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Thursday, March 31, 2011

Politics and Prose recommends Tomine

SCENES FROM AN IMPENDING MARRIAGE
by
Adrian Tomine (Drawn & Quarterly, $9.95)

Adrian Tomine's new book is quite different from his previous work. Utilizing a smaller format, and more cartoonish style, Scenes from an Impending Marriage documents, in several smartly staged and well told scenes, some of the humorous drama before Tomine's wedding. Here you'll find a lot of honesty and a frequently hilarious exposé of an often overwhelmingly stressful event. This is pure Tomine and a joy to read. Highly recommended.

Click here to learn about my other new favorites in the Graphic Novel Department.

- Adam Waterreus

City Paper reviews Super

Dwight Schrute fights crime; How I Met Your Mother Guy adopts
By Tricia Olszewski
Washington City Paper April 1, 2011
http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/articles/40604/super-and-happythankyoumoreplease-reviewed-dwight-schrute-fights-crime-how-i/

Post on Brazilian kid cartoonist

Teenage cartoonist lampoons Brazil's elite
By Juan Forero, Washington Post March 31 2011
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/teenage-cartoonist-lampoons-brazils-elite/2011/03/29/AFHUPi5B_story.html
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/teenage_cartoonist_lampoons_brazils_elite/2011/03/30/AFhwcD6B_gallery.html

Good review of Finder: Voice at TCJ.com

Finder: Voice
Carla Speed McNeil
Dark Horse
$19.99, 208 pages

REVIEWED BY Shaenon Garrity Mar 29, 2011
http://www.tcj.com/reviews/finder-voice/

I love Carla Speed McNeil's Finder, and I imagine the reason I love it is the same reason it doesn't get more attention in the comics press: it's simultaneously straightforward and labyrinthine, genre-based and uncategorizable. It's solid sci-fi of the kind they were making in the 1970s...

Introducing Page Speed Online, with mobile support



At Google, we’re striving to make the whole web fast. As part of that effort, we’re launching a new web-based tool in Google Labs, Page Speed Online, which analyzes the performance of web pages and gives specific suggestions for making them faster. Page Speed Online is available from any browser, at any time. This allows website owners to get immediate access to Page Speed performance suggestions so they can make their pages faster.



In addition, we’ve added a new feature: the ability to get Page Speed suggestions customized for the mobile version of a page, specifically smartphones. Due to the relatively limited CPU capabilities of mobile devices, the high round-trip times of mobile networks, and rapid growth of mobile usage, understanding and optimizing for mobile performance is even more critical than for the desktop, so Page Speed Online now allows you to easily analyze and optimize your site for mobile performance. The mobile recommendations are tuned for the unique characteristics of mobile devices, and contain several best practices that go beyond the recommendations for desktop browsers, in order to create a faster mobile experience. New mobile-targeted best practices include eliminating uncacheable landing page redirects and reducing the amount of JavaScript parsed during the page load, two common issues that slow down mobile pages today.

Page Speed Online is powered by the same Page Speed SDK that powers the Chrome and Firefox extensions and webpagetest.org.

Please give Page Speed Online a try. We’re eager to hear your feedback on our mailing list and find out how you’re using it to optimize your site.

Paraules invisibles

Plourà silenci per tot el mal que fem i hem fet,
pel conformisme i les plàcides omissions
d’aquest viure de xais escaldats i immisericordiosos.
Declinarem “ l’a,b,c ” descervellat d’un sistema
on la fi és l’inici de l’acomodament
més inhumà i parcial.
Adorarem l’euro,
la totpoderosa xarxa i el paper couché
de tants projectes nascuts ja morts;
dissenyarem
un món luxós i serem savis imprescindibles,
llum per als cecs, guia per als pulcres moribunds.

Tot serà fet a la mida adobada d’una passarel·la
on white collars de gomina invisible xuclaran,
dels lliris blancs i, amb somriures, la darrera saba
i brindaran per la tristesa dels altres.
Ploreu amics, plorem
pels nens que fórem si hem desaprés de la pluja
els seus pètals, els llamps de la veu,
car, és per tendresa que vindrà el sagrat judici
on regnarà la veritat blanca i la bellesa
dels qui construeixen la història –oblidats
pel present–.

Del Llibre Invisible, 2005.

Ací la continuació...

Blogs are for people

By Scott Knaster, Google Developer Relations
Scott standing in front of a door with 404 on it. It's funny.
Hello, esteemed Google Code Blog readers! My name is Scott Knaster, and I’m the new editor of this blog. I’m interrupting the usual flow of posts to let you know about some new things happening around here. This blog has the company’s name on it, but of course, like all blogs, it’s written by individual people, to be read by other individual people, like you. We want to do a little more to celebrate that, starting with these small steps:
  • We’re adding a photo and some info about each post’s author. Googlers get around, to hackathons, conferences, and GTUGs, and now you’ll have faces to match up with names when we meet in real life.
  • We’ll spend more time responding to comments. As always, we encourage and appreciate your thoughtful, on-topic comments.
  • We’ll be tweeting more at @googlecode over on Twitter, too. And you can find a list of Google developer-related Twitter accounts here (choose Developers from the Category drop-down).
  • I’ll be hanging around here a lot. Think of me as the host of a big, geeky dinner party. Mostly I’ll be helping edit posts written by others—experts who work on the products they post about—but I’ll also write a few posts myself.
I’ve been working with APIs and platforms for a long time, mostly by writing docs about how to use them. Platforms are full of promise, but they’re only interesting and worthwhile when people build on them.

Please email me at sknaster@google.com if you have any thoughts or feedback for improving this blog. Or, just leave a comment on this post.

Thanks for being here!

Adam Dwight fine art animation at Flashpoint Gallery

Today's Express has a picture from the animated "Rocket Fuel" on page 5. Here's the information from Flashpoint's website.
 
Adam Dwight & Dana Jeri Maier: Off in a Corner
April 1 – May 7, 2011
Opening Reception: Friday, April 1, 6 – 8 p.m.
Art + Coffee Program: Sunday, April 10, 1:30 p.m. — Presented in collaboration with the Smithsonian American Art Museum's Luce Foundation Center Art + Coffee Program [meet at the Smithsonian American Art Museum in the F Street Lobby]
Pink Panel @ Flashpoint: Drink + Draw, Thursday, April 21, 6:30 p.m.

Adam Dwight's gouache paintings and rubber puddle will collide with Dana Jeri Maier's ink drawings on drink coasters for Off in a Corner, a two-person show that manipulates the line between fine art and illustration. When juxtaposed, Dwight's and Maier's farcical and cartoonish narratives reveal a dark absurdity to the characters and relationships depicted within.

Exhibition Press Release
[PDF, 348 KB]

Gallery Hours 
Tuesday – Saturday, 12 – 6 p.m.
OR BY APPOINTMENT
Contact  Karyn Miller, Manager, Visual Art
t 202.315.1310
f 202.315.1303

Hop (id., 2011)di Tim Hill

POSTATO SU
Ah la Pasqua! Tempo di conglietti che con le loro slitte volanti trainate da pulcini portano piccole uova colorate nei giardini di tutti i bimbi del mondo. La vera tradizione!
Non è ben chiaro se prima poi anche noi subiremo la mitologia americana relativa alla Pasqua e se i coniglietti soppianteranno gli agnelli fatti al forno, di sicuro gli americani stessi (almeno al cinema) stanno modificando la loro tradizione a favore di una più comoda ibridazione con il re delle feste commerciali: Babbo Natale. Ecco quindi la fabbrica di uova di cioccolata (che sembra quella di Willy Wonka ma è, ovviamente, sull'isola di Pasqua), le slitte volanti e i sistemi per girare tutto il mondo in un giorno solo.

L'ibridazione con il modello vincente di festività remunerativa (sempre il Natale) avviene anche ad un livello più raffinato, cioè quello della forma. Hop infatti risponde ad un modello cinematografico che è tipico del Natale: il film che racconta il retroscena del lavoro che porta felicità ai bimbi. E questo retroscena si compone sempre di una parte industriale (il meccanismo attraverso il quale ogni anno avviene la magia del Natale) e di una di crisi (quest'anno si rischia di saltare il Natale perchè qualcosa è andato storto).
Così accade anche in Hop, il coniglietto pasquale di turno è ormai vecchio e deve passare il testimone al figlio (ottemperando ad una tradizione vecchia di secoli) ma questi vuole in realtà fare il batterista e per sfuggire al proprio destino scappa ad Hollywood. Lì incontrerà un ragazzo in cerca di lavoro ed identità a cui rovinare la vita e poi salvarla.

Se lo schema è applicato perfettamente alcune zone d'ombra rimangono nel finale. Solitamente questo tipo di cinema, smaccatamente rivolto all'infanzia, si fa portatore di ideali di libertà, liberazione ed esaltazione dell'autostima. Il mantra "insegui i tuoi sogni", "sii te stesso", "trova il tuo destino", sembra essere applicato anche in questo caso salvo un clamoroso tradimento finale.
Il figlio del coniglietto pasquale infatti, non solo vuole fare il batterista ma è anche molto bravo, riceve complimenti da tutti e partecipando ad un talent show (dove il giudice è David Hasselhoff, e se lo dice lui...) sembra essere ad un passo da una scontata affermazione come musicista. In extremis tuttavia manderà tutto all'aria per un repentino cambio d'idea, non motivato da nessuna scoperta o nessun evento negativo, solo per andare incontro al desiderio paterno di vedere il figlio che segue le sue orme. Si tratta di quello che succede nella realtà nella maggior parte dei casi, da questo punto di vista quindi una chiusa più sincera, ma che sembra cozzare con tutto l'ideale positivo di inseguimento di un sogno che il resto del film persegue.

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Truitt on Who Is Jake Ellis?

We spy a 'Jake Ellis' extension
By Brian Truitt, USA TODAY March 30 2011
http://www.usatoday.com/life/comics/2011-03-30-JakeEllis_N.htm

Troy Allen of Bamn has a Podcast


From: Troy Allen
Introducing The Menagerie of Kick-Assery Podcast



No new Bamn updates this week (although we have a deadline of April 6th to complete the bubbling on #3), but I neglected to mention earlier that I recently started a podcast called Menagerie of Kick-Assery.

M.O.K.A. (as it is affectionately called by nobody) is centrally focused on all things "geek." That includes comics, movies, TV shows, and, yep...wrestling.

We are nine episodes in and the ninth episode just went online today.

This episodes we talk to my good friend and wrestling manager Marcus "King Kong" Dowling.

Marcus was there for my fall from grace from professional wrasslin' (it was a short fall) and he gives us tons of industry insight.

Download it, stream it, or Itunes it at the Menagerie of Kick-Assery blog (you might learn something...but no promises):

CLICK HERE to listen to me, co-host Gene Green, and Marcus at the MOKA blog.



April 10: Capicons next convention

Capicons Comic Book and Pop Culture Con
Sunday, April 10 · 10:00am - 3:00pm
________________________________
Location
Dunn Loring Volunteer Fire And Rescue Department
2148 Gallows Road
Dunn Loring, VA
________________________________
More Info
Special Guest: Rafer Roberts--creator of Plastic Farm, and editor of D.C. Conspiracy's Magic Bullet! More TBA!

Admission $3 - Kids FREE!

Open to the public from 10 am - 3 pm. Buy, sell & trade: Gold, Silver, Bronze Age comics; Indie & Modern comics, Publishers & Creators, TV & Movie Collectibles. Non-sport cards; Videos & DVDs; Horror/Sci-Fi; figures, toys; Star Wars & Star Trek memorabilia; original artwork, posters and other comic-related collectibles.

New imagery of Japan after the earthquake

(Cross-posted on the Official Google Blog, Google.org Blog and Public Policy Blog)

It’s now the third week after the devastating 9.0-magnitude earthquake that struck northeastern Japan. Aid organizations have been hard at work and cities are starting to show signs of recovery, but the damage is beyond imagination and there are still thousands of people at shelters grappling with daily challenges. As a native of Sendai city, I’m still speechless seeing the destruction and damage that has been done to the places I love and care about.

We’ve been looking for ways we can assist in the relief efforts using Google’s map-related tools. A few days after the quake, we published updated satellite imagery of northeast Japan in Google Maps and Google Earth, which illustrated the massive scale of devastation in the affected areas.

Today, we’ve published imagery of the Sendai region at even higher resolution, which we collected on Sunday and Monday. The new Sendai imagery, along with satellite imagery from throughout the area, is now live in the base imagery layer of Google Earth and will soon be visible in Google Maps. We hope to continue collecting updated images and publishing them as soon as they are ready.

We hope our effort to deliver up-to-date imagery provides the relief organizations and volunteers working around the clock with the data they need to better understand the current conditions on the ground. We also hope these tools help our millions of users—both those in Japan and those closely watching and sending their support from all over the globe—to find useful information about the affected areas.

A riverside neighborhood in Sendai from our newly released imagery

Wheatley / Hempel comic book funded for movie adaptation

Mark Wheatley tells me that his comic book, Blood of the Innocent about Dracula versus Jack the Ripper, has moved along in the movie development process and sends this link for more details.
Mark will be the next Meet a Local Cartoonist at the City Paper site.

Comicsgirl reports on "Mr. Mendoza’s Paintbrush/Trickster event at Busboys & Poets • 03.30.11"

Comicsgirl has written up last night's "Mr. Mendoza's Paintbrush/Trickster event at Busboys & Poets • 03.30.11".  I was quite taken with Christopher Cardinale's talk about how he visited Mexico and photographed the scenes that the author had described in his short story.

Editor Matt Dembicki also pointed out this blog post on Trickster that talks about how Peter Kuper did the initial cover for the book

Comic Riffs interviews Tom Tomorrow

REBEL WITH A 'KOS': Tom Tomorrow ends Salon run to become 'comics curator' at the Daily Kos
By Michael Cavna
Washington Post Comic Riffs blog March 30 2011
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/comic-riffs/post/rebel-with-a-kos-tom-tomorrow-ends-salon-run-to-become-comics-curator-at-the-daily-kos/2011/03/30/AFEaTl3B_blog.html

April 1: Nick Galifianakis at National Press Club

Nick Galifianakis will be at the National Press Club hosting Commedia dell Media, a contest to select Washington's funniest journalist. The event is a fundraiser for three causes.

Atlas Returns in Baltimore

It’s easy to forget how close Baltimore really is, but it is less than an hour away and has one of America’s few comics museums. Geppi’s Entertainment Museum (aka GEM), housed in a former railroad station right outside the Camden Yards ballpark, is a magical place for comics fans. Steve Geppi is the owner of Diamond Distributors, the largest comic book distributor in the country, and his museum is a showcase for his collections. The main hallway is filled with large posters (including one for the original King Kong movie), original comics artwork, advertising signs, and a letter from Walt Disney to Mrs. George ‘Krazy Kat’ Herriman expressing condolences on her husband’s death.

The exhibit galleries tell the story of popular culture via characters, beginning in the 19th century with Palmer Cox’s Brownies (although there’s a nod to earlier history in the first one – you can see Ben Franklin’s original newspaper cartoon in it). They jump decade by decade, hitting highlights such as The Yellow Kid, Superman, Disney’s characters, Little Orphan Annie, Popeye and the like before ending with Star Wars in the 1970s. Each room is packed with toys and merchandising.

The galleries begin with one devoted to the history of the comic book which begins with early collections of comic strips from the 1900s through the ‘20s, then moves into pulps and a whole wall of Big Little Books, before showcasing Geppi’s collection of key comic books. Atlas At Last! the current temporary exhibit began in this room. Atlas was a company that barely existed from 1974-1975. It was created by Martin Goodman, the former owner of Marvel Comics (which had used the name Atlas in the 1950s), for his son Chip to run, in an attempt to outstrip his former company. As Diamond’s Scoop site notes, “By paying top rates, the company attracted creators such as Russ Heath, John Severin, Alex Toth, Walter Simonson, Ernie Colon, Neal Adams, Pat Broderick, Mike Ploog, Rich Buckler, Frank Thorne, Tony Isabella, Jeff Jones, Boris Valejo and others. One series, The Destructor, featured longtime Warren, Marvel and DC editor Archie Goodwin as its writer, Spider-Man and Doctor Strange co-creator Steve Ditko on pencils, EC veteran and T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents creator Wally Wood on inks, with Marvel veteran Larry Lieber (one of the Atlas editors and Marvel impresario Stan Lee’s brother) providing the cover.” It’s worth noting that talents did not move between the major companies at the time, and one could be blackballed for doing work for a competitor.


Mark Huesman, JC Vaughn, Mike Wilbur, Philip Zullo & Mark Wheatley

The exhibit features most, if not all, of the comics, that Atlas published and some striking original art down for the books. These are drawn from the collection of Philip Zolli, the enthusiast behind The Atlas Archives website (which he started in 2003). Zolli bought the comics he could fine when they appeared originally, and has continued completing and filling out his collection over the intervening thirty-five years. Mike Wilbur (employee of Diamond International Galleries) was one of the show’s curators and provided some of the comic books on display. The other of exhibit’s two curators, J.C. Vaughn (of Gemstone Publishing), invited me to the opening of the show. Of Atlas’ enduring appeal, he told me, “I’ve worked in comics for sixteen years next month, and I freelanced for a year before that, so I’m not a novice, I’m not your average fanboy, but I was totally a geeked-out kid. I got two of the comics in a trade when I was a kid, like 1976, a year after they died, and I got so into them -- that’s the seed of the exhibit being here now.”

The Atlas line has just been relaunched by Ardden Entertainment and grandson Jason Goodman, and Vaughn says, “I think there’s a better understanding of the company now … we’re talking 72, 73 publications in 1975, and the fact that we’re still talking about them in any sense is amazing, and the fact that anyone’s bringing them back is even more amazing.”

Phil Zullo was attempting to collect his comics before there were comic book stores. “I remember there several stationary stores had the spinner racks, and they were there, and Atlas in my area got good coverage, so I was able to buy them right off the newsstand. They just struck a chord with me because all I knew at the time was Marvel and DC, and I got to be at the ground floor of a brand-new company. It was very exciting. A year later, they disappeared.” He didn’t buy all of the line at the time – Archie knock-off Binky, Gothic Romances and other magazines waited for later, as did buying original art. “Once I started the site, and I had searches out because I wanted to accumulate as much information as I could, E-bay was a great source of information and artwork that popped up. I thought, ‘This is great and relatively inexpensive. I’m going to buy it.’ Zullo’s original artwork is interspersed with other artwork, both in the main comic book exhibit room and the museum’s main hall, a weakness in the show’s design that lessens the impact of the art. Very little of the original art exists. Vaughn noted, “When people went up to the Atlas offices, after they ceased publication, there was one secretary that denied that they were ever in comics, Simonson had a whole story missing… some have cast glances at some of the last editorial employees and others have just heard that it got thrown out.” Maryland comic artist Mark Wheatley, who noted that he published the first or second story done by Howard Chaykin, said “During that period, it’s quite likely it just got tossed.” Zullo is continuing to collect the new versions of the comics, and has been buying original art from those series as well.

The second Atlas failed for a couple of reasons. Vaughn points out, “They hired Jeff Rovin from Warren [a black and white comics magazine publisher] and put him in charge of color comics; they brought in Larry Lieber who worked at the core of silver age Marvel, and put him in charge of black and white magazines…” Wheatley said of Atlas, “They looked like Marvel deliberately, and then the distributors forced them to change and not look like Marvel” while Vaughn says that “a lot of the changes were capricious like the Movie Monsters [magazine on display] originally had differently colored lettering that didn’t get lost in the background orange, but the Goodman’s came by and made them change it.” Discussing how much the comics industry has changed, Zullo says “Larry Hama was doing the second issue of Wulf, and his mother was dying, and Martin Goodman refused to push the deadline back. The guy quit right after that. A lot of people were bitter.” Distribution was a problem for the company, as other companies such as Skywald and Charlton were still fighting for space on the racks. Wilbur remembers, “The place I was buying my new comics in the ‘70s was a bookstore / newsstand place. I went in there often enough that they would let me put out the new comics when they came in. They had no say in what they got – they would just get these bundles of comics strapped together and it was just totally random. Maybe this month you might get ten copies of this title, next month you’d get two copies and the next month you’d get twenty of them.” The failure of this newsstand distribution system is what led Geppi to begin Diamond, his distribution company – so he could get his own comic books to read. If you’re curious about a little company that didn’t matter much, or are interested in cartooning history, the museum is located at 301 W. Camden Street, Baltimore, MD 21201, 410-625-7060, sliding scale entry fee begins at $10 for adults.

Magic Bullet 2 distribution begins

D.C. Conspiracy Has Better Luck Hawking Papers Than Radiohead

 by Jonathan L. Fischer on Mar. 30, 2011

http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/blogs/artsdesk/books/2011/03/30/d-c-conspiracy-has-better-luck-hawking-papers-than-radiohead/ 

Monstres



Volia dir de l'ABC, que en dos dies ha produït dos monstruositats informatives filles de la inconcreció, la invenció i la manipulació de dades. Ahir i hui. Però nosaltres al vent!

Amici, amanti e... (No strings attached, 2011)di Ivan Reitman

E che Natalie Portman sia. Sulla scia degli Oscar la distribuzione italiana ammassa titoli con la titolata. Oltre al Cigno Nero abbiamo nelle sale anche Amici, amanti e... letterale traduzione di No strings attached. Commedia romantica con Ashton Kutcher che, attenzione, funziona. Un bel passo in avanti rispetto a La mia ex ragazza e soprattutto Evolution, i due precedenti titoli di Ivan Reitman.

Ma il film funziona soprattutto perchè funzionano le componenti più determinanti della commedia romantica: il romanticismo convincente, i comprimari, lui non ingombra.
Ecco Amici, amanti e... si rassegna a dare alla protagonista il potere nella messa in scena, si affida quanto serve alle di lei espressioni (convincente anche quando dice il solitamente banale "L'ho perso") e piazza qualche ironia non da poco nel rapporto con i personaggi di seconda fascia. Dalla compilation per le mestruazioni agli scherzi ai danni del ragazzo tutto sembra funzionare e creare un'aura di naturalezza invidiabile.

Non un capolavoro certo (specie considerando chi c'è al timone) ma un film decente in grado di parlare di sentimenti sul tanto desiderato terreno della liberazione sessuale. L'indipendenza dal rapporto di coppia e la possibilità di avere rapporti unicamente sessuali, le chimere di un periodo in cui sempre meno il legame è un valore a livello sociale ma che rimane desiderabile a livello personale.

When in Rome: New Street View imagery of historic sites in Italy and France

[Cross-posted from the Official Google Blog]

We’ve been busy pedaling the Street View trike around the nooks and crannies of storied sites in Europe, including palaces, monuments and castles, so you can explore them in Google Maps with Street View.

Starting today, you can view some of the most historic and architecturally significant landmarks in Italy and France, including UNESCO sites in Rome, the center of Florence and stunning chateaux in the French countryside.

In addition to seeing the exterior of archaeological sites like the Imperial Forum and the Colosseum in Rome, you can now explore inside the Colosseum and imagine yourself viewing naumachiae—simulated sea battles for which the Colosseum was filled with water—or speaking with statesmen inside the Imperial Forum.

Inside the Colosseum, Rome

In few clicks you can navigate through centuries of history. Start at the birthplace of Rome, the Palatine Hill, where the mythical founders of the city, Romulus and Remus were found and saved by a she-wolf, and where the most ancient buildings of the city are located. Follow the Appian Way, a little path that became one of the most strategically important roads of ancient Rome. After the long walk, experience the splendor of Imperial Rome at the Thermae (Baths) of Diocletian—ancient wellness and cultural centers with 33 acres of pools, gymnasiums and public libraries.

Baths of Diocletian

After wandering around Rome, you can fast forward in time to witness the celebrated architectural wonders of the Italian Renaissance, including Giotto’s Campanile (bell tower) and Brunelleschi’s Cupola (dome) in Santa Maria del Fiore in Florence. While in Florence don’t miss the opportunity to walk through Ponte Vecchio and shop at the famous artisan jewel stores built on top of it!

Santa Maria del Fiore, Florence

In France, you can view picturesque chateaux and indulge your fantasies of living like French royalty by taking a virtual stroll around the beautiful Fontainebleau.

Château de Fontainebleau

Start exploring these sites in our Street View gallery, or find your favorite historic spots directly in Google Maps.

Posted by Marco Zennaro, Senior Software Engineer

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Comic Riffs on meta-Peanuts

The 'Riffs Interview: One fan's new '3eanuts' site takes stripped-down view of 'PEANUTS'
By Michael Cavna
Washington Post Comic Riffs blog March 29 2011
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/comic-riffs/post/the-riffs-interview-one-fans-new-3eanuts-site-takes-stripped-down-view-of-peanuts/2011/03/28/AFr8AluB_blog.html

Truitt on new Thor cartoon

'Blood Brothers' shines new light on Loki
By Brian Truitt, USA TODAY March 28 2011
http://www.usatoday.com/life/comics/2011-03-28-BloodBrothers_N.htm

April 2: Anime at Cherry Blossom time in Freer Gallery



FESTIVAL

NATIONAL CHERRY BLOSSOM FESTIVAL ANIME MARATHON*

Saturday, April 2, 11 am|Freer, Meyer Auditorium

 

The Freer's ninth annual anime marathon is hosted by anime expert Roland Kelts, author of Japanamerica: How Japanese Pop Culture Has Invaded the US. It features a Miyazaki kids' classic, a cosplay contest, a Makoto Shinkai feature and sneak preview, and a tribute to the late Satoshi Kon, who visited the marathon in 2007.

 

 This event is cosponsored by Otakorp, Inc., and copresented with the DC Anime Club.

 

 




PR: Watch America's Greatest Otaku in DC


TOKYOPOP Roboblast!
Watch America's Greatest Otaku Episode 5 on Hulu!
March 24, 2011

 

 AGO EPISODE 5
WATCH IT ON HULU NOW!!!

 

A BIG shout out to Baltimore,
Washington DC, and New York!!

 

(And of course, don't forget about our contests just for AGO Fans -- details at the bottom!)


America's Greatest Otaku,
a revealing eight-episode documentary series that searches the United States for the number one American otaku, heads to Baltimore, Washington DC, and New York!   

Stu and the Otaku six are fueling up for another week! 
Sully looks like he wants to finish his breakfast...
 

 

Who's Da Entertainer?  Home Made Kazoku!

Let's keep in all in the Familia

 

 

But let's not forget the classics: here's Italy playing the flute! 

 


With all this music going around, let's dance.

 

And we have special guest star M. Alice LeGrow, creator of Bizenghast! 

  

With her, the awesome author brought along Bubbles!

 

 

Aww, Bubbles is so cute...

 

 

 ... but ninja are scary!! 

 

Hot spots in this episode includes Otakon, Geppi's Entertainment Museum, the National Bonsai and Penjing Museum, Alice's Tea Cup, New York Ninja, and interviews with Dr. Natsu Onoda Power, Reni Mimura, and I-ChiP!    

 

Be sure to tune in to Hulu every Thursday for new episodes of America's Greatest Otaku!  

 

CONTEST DETAILS!

Yay for another AGO contest! Watch EPISODE 5 NOW, and we'll post up how to enter the contest on the AGO website later today :) 

 

 

To learn more about the show, as well see exclusive bonus content (such as extended interviews, clips, etc.), be sure to keep visiting americasgreatestotaku.com!

 

 

                    

 

 

 

 

 

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NPR's Monkey See blog staff to read Sandman, and write technical report

Ok, so maybe they're not doing a technical report...

The 'I Will If You Will' Book Club: Neil Gaiman's 'The Sandman: Dream Country'

by Linda Holmes

 National Public Radio's Monkey See blog March 29, 2011

 http://www.npr.org/blogs/monkeysee/2011/03/29/133372647/the-i-will-if-you-will-book-club-neil-gaimans-the-sandman-dream-country

Meet the Map Maker Advocates


Today, we’re proud to introduce you to our Google Map Maker Advocates! Google Map Maker is an online tool that enables individuals to add detailed information to the maps of many countries and regions for everyone to view and use in Google Maps. Having a healthy community of people contributing their local knowledge to the maps is essential, and these nearly 50 mappers representing regions from around the world have earned the status of “Map Maker Advocate” for the year 2011. They’ve made an impressive number of contributions to the map, as well as demonstrated community leadership by organizing mapping events and actively participating on our Map Your World discussion forums throughout the past year.


Map Maker Advocates Zohir (Morocco), Momodou (West Africa), and Jabran (Pakistan) 
at the Africa Super Mappers Conference

As part of this year-long volunteer opportunity, Map Maker Advocates will be heavily involved in Map Maker events hosted by Google and are also excited to host their own mapping events sponsored by Google. These are the mentors of the Map Maker community, well versed in the technical aspects of the product as well as local experts for their region of the world.

You can discuss mapping with them on our Map Your World discussion forums, directly through the Map Maker Advocates page, or look for their upcoming events on the Map Maker Community Events calendar. We encourage you to try out Google Map Maker today and thank our Map Maker Advocates for their continued enthusiasm and support of our growing mapping community.

Posted by Jessica Pfund, Program Manager, Google Map Maker

2 local strips in Charlotte Observer comics poll

Both Barney & Clyde and Cul de Sac are in the running.  Good luck gentlemen.
 
Help us pick a new comic

Mar. 29, 2011

http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2011/03/29/2180009/help-us-pick-a-new-comic.html

Tonight: Dueling comics events

On March 29 at Busboys and Poets (14th and V in Washington, D.C., 6:30-8:30) discussing 'Trickster' will be editor Matt Dembicki, contributing artists Michael Auger and Jacob Warrenfeltz, as well as Christopher Cardinale, illustrator of 'Mr. Mendoza's Paintbrush,' who will be talking about that book.

Also on March 29, Ben Katchor is at the Corcoran Gallery of Art. Here's their PR:

The Picture Stories of Ben Katchor
Tuesday, March 29
7 p.m.
Members $12; Public $15
Hailed by The New York Times as "the most poetic, deeply layered artist ever to draw a comic strip," Ben Katchor has collected both a cult and mainstream following for his wry, perceptive, and slightly surreal comic strips of urban life. The author of The Jew of New York and Julius Knipl, Real Estate Photographer: The Beauty Supply District, Katchor's work has appeared in The New Yorker, The Forward, and Metropolis. The first cartoonist to receive a MacArthur Fellowship, Ben Katchor discusses his first book in more than 10 years, The Cardboard Valise (Random House, 2011)- the whimsical graphic novel which follows the intertwined lives of three characters who travel to the fantastical nation of Outer Canthus. A book signing follows the talk.

Cellulite e Celluloide - Il cinema su Radio Rock

Il consueto podcast settimanale della trasmissione in onda su RadioRock (106.600 FM) ogni venerdì alle 19.45, che vede ai microfoni oltre a Prince Faster anche il sottoscritto sotto lo pseudonimo di Gabriele Vasquez.
Subito in partenza Frozen, l'horror verbale in cui si parla più di quanto si muoia, e poi subito dopo l'altro "horror" della settimana cioè Sotto il vestito niente - L'ultima sfilata. A seguire due non-film in una recensione sola Silvio Forever e La Fine è il mio inizio.
Pure Sucker Punch delude tantissimo, nonostante il favore per il regista di 300, mentre la sorpresa è il bel Non Lasciarmi.


LA PUNTATA DEL 25/03/2011

Pur non essendo di Roma o dintorni potete godere anche voi di queste perle radiofoniche sottoscrivendo i podcast come più vi aggrada. O consultare l'archivio.

Boris - Il film (2011)di Giacomo Ciarrapico, Mattia Torre e Luca Vendruscolo

POSTATO SU
Siamo di fronte forse all'unico caso in cui il passaggio di una serie televisiva al grande schermo ha senso a priori, prima ancora di leggere la sceneggiatura. Il passo successivo di una serie che parlare del fare serialità in Italia non può essere infatti altro se non un film che parla di fare cinema in Italia.
Il risultato è in linea con tutto ciò: Boris - Il film è molto simile a Boris - La serie, ne è figlio, ne ha lo stile, ne ha la comicità (irresistibile, non solo verbale e devastante) e ne costituisce (in linea di massima) una puntatona. La cosa solitamente è indicata come un male, in questo caso invece è ontologicamente inevitabile. Boris è l'eccezione.

Se dunque il film è pieno di colpi diretti al suo pubblico affezionato, ammiccate, citazioni, tormentoni, riproposizioni di eterne dinamiche e via dicendo, è anche qualcosa che da noi non si è mai fatto, cioè un film sul fare film lontano dalla poesia del tutto (cioè dal filone Sogni D'Oro, Il Caimano e via dicendo) e calato nel set e nell'industria. Fare cinema non come arte alta ma come lavoro basso, una dimensione, la seconda, che nella realtà è quantitativamente superiore alla prima.
E' paradossalmente un'idea uguale e contraria ad Effetto Notte di Truffaut, il film che rappresenta le due linee guida teoriche del regista francese, ovvero girare film come lavoro fatto per vivere e il mondo del cinema come microcosmo bello in sè, a prescindere dal risultato).

Non c'è nessuna poesia nel cinema di Boris e nonostante si ripropongano molti momenti da Effetto Notte (l'attrice chiusa in camerino che blocca la produzione, quella che non riesce a dire le battute e il regista che deve inventare una soluzione, la storia d'amore sul set, il sesso clandestino, il tono da commedia che arriva a salvare tutto....) qui sono totalmente ribaltati. Fare cinema è sempre brutto anche quando può essere bello (i produttori si ritrovano per la mani i diritti per trasporre La Casta e ne esce un cinepanettone), il lavoro sul set non è un macchina che migliora le idee di partenza ma le rovina e più il cinema entra prepotente più lo schifo avanza. Chi lavora ai film è gente terribile, dal primo all'ultimo e il lavoro del filmmaker è il peggiore possibile.

Certo la lettura non è scevra da un certo vittimismo (è sempre colpa degli altri e del sistema) nè di una visione un po' stereotipica e facilona delle cose (i cinepanettoni per come li rappresentano non esistono più da una decina d'anni e sono la sentina d'ogni male). E' innegabile però che Boris racconti ottimamente il rovescio della medaglia truffautiana, se esiste un cinema bello a prescindere ne esiste anche un altro brutto in ogni caso, che bello non sarà mai nè potrà essere salvato da nulla, nemmeno dalla commedia.