Beyond Comics writes in:
GAITHERSBURG IS OPEN!
FREDERICK Pending Plowing of Parking Lot
We will update the newsletter and our face book page.
Thursday, February 11, 2010
Bravo to the Washington Post
I think the Post's delivery people deserve a special thanks, although I'm sure none of them are reading this blog. We haven't gotten the paper everyday, but it's been delivered when the roads are passable. I was very surprised to look out this morning and see a bag poking out of the snow.
And the same thanks holds true for the production people and the reporters. I don't even have my car shoveled out again yet, but my wife is reading the Post and sipping coffee in comfort while the wind howls outside.
So to any Postie (you don't really use that term, do you?) reading this, thank you.
And the same thanks holds true for the production people and the reporters. I don't even have my car shoveled out again yet, but my wife is reading the Post and sipping coffee in comfort while the wind howls outside.
So to any Postie (you don't really use that term, do you?) reading this, thank you.
Big Planet's got your hit today, in spite of the snow
Owner Joel Pollack wrote to me to say, "Because each store in our chain sets its own policy, I can only speak for Bethesda and Georgetown. We are going to try to open today (Thursday) 11-7, but we recommend a phone call, just in case." Owner Greg Bennett followed up with "Vienna and College Park are both open today as well. Closing time dependent on weather/road conditions, so call first if you're coming out after dark. And we have new books!"
I'm going to suggest that unless you live in Bethesda or Georgetown, it's probably not a great idea to try to get there no matter how much you're missing your comics. I was just out in my Arlington neighborhood and the streets and sidewalks aren't ready.
Here's the BP contact info:
BIG PLANET COMICS
4908 Fairmont Ave.
Bethesda, MD 20814
301-654-6856
Also affiliated with:
BIG PLANET COMICS
3145 Dumbarton St. NW
Washington, DC 20007
202-342-1961
BIG PLANET COMICS
426 Maple Ave. East
Vienna, VA 22180
703-242-9412
BIG PLANET COMICS
7315 Baltimore Ave.
College Park, MD 20740
301-699-0498
I'm going to suggest that unless you live in Bethesda or Georgetown, it's probably not a great idea to try to get there no matter how much you're missing your comics. I was just out in my Arlington neighborhood and the streets and sidewalks aren't ready.
Here's the BP contact info:
BIG PLANET COMICS
4908 Fairmont Ave.
Bethesda, MD 20814
301-654-6856
Also affiliated with:
BIG PLANET COMICS
3145 Dumbarton St. NW
Washington, DC 20007
202-342-1961
BIG PLANET COMICS
426 Maple Ave. East
Vienna, VA 22180
703-242-9412
BIG PLANET COMICS
7315 Baltimore Ave.
College Park, MD 20740
301-699-0498
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Weldon on music and comics
Presumably Glen Weldon is snowed in like the rest of us in DC, so he's written a long look at "Comics That Have A Nice Beat And Are Easy To Dance To," National Public Radio's Monkey See blog (February 10 2010).
That darn Mussey
Marie Drom says in a letter to the editor of the Fredericksburg Free Lance-Star "Mussey's cartoon was not a bit funny" (2/10/2010)
Feb 20: DC Anime Club's Cosplay Corner.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Chris Wanamaker, (202) 262 2083 president@dcanimeclub.org
DC Anime Club
Presents Cosplay Corner
On Saturday February 20, 2010 at 2:30pm DC Anime Club will be hosting an costume creation workshop called "Cosplay Corner" at the Martin Luthur King, Jr Memorial Library 901 G St NW Washington, DC 20001 in Room A5 on the A Level. "Cosplay" is short for "Costume Play", in which fans of Japanese Animation (Anime) and Japanese Comics (Manga) dress up as their favorite Anime, Manga and Video Game Characters by costumes they make themselves. The word "Cosplay" was coined by Nov Takahashi of the Japanese Studio, "Studio Hard". DC Anime Club will teach members how to create their own costumes: everything from making cosplay props, to places where materials can be acquired, to even acting as their characters. DC Anime Club has also given Cosplay Presentations at the Smithsonian Anime Marathon an event which is part of the National Cherry Blossom Festival and the Fiesta Asia Parade where
This event is free and open to the public for Ages 13 and up.
For more information please call (703) 655-1412 visit the DC Anime Club website at http://dcanimeclub.org.
CONTACT: Chris Wanamaker, (202) 262 2083 president@dcanimeclub.org
DC Anime Club
Presents Cosplay Corner
On Saturday February 20, 2010 at 2:30pm DC Anime Club will be hosting an costume creation workshop called "Cosplay Corner" at the Martin Luthur King, Jr Memorial Library 901 G St NW Washington, DC 20001 in Room A5 on the A Level. "Cosplay" is short for "Costume Play", in which fans of Japanese Animation (Anime) and Japanese Comics (Manga) dress up as their favorite Anime, Manga and Video Game Characters by costumes they make themselves. The word "Cosplay" was coined by Nov Takahashi of the Japanese Studio, "Studio Hard". DC Anime Club will teach members how to create their own costumes: everything from making cosplay props, to places where materials can be acquired, to even acting as their characters. DC Anime Club has also given Cosplay Presentations at the Smithsonian Anime Marathon an event which is part of the National Cherry Blossom Festival and the Fiesta Asia Parade where
This event is free and open to the public for Ages 13 and up.
For more information please call (703) 655-1412 visit the DC Anime Club website at http://dcanimeclub.org.
Tom the Dancing Bug cartoonist raises over $4,000 for Haiti
We highlighted Ruben Bolling's campaign to raise money for Haiti when he started, and now Ruben's written in to announce the total he's raised and who won original drawings. Let's here a big round of e-pplause for Ruben and his donors. Remember you can still donate too.
Tuesday, February 09, 2010
Big Planet Comics says "This crazy weather"
Big Planet Comics Bethesda and Georgetown stores will be closed Wednesday Feb. 10th because of the snow storm. We hope to be open Thursday the 11th. We do have the new comics...and they'll be on the racks when next we open our doors.
Please call before coming here on Thursday to make sure we are in fact open, and to find out what time we plan on closing.
Stay safe and stay warm.
--Joel Pollack
Please call before coming here on Thursday to make sure we are in fact open, and to find out what time we plan on closing.
Stay safe and stay warm.
--Joel Pollack
--
BIG PLANET COMICS
4908 Fairmont Ave.
Bethesda, MD 20814
301-654-6856
Also affiliated with:
BIG PLANET COMICS
3145 Dumbarton St. NW
Washington, DC 20007
202-342-1961
BIG PLANET COMICS
426 Maple Ave. East
Vienna, VA 22180
703-242-9412
BIG PLANET COMICS
7315 Baltimore Ave.
College Park, MD 20740
301-699-0498
So who was editorial cartoonist John M Baer anyway?
For our 3rd post on editorial cartoonist John M Baer, we finally have some real information, courtesy of Curt Hanson, Department Head, Elwyn B. Robinson Department of Special Collections, Chester Fritz Library, University of North Dakota. Thanks to Curt for providing copies of articles about Baer, and also for pointing out their digitized collection of Stuart McDonald editorial cartoons.
The first article by Charles P. Stewart of the Central Press Association appears to be from 1921. Baer had been elected to congress from North Dakota in 1917 as an advocate for labor and farmers. In this article Baer blamed his re-election loss on his cartooning, rather than the fact that he was on the left (blue) in a right (red) district. The article said, "The fact is, Baer's cartoons had not rated as of national importance while their circulation was confined to North Dakota. As a congressman's handiwork, however, they quickly began making their appearance in all corners of the republic, causing widespread trouble for conservatism. In consequence, the campaign of 1920 saw an invasion of the Fargo district by outside spellbinders with practically unlimited resources. Since then Cartoonist Baer has been an ex-congressman."
Personally, I doubt that his cartooning was the cause of his election loss, but who can say 90 years later? He apparently was represented at some point by King Features Syndicate, who released the following:
World-Famous Artist Crashed Congress With A Lead Pencil
Washington, D.C. - Let it be understood that John M. Baer knows his politics from left to right, up and down and diagonally. For years he has been the champion of the farmer and the worker, fighting for them, not with glib, silver-tongued oratory but with a facile cartooning crayon that clarifies and mocks at most intricate bits of Machiavellian chicanery that back-room politicians ever foisted upon a suffering country.
Baer's political cartoons are known wherever a newspaper is read and he has he distinction of being the only man who ever crayoned himself into Congress, his Farm-Labor and Graft drawings having brought him such prominence that he was elected to fill the term of Congressman Helgessen of North Dakota, on the latter's death in 1917. At the expiration of that term, he was re-elected.
It was in 1912 that he came into real prominence by cartooning an expose of how the farmers were being "gypped" 90 cents per bushel on their wheat.
Since then he has never ceased in his fight on graft and shady political dealings and his work has appeared in most of our national periodicals and newspapers. His friends, among them workers of every calling, number millions and he is adding to the list daily. Baer's home is in Washington, D.C., where he keeps a watchful eye on the solons that make the wheels go round. One wonders if he is ever amused at the tales of huge campaign funds ad he remembers how he crashed Congress with a pencil.
"John M. Baer, once N.D. Congressman, still active at 83," a 1969 article by Jack Hagerty for the Grand Forks Herald provided far more information on Baer's life and career. Baer was born Mach 29, 1886 in Black Creek, Wisconsin, went to Lawrence University where he edited the newspaper and the yearbook before graduating in 1909, and then married a woman from North Dakota and moved to work on her father's farm. In 1913 he was appointed a postmaster, but soon was making more money from cartoons so in 1916 he moved to Fargo, North Dakota, to work for the Courier-News.
After losing re-election, Baer worked for Labor, a railroad union newspaper. In 1969, he was still working for them in an AFL-CIO building on Lafayette Square, but also cartooning at his home in Chevy Chase, MD.
Hagerty's article says this "Appropriation Pie" cartoon was printed over 100 million times, in 18 languages, and was credited with bringing about the Naval Disarmament Conference of 1921. Unfortunately, it's still true - past wars are shown as taking up 68% of the budget, defense with 25%, education at 1% and 6% left to labor, farmer and public.
Hagerty's article says that General Billy Mitchell distributed 20 million copies of this cartoon in 1925 and it was used in his court martial over aggressively pursuing an air force.
Baer's 1931 cartoon that was credited with coining the phrase "The New Deal." The worker, honest business and the farmer are saying "We demand a new deal" at a crooked card game with speculators, big business and cooked politicians.
A sidebar to Hagerty's article says that "For 58 years, he has used bears on his Christmas cards, but was turned down when he offered another cartoonist $1,000 for the right to use a bear symbol as an identifying mark in his cartoons." The other cartoonist is undoubtedly Clifford Berryman, also of Washington, who created the Teddy bear and drew him in many cartoons.
Monday, February 08, 2010
A new comic shop in Falls Church?
Missy Frederick is reporting that Victory Comics will be at 586 S. Washington Street. She notes that Hole in the Wall Books (which is a general used book store with comics) and Anime Pavilion are already in Falls Church.
Editorial cartoon change at the Examiner
Perusing today's Examiner online, we find that their editorial cartoon today is from Mike Ramirez and Creators Sydicate. I'm not sure if Cagletoons will still be providing cartoons to them as well. Their editorial cartoonist Nate Beeler is syndicated through Cagle.
Brian Keene signing in Baltimore
Up to our north, we have an upcoming creator appearance, which is really to promote a horror anthology book, The New Dead, but that never stopped me personally from plopping a comic or four in front of the creator and asking for a signature!
Mr. Keene wrote Marvel's Dead of Night Featuring Devil-Slayer. He also edited Cemetery Dance Publications' Grave Tales.
Nationwide Signing Event
On February 16th, 2010, the day The New Dead is released, the majority
of the authors who have written stories for the book will be signing in various
locations around the country.
Baltimore, MD: Brian Keene
7 PM
Barnes & Noble, 1819 Reisterstown Rd, Baltimore, MD 21208
(410) 415-5758
Mr. Keene wrote Marvel's Dead of Night Featuring Devil-Slayer. He also edited Cemetery Dance Publications' Grave Tales.
Bored? Big Planet is open in Georgetown and Bethesda
I'm not going out, but Big Planet is open in Georgetown and Bethesda. Beyond Comics was planning on being open today too. I would imagine that Fantom Comics is open since both sites are in large malls.
Comics on the Rack, Quick Picks for Comics Due 02-10-10
COMICS ON THE RACK
Quick Picks for Comics Due 02-10-10
By John Judy
ADVENTURE COMICS #7 by Tony Bedard and Travis Moore. Black Lantern Superboy! No, the other one! Fight!
ALL-STAR SUPERMAN, VOL. 2 SC by Grant Morrison and Frank Quitely. Collecting issues #7-12 of the best Superman comics in quite a while. Recommended.
AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #620 by Dan Slott and Marcos Martin. Mysterio made his big move last ish, but I'm really coming back to read more "Adventures of Dark Aunt May!" Recommended.
BATMAN AND ROBIN #8 by Grant Morrison and Cameron Stewart. So who or what exactly is coming out of that Lazarus pit? There's gonna be a scrap! I can tell!
BPRD: KING OF FEAR #2 of 5 by Mike Mignola, John Arcudi and Guy Davis. A journey to the Hollow Earth and an attempt to lay Lobster Johnson's ghost to rest. Also, Liz cremates some dead dudes.
CHOKER #1 by Ben McCool and Ben Templesmith. There are so many reasons this comic is a must-have, but among the most compelling is this: The female lead is a cop nicknamed "Dick-Puncher." Described by co-creator Templesmith as "A little bit like FELL with a bad case of Gonorrhea." Highly recommended. Not for kids.
DAYTRIPPER #3 of 10 by Fabio Moon and Gabriel Ba. Okay, I think I'm getting this one now. Every issue is a new "Death of Kenny." It's cool though because each issue thus far has been extremely well-crafted on both the art and scripting. Recommended for grown-ups.
HELLBLAZER: PANDEMONIUM HC by Jamie Delano and Jock. John Constantine goes to Iraq. What could possibly go wrong? This marks the return of the original HELLBLAZER scribe to the character. Combined with Jock doing the art makes this one Highly Recommended.
HIT-MONKEY #1 by Daniel Way and Dalibor Talijic. This is written by Daniel Way, the guy who writes WOLVERINE:ORIGINS. And that's all I have to say about that…
HUMAN TARGET #1 of 6 by Len Wein and Various Creators. DC's newest TV star, Christopher Chance, takes on every low-life and ne'er-do-well on the European continent! Action, intrigue and glamour galore from co-creator Len Wein! Recommended.
JSA ALL-STARS #3 by Matthew Sturges and Freddie Williams II. After last week's godawful JSA ANNUAL #2 Mr. Sturges has some serious ground to make up. Geoff Johns has never been more missed. And why there needs to be a Liberty Belle/Hourman co-feature written by Jen Van Meter continues to elude me.
PUNISHERMAX #4 by Jason Aaron and Steve Dillon. Words that will make me buy a comic, sight unseen: "Sledgehammer-swinging hitman!" Must-have! Not for kids.
SECRET SIX #18 by John Ostrander, Gail Simone and Jim Calafiore. Black Lanterns vs. the Six vs. the Suicide Squad! Boy, who most deserves to eat that one? Recommended.
SMILE SC written and drawn by Raina Telgemeier. The autobiographical account of a girl who gets her two front teeth knocked out just in time to start middle school. In real-world pubescent terms this is Galactus coming to Earth. Recommended.
SOLOMON KANE: DEATH'S BLACK RIDERS #2 of 4 by Scott Allie and Mario Guevara. Okay, so if you're hiding from demons in the Black Forest is it really a step up to barricade yourself in a tavern called The Cleft Skull? This is a cool adventure series and you should read it.
STRANGE #4 of 4 by Mark Waid and Emma Rios. The big finish that leaves readers asking, "Hey, could we maybe get an on-going Doctor Strange series written by Waid, like, starting next month?" Great series. Recommended.
TAILS OF THE PET AVENGERS #1 by Various Pickers of the Short Straw. Kids, when you start shooting heroin you think it will be cool, like in those reality fashion shows. Then you wake up one morning , naked and alone, with your name attached to something like PET AVENGERS. Stay in school!
UNWRITTEN #10 by Mike Carey and Peter Gross. Tommy Taylor meets the spiritual father of Fox News: Josef Goebbels! Gotta look!
X-MEN: PIXIE STRIKES BACK #1 of 4 by Kathryn Immonen and Sara Pichelli. No Pet Avengers appear in this comic.
Sunday, February 07, 2010
March 7: Capicons convention rescheduled
Event: Capicons Comic Book & Pop Culture Con
Start Time: Sunday, March 7 at 10:00am
End Time: Sunday, March 7 at 3:00pm
Where: Dunn Loring Volunteer Fire Department
To see more details and RSVP, follow the link below:
http://www.facebook.com/n/?event.php&eid=293214896993&mid=1d94bd4G40206d0eG15556b8G7
Start Time: Sunday, March 7 at 10:00am
End Time: Sunday, March 7 at 3:00pm
Where: Dunn Loring Volunteer Fire Department
To see more details and RSVP, follow the link below:
http://www.facebook.com/n/?event.php&eid=293214896993&mid=1d94bd4G40206d0eG15556b8G7
Zadzooks on Whiteout dvd
Zadzooks: Whiteout, Doctor Who and Zombieland reviews, Joseph Szadkowski, Washington Times February 6, 2010.
Herblock & McCarthyism is AAEC's lesson
Click on the AAEC's Cartoons in the Classroom website and look for February 7th.
Saturday, February 06, 2010
Brian Wood interview at USA Weekend
From the heart of snowy Rosslyn comes - Comics scribe Brian Wood ready for the best February ever, by Brian Truitt, USA Weekend's Whos News blog (February 5 2010).
Another Harvey Pekar interview popped up
Here's another one to print out and paste in the back of Harvey Pekar: Conversations -
INTERVIEW: Comix Legend and Creator of American Splendor – Harvey Pekar
The Zeitgeisty Report Feb 5th, 2010
INTERVIEW: Comix Legend and Creator of American Splendor – Harvey Pekar
The Zeitgeisty Report Feb 5th, 2010
Friday, February 05, 2010
Feb 7: "Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs" at Shirlington Library
Ok, I'm pretty sure this will be cancelled now that we have 1 1/2 feet of snow with another 1/2 foot projected... It was a good movie though.
Film: "Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs"
Sunday, Feb. 7, 2pm
Shirlington Branch Library
The Shirlington "Family Movie Matinee" presents "Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs" [2009]. Rated PG, 90 minutes. Directed by Christopher Miller and Phil Lord. Featuring Andy Samberg, Anna Faris and James Caan. Based on the children?s book, this animated adventure follows a scientist who tries to solve world hunger only to see things go awry as food falls from the sky in abundance.
Film: "Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs"
Sunday, Feb. 7, 2pm
Shirlington Branch Library
The Shirlington "Family Movie Matinee" presents "Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs" [2009]. Rated PG, 90 minutes. Directed by Christopher Miller and Phil Lord. Featuring Andy Samberg, Anna Faris and James Caan. Based on the children?s book, this animated adventure follows a scientist who tries to solve world hunger only to see things go awry as food falls from the sky in abundance.
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