Giles Farnaby's Baby

Here’s how small and fucked up the audience for comics is nowadays: Thief of Thieves and Peter Panzerfaust. These are comics of interest to one type of person, and one type of person only–the type of person who wants to write comic books for Image Comics to publish. They don’t want to draw comic books, because that part is hard. They just want to write comic books that some guy they talk to on the Internet, preferably one in a foreign country far away from legal representation, draws for them, and then they want to go to conventions and tell the people they were in line with last month how to break into comics. Do they want to write short stories? No. Do they want to write movies? Maybe, if it’s easy enough, sure, yeah okay. Why? Do you know somebody? That seems like it could be okay! That kind of thing. That’s who Thief of Thieves and Peter Panzerfaust is for, and that’s it. The funny thing about these comics is that the last thing they want to be is actually successful, because that would ruin the game–it has to seem like what you’re seeing isn’t that much different from what’s on your MacBook, that what you’re reading is the same thing that will happen to you if you can just wrangle up a few hundred more Twitter followers. Thief of Thieves: it’s the story of a thief who wants to get out of being a thief so he can become a regular family man. Peter Panzerfaust: hey, what would happen if Peter Pan was running around during World War II, jumping over the Nazis with some Lost Boys? Could he be an irritating piece of shit while doing so?

Those aren’t stories, they’re elevator pitches. They’re what got written in the fill-in blanks of a how-to book, and they result in the sort of comic that appeals only when the reader thinks they might be able to do something like this, you know, but probably with a vampire, or an Asian girl who hates her parents. Maybe it could be set in Seattle! Don’t you dare mention webcomics to me, I swear I’ll just die.

-Tucker Stone

Isn’t it depressing that this is like half of what comics is nowadays? Thief of Thieves (this is what you named your comic, Robert Kirkman!) did get picked up, surprising no one - but this it, this is the end result of comics I guess. Hope you like Jerry Bruckheimer movies and police procedurals!

So, let me see if I can write the “official” announcement for Watchmen 2:
Not the announcement from DC— the article that’ll be run by hacks like that USA Today guy or that one shitty LA Times blog when Watchmen 2 gets announced. I always enjoy those articles more. The first paragraph will start with some bland sentence that references the book’s popularity, maybe mentions its placement on Time’s Top 100 books list, and then segues into a question like “But a sequel?” Or maybe it’ll go more daring like “The only thing crazier than publishing Watchmen is publishing its sequel.”

And then there’ll be a couple paragraphs of the plans— DC to launch a wave of Watchmen 2 miniseries, created by various C or D-list talents, whatever also-ran is writing these. Then, quotes from … I’m guessing they’ll put Jim Lee out front on this one. ”There’s risk, but we want fans to be excited and talking about the risks we’re taking. It’s our top talents on these books” (again, alluding to, like, Andy Kubert who’s never even been a top talent within his own family, but…). Allusion to Alan Moore’s prickly relationship with the company— Moore is “unavailable” for comment at time of press and/or declines to comment. Maybe, maybe he says something pithy like “All of those characters are already dead to me. I’m busy writing a 10,000 page poem about a molehill’s evolution over 20,000 years. But why doesn’t anyone working in comics have their own ideas, I wonder?” (Jason Aaron tells him to fuck himself again 4 months later, then goes back to architect-ing X-Men vs. The Hulk crossovers). That feels more like a subsequent snippet of an interview to me from Obscure Magazine Quarterly, than an opening article, though.

Then, there’ll be allusions to controversy on the internet, with half-witted quotes from SLAMPENIS654 like “How darez they?” or “This makez my nutz sore! #SLAMPENIS”, a snapshot of the discourse from fucking twitter… Best case scenario, they get a quote from someone associated with Comics Alliance like “Many fans are very troubled by concerns.” Then follow that with an upbeat quote from one of the creators. ”I welcome the challenge. I think fans will be excited when they see what we’ve done here,” says Amanda Conner or whoever. And then end with a quote from Jim Lee, some kind of meaningless bit of inspirational nonsense like “The only risky thing in life is to not take risks.” End of article. I think that’ll be the article.

After that, Marvel will immediately announce a “major press event” and try to promote something they’re doing; after DC’s 52 thing, they announced a Spiderman comic that Joe Madureira drew, like, 4 issues of. So— they haven’t really set the bar that high for themselves, in the past. But I’m sure they’ll architect up some kind of major event of events. Axel Alonso and all of the architects past, present and future will all join hands and together declare it “the biggest story we’ve ever told, ever, for real this time, seriously, the biggest, really, we mean it.” (Five months after whatever they do, some Architect will tell the audience in interviews that they’re stupid for having believed in anything, at all, at any point in their lives, and then try to bully the audience into believing that every bad comic ever published was actually about “escape” this entire time and we were all too stupid to realize it).

Then, the books actually come out. By the time they do, everyone’s already bored by the idea of it, after all the pre-release hype / the way-more-entertaining internet fracas. “Sales” to retailers— the ones still standing— for the first issue will be good, “justifying” the whole thing— no one will care by issue 4 (which will be late because of REDACTED). There’ll be some reviews at CBR or IGN or wherever— the third paragraph of that will be “but setting aside the question of whether it should exist, I’m instead going to judge it by the criteria of whether the writing and art are executed with the bare minimum amount of skill, and then leave it up to you to think about what it means.” (Like those videogame reviews that talk about how “gameplay is a 7”, whatever the hell that means.) I’m guessing 4 out of 5 “stars.”

One of the writers involved will later be heard at a bar at a comic convention saying, “Well, if fans wouldn’t buy it, we wouldn’t waste our lives making it, just the same way that if men didn’t pay for sex, I wouldn’t blow every man with $5 in his pocket— so really this is all the fault of comic fans, as is everything, always; the creative personnel in comics will never be in any way responsible for the state of comics”; everybody nods, and goes home happy. The end.

Mainstream comics in 2012! Previewed!

Twist Street

 Just, Jesus. Abhay Kosla does it again.

The only revolutionary act left in comics is to live up to its potential.
Sean Witzke
Some quotes from the Judgement Day 5/21 Site

that would be here

“Perhaps it would be more appropriate for me to say that word of the May 21 Judgement Day is spreading like the Mississippi River flood?”

“Harold Camping and Family Radio have been hailed as heros as some, and denied as hoax’s as others – but on May 21, the truth will either come, or not.”

“Will you be able to survive the apocalypse?  No!”

Joel Osteen, Danny Davis, and Mike Murdock are three, of many false prophets that we have seen rise to fame and fortune over the last several years.  These false prophets bring teachings that do not correspond with the word of the Bible, and have had a negative effect on Religious culture.  They have used the television of their primary avenue to exploit the word of Christ for their own benefit. The Rapture on May 21 will most likely come and go without saving these three, along with the rest of the False Prophets on this Earth.  They will be left behind during Judgement Day, and spend the End of Days begging for forgiveness from Jesus for their sins in hope of being saved by the lord before the End of The World.  Don’t worry, we doubt they will join us in Heaven.”“

This sign of the Apocalypse specifically refers to the ‘Elect’ who are also known as the true believers in Christ the Lord.  The recent persecutions in child molestation cases of Priests, and other high-ranking church officials may in fact be another sign of the May 21 apocalypse.  While those persecuted may in fact be guilty of their crimes, the Bible does not specify if they will be tried justly or not.”

While there may be many Justifications for this particular event, lawlessness, and a lack of consideration for others has clearly grown in the previous years.  Notice how people no longer use their blinker when driving, or park between the lines properly in parking lots.  These may seem unrelated to the End of the World, but in fact are perfect examples to prove that May 21 will be Judgement Day.”

Harold Camping originally predicted that the world would come to an end in 1994, but after re-calculating God’s word in the Bible, he came to the conclusion that Jesus will return to Earth for the Rapture on May 21 2011.”

Chuck Norris will die in bed. Werner Herzog will die after falling from an airship into a volcano.
Roger Ebert, droppin’ truths like it was 50 tons
Idiots recommend learning some other career to “fall back on” in case the cartooning doesn’t work out. Does anybody give that advice to aspiring bus drivers? “Learn something harder to do in case the bus-driving thing doesn’t work out. Like rocket science.” It’s harder to become a CPA than a cartoonist, so why not do the easier thing? Especially if it makes you happy.
Kyle Baker
I recently saw a “blockbuster” Hollywood animated feature at the mall. This cartoon cost $100 million to make. Every blade of grass, every leaf on every tree was lavishly rendered. I noticed that the grass itself was animated, swaying in the breeze. Then I realized I was staring at the background because the story was so damned boring that my attention kept wandering away from the characters. The movie failed financially because kids hated the movie. It bored them, too. It took hundreds of people and millions of dollars to make something this boring. Incredible.
No. The room I was talking to had a substantial number of people who continue to use the phrase “generation of entitlement” when they talk about those kids today who are on their lawn playing rock and roll. And that, with all due respect to many of those people, make me batshit. Do you know who invented the phrase generation of entitlement? The next generation after the Mayflower. The next generation is always the generation of entitlement, because they didn’t have to build their own log cabins or ride their penny-farthing bicycles to work. As long as there have been children, this has been going on.
Mark Waid