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The Bum’s Rush #56
Free Comic Book Day – Part 2
Okay… where was I? Oh, yes. Free Comic Book Day. The books
were done, I’d managed to avoid a painful death and I got to
sleep in. Hopefully Dana and Dave had made it to CAPE
without incident. I arrived at Titan, about half an hour
before they would officially open, surrounded by a throng of
adoring fans. "Groupies", I think, is the technical term.
Seriously, there were at least two guys already there to see
me specifically! Well, actually my buddy was there to see me
specifically; the other guy was a friend of his whom I’d
never met before. And I think maybe my buddy was more
interested in picking up the Free Scott Pilgrim book
from Oni than in seeing me. Hmm.
Anyway, thronged by adoring fans (eww) I entered Titan,
expecting some warm applause and maybe a cheer or two. I’m
nothing if not modest, after all. Instead I was brushed out
of the way by one of Titan’s employees who barely glanced in
my direction with an “oh, it’s you” look in their
eyes before continuing to stock the store’s front shelf with
free comics. I decided to be as much of a nuisance as
possible and began taking free comics off the shelf as they
were being stocked. “You’re in the way,” I was told. “That’s
what I was going for,” I replied, grinning like an idiot. I
took many a lump… but ‘twas all in good fun.
Once I’d thoroughly annoyed the entire staff (and
subsequently talked them out of forcibly ejecting from the
premises) I began setting up my mighty display. Oh, it may
look like a bunch of random comics and papers with pretty
pictures scattered haphazardly about the table… and it is.
But therein lies the genius. As soon as I figure out what
the genius part is I will be sure to tell you all about it
and take full credit for thinking it up years ago. I was all
set for inevitable mad rush that would follow the official
opening of the store, in which surely all copies of Mars
1938 would disappear in a matter of minutes, my shirt
would be torn from my body by hot, young comic-reading girls
(they exist I tell you!) and I would be left dazed, covered
in kisses and wondering what had just happened and how I
could make it happen every day.
But then… disaster! I had misspelled our email address on
the postcard-sized inserts that I’d made the night before to
attract people to advertise in the next Stumblebum comic. I
couldn’t believe I’d made such a huge mistake. Me! Being
someone who never screws up this was quite a blow to my ego.
Obviously none of the 200 inserts I had made could be used.
What a waste of time. I whined about the problem to anyone
in earshot. Most people walked away. However, hearing my
tale of woe,
Greg
Gatlin, boy genius, offered a solution. “Why don’t you
just register for the email address that’s listed on the
flyer?” he pondered. “Why don’t you go to heeey, that’s not
a bad idea!” I responded. Problem solved. See? I am a
genius. Greg who?
With
all my troubles taken care of the rest of the day went like
clockwork. Though obviously not as crowded as CAPE, there
was a steady stream of customers all day, picking up quite a
bit mid-afternoon. Not too surprising really, as Titan had
some great guests like my ol’ buddies
Kit
Lively, Michael Moore (El Gato Negro) and new friends
Brian Warthen,
Michael Logocki,
Jon Miller and Jake Nealis & Jay Ewald of
Cat
Torpedo Comics. Jace Moore was also there in her
incredible Green Goblin costume (based on a design by
Humberto Ramos) taking pictures with the kids who came into
the store.
Darren Hollander, official demonstrator for
Duncan
YoYo’s, showed off his amazing talent (with
yo-yo’s sicko) inspiring a draw-off between Greg Gatlin and
me. I drew Darren as the multiple, weaponized yo-yo spinning
Yo Man while Greg drew Yo Man’s arch nemesis, a particularly
foul looking character with buzz saw and spike-laden yo-yos.
That was actually a lot of fun and Darren dug the hell out
of both our sketches (though secretly I know he liked mine
best). I wish I’d made a copy of the sketch, but alas I did
not. Oh well, perhaps Duncan execs will see the sketch and
demand that I draw for them an Adventures of Yo Man comic
book! Hey, you know, I’d actually kind of dig that. (And by
“dig” I mean “cha-ching!”)
Soon my biggest fans (i.e. my parents) showed up with my
adorable nephew in tow. He was wearing his Stumblebum
Studios t-shirt to show his support. When he saw the huge
painting of Spiderman that hangs from the ceiling of the
store he pointed and said “Spiderman, Spiderman!” Only two
and already a comic geek. Yay! He wandered around the store
with my folks, marveled at the sick yo-yo skills of Darren
and admired Jace’s incredible Green Goblin costume, albeit
from a safe distance. At one point I decided to try and pass
my nephew off as the inker of Mars 1938, Dave Sherrill,
hoping to draw an even larger crowd. Unfortunately most
people saw through this ruse. He didn’t look anywhere near
drunk enough to be Dave. My parents left smiling, satisfied
that I was indeed as famous as I had led them to believe.
Shortly thereafter Darren left and I decided to entertain
the troops by taking over as the official yo-yo
demonstrator. Everyone was amazed as I performed death
defying yo-yo tricks without ever removing the yo-yo from
it’s packaging. Tricks like “Toss In Air and Catch”, “Toss
In Air, Spin and Catch” and the tricky “Toss Under Leg, Into
Air and Catch”. When Titan employee Rebecca tried to take
the yo-yo away from me lest I do harm to guests or, more
importantly, customers, I was forced to do my “Over
Shoulder, Miss When Trying to Catch, Almost Remove the Nose
of Titan Employee, Sure It Looked Like An Accident But I
Meant To Do That” trick. It’s famous… I learned it in Nepal.
Dana arrived at Titan shortly after 4:00. A combination of
bad weather and not having any more copies of Mars 1938 had
prompted him to leave Zeus Comics early. That’s right!
Almost all the copies of the book were gone and the general
response from fans was quite positive. I myself only had 10
copies of the book left when Dana arrived. He sat himself
upon the couch behind the guest table and read comics while
I busily sketched for fans until the end of the day. I
managed to get some copies of a few sketches I did -
| Deadpool for Jon Miller |
Cable for one of Jon’s buddies |
The Silver Spectre for the Cat Torpedo |
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Click on an image to view full
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Walking out of the store with a handful of free comics and
only five copies left of the first printing of
Mars 1938, I
felt pretty damn good. Free Comic Book Day was a huge
success. And I hadn’t been killed… this time.
Now let’s see how CAPE went, courtesy Mars 1938’s trace… I
mean inker, Dave Sherrill:
Free Comic Book Day – CAPE Report by Dave Sherrill
Howdy folks,
This is ace reporter Dave Sherrill reporting from Cape… well
at least reporting on Cape since it was a few days ago.
The scene was that of excitement and merriment as people
walked around excited and merry. The event was held in a
large circus tent in front of the comic book shop in Dallas
mytholodically named Zeus. There were tons of comic book
celebrities that everyone was excited about, comic book
radio shows that people were interested in, and local
cartoonists that people walked quickly past.
The crowd was filled with people, which I barely saw because
of the handfuls of beautiful confused girls who accidentally
stumbled into a comic book convention. My mind wandered back
to what my grandfather told me on his deathbed "Merciful god
in heaven, look at the milk bladders on that little missy".
Just a side note, my grandfather hasn't died yet, but I'm
sure he won't get a new bed before he passes, he's pretty
cheap and it's a pretty good bed.
Back to the convention, people were very receptive to Mars
1938, mostly because it was free, but sometimes because they
were drunk. Very few people threw the comic away in front of
us, and even less wiped their arse with it…. †in public. The
day was a rousing success, not only for the good people at
Stumblebum, but for the local comic book scene in general.
God bless you local cartoonists, some day you will sell
those "xeroxed prints of yourself with a fox's head" poster.
Some day soon.
Signing off,
-Dave Sherrill
Ace Reporter
Infinite Crisis and Civil War
Uhm… I’m way past deadline here. How about we cover this
next week? Besides, you should know by now that just because
I say I’m going to talk about something doesn’t mean I
actually will. It’s all part of that genius thing I was
talking about earlier.
Quick Bits
Warning! Nothing you read here in Quick Bits should be
considered FACT until it actually happens. Which it might
not. How do you know I’m not just making all this crap up? I
could, you know. You’ve been warned!
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Well, as intriguing a promotion as it was it doesn’t look
like enough people pulled Dan Slott’s Thing. The series,
which is actually one of my favorite books at the moment,
will end with issue #8. It’s a shame too because the awesome Kieron Dwyer just came on board as the new artist. Oh well,
I suppose I should be used to my favorite books being
cancelled by now. Cry.
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Oh yeah, DC’s Manhunter will be ending with issue #25.
Shrug.
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There’s been a lot of talk about the preponderance of
product placement (say that five times fast) within comics
over the last few years, most notably with the Nike swoosh
popping up in several Marvel titles. And it looks like that
was just the beginning. In July DC will be publishing Rush
City, a six-issue mini-series starring a new DC hero named
Rush whose car, the Pontiac Solstice GXP will appear as part
of a product placement deal between DC Comics and
Pontiac. When I first read about this I had to roll my
eyes. A comic based around trying to sell a car? Other
comics have done the same thing, to a lesser degree, and
failed pretty miserably. Who wants to read what amounts
to 32-page ad for Pontiac? But then I saw the art by
Timothy Green II. It’s insane! Seriously, take a look
here
and tell me that isn’t some of the most eye-popping art
you’ve ever seen. Add in writer Chuck Dixon, arguably one of
the best writers of straight up action in all of comics, and
I’ve got to say that this is one book I’ll be hard pressed
to pass up. It actually looks like more than a simple
advertisement and when you think about it is it any worse
than seeing a new car (almost certainly provided but the
manufacturer for the purpose of advertising said car) being
driven by the main character in a movie or TV show?
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In December Peter David and George Perez’ hard-hitting,
ultra-violent, mature readers mini-series Sachs & Violens
will be collected by DC Comics. The book was originally
published in the 90’s by Marvel/Epic’s Heavy Hitter line and
the characters, which are owned by David and Perez, didn’t
appear again until recently in the final two issues (19 and
20) of David’s Fallen Angel series.
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DC Solicitations for July
2006 are right
here.
-
Marvel Solicitations for July 2006 can be found
here.
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And Image Solicitations for July 2006 are over
here.
NEXT WEEK: Talk to The Bum with Neal Langham and Kevin
Steele. Plus, thoughts on Infinite Crisis and Civil War… as
far as you know.
Send me hate mail at
thesuperleezard@yahoo.com
Read more stupid crap I write at
www.livejournal.com/users/superleezard
Check out my (semi) daily comic, Der Wundervolle Bean, at
www.livejournal.com/users/der_magic_bean
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