quickees. Approx. 15 comics deep is where intended reviews go to die. 🙁 The stack on the top right, underneath the New York Times‘ Infinite Crisis article, is mostly completed mini-series and story arcs

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