
Not Comics: MTV is interesting?!
April 10th, 2008 Posted by david brothersMTV Multiplayer > Black Professionals in Games
These articles are really interesting. I’m kind of surprised to see it on MTV.com.
No excerpts, click through and read on.

MTV Multiplayer > Black Professionals in Games
These articles are really interesting. I’m kind of surprised to see it on MTV.com.
No excerpts, click through and read on.

TALKING IRON FIST WITH SWIERCZYNSKI, FRACTION, BRUBAKER AND FOREMAN – NEWSARAMA
Highlights: Misty with a fro, and a “Ten years later” flash forward of a little boy asking Misty how his father died.
I’m sad that Bru/Frac/Aja are leaving, though.

I’ve been rereading Silver Surfer this weekend. I started with the Englehart/Rogers stuff, which was really very pretty, but kind of boring so I skipped up to Jim Starlin & Ron Marz scripting over Ron Lim.
And wow. What an underappreciated bunch of comics these are! I’m not sure if they are actually good or not, but I’m enjoying the crap out of them. I’d read half a dozen of these as a kid, so I figured I’d see if they held up. I’ve taken some notes which I hope you’ll enjoy and possibly be able to answer!








Happy 500 posts to us.

This guy:
I love Duck Down Records, man. It’s always fun. Black Moon is composed of a rapper name 5 Ft., who is in fact five feet tall, Buckshot Shorty da BDI Thug, who is also like five feet tall, and Evil Dee, who looks eight feet tall when he hangs around with his buddies.

First off, I have a new installment of Comics From the 5th Dimension up. This time it’s the KO and Return of Superman, where I discuss the classic one-shot Superman vs. Muhammad Ali.
Also at PCS is a roundtable discussion about Secret Invasion #1, involving both 4L writers and Funnybook Babylon writers. Or as I call the collective group, The Corporate Ministry.
On another note, today is 4/4. That should be the official 4th Letter Day. Make it happen, politicians!


I’ve seen it said, both online and off, that intent doesn’t matter– results do.
It doesn’t matter that you intended to do one thing if it ends up being another. All that matters is the end result and how the reader takes it.
I don’t know that I agree. For one, it puts the reader on a higher pedestal than the author. I’m not entirely comfortable with that. On equal levels? Sure, I can get with that. What you take from it is just as important was what’s portrayed or what was intended. But, the reverse?
Why should the experience of the reader trump that of the author?
Honest question, not just talking out loud.

I’m not sure I know what I was thinking with this.

I was going to have Cap say, “Avengers! Run around and hurt him!” but then I realized I got the lyrics wrong.

Funnybook Babylon » Blog Archive » Fandom, Readership and Snark
What’s starting to disturb me more is the reaction to this that I see on a lot of the more moderated/respectable blogs – this conscious attempt to cut ties with the tastes of the hoi polloi and instead turn the topic to how cleverly you can savage a certain creator or book. Mike Choi is right – the switch is defaulted to “snark” all across the blogging community and everyone’s tripping over themselves to be the funniest guy to say something’s going to suck.
I’m increasingly beginning to feel that the topic of conversation is turning from comics themselves to the comics community, because everyone’s trying to take sides and generate controversy. Everyone wants to start some shit or get some gossip, everyone wants to know if marvel b0y’s going to set the photocopier on fire and dress up like Dan Buckley to try to fire Joe Quesada. Not that there’s anything wrong with wanting to know that, I’m enjoying this little drama as much as everyone (except for when people turn their blogs into dedicated spoiler dumps), but doesn’t everyone remember comics? Does it really take All Star Superman #10 to get comics discussion going these days, even if it’s just “OMG best issue ever”? And no, I’m not counting the latest 40-thread viral controversy about whether (X) or (Y) is racist or misogynist.
Go scope it.
By the way, the best podcast in history went live last week. Go give it a listen, too. You might hear a familiar voice talking about comics.
A few highlights:
Like if you went to his wikipedia page Joe, and you were to read it, your head would explode. It abuses time travel in the worst way.
– Pedro on “Per Degaton”“The only man trying to be a cross between Doctor Doom and Marlo Stanfield.”
– Joe on “What Pedro wishes to be when he grows up.”“4th Letter is a subsidiary of David Brother’s ego.”
– Pedro on “our special guest’s website.”“She’s like an ineffective Amanda Waller.”
– David B. on Val Cooper“Interestingly enough, genocide was not enough for Metron. He was totally fine about that.”
– Jamaal on “The betrayal of Mister Miracle”“Honestly, he was like a Scooby Doo villian back then.”
– David B. on Jack Kirby’s Darksied” I do like that original Norse Myth where Thor’s hammer got taken by a space alien.”
– Joe on “Viking poet Walt Simonson”“He just got a kid, so he needs his cash.”
– Pedro on Matt Fraction“I hear Chris is turning into a spicy latina.”
– David on the FBBPodcast relaunch at New York Comic-con and the ensuing continuity changes.
There! Now you don’t have to listen to the podcast!

Yes, this was supposed to be up on Thursday. You’ll be surprised to find that this time it wasn’t the fault of my laziness. Instead, PopCultureShock was having some technical difficulties and couldn’t update the front page for a couple days.
So here’s my review of Acclaim’s short-lived series based on Killer Instinct.