Monday, July 26, 2010

E-7: Keeping Comics Alive At Comic-Con!

Comic-Con 2010 is in the books and I’m happy that it’s over. Before every Comic-Con I always go down to San Diego wide-eyed and hopeful and afterwards I leave San Diego bleary-eyed and battered. I even left the Con one hour early on the last day! I didn’t want to be traveling on a post-convention train with the fans who attended all four days without changing clothes… I would rather watch my beloved LA Dodgers give up four runs in the ninth to lose to the Yankees!

Once again I was with the good people in the Bare Bones Studios
booth at E-7. Mike (the bunny-eared leader) was there, as was Killer Robot Rob and Carnival Barker Carlos. However, Sandra wasn’t in our booth this year. Mike explained that she was in the booth behind us. “Maybe she thinks she can make money this year,” I said in jest.

The fourth person sharing the booth this year was Lin. Her cool, inexpensive Wicked Apple jewelry was on display, but since she also had her own booth at the art auction area, I didn’t see her until the fourth day of the Con. I was glad to finally meet her, as she was very nice and paid her sales tax!

Lin had her jewelry, Mike and Rob had their latest copy of Pocket Book Heroes and I had Pretty Vacant: Vegas Showcase. All we needed was the item that got people to our booth. And as usual, Mike supplied that item for the booth: stickmen!
Mike brought 8,000 stickmen on Preview Night and we started giving them away for free the entire show! I don’t mind drawing faces on Styrofoam too much because doing so gives me time to actually talk to a rapt audience about my book. I drew specific faces on the stickmen when requested, and there were a lot of requests: happy, sad, angry, constipated, vampire, zombie, Jedi, even Bob Marley! My favorite request came from Stasia, who was in the booth next to me. She wanted the expression of “someone who just realized she was brushing her teeth with neosporin!” Apparently this came from personal experience.

The stickmen were so popular that io9.com called them the Best Homemade Free Swag at this year’s Con! They could have told us in person. Mike said he found out from a midget dressed as the Stay Puff Marshmallow Man! I hope it was a midget – I’d hate to think that a kid could get that out of shape so early in life!

Usually film crews and press people interview Mike, Rob or Carlos. I always join in with the wacky shtick, but they seem to turn the wackiness up a notch whenever a camera is nearby. Yet one time I was drawing a happy face on a stickman for a lady when she thrust a microphone in my face. I saw her press badge and I realized she wanted to interview me. We talked about the origin of Pretty Vacant: Vegas Showcase (an optioned movie script turned into a comic) and the story itself: How The Still Life Corporation plans to transform Gigi Gutierrez into an unmoving, unthinking body mold for their mannequin line and how Gigi struggles to escape her plasticized fate. The lady thought that I was too intelligent and articulate to be with the others and asked why I with Bare Bones. I simply told her that I want to “keep comics alive for Comic-Con.”

Comics don’t distinguish whether they are art or trash. They are judged by the fun factor: Is it fun to read? Even the “worst comic book ever,” Rob’s Shadow Prophecy is a fun comic if you spend your time poking holes in it. My companions at E-7 couldn’t be any more different from me, but we like each other, balance out each other and we have a lot of fun! Someday the Comic-Con Board might realize balancing con-specific films and television (what are “Dexter”, “Community” and “Hawaii-5-0” doing at Comic-Con anyway?) with comics and gamers will lead to a better show rather than emphasizing Hollywood at all times.

Despite the long lines, sore feet, overreaching tax men and overzealous security, I had a lot of fun at Comic-Con! I dispensed wisdom (“sum up your idea in one sentence when pitching your story”), got the free swag item I wanted (a “Chuck” promo bag), and sold enough copies of Pretty Vacant: Vegas Showcase to pay for the print run and my share of the table!

Yet the most fun I had was with my friends, be it old friends (Bare Bones gang, Sandra, Dustin, Hye Jung, Erwin, Phillip) or new friends (Kevin and Stasia). I still managed to talk with my friend Rachel even though she was running the G4 booth this year, and I had lunch twice with my best friend at Comic-Con, Rodney. Rodney taunted me about my Dodgers imploding against his beloved Yankees and I mocked him for waiting two-and-a-half hours in line and still failing to get into the Green Lantern presentation!

I also got to take a cool picture with my friend Elizabeth, who cosplayed this year as Red Sonja! Thanks Rob for the photo (I have to write that or he’ll go Killer Robot on me)!


Dance, Killer Robot, Dance!


And I do hope the lady who had nicest smile at Comic-Con comes back to sell her comic book in 2011!

5 Comments:

At July 29, 2010 at 10:46 PM , Blogger angry robot said...

as always you summed up comic con in 1500 words or less and did a spiffy job of it as well... being pith was never my strong suit. doubtful,under normal circumstances, i'd spend less words posting a comment in response to your blog! anyway, as always, cmic conwouldn't be comic con without our "annual family reunion" and it was a pleasure to spend a few days catching up. hope you have a great upcoming year and see you in 11 months and 3 weeks!!!

 
At July 30, 2010 at 9:25 PM , Blogger rebelakemi said...

Sorry I wasn't in the booth. I planned to have way more merchandise and I needed more space! If you guys attend the Wondercon, I think there will be a good chance I will be there. I also got a table in artist alley at the Long Beach Comic-con in October. Are you going?
Sandra

 
At July 31, 2010 at 2:45 PM , Blogger Rachel said...

I just would like to start buy saying I am sorry John to have joined the Dark Side. The G4 Retail Booth, I know Comicon started with comic books but has moved into movies and TV and I have jumped ship to that dark side. I loved Comicon for the fans and the joy they have just to be there but when you can work along side TV and movie stars...well let's just say I was seduced with the glitz and glam.
I still love the books but there is so much more there, I have one foot in each camp.
Thank you for still being my friend.
Rachel

 
At August 1, 2010 at 8:06 PM , Blogger John Villalino said...

@rebelakemi I also have a table in artist alley at Long Beach Comic-con. Maybe we'll be back-to-back! And I do plan on having a booth at Wondercon. It would be great to see you at both! I also want to say that I love the avatar!

 
At August 1, 2010 at 8:13 PM , Blogger John Villalino said...

@Rachel I think it's great that you managed the G4 booth this year! You are in a unique position to remind your employers that Comic-Con is really about comics and Hollywood's presence is because of those comics, not the other way around. Thank you for your support of small press comic books! We're the non-paid research and development department for movie studios! :)

 

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