Chuck Rozanski, courtesy Mile High Comics |
Monday, December 30, 2019
How Chuck Rozanski opened up comic distribution
Sunday, December 22, 2019
After the NFL, 31 years in retail
Brian and Rosemary Peets, photo courtesy Brian Peets |
Brian Peets had what he called a "wasn't very good" NFL career (c'mon, it was four years!), and 31 ago, launched his passion—a comic book store, which has blossomed into a chain of three stores. Find out what he's learned along the way HERE.
Jim McLauchlin
Tuesday, December 17, 2019
The comic back issue market, December 2019, tech and speculators
Comic back issues are UP in 2019, driven by keys, collectors, key collectors and speculators. Confused? Read THIS, and you won't be any longer!
Jim McLauchlin
Wednesday, November 20, 2019
Funko comes to Hollywod
Photo: Getty Images for Funko |
And that's just what Funko has done, with its new Hollywood Boulevard superstore. For the full scoop and so, so many pics, check out icv2.com.
Jim McLauchlin
Thursday, November 14, 2019
Paul Levitz and things that amuse him
Paul Levitz, courtesy Paul Levitz |
Jim McLauchlin
Friday, October 18, 2019
Bad speller, good businessman
Photos courtesy Bret Parks, Ssalefish Comics |
Jim McLauchlin
Sunday, October 13, 2019
The Origins of the Origins of Marvel Comics
Starting in 1974, Stan Lee started chronicling the history of the Marvel Universe in a series of bestselling paperbacks beginning with Origins of Marvel Comics. For a look at why the work is STILL foundational (with nice remembrances from Kevin Smith and Joe Quesada), bop on over to Newsarama.
Jim McLauchlin
Friday, October 11, 2019
Gift cards, the comic shop MUST
Comic stores are gift destinations, and as retail moves into the Christmas season, gift cards are a MUST. You can do paper, swipe cards, and even fully electronic. Check out all the upsides over at icv2.
Jim McLauchlin
Wednesday, October 9, 2019
Runaways Season 3 is dark, with guest stars
Marvel's Runaways is queued up for its third season, where the Dark Dimension and Morgan le Fay will play a major role, and Cloak & Dagger make a guest appearance. Read all about it over at Newsarama.com.
Jim McLauchlin
Wednesday, July 24, 2019
Pandora is scf-fi on the other side
Creator Mark A. Altman is a TV veteran of Castle, The Librarians, and more. He's also reverent when it comes to science fiction, and his new CW series, Pandora, is rife with conflict, but ultimately hopeful. Read all about it over on Space.
Jim McLauchlin
Tuesday, July 23, 2019
Christian Gossett: Writer, artist, director and allla that
Christian Gossett, courtesy Christian Gossett |
Back in 2000, young buck Christian Gossett popped in to the comic book scene with a hot new title, The Red Star. Since then, he's built a wild and varied career. Catch up on it all at Newsarama.
Jim McLauchlin
Tuesday, July 16, 2019
Joe Quesada, Storyteller on Stories for Disney+
Quesada with mountain climber Ed Viesturs (Disney Enterprises, Inc.) |
Joe Quesada has worn a variety of hats as Marvel's chief creative officer: Publishing expert, TV executive producer, and even theme park ride designer. Now he's the host of a new upcoming Disney+ show in which "the connective tissue is story." Read all about it at Wired.com.
Jim McLauchlin
Quesada with Teen Vogue Editor Samhita Mukhopadhyay (Eric Liebowitz (Disney Enterprises, Inc.) |
Monday, July 1, 2019
More on the mystery of Spider-Man's first appearance
Spider-Man art from Amazing Fantasy #15 |
Jim McLauchlin
Wednesday, June 19, 2019
50 Years in, Looking Forward to the Next 50
Chuck Rozanski, courtesy Mile High Comics |
Jim McLauchlin
Thursday, May 23, 2019
On retiring from coaching youth sports…
"Good day, men. Good day to work." |
I've coached youth sports, but am
officially…retired. I coached 4-5 YMCA basketball teams, three Little League
teams, and two flag football teams. Ages from about 5 to 11.
I’m done, I’m out. I feel like I’ve had enough for reasons
you’ll see. But ultimately, I’m happy. It takes a lot out of you, but it puts a
lot into you as well.
I can tell you this right from the jump, and I’m sure it
comes as no surprise: 100% of the kids are great and 90% of the adults are
great.
Yes, Fortnite dances have wrecked havoc with attention spans
over the last year or two.
I’ll tell you this: If you are a youth sports coach, you are
not just a coach; you are also Lost and Found.
I’ll tell you this: If you are a youth sports coach, you are
not just a coach; you are also Julie the cruise director from the Love Boat.
I’ll tell you this: If you are a youth sports coach, you are
not just a coach; you are also expected to be Master of Schedules (and the one
to blame when parents don’t like the schedule).
If you are a youth sports coach, you are not just a coach;
you are a bathroom monitor. No matter HOW many times you beg those kids to go
pee before the game, you’ll have a shortstop who has to run off the field and
pee in the 6th inning.
Getting back to those 90% of adults, two quotes will stay
with me forever. One parent in Little League told me “I’ve made a lot of
friends here…and a few enemies.”
I found that experience to be true. And it pains me, and
maybe it should pain you, that it happens. Yes, Virginia, every damn story
you’ve heard is true. There are parents who speak out of both sides of their
mouth, and take this WAY too seriously.
The second quote speaks directly to that: “It’s all about
the kids.” I don’t know WHY, but in my experience, this was a-hole code. The
guy who said “It’s all about the kids” was UNDOUBTEDLY going to be the biggest
jerk in the league.
Explicitly and for the record: I’ve seen adults F-bomb each
other over if their team is going to be the White Sox or the Diamondbacks or
whatever.
Explicitly and for the record: I’ve seen coaches try to
TRADE their team name (“Hey, you wanna be the D-Backs?”) for a PLAYER on
another team. Yes, turning 9-year-old kids into commodities swapped for laundry.
Explicitly and for the record: I have been F-bombed and had
objects thrown at me by other coaches on a field of play. You swallow hard, but
I never took the bait.
I’ve been in the middle of drafts—YES, drafts for 8-year-old
kids—with adults F-bombing each other over player ratings and if they were
getting screwed or not because a coach’s kid was ranked too high.
I distinctly remember one F-bombing fit over (really) team
names. I walked in on the middle of a conversation to hear a league
administrator say to a coach…
“Here’s the hierarchy: We have the administration, then we
have the volunteers, then we have everyone else. You’re everyone else.”
I said, “Hey, I’m a volunteer coach. What’s that make me?”
He had no answer.
These things are all true. And this is a scratch of the
surface. You wanna hear the REAL stories of Adults Acting Badly at 10-year-old
sporting events? Ask the refs and umpires.
So look, there’s some bad. As can be said for many things in
life.
And as I prepped this missive, I realized something. It’s
not new. I have distant memories of playing T-ball, freaking T-ball, in 1975,
and hearing the parents whisper about the league commissioner who always
happened to coach the most stacked team in the league as well.
Freaking T-ball. 1975.
And here’s a crazy rub: Youth sports desperately need
coaches, for a job that’s time-consuming, occasionally soul-sucking, largely
thankless, and did I mention time-consuming?
I’ve been called by sports leagues coyly asking, “Hey is
your kid playing this season? And if so, maybe you’d like to coach?”
I’ve also had leagues call and just flat-out ask me to
please please please please coach, regardless if my kid is playing or not (!) because
they need coaches badly.
Are they calling me because I’m some great coach? Some
pillar of civic virtue? Hell no. I’m a warm body who’s done it before and never
gone Roy Turner on a kid. Those are my qualifications.
But now, I’m out. I limped to the finish line. I just
finished a season with a jacked-up hip and shoulder, doing 2-3 physical therapy
appointments a week while coaching. I’m happy to bid this goodbye.
Yes, I said “happy,” and I mean that in every sense of the
word.
The main driving force was my kid. He’s 10, and he just
feels done with team sports for now.
Please make NO mistake: 10-year-olds are WAY smarter than we
typically give them credit for. He sees everything I’ve mentioned so far.
And I told myself I was NEVER going to be the parent who
forced their kid into activities they didn’t want to do.
I told my kid, too. I desperately want him to find what he’s
passionate about and pursue it—music, theater, art, back into sports, whatever.
But I’m not going to force anything on him.
Find a passion, kid. Fortnite seems to be winning right now.
And yeah, “happy” in every sense of the word. Because I’ll
tell you this:
I felt a lot of sting in the moment, sometimes from a tough
loss, sometimes from a chappy parent. But now, all I feel is the good. The bad
has lost its sting.
I distinctly remember starting a Little League season 0-3
once, wondering if we were ever going to win a game. I felt so badly for the
kids, like I was letting them down. Thank the gods and Abner Doubleday that we
won our next game, ’cause I was almost ready to jump off a bridge.
And if I’m being 100% honest, I’ll tell you I’ve wrestled
mightily with my own motivations. Was I REALLY feeling bad for the kids? Or was
I doing this all for my own self-aggrandizement?
I’d like to think it was 100% the former, but I don’t know.
Maybe I’m a symptom of a problem myself.
So look, I’ll say it again: I lived all the good and the bad
in the moment, but all I remember is the good. The bad has lost its sting.
I have trinkets. Every now and then I’ll reach into the
cupboard for a glass and pull out an engraved mug the parents got me at the end
of a Little League season. Makes me smile every time, and sometimes damn near
cry.
I have memories. I coached a 7-8 year old basketball team
once, and we had a tiny, tiny little 7-year-old girl on the team who just flat
out lacked the strength to even come close to making a shot, even on an 8-foot
hoop.
And the end of our first practice, I put her up on my
shoulders so she could score. Her mom came running over to me after, tears in
her eyes, crying about how happy her daughter was that she finally made a
basket.
So we ended every practice that way. Little girl gets to
score, we all go out on a high note.
Cliché as it sounds, I think my favorite memories will
always be helping those “bottom of the roster” kids move up and move along.
We had a baseball player who barely knew which end of the
bat to hold on Day One, but when he hit a legit triple (which turned into a
Little League home run when he ran through my stop sign at third) against a
first-place team, well…you rarely see greater joy than a kid’s face turning
third an heading into home like that.
Seriously, the best was watching the kid who was tripping over
his own feet on the first day of practice develop a love of a game or a kid who
couldn’t even grip a football suddenly “get it.”
Another parent, a really good guy, told me something else:
“You’re approaching the end of your ability to help them.” Yeah, as my son
moves from 5th grade to 6th, it’s largely the schools
going forward.
And I’ll go forward with him, into whatever he wants. Just
not as a coach anymore.
The feeling is bittersweet, but way more sweet than bitter.
I’ve had first place and last place teams, but again, the
sting is gone and the good remains. I know there are more important things than
a won/lost record. And I comforted myself with that thought last season. It was
also a last-place season.
Am I a saint? Hell no. It will likely take me a few more
years and the bottom of a bottle to truly figure out if I did this out of some
kindness of the heart or for my own puffery. Maybe it’s some combination of the
two.
But at 51creaking years old, and with some torn knee
cartilage and thoracic outlet syndrome, I’m happy to sunset.
I CAN tell you with all certainty and no hesitation: I love
every one of the kids I ever coached. Again, 100% of the kids are great. The
moments I spent with them were magic.
I love you kids. Just please, go pee before the game starts.
Thank you for listening to my it’s-not-a-Ted-Talk on
#YouthSports.
Friday, May 17, 2019
From $300 to an eight-store chain
Phil Boyle of Coliseum of Comics |
One of eight Coliseum stores |
Phil Boyle is one of the stronger voices in the (no, really it's a) billion dollar comic retailing game. He started with 16 boxes of comics and a $300 rent payment, and grew that into an eight-store Coliseum of Comics chain. Find out what he's learned along the way HERE at icv2.
Jim McLauchlin
Thursday, May 2, 2019
Elementary Comic Book Club, meet retailers
Teacher Matt Corrigan at a Lemay Elementary assembly |
Kids at the Lemay Comic Book Club |
Jim McLauchlin
Wednesday, May 1, 2019
Moving from a kids section to a kids store
Patrick Brower of Challengers Comics |
Sidekicks, the kids comics store |
Jim McLauchlin
Tuesday, April 30, 2019
Kids comics and family focus
Jenn Haines |
The Dragon, Guelph, Ontario |
Jim McLauchlin
Wednesday, April 17, 2019
From a crabhouse to the Os to 35 years in business
Marc Nathan (left) with Steve Geppi of Diamond Comic Distributors |
Jim McLauchlin
Wednesday, March 27, 2019
After 35 years, a comic store closes
Mitch Cutler owned and operated St. Mark's Comics in New York City for 35 years until he had his Danny Glover moment: "I'm getting too old for this…plop."
But you can find out what he learned over those 35 years at icv2. GO!
Jim McLauchlin
But you can find out what he learned over those 35 years at icv2. GO!
Jim McLauchlin
Friday, March 1, 2019
Who Signs What, and Why?
Stan Lee signing comics |
The landscape for comic creators signing autographs is changing. To find out who signs what, and why, and for how much, please join us over at Newsarama.
Jim McLauchlin
Thursday, February 28, 2019
Greg Pak, Rhodes Scholar, Comic Writer
Greg Pak, courtesy Greg Pak |
Jim McLauchlin
Friday, February 22, 2019
Watchmen #1 cover art is your best hedge against inflation
Watchmen #1 original art and color guide, photo: Heritage Auctions |
Well, it just sold again, this time for $228,000. You can read all about it over at Newsarama. Please do!
Jim McLauchlin
Monday, February 18, 2019
The Comics Direct Market Changing…now?
Direct-market distribution for comic books was a great idea when started 46 years ago. Today, it might need some nipping and tucking. For a LOT of the evolution of the market—to my mind, things might start breaking very soon—check out icv2.com. And for much more from Image Comics, well…here's more.
Jim McLauchlin
Amazing Art at the Library of Congress
The Library of Congress has the original art from Amazing Fantasy #15, the first appearance of Spider-Man. How it got there remains a bit of a mystery. It was an anonymous donation in 2008. For more on its background, check out Newsarama.com.
Jim McLauchlin
Friday, January 18, 2019
You cannot do just one thing
These are some of the most dedicated educators you will ever find. |
With a full week in the books of the UTLA/LAUSD strike, I'm puzzled to report that there have been two uniformed police officers at my kid's elementary school both morning and afternoon. By every measure I've been able to find except one, the strike has been peaceful and downright civil at every turn. Even the small incident mentioned in the previous sentence is just that—small.
But in an "abundance of caution," as we say in this day and age, public safety seems to be guarding against a Haymarket Square riot. Think about this: With two uniformed officers dispatched to—likley—every school in the city two times a day, resources are pulled away from where they're actually needed. To guard against…ladies in red slickers like those pictured above? One badge I saw actually said "detective" on it. Crimes are going un-investigated and resources are being pulled over a strike that should have never happened if the District had just agreed to simple, beneficial demands the teachers made. You cannot do just one thing.
Make the call: 213-443-1300, and urge the Los Angeles Unified School District to accede to the Union's wishes. With every day of the strike, the LASUD loses $10-$15 million owing to grant-in-aid money that is not coming in based on per-student, per-day attendance. That's money that's also vital to the District's ongoing operations.
Again, you cannot do just one thing.
Jim McLauchlin
Wednesday, January 16, 2019
Rally in the Rain
It's tough to get people in Los Angeles to come out in the rain. They're like, I dunno. Cats or something.
Yet despite a third day of picketing in the rain, United Teachers Los Angeles and their supporters showed up in droves for a series of rallies throughout the city. One took place on Balboa Blvd. between Victory and Vanowen, just a 10 minute stroll from our front door. So I took the 10-year-old, and we joined a crowd estimated at 3000 people (and multiplied by about eight other similar rallies throughout the city).
I took the time to remind the kid about our First Amendment rights of speech and assembly, and introduced him to the concept of time/place/manner restrictions on speech. Gotta keep it educational.
Sure, it was raining, but spirits were high, and teachers and boosters were in full throat. Again, the teachers are looking for a simple cost-of-living wage over the next two years, some additional support staff, and smaller class sizes. ALL these things make for better schools and are positives for our kids. The District can and should, without delay, accede to the teachers' wishes.
You can and should, should you so desire, call the LAUSD at 213-443-1300 and add your voice to the many they are already hearing.
Tomorrow, the 10-year-old will be bringing food to the teachers on the line again, tho' I'm switching it up to fruit after three days of donuts. The district is bleeding, losing an estimated $10-$15 million dollars a DAY in grant-in-aid funding for every day the strike continues. One day was long enough, three days is getting preposterous. Please call and urge the District to end this strike immediately by giving the teachers what they need.
Jim McLauchlin
Tuesday, January 15, 2019
LAUSD strike, Day 2
As promised, we're bringing the teachers donuts every day. An army runs on its stomach.
I'm teaching the 10-yr-old about the history of the labor movement, so that's cool!
The Los Angeles Times coverage of the strike has been great so far. They're doing an amazing job of showing you the human face behind all of this. It's a trying time.
I cannot stress enough: CALL the LAUSD at 213-443-1300. Tell them how you feel about the strike, and urge them to bring this to a swift resolution. The teachers are DESERVING of your support. They're looking for a small, cost-of-living increase in wages, and ultimately better classrooms and schools for your kids through smaller class sizes and more support staff. NOTHING is more important than education as in investment in the future.
I spoke to the principal and the office staff at my 10-year-old's school yesterday. They looked…haggard. They were tired. They're administrators, not part of the teachers' union, and were doing their best to keep things running…with about 8% of usual staff. It's a terrible situation for all: The students are not served, the teachers are not served, and those left behind to run a shoestring operation are not served.
The administrative staff, though they chose their words carefully, were solidly on the side of the teachers. I asked them how the day was. "It wasn't the same without our teachers," one said. I asked what I could do. "You know [LAUSD Superintendent] Austin Beutner?" one joked. "Call him and tell him to end this. One staffer had an older child at another school. She didn't send her kid to school on day one. She knew it was effectively worthless.
Even two days of this is two days too long. The teachers' demands are simple, and justified. The Los Angeles Unified School District MUST end this strike with all deliberate speed, and grant the teachers what they need for themselves and their students.
Jim McLauchlin
Monday, January 14, 2019
Okay, LAUSD, I like donuts, BUT…
Today is Day One of the Los Angeles teachers strike. In hopes that anything can be a "teachable moment," I brought my 10-year-old son to school. And I told him this was the plan:
• We're bringing the teachers donuts
• He was going to attend at least one day of school during the strike to have the experience and to see firsthand what it's like
• On all subsequent days, he could determine if he wants to go to school or not for the (hopefully short) duration of the strike
• No matter WHAT his decision there, we're getting up early like regular school time, and bringing the teachers donuts every day.
In the round trip between home, the donut shop, and my kid's school, we passed two OTHER schools. I'm happy to report that a full compliment of teachers were walking the line at each school, with robust support from passers-by. All this, in a steady rain (in L.A., so for you out-of-towners, this might as well have been the apocalypse).
At my kid's school, I was flat-out crying, truth be told. These teachers have been GREAT for my son, and for the community at large. It PAINED them to be outside, carrying signs and singing protest songs, knowing that they could not do their jobs today, watching their own students walk by. I saw retired teachers who had come to walk the line with their current counterparts. And no matter WHAT they were feeling on the inside, to their eternal credit, they smiled, said "good morning," and thanked every parent who was there with their kids.
Inside, all the students gathered in the auditorium. The principal, one heck of a great guy, addressed the kids and the parents. Told everyone they were doing their best. Said they'd have the kids in the computer lab, the auditorium, outside. Said it would be "fun."
District-wide, the Los Angeles Unified School District is attempting to keep schools open with about 8% the usual capacity of actual dang adults. They need the grant-in-aid money that flows to them on a per-student, per-day basis. I get it.
I also get that a strike is the WORST of all possible outcomes. It is NOT good for the teachers, the administrators, the students, the district, the parents. NO ONE wins here.
The teachers' demands are simple, and justified: A cost-of-living wage increase over the next two years, and some additional staff and smaller class sizes. ALL of these are good outputs.
The onus is squarely on the shoulders of the district. It MUST accede to these very reasonable demands.
I will be there every morning, with my son, for this duration. I like donuts. But I'd rather enjoy them in a more comfortable environment, knowing that the needs of my son, the teachers, and the community at large are being served.
Los Angeles Unified School District: Give the teachers what we all need, nnd this strike immediately.
Jim McLauchlin
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)