Inn Suspense

Okay, so this year's WonderCon is history and it's time to turn our attention to this year's Comic-Con International which takes place July 19-22 with a Preview Night on 7/18.  So we are now 109 days away.

If you're going and you need a hotel room, it's time to do something about it.  The "Early Bird" hotel sale for rooms in the Mission Valley and Airport area has been open for some time.  If one of those locations suits you, go there a.s.a.p. and try to book something because the list of what's available is thinning and the whole Early Bird sale will be shut down this coming Tuesday, April 3rd.

This coming Wednesday, April 4, the General Sale commences.  Read this to learn how it works.  There will be more people battling for rooms than there are rooms so you need to study up on the procedure to have a shot at getting one.  Happy Hotel Hunting…and no, if you don't get one, I can't help you.

WonderCon Wrap-Up

I've been meaning to write the second part of my WonderCon Report but it's been a busy week around here.

Where was I? Oh, right: Saturday. Saturday, parts of WonderCon looked like a Cosplay Con with a few tables for people to sell comic books. I keep hearing that the people who do this just want to be noticed and to "stand out" and I don't completely buy that. If they wanted to "stand out," half of them wouldn't be dressed as Harley Quinn or The Joker. Harley Quinn is such a popular costume, I even saw women dressed up as her!

Some folks find them annoying but I love all cosplayers who don't brandish props that can (and do) thoughtlessly poke people and who understand that when someone asks to take their photo, they can't just stop anywhere and strike a pose. If it's on a walkway, other people may be trying to walk that walkway. I saw one spot where we came close to having a Four-Klingon-Pileup.

My two Saturday panels were late in the day so I just wandered around talking to folks and browsing the aisles. There were some wonderful craftworks there to be browsed and if I had any room left in my house for such things, some of them would have been purchased by me, too. As it was, some of the sellers seemed to be doing a brisk business.

That day's panels — Quick Draw! and Cartoon Voices — were back-to-back in the same room, the way we go it at Comic-Con in San Diego. We filled the room to capacity for the first one and the few seats that were vacated after Quick Draw! were quickly filled for Cartoon Voices. Both were in Room North 200B, which is in the convention center's new add-on building…very nice but also a little far from the part of the main hall where I'd been hanging out.

Our Quick Draw! draw-ers were Tom Richmond (from MAD), Lonnie Millsap (from this very funny site) and Sergio Aragonés (also from MAD, as well as Groo the Wanderer). Scott Shaw!, who usually occupies one of those seats, was unable to make it to WonderCon but we expect to see him back, Sharpie in hand, for San Diego. On the Cartoon Voices panel, we had Neil Ross, Eliza Jane Schneider, Wally Wingert, Julie Nathanson and Townsend Coleman.

Fave moment of the panel? There were several but I loved when Wally displayed a new acquisition he'd brought to the con…a replica Muppet from the famous "Mahna Mahna" routine. Wally brought it out, made it say "Manha Manha" and the whole audience, without prompting, began singing "Doo-doo-doo-doo-doo."

Sunday, I did two more panels. There was Cover Story where we discuss the design of comic book covers, in this case with Dan Jurgens, Ed Piskor, Mitch Gerads and Ryan Benjamin. Later came the Annual Jack Kirby Tribute with my ol' partner Steve Sherman, Tom Kraft of the Jack Kirby Museum and Research Center, and attorney Paul S. Levine. Interest in Jack and his work has never been greater and I expect to keep saying that the rest of my days.

That's about all that comes to mind. I very much enjoyed chatting with old friends and meeting many readers of this blog. I had one frustrating conversation with a Trump supporter who sought me out to explain to me that everything bad about Trump the press says is a conspiracy of lies, whereas everything good you hear about him is absolutely, incontrovertibly true. Guess that must be so if this guy said it. As a bonus for the entire weekend, I made great time back on the 5 Freeway…and I think that's the end of this report. If you made it there, I hope you had even a quarter as good a time as I did.

Cleese Close-Out

Hey, remember the two tickets I had for sale for Saturday night? They're showing Monty Python and the Holy Grail at the Saban Theater in Beverly Hills Adjacent and it's followed by a live Q-and-A with John Cleese himself. I offered 'em here and a friend swooped in and grabbed them…and now, he can't go.

Two seats in Row G of the Front Balcony. They cost someone else $160.20 and we'll let 'em go for $160.00 — a savings of not one but two dimes. Write me if you want 'em and this time, All Sales Final. And if you have an online account with Ticketmaster, I can transfer them to you that way so you know they're genuine.

Today's Video Link

Earlier today, I posted an obit for a very talented cartoonist named Lee Holley. Here's a video from a few years ago of Lee drawing Dennis the Menace and his own creation, Ponytail. He makes it look so easy — and if you had as much experience as he did, it might be…

Your Wednesday Trump Dump

The Rasmussen Poll usually favors Republicans and it's now saying Trump's popularity is fairly high. No doubt he thinks that's the only one that matters…and will until it tells him something he doesn't like. For what little it may be worth, I don't think the measure of any politician's popularity means a lot until such time as there's a named alternative to them. Asking "Would you rather have [name of elected official] or some unnamed alternative who isn't even running yet?" is different from asking folks if they'd prefer a named alternative. You not only can't beat something with nothing, you can't even measure preference against nothing.

Here are some articles I read today which you might want to read today…

  • Trump has been hammering Amazon — gee, I wonder why he'd attack a company owned by Jeff Bezos — and insisting they don't pay high-enough postal rates. Here's what that's all about and why he's probably wrong.
  • Fred Kaplan wonders (and has a theory) about who made the single worst decision of the Iraq War. There were a lot of "worst" decisions made during that mess but only a couple of folks who could have made the real "worst one."
  • William Saletan tries to get to the bottom of how John Bolton, Trump's incoming national security adviser, feels about Muslims and Islam. As you'll see, this is not an easy thing to figure out.
  • A political theorist offers political theories as to why Trump's base doesn't seem to care if he's corrupt. I think it's a lot simpler. They hate not having one of "their guys" in power so much that they're willing to overlook anything.
  • Jonathan Chait explains why Trump signs a budget then denounces it as terrible. It's because if he said it was great, then he'd have to take some responsibility for what results from it.
  • Charles P. Pierce on how Wisconsin governor Scott Walker's idea of democracy is to not hold elections he fears Republicans will not win. And hey, what's more democratic than not letting people vote?

Like you, I'm aghast at some of the lies and personal attacks being hurled at the young survivors of the Parkland school shooting. Some people will say or do anything just to deny an opponent a smidgen of Higher Moral Ground…or even Equal.

Lee Holley, R.I.P.

Last Monday morning, a single-engine Mooney M20E airplane crashed and burned at the airfield in Marina, California. The pilot, who was reportedly killed upon impact, was the very fine cartoonist, Lee Holley.

Lee was born April 20, 1932 in Phoenix. He got his first cartooning job at age 15 and by the time he was 21, he was doing animation and layout work for the Warner Brothers cartoon studio. In 1957, he began assisting Hank Ketcham on Dennis the Menace, drawing the Sunday page, a few of the comic books and much of the merchandise art. That went on until 1960 when Lee sold his own syndicated strip, Ponytail, which he did until 1988. Between 1980 and 1988, Lee and his friend and frequent collaborator Frank Hill also produced the syndicated Bugs Bunny newspaper strip.

Lee was no stranger to Bugs, having worked on his cartoons at the Warner Brothers studio. But he also drew Bugs in comic books for Western Publishing's Gold Key line and that made me very happy because I was writing a lot of them. He drew most of the new stories of Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck and Tweety & Sylvester that ran in the early issues of the revived Looney Tunes comic that Western launched in 1975 and did occasional stories for the Bugs Bunny and Porky Pig comics. (Online sources say he also drew The Jetsons for Gold Key but I don't think that's true.)

The editors at Western loved the way Lee drew teenage girls so much that they asked me to create an Archie-like teen comic for him to draw. The result was Tom, Dick and Harriet (not my title) which had three tryout issues but never graduated to a regular series. I wrote the first two and Lee did a terrific job on his end. We were both sorry there weren't more. Other comic books Lee drew would include the Ponytail comics published by Dell and later Charlton.

Though we corresponded a bit, I only spoke to Lee in person once — at a San Diego Comic Con in the seventies. He was a very nice man who obviously loved his profession…and why wouldn't he when he was so good at it?

Vault of Walt

Hey, ya know what Turner Classic Movies is showing tomorrow night? A whole batch of rarely-seen Disney movies, hosted (and maybe selected) by my four-star film friend, Leonard Maltin…and who better? Here's the rundown on what they're running, not in this order…

  • The Golden Touch (1935)
  • Mickey's Trailer (1938)
  • Mr. Duck Steps Out (1940)
  • The Sword and the Rose (1953)
  • Rob Roy: The Highland Rogue (1953)
  • In Search of the Castaways (1962)
  • The One and Only, Genuine, Original Family Band (1968)
  • The Journey of Natty Gann (1985)

Check the schedule for the precise times and remember that precise times on TCM are usually not precise so if you're DVR'ing, pad your recordings. There's some pretty good, hard-to-see material there. The One and Only, Genuine, Original Family Band is kind of a "lost" movie musical with songs by the Sherman Brothers and nice performances by John Davidson, Walter Brennan, Buddy Ebsen and many others. If you look fast, you can spot Goldie Hawn in her film debut as one of the dancers.

This Should Not Be

Photo by Bruce Guthrie

Here's a sad story about the current financial condition of a very good guy, William Messner-Loebs. Here's what I wrote about Bill last year when we presented him with the Bill Finger Award for Excellence in Comic Book Writing…

Bill Messner-Loebs has been a cartoonist and writer since the 1970s. He has worked for DC, Marvel, Comico, Power Comics, Texas Comics, Vertigo, Boom!, Image, IDW, and the U.S. State Department (for which he produced a comic about the perils of land mines). He has written Superman, Flash, Aquaman, Mr. Monster, Hawkman, Green Arrow, Wonder Woman, Dr. Fate, Jonny Quest, Spider-Man, Thor, and the Batman newspaper strip. He wrote and drew Journey: The Adventures of Wolverine MacAlistaire and Bliss Alley, and he co-created The Maxx and Epicurus the Sage. He has also delivered pizzas, done custom framing, been a library clerk, sold art supplies, and taught cartooning.

A guy like this should not be in the precarious situation he's in. Everyone reading this who reads current comic books can name a whole bunch that would be better written if the editors had hired Bill Loebs to craft some of his always-fine stories. If I were a publisher right now, I'd seize on this chance not just to help someone down on his luck but for strictly selfish reasons — to get more good books into my line by grabbing onto this fine and available resource.

Read the story. Think if there's anything you can do to help. A donation to the organization helping people in his predicament would be nice but what Bill needs is good, steady employment. Anyone out there got any?

Ticket Talk

This Saturday night, the Saban Theater — which is almost in Beverly Hills — is running the movie Monty Python and the Holy Grail, followed by an in-person Q-and-A with John Cleese. Ticketmaster has a few seats left in the last two rows of the rear balcony…which are not only not in Beverly Hills, they're not even in the same troposphere.

If you wanna go but wanna sit closer, I have a friend who has two seats in the front balcony for a lot less than some "resellers" are asking. Drop me a note if you're interested.

In the meantime, some of you may be holding tickets for this Thursday night to see Seth Rudetsky interview and accompany the wonderful Chita Rivera at the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts, which actually is in Beverly Hills. Well, in case you haven't heard, the event has been rescheduled for May 10.

My Latest Tweet

  • In their 60 Minutes interviews, Stormy Daniels sounded like the Secretary of Education and Betsy DeVos sounded like a porn star.

Today's Video Link

Sgt. Sonny did such a good job yesterday we're having him back for an encore…

Hardly Working

Let's repeat a post that I put here on February 27, 2004. A conversation that I had at WonderCon with an artist who hasn't gotten a lot of work lately made me think this was still timely…

Every day or so, someone sends me a link to a website on which they display cartooning or other creative work they've done. They are not, they say, getting any or enough work. Could I please look at their samples and tell them if they're wasting their time pursuing a career as a writer or artist? And of course, could I suggest anywhere they might sell some of their work?

To the latter, the answer is almost always no. I just don't know of very many places these days that are looking for writers or artists. Everyone I know who hires or buys at all has more submissions than they can handle. And of course, the fact that I might like the work doesn't mean anyone else will. So I usually wind up writing a reply that reads…well, like this one I just wrote to someone who sent me a link to a website that displays their cartooning that no one is buying…

There are two aspects to what you're asking me. One is whether the work is any good. I liked what I saw on your site very much but I'm afraid that doesn't mean a lot in terms of you selling it.

I know a lot of very talented artists who aren't getting much work, including many who once did. It's a sad fact of life that in a field like this, there are only so many openings. If a given company needs 10 good artists and 25 good artists apply, 15 good artists get turned away. Those 15 aren't necessarily doing anything wrong except to try and sell their wares in an oversaturated market.

I believe it's important in this world for everyone, even an artist, to have some measure of financial stability. Perhaps to attain it, you might have to modify your short-term goal. It may seem like giving up or being untrue to your muse to look to non-artistic sources of income, and you may even be able to tread water for a while longer. But the work of a creative individual flows in many ways from his or her life, and if that life involves constantly worrying about the Visa bill, that will eventually destroy something. To artists or writers living on the edge, I sometimes suggest finding something steady to pay the rent, getting a little cash in the bank and then perhaps returning to writing or drawing as time permits. Monetary desperation is just plain bad for the soul, especially when one gets beyond the "young beginner" stage of one's life.

I never tell anyone to give it up but I also never assure them that it's merely a matter of time before the world discovers the wonderment of what they create. The world isn't that perceptive and sometimes it isn't even a matter of talent but of the right talent in the right place at the right time. Persistence up to a point is an admirable quality but at some point, it can become a matter of investing too much of your future in a risky proposition.

Back From WonderCon

Just got an e-mail from someone asking if something was wrong since I haven't yet posted my usual "Had a great time at WonderCon" report. It's coming, it's coming. Actually, I got back last night setting some sort of record for getting home from Anaheim. If it was always that quick, I'd go to Disneyland more often than once every 1.5 decades.

Yes, I did have a great time…as I always do. There are just things that have to be done before I can tell you how great. They include unpacking, catching up on sleep, writing a sudden We-Need-It-Yesterday assignment for someone and it might be nice if I assembled all my tax records that I promised my Business Manager he'd have by St. Patrick's Day. But I will be back and I'll tell you how much I enjoyed WonderCon.

Today's Video Link

I really like these guys on the 'net who sing four-part harmony with themselves. This is Sonny Vande Putte ("Sgt. Sonny" to you) and he's doing the jobs of all four members of the Four Seasons…

Storm Warning

Apparently, the Stormy Daniels interview is going to air tonight on 60 Minutes…and why the heck wouldn't it? They'll get big ratings. She'll get publicity and attention for whatever personal/business objectives she has.  I kinda doubt it'll lower a lot of opinions of Trump. I'm thinking most of the opinions of him that could be lowered already have been.

And I gotta say, I really don't care if he had an affair with this lady or anyone. Marital infidelity is high on my list of things that are nobody's business apart from those directly involved. The only thing I thought was our business about Bill Clinton's dalliance with Ms. Lewinsky was that it showed some pretty poor judgment on his part. I'd thought he was smarter than that.

Then again on a scale of 1 to 1000 for Bad Judgement with 1000 denoting utterly terrible, catastrophic Bad Judgement, I think Bill 'n' Monica barely cracks double digits, whereas the Iraq War is around 1008. And a lot of folks are not only denying the Iraq War was a mistake but seem quite eager to make it again maybe with some of the same people leading the way.

Even if all Stormy says is true, whose opinion of Trump is going to change? The rich got their big tax cut. Immigrants are on the defensive. Trump could [fill in name of your favorite sexual aberration] on the White House lawn and he wouldn't lose support from those who cheer those goals, not even from when they're self-described evangelicals.

If you're an exception to this — if you have a sense of morality that transcends politics, my hat's off to you even if I disagree with your morals. I haven't always been as consistent in that regard as I'd like and I'm working on it. That's whey I'm going to view Trump's alleged affairs the same way I viewed Clinton's. If it's just a matter of being unfaithful to one's spouse, that's their concern, not mine.  If there's a part of this that is our business, it's the ancillary, cover-up stuff.