Monday, January 25, 2021

Books to seek, and Youtube channels to find and follow

By Alex Ness
January 25, 2021

BOOKS TO LOOK OUT FOR AND TO BUY

In a recent past article I reviewed both Sonata and The Marked volume 1 tpbs. Sonata is a story of loyalty and action upon a fantasy world.  The Marked is a secret group who has a deeper goal to challenge the darkness, usually in the form of other groups in power. David Hine writes dialogue and world building lyrical words and Brian Haberlin draws exacting, soundly created, beautiful characters and creatures.  These two second volume tpbs take each story into a deeper place, in ways that are most welcome.  Sonata remains the better of two series. The fantasy and characters are well developed in a world that feels mysterious, different, and invites further investigation.  The Marked is a fine work, featuring a mysterious secret society that uses tattoo images as sigils of power.  It is a powerful work, and has more present world applications.  The depth in The Marked is actually more pronounced than Sonata, but, I am more interested in fantasy than I am towards the concept of powers and dark forces in conflict in the modern world. (Sonata is an A, The Marked only slightly less as an A-).

Author Mike Baron's character The Badger is well worth exploring.  In comics form he has rarely been a normal superhero, focusing by far more upon the mind behind the costume/uniform.  A veteran of war, he has experienced some mind shattering events.  He is crazy, but, able to focus his efforts to defeat evil, duck hunters, costumed bad guys, weird supernatural villains, and cockroaches.  You can argue many things about the character, he is perfectly different from any character in comics.  Mike Baron's other famous creation, Nexus is perhaps the reverse.  Nexus is a human with nearly god like powers.  He brings justice to the universe by slaying those who have transgressed the moral status of the world with mass killings.  That is, Badger is crazy, but in his madness fights whatever he supposed to fight that he finds in his presence. Nexus is perfectly sane, but will suffer personal pain and horror if he isn't able to kill the people who mass kill others.

And just like Nexus was captured in prose form, funded by Kickstarter, so now has Badger experienced the same. The Nexus novel was great, I have no words to limit what a pleasure it was. You wonder only, had Nexus begun as a prose series and was long after considered in comic form if we'd learned more, and been as deeply appreciating the character's depth.  In the Badger novel you don't wonder that at all.  There are numerous cultural influences to Mike Baron's writing that all appear in Badger.  Mr. Baron is sane but deliciously different, creating different traits and voices for many characters as a writer, while the Badger has multiple personality disorder.  Mike Baron is a person trained in martial arts, and it has an effect upon the action in his stories, while Badger is a martial arts master, his participation in martial arts tournaments resembles the best of Hong Kong cinema.  Mike is vocal about his love of music and styles of each genre, including the blues, and you find old blues artists as well as musical mentions throughout the comics, and now book. 

In this book Badger goes off on his own, no longer taking part in mystical and weird world events for the Druid Ham, an ancient soul who in the comics often found himself in the present using his talents for both personal success and for an occasional world saving effort. While Badger is starting his own studio for martial arts, blues man Dalton Seaberry comes into Badger's life. Only Seaberry had made a deal with the dark lord of Hell, and now, wants to fight for his soul.  Of course Badger joins in. Ham sees a way to make the event more exciting, and Seaberry fights a battle of bands with the demonic band Vong for possession of more than Seaberry's soul, but that of earth.

I ask you readers, what more could a story ask for?  Baron's writing never fails.  And to the extent that some might find the humor here too much, so, the costume and personality of Badger was normal?  This isn't a spoof, it isn't a single joke taken to book form, the Badger and the world he explores and events he experiences are meant to entertain.  Be dark and moody when reading Nexus, it explores dark things.  But Badger is funny, and so, enjoy it with a light heart.  I always sort of liked Badger more than Nexus in terms of how I felt reading the comics, but Nexus is serious and the Badger made me smile.  After a year of pain, surgery, car accidents, loss of friends, I needed that.

Find Mike Baron on Facebook or Twitter to find copies, I am uncertain if these will be available at retail stores.


CHANNELS ON YOUTUBE FOR YOU


As I've shared some channels before, to good response, I want to make this a regular feature. But I also want to make sure to note, these are my opinions, I've received absolutely nothing for the mentions, and you might find my choices to be uninteresting or less excellent than my views.

This group of selections includes mostly dark content (except for Hybrid Librarian which would be considered mostly intriguing than dark).  The darkness found in these involves unsolved disappearances or murders, as well as disasters. When a famous person or someone unknown but to a very small circle of people is murdered, it suggests that we might all face such danger.  When a person disappears it is perhaps even more unsettling. As I think most people see themselves in the victims, and the idea that you could go missing, without a clue for others to find you, there is a great feeling of discomfort and worry.  Few people who go missing are found, and those few that are, rarely went missing for happy reasons.

HEAVY CASEFILES
is a channel with a great many unsolved disappearances. The reason I list it first is the careful treatment of facts by the narrator, as well as the return to cases that have been covered when new facts bring new light to a case, or better yet, solve them.  The narrator does a fantastic job treating the cases with both serious attention and detail, as well as compassion.  I never miss a new addition to the channel.

CRIMINALLY LISTED This channel has a form that helps the site creator present dark criminal events without emotional manipulation of the viewer. Each video will present 3 or 4 cases based upon similarities of the crimes. The site creator presents them in a dry, unemotional way, so that the viewer can learn what happened in each case, and respond with their own emotions.  For as many cases as have been covered by the site creator, there have been almost no errors in fact, nor flaw in presentation, and nearly no mispronunciations. I definitely recommend this channel.

HYBRID LIBRARIAN I've hoped for a while that this site would return to adding new videos, and it hasn't for 2 years. But the intelligent and moving presentations are worth noting, even without new content being added.  While it presents lists of common new, old, different or common subjects, I found the content to be mature and worth watching.

THE CRIME REEL The Crime Reel is purely about criminal events and does a fine job presenting each.  I like it slightly less than Heavy Casefiles or Criminally Listed, which is only to say I have a preference, but it remains a good channel.  The narrative presentation style is dry, and the details and facts shared allow greater impact upon the listener. If you dislike true crime, of course the focus here is narrow and out of your range, but the resulting detailed well presented videos are worth your time if you have even a mild interest in the subject.

LADY WHITE RABBIT presents odd, terrible events, dark crimes, and weird and scary fiction.  The content for this channel is more diverse, and I'd argue, more interesting to more people than the others mentioned (except perhaps Hybrid Librarian). However, the true crime and dark events are equally well addressed and presented as all the previous channels. The wider view allows me to check on the channel even when not in a mood for true crime.

ABOUT GETTING REVIEWS FROM ME

First off, I can be found on FacebookTwitter or through email at Alexanderness63@gmail.com. I accept hard copies, so when you inquire at any of these places, I'll follow through by telling you my street address. I no longer have a post box, although I regret that.  It was a crushing defeat to no longer have a p.o. box, when I came to realize I was getting so little product it made no sense to pay for the privilege to not receive mail at both my home and at the post office. If you send hard copies for review I will always review them, but if you prefer to send pdf or ebooks to my email, I will review these at my discretion. I don't share my pdf/ebooks, so you can avoid worry that I'd dispense them for free to others.

My Poetry Blog alexnesspoetry.blogspot.com
Published  alexnesspoetry.blogspot.com/2007/01/My-Work.html
Amazon amazon.com/author/alexness
Personal Blog catastrophicmemories.blogspot.com
Lovecraft Horror cthulhudarkness.blogspot.com
Atlantis MU, Lemuria alexnesslostworlds.blogspot.com

Jean de La Bruyère "Life is a tragedy for those who feel, and a comedy for those who think".

Friday, January 22, 2021

As life moves forward in the pandemic, the ocean of obituaries lose their power

THE DEAD ARE NOW BUT ASHES IN WIND

By Alex Ness
January 22, 2021

Click any image to make it larger.  No images are used or owned as anything but fair use for educational purposes.  No copyright ownership is asserted.

Edith Piaf sang a song that makes me cry with every listen.  She was a cute and tiny little French woman with an enormously powerful voice and spirit.  She'd been searching for a song that she'd be identified with, as well as one that would also be the same to the French people.  The music and lyrics came from two people who she considered to have bothered her in the past. As they tried having her listen to their songs, and hoped she'd love the songs and popularize them, she was aloof.  Somehow though, the song would make all three of them famous, and for the time, wealthy. 

She wasn't interested immediately. She thought of them as at the least unimportant, and highly annoying to presume to take any of her time. So she made them wait, and finally after coffee and cigarettes and perhaps toast, she came out from her breakfast or snack, and said ok, what have you for me to hear? They played Non, Je Ne Regrette Rien, which in English is No, I do not regret a single thing, nothing.  As it plays there is a power that builds, and over the course of the song you can feel this woman emoting for everyone who dares listen, and she tells them, in this life you do not get to replace once in a lifetime opportunities, you have now, and nothing else is promised to you. And while nothing is promised, the future remains unwritten. 

The song, soon after release became popular and famous, was adopted by a cadre of French Legionnaires who had attempted a coup. They had wanted the affair of  French Algeria to be settled or fought in the manner they wished. The choices made backfired and they failed in their attempt to create a change in policy or even change in leadership. Upon marching out from their barracks under guarding troops watchful eyes, the Legionnaires whistled, hummed and sang this amazing song. And for that I am moved beyond normal. Listen to it yourself.

I am writing this piece because 2 of the last 3 pieces have been obituaries.  In this stressed and worrisome world of pandemics, riots, accusations, fallen heroes, crushed hopes, and hurt, the single death of a person is no longer a shock.  It does not matter the violence or the passive feint heartbeat that ends.  A neck kneed upon, or a AR-15 brought to a riot in the making, death has become a simple, normal thing. Except that, it shouldn't, ever become so.  YES we all die. Yes I talk about death a lot, it is an important thing. But, we should never be so unmoved because of volume.

I received a couple really snarky not angry but maybe pissy is the right term, emails/comments. "How did you become Mark Evanier, all you post is obits, which are the reason I stopped reading him, well those obits and his anti-Trump hysteria." This note didn't/doesn't hurt me, as comparing me to a great writer and encyclopedia of entertainment world stories Mark Evanier is a very complimentary thing. I like him quite a great deal, and love his stories of life in the trenches of comics and cartoons. I'm not politically inclined, despite being very interested in the process. So, his focus might not work for me when he goes in that direction.  "Obituary freaks like you should go and cry in a corner". I've heard this before. I think I said similar things when young. I wasn't a jerk necessarily, and I'd never complain to someone about what they right, I don't care enough to worry. But, when I was young I thought what is the big deal, people get old, or sick, they die, then I die and then it starts over for the next people. 

That is, until my dad died in 1998, but that year was so manic and weird, I lost my dad but enhanced my master's degree, I had a gallbladder removed, three teeth needing surgery and removal, but at the end of the year, wife Beth and I welcomed my son to our life. Because of the speed of life, and the confusion that brings, this loss didn't sting me as much as it otherwise might have. But then in 2009 a best friend, Guy Morey died of brain cancer. In 2010 very good friend and great supporter of my work Alan Coil died of a massive heart attack. In 2012 my mother died, and I still mourn her.  In 2013 I was fired from projects on the very same day I learned I had cancer. And in 2014 in August, I was declared cancer free, on the very same day I lost another best friend, my wife's best friend too, Cathy Roberts. I began understanding loss, from numerous perspectives. Losing my mom meant never hearing her voice again or talking to her.  Losing Guy meant that the world lost an enormously bright and talented artist, forever.  Losing Alan I lost the guy who bought multiple books to share with others to make sure I had sales right away.  And losing Cathy on my cancer free declaration day? I despised myself that I was still here and this beautiful and smart, passionate person had killed herself.  When we lose people we don't, EVER get them back.  And the wounds don't heal, you just learn to live with the pain.  In the last month many names have been posted in the various obituaries of newspapers and news sites.  Most you read about, due to them being on a large site are famous names. For every one recognizable name, you don't see the many hundreds who passed from view without notice.  

The image above shows four books featuring some major people of importance who've we lost. Hank Aaron broke Babe Ruth's seemingly untouchable record. Prior to his home run breaking hit I'd read a book for kids, about the great stars of baseball and one of the books said, The Babe is likely safe in his grave knowing no one will ever break his record. It was honestly thought by most fans and execs in baseball to be an impossible record to equal. But Aaron did even more, as he surpassed it. All the while with death threats and hate mail towards him, as well, his wife and family need body guards and protection, for he took his bat and changed the course of history. Julie Strain was an impressive looking woman, muscular, tall, beautiful, she became a scream queen of movies made with somewhat limited budgets. She was determined, dogged in her pursuit of fame. Samuel Little killed almost 100 people, and perhaps did. He is not famous, rather, he is infamous, not deserving of accolades, only venom.

Then there is Phil Spector.  He had enormous talents for making music, he could truly be considered a musical genius.  He had made stars out of numerous people, but the fickle rewards of fame faded, and in his isolation he became paranoid, and violent, controlling and spiteful. He'd been the most sought out producer of music, and he wrote dozens of the most popular music of his day.  But he became trusting only in violence and owning guns. And people who came into his life were in danger.  One woman was killed, Lana Clarkson, a talented woman who was on the descent portion of a star's life.  Perhaps she wanted the fame that Spector could give, but he wanted more than fame, he wanted to be a god, and he took her life. Covid, the miserable virus that cast our world into darkness killed Spector and so many more.  I think very little could have changed our trajectory regarding losses whoever had been president, but, that doesn't make Covid any more or any less tragic. I write that the way I did, because it is the simple truth, we have a situation and whoever is in charge, we've got a terrible creature in our midst and it is dangerous, hateful, and will take down the weak, the elders and compromised of immune systems.  So live like you will never have a chance again to express yourself, to love, laugh, cry, live like you can't bear the thought of regret, so you live every moment with the most immense amount of agency.  Be the person who does the things that you read about and say to yourself, that person knows how to live. Lana Clarkson should be alive, and so I don't regret what Covid took with the genius Spector. I regret the loss of Lana, and all others who had abuse or violent acts against them.

AS AMERICA BURNS MANY WONDER WHY...

As a person who has tried to study the history of my world, the way people exchange and trade for power or safety, I've been reading a lot when able.  I might not always have the focus required, but I love feeding my brain.  The four books shown give a quick tour of the world we've created since the peak of American culture, the 1950s. America has many great aspects of its character. It has been generous, it has been forthright and honest about her beliefs and goals of gathering wealth and building a great life for all who participate.  For most Americans capitalism is a religion, with all of the aspects of a religion laid bare to any who study it.

TECHNOPOLY by Neil Postman

We've become addicted to technology, in ways no one can escape. But more than that, we want and choose the addiction our own selves.  No need for a pusher or a seller of an illicit and illegal product.  We invite this into our lives, and slowly we've become without an ability to appreciate life outside of the orbit, of the blessed technology.  Remember when cars could play 8 track tapes or cassettes, and then holy God of Tech, we could play CDs! Well cars, most of them, no longer have CD players, people have a stream of music they bring in the car with gadgets.  People don't just talk on phones, they now shoot silly friend videos, record terrible events, send images of concerts, and so much more.  We interface with the world every day, with our gadgets, and they've been designed to have an early obsolescence, where an item is meant to be seen, like so many other aspects of consumerist culture, a trash item, a worthless token of our epic breakneck speed life. This throw away culture breeds throw away minded citizens.  Sooner, than later, they'll throw away their freedoms and ideals for new gadgets and things that are shiny and make noise.

THE IMAGE by Daniel J. Boorstin

Written around the time of the Nixon Kennedy televised debate prior to the 1960, Boorstin had worried what the effect of image and moving and talking figures would have to the general audience.  He did research, but more to the point of his central thesis, he knew that Kennedy Nixon on television had been perceived by viewers as a crushing blow to Nixon. But for those with only the radio, most listener only voters thought it had been an even match. Boorstin constructed from his fears and thoughts a paradigm where he asked, how does charisma in a modern world affect voter behavior and American leadership.
We choose leaders who are slick and promise things, that they have no ability to produce. And once in office we are satisfied by their glib answers, their beauty and charm, their charisma. We'll take a man, (usually) who is untested, but is popular. We'll take someone who is a man of action, rather than a passive scholarly old dude with glasses. The phrase in the past was, the Man on the Horse, often a military man of some talent, who seizes power, without actually seeming to seize it.  Offered the crown they'll point to the crowd, they'll say, I'll accept this honor only if the people say I must.  And they'll be anointed King, or the Emperor, with a smile and the only worrying thing we can see, is that he is just as vapid and empty as we are, and we'll applaud even louder so the crowd noise will chant, in unison, four more years, four more years, or lock him or her up.

THE CLOSING OF THE AMERICAN MIND by Allan Bloom

Some reviewers thought that this book was an anathema to the American way. We were losing our path, and Bloom said we need to go back to the books and realize where we came from. And in the past universities did teach in a hard impact form of a central core of literature, music, philosophy, and arts.  Various smart ass or innocently clever students have said, I'm going to be a cook, or a hair stylist, an auto mechanic, or a farmer, why the hell do I need to know who Beowulf was or what he did? Or even more to the point, how do you think I'll use or have need of Algebra when counting my tips, or buying a new coffee pot for the office? The hope was that every graduate and most of those who might get close would have, by exposure and courses, become culturally literate. But our teachers even as well as those students have seen how slow the classics feel, and how fake they seem to be, and how old and ancient the values in them are, how we perceive that they don't fit in the modern world we've created.  So over time the schools and that extends to many high schools too, schools began to allow the students to decide what they needed to study, so that they could become culturally literate.  You saw in the comic book publishing world writers who were highly competent in creating fun stories, but you began to wonder, have some of these writers and artists ever read or studied anything but comics?  Specialized training is great, but what kind of weakness are we developing, allowing the patient to decide the care given by a doctor?  Bloom saw America becoming nihilistic rather than broad minded and hopeful.  He feared that without a knowledge of the past and the foundations of our culture, we'd weave from side to side.

THE CULTURE OF NARCISSISM by Christopher Lasch

According to Lasch, America has pursued a path of, if not a goal of, pathological narcissism.  This is found, in his view, schools but also in the family as well as business and the workplace.  It should be obvious that capitalism has a dark side as well as the financial and creative desire to achieve success, of one's own goals.  Such a success based society and pure individualism rewards people with the treasures they seek, and pure narcissism and self centered goals can be viewed as prevalent from youth to elder, from weakest to the strong. Remember Wall Street? and the famous quote "Greed is good." Across the nation you can find people who can perform tasks in their preferred field well, but when found outside their areas? They had no interest so they've had no exposure.

The result of a lack of exposure to ideas is how naive and limited otherwise intelligent people can be.  Some think the Civil War was between America and Canada, or that the US was originally located someplace else and the survivors of a great disaster moved here from wherever that place is.  Some of these people will tell you that France is on the East coast of the US, maybe an island. Or you'll hear an executive officer of a business ask why the postage to Japan is so expensive, it is just another state like Hawaii or California. And when they say this in a meeting, no one corrects them, it just becomes quiet and uncomfortable, as those who actually know what or where Japan is, don't want to lose their job, so they remain silent.* Silence means we never learn, we never challenge the flaws, because we all want that beautiful house a dream of luxury and wealth. The Nihilist worldview is toxic. Narcissistic parents raise similar children. And sooner or later we will have changed our outlook to something even more dangerous.  Narcissistic parents and children and society will evolve (or devolve) into something called Solipsism. It is a world view that proposes that the only thing that matters is you, where the only thing that is real is what you are experiencing. It is the opposite of feeling empathy for another person's struggle or pain. It is the opposite of the mantra that greed is good, because it isn't true that when all men and women pursue their own goals moral goodness follows.  In fact ask anyone from the Belgian Congo how fun it was pursuing their master's greed based goals? 

* These are factual examples of crazy things I've heard or witnessed as a teacher and worker in various levels of education.

GREAT YOUTUBE CHANNELS TO WATCH

JCS - CRIMINAL PSYCHOLOGY
Of the offerings of channels to peruse, this channel is I think the best in quality.  However, it is not the most likely to be as popular since it is very long serious essays about the criminal mind and how to view it.  I am moved greatly by the quality and have never clicked off any story I began, but, some of the content is either too high minded, or too dark for some. However, if you are bright and like the dark, this one is great.

LEMMINO: This channel is a fun combination of top ten lists, long form considerations of esoteric ideas, secret knowledge and fun facts.  I like this site for the clear minded serious ideas put forth, and the seeming innocence of the narrator.  He hits the near perfect mark for clarity of voice and interesting ideas.

ESKIFY: Eskify is a seemingly ordinary gathering of interesting ideas, slick delivery, and weird fun humor.  It is truly informative in ways most top ten list channels can't even perceive. I find the narrator to be quite a character. The offerings are interesting, silly sometimes at just the right moment but always worth watching. Ancient castles or doorways to hell along side of dark silent movies or worst dictators makes this a dark entry, but the narrator's glib comments make it more silly than scary, in just the right amounts.

HOCHELAGA: I am deeply interested in mysteries of the past, as well as theological ideas that have resisted modern thought.  This channel focuses somewhat narrowly but with far more intelligent analysis than most others I've encountered.With many narrated works on youtube it can require some thought and focus to imagine some of the things discussed, but this channel's narrator is a very compassionate, thoughtful and earnest sounding reader/speaker.

LEGENDS OF HISTORY: The human past, mysteries, gods, mythology, and more, wrapped up in serious descriptions.  I think it is slightly off course with the name, but only because I don't see tons of war videos or political events.  The videos here focus on the beliefs of ancient and medieval people, the fears and dreams they have, and what lays at the heart of the belief systems and myths of humans. I like it a lot.

AND FINALLY

No, I have not returned fully to writing for various sites.  I had to take a great many meds today and when I finally was in less pain I said, I am going to write.  

I have been asked by people if I'd review their work, and sure I will.  But I prefer hard copies to digital and can't promise reviews of things like porn or various video games that I'd never try if I weren't being asked to do so.  However, books, comics, games, and stuff in general, yeah, I'll consider that.

ABOUT GETTING REVIEWS FROM ME

First off, I can be found on FacebookTwitter or through email at Alexanderness63@gmail.com. I accept hard copies, so when you inquire at any of these places, I'll follow through by telling you my street address. I no longer have a post box, although I regret that.  It was a crushing defeat to no longer have a p.o. box, when I came to realize I was getting so little product it made no sense to pay for the privilege to not receive mail at both my home and at the post office. If you send hard copies for review I will always review them, but if you prefer to send pdf or ebooks to my email, I will review these at my discretion. I don't share my pdf/ebooks, so you can avoid worry that I'd dispense them for free to others.

My Poetry Blog alexnesspoetry.blogspot.com
Published  alexnesspoetry.blogspot.com/2007/01/My-Work.html
Amazon amazon.com/author/alexness
Personal Blog catastrophicmemories.blogspot.com
Lovecraft Horror cthulhudarkness.blogspot.com
Atlantis MU, Lemuria alexnesslostworlds.blogspot.com

Jean de La Bruyère "Life is a tragedy for those who feel, and a comedy for those who think".

Sunday, January 17, 2021

Tim White

By Alex Ness
January 17, 2021


I was going to write a short piece to describe the power of the right cover on a book, comic book, or even record album or CD.  I had an example in the cover by Tim White illustrating the work Icerigger, which made me immediately want to buy it.  It had jumped out at me, made me imagine what the interior of the book was about.  That short journey was then tempted to change direction when I saw the original cover in full, without trade dress by Dean Ellis, and thought, wow that is a great cover too.  I preferred the Tim White version, and wasn't made to choose back when I was a 14 year old kid.  But still, now I had a thought, what other books had one cover and upon changing cover did sales change.  And that was all before I looked up on the Science Fiction Data Base other book covers by Tim White.  Which then led to my seeing if what I read was correct, on Wiki.  And it was correct.  Tim White, an artist I liked the work of very much, had died in April of 2020. According to one source, he died of Covid.  The two other sources don't say that, so I don't know what he died from.


He blew me away in terms of how he presented an image, his color choice,  his skills in creating new work that didn't consistently replay other works.  He was an original.

His work appeared on magazines and books, cards and art collections.  I'll miss his work very much.  And I've no doubts that his family will miss his person.


These are my favorite covers of HP Lovecraft works. When I learned they were also done by Tim White I smiled, he was a very talented artist, and he could do works of any genre, since the only limits one has, is the width and depth of an imagination.

Monday, January 11, 2021

SPHINX Turns 20!


pexels-photo-60125 (1).jpeg

 
 

Sphinx PR Turns 20

Chicago, IL - January 11th. The boutique public relations firm Sphinx PR is celebrating being in business for 20 years by launching a charity t-shirt campaign on Bonfire. The campaign will benefit Heifer International a leader in creating income paths for all people globally. In August of 2000, Lys Fulda started the company and in the decades since Sphinx PR (originally Sphinx Group) has helped clients large and small get access to affordable public relations and marketing services regardless of budget. The firm offers a full range of options and has a proven track record within most geek-related audiences. Although the scope of her work has expanded outside pop-culture focus, geek will always remain the focus of Sphinx Pr. The commerative shirt can be ordered at https://www.bonfire.com/sphinx-pr-turns-20/.


Fulda explains “ In short, ideas matter. This started when I saw a lot of wonderfully creative people who had great ideas and had no clue how to get them to market or how to reach their audience effectively. In 20 years, a lot has changed and the core of what I do is focusing on the empathetic response that is required to activate a response from an audience towards a specific goal. Empathy isn’t magic but it can seem like it to some. How all this is applied depends on the client. Each client is different, each product is different and each person regardless of budget deserves a chance to have their creation in the spotlight."


“What started as a business has become its own community and network. There is nothing better than introducing people whether it’s digitally or in-person after programming on a panel and watching relationships blossom that have nothing to do with me” Fulda continued. “The focus has always been on opening doors and activating connections. I would not have made 20 years without the incredible people that I have met both personally and professionally and am thankful for every single one of you!"


The t-shirt campaign was designed to give back in a year that has been tough for so many. Art plays a key role in all of pop-culture so designing something fun and eye-catching as a vehicle to help those in need seemed appropriate. The campaign will be ongoing. The artist behind the image is Kurt Komoda and you can find out more about him at https://agonyagogo.com/.

For more information on Sphinx PR visit www.sphinxpr.com.

Contact Information: lys@sphinxpr.com 

 
 





Friday, January 8, 2021

Steve Lightle

By Alex Ness
January 8, 2021

Steve Lightle, a fine comic book artist just passed away at age 61. 

As I was/am a Legion of Superheroes fan, as well as a Doom Patrol fan, upon which Steve Light also illustrated, I feel this loss perhaps more than when others pass in the industry.  I genuinely enjoyed and sought out his work. I'll miss him and with nostalgia and sincere appreciation embrace his works.

Here are some great works by him. Click each to see in full size. 
(All works copyright their respective owners, or creative entity)

Monday, January 4, 2021

Return to active status delayed, but...

By Alex Ness
January 4, 2021


I've had to go on hiatus before, and usually it ends right away, I love comics, movies, books and games.  (Music too, but I am aware I tend to like or not like stuff and that's as far as the discussion goes).  In this case, due to health issues related to surgery, I am not ready to return.  The original description of my situation was that I had a degenerative disc disease, and I needed to be operated upon to help deal with that.  But when the surgeon made his entry he discovered a broken bone, a missing disc, a calcified piece of bone, a torn spinal cord, and fluid leak.  I'd obviously had a fall that led to damage.  When after the surgery I asked the doctor if it had really been that dangerous, he said, had your airbag gone off in the October car crash you had, you'd now be a quadriplegic or dead.  Which is a statement that will linger, I promise.  Healing and sleep have both gone very poorly, even if all healing takes time, it's been a long journey.  As such my return won't be immediate, and I am not aware of any way I could make my presence regular.  Every two steps forward I seem to take two steps back.

As a result of actions by some very kind people, my life isn't all poop. A generous person gave me a Chromebook so I can continue to work, as my normal computer crashed twice between December 2019 and February 2020. I was barely getting by. I received support from family and friends who know I make very little money. They bought books or donated money. Having 2 MRIs and dozens of dr visits, along with surgery, has a cost. My outlook has been good, even though what I'm going through has been brutal.  In this dark place of 2020 memories, I didn't read as much as I'd have liked, the focus needed to do so was usually interrupted by pain and lack of sleep.  So, the idea that I could compose something of worth to say, is questionable, more so than in the past, at least, as there are people who think I've never had anything worth saying, even finding my best interviews tedious.

In the time I've spent not writing about comics or books, I've had a number of people in the journalistic side of comics write to me and ask weirdly similar questions about people I've interviewed, primarily Chuck Dixon and Mike Baron. I respect both the work and the person's creating that work. I like them.  The asking me of questions such as is Chuck Dixon racist or is Mike Baron religious or from a certain ethnic group are pointless exercises. I don't know. Even if I know the people, I can tell you that while you can make your own mental groundwork by reading their interviews, or reading their work, you'll get far more from actually asking the people themselves rather than me. I've regarded both as friends, so I get wanting insight into their being. But both men are on social media, and both are very responsive. (I do know, whatever my views of Chuck are, on Facebook and especially Twitter, when I shared an interview I did with him, or reviewed a work of his, or shared his Youtube content, I'd always lose followers from the comics world. Every single time.)  Chuck and Mike have both been very generous in the time I've been in the periphery of writing about comics.

I think it is true that, there are nasty evil people in every field of human endeavor, including the creative arts.  The desire to follow only your version of morality is understandable, even if it is limited, and creates an echo chamber.  When I grew up, many many years ago, I was told we live in a world of free speech and the marketplace of ideas is one where the best reasoned and rationally argued view will win the day.  We are not there now.  In fact, I think the way society is at present is approaching bankruptcy, because, if one is honest, no one is sinless and whoever is making the judgment of the artist is no more free of sin than the artist being judged. Then the one judging make things worse as they reject whatever the artist creates out of a misplaced sense of self righteousness.

As an example, and I acknowledge that this was naughty of me, I found a number of images of paintings by Adolf Hitler.  Without letting the person viewing it know who created the images, I asked them if they found them beautiful.  In most cases the viewer did.  But when notified that the art was from the bad ol' Hitler, they were in most cases horrified, and in one case pissed off.  I'm not suggesting ideas and philosophies should be absent from any work. I am also not saying I won't like a work if I don't like or agree with the philosophy expressed. My concern comes from, how does it affect the work. If you read the book Anthem by Ayn Rand, by the end of reading it you'll have to agree that it is a pure form of propaganda. And as such I appreciate the quality it has, but, realize it was meant to illuminate a certain worldview.  As such, my outlook towards the final product isn't really if it is good quality art. It uses art, but the goal isn't to express creatively, it is to creatively use a narrative to teach. I could accept the work, or not, but never said it shouldn't be read because it was political, I'd say, it was a political work.  (I might dislike Ms Rand in general, and think most of her work is less than enjoyable for reading material, Anthem worked in its own way.)

In general asking me about this is something that isn't productive.  I look at the art, and judge that. I get rather annoyed when people only think of the person creating it. I can appreciate the art of John Byrne, even if the things he has said are assholish. I appreciate a wide variety of creative and artistic people, without a single thought to their political outlook.  A better example of how I view the work first, only thereafter the artist is When I first read the comics by Josh Howard I was unaware of his religious outlook, and in my review I said I was amazed by the quality of work but my single caveat for the reader was, he seemed to have a religious theme that was underneath the rest of the work. Not knowing where it came from I just said it to mark an awareness of a theme, without being able to say anything more deep about it. The ideas expressed were interesting, but it didn't make the art at all solely or even mostly propaganda.  (Josh Howard is an awesomely talented, kind and moral fellow.)

So, the lesson for the day is not politics or religion or philosophy are bad.  I don't judge a creator's views by his or her art.  Just as an actor can play Hitler without having Hitler's worldviews or diseased mind, one can write work without it being a political memorandum or testament.