Tagged: Web

The Big ComicMix Broadcast watches the tube

The Big ComicMix Broadcast watches the tube

The Big ComicMix Broadcast slides into the weekend with a wrap up of the big week of TV News, the scoop on a few new variant covers to hunt down, more things to watch on the web and the return of two popular indy comics. Plus we sit down with former DC superstar DAN MISHKIN and get the story on a new line of young reader books done by some very familiar comic pros.

And if that wasn’t enough, The Big ComicMix Broadcast digs up – Tony Danza! All you have to do is (all together now) PRESS THE BUTTON!

The last internet argument

The last internet argument

One of my favorite web cartoonists, August Pollak, hits a home run with his Some Guy with a Website strip called "Internet Argument."  If you ever want to explain the world of blogs to anyone, you could do much worse than this strip.

Why “The Lone Gunmen” got axed

Why “The Lone Gunmen” got axed

We seem to have an unofficial theme of sorts today.

Fans of The X-Files remember the Lone Gunmen, the trio of brilliant but socially inept hackers and conspiracy experts that made comic book fans look socially un-inept. They were spun off into their own short-lived TV series, which recently became available on DVD.

But some wondered: How could a show featuring such popular characters get cancelled so quickly? Was it some sort of evil scheme? Who was to blame? Why was that guy in Fox’s programming division constantly smoking?

Finally, we have an answer – in comic book form, no less, which means that we can talk about it here and still remain within our theoretical charter.

Dean Haglund, better known as Richard "Ringo" Langly, has written and drawn an autobiographical story of what happened to the Lone Gunmen – how they found out about the series, how it lived, and how it died. The art is reminiscent of a cruder version of William Messner-Loebs, and the story reinforces every dumb story you’ve heard about Hollywood. He’s selling it on his web site for a pretty high price, but if you ask nicely, I’m sure he’ll autograph it directly to you.

Superhero confessions

Out in Austin, Texas it’s South by Southwest (SXSW) week, with two festivals and a conference going on.  While most tech types are attending the Interactive trade show and festival for creative web developers, designers, bloggers, wireless innovators and new media entrepreneurs, there’s also a film fest/conference going on, with plenty of world premieres.

One of those is the documentary Confessions of a Superhero directed by Matt Ogens, which "chronicles the lives of three mortal men and one woman who make their living working as superhero characters on Hollywood Boulevard."  Cinematical has a review of the docu.  Hey, at least they don’t have to wear giant animal heads like those poor kids up in Anaheim…

ComicMix’s own Brian Alvey is out there, and maybe we can press him into making his CM debut with a full report!