HEROESCON 09 :: Well, It Had To Happen–

July 2, 2008 at 3:16 pm By:

For the first time in nearly 20 years? I’m not even sure–probably back to the 80’s, and definitely before I started working here in 1996. Anyway, what I’m talking about is HeroesCon ticket prices, which for our 2009 show have gone up.

HeroesCon 09 ticket prices will be $15 a day, or $30 for a 3-day pass. Although, to ease the blow for our longtime patrons, we’re offering an advance 3-day pass price of $25 for all persons who have paid by December 31st of this year. So if you buy early, your price only goes up by $5.

Not to sing the blues after a hugely successful show which people are still talking about, but you’d be surprised at how little money we actually make organizing the convention. Besides the incredible cost of just renting the hall for a few days, there are a million other costs involved, from tables and booths to hotel rooms to advertising, printing, and everything else. Part of what makes our show so great is that Shelton and the rest of us throw ourselves into it year-round, not only our backs (and in my case, carpal tunnels), but wallets as well.

2009 is already set to be a giant year–sure, we say that every year. But every year it’s true–our convention has grown by leaps and bounds over the last five years. And with Brian Michael Bendis and Jeff Smith already on the list for next year (you may not have heard this if you weren’t at this year’s HeroesCon, but I’ll “officially” announce it pretty soon) among a bunch of other big names, 2009 will be one of the biggest comics events on the East Coast next year. We feel confident that you guys will all come with us on this one, and help us pay some bills and (maybe) even have some profit left over afterward! That’s what business is all about, after all, although it’s good to have a great time at your business, too!

Tickets for HeroesCon 2009 are available right now, so go on and buy some, already!

Also, see the relevant pages for similar increases in our Exhibitor Booth pricing and Small Press Table pricing. Hey, we wouldn’t ask the fans to shoulder it all by themselves!

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Filed Under: HeroesCon, HeroesCon News

[POST] HEROESCON :: What Did You Buy At HeroesCon?

July 2, 2008 at 1:10 pm By:

So what did YOU buy at HeroesCon?

While the staff is still getting back up to speed, I thought it would be fun to talk about the cool stuff we all bought at HeroesCon.

To me the very best thing about a terrific con is getting home with back, arms and legs hurting, sitting down and reveling in the bounty you’ve just acquired. I’ll start– most of mine is indie stuff but I want to know about ALL about your purchases. Did you finally get Amazing Spider-Man #215 to complete your collection? How long have you been looking for it? Lets hear about it!

so…..ME FIRST!!!!

• I got the Gary Panter two-volume omnibus from PictureBox signed (with a drawing!!) by Mr. Panter hisse’f!
• At the Heroes auction, I won a Gasoline Alley Sunday page (with the color guide on back!!!!) by Jim Scancarelli. The Sunday I bought was in the papers nationally the next day– whoa!!)
Richard’s Poor Almanac by Richard (Cul-De-Sac) Thompson— laugh out loud funny!!
• I bought so much stuff from Roger Langridge, I will need a CPA to sort it all out for me,but Zoot Suit excites me the most!!
• I got the two issues of Jack Kirby‘s 2001: A Space Odyssey that completes the run for me (sweeet)

What about you? Let’s hear it!

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Filed Under: DISCUSS, HeroesCon

HEROESCON 08 :: Super-Long Fact-Packed Con Report!

June 27, 2008 at 4:43 pm By:

For literally hundreds of photos, go check out our massive Flickr collection dedicated to HeroesCon 08, which we’ll be adding to and updating with descriptions and links for most likely weeks!

Where to begin? Here it is a full week since HeroesCon 08 opened its doors to the public, and we’re struggling under a DELUGE of well-wishes, congratulations, and sweet notes from many of you. Not to mention that half of us are sick–after a month without days off, a full weekend of scant sleep, missed meals and crummy food, and possibly more late nights in the hotel bar than are really appropriate for health-minded individuals, it’s no surprise. Only super-conventioneer Shelton Drum seems immune to the effects of time and tide–not only did he bounce back faster than any of us, but he was unloading boxes and fixtures the very next day in our warehouse, with nary a complaint!

But enough about us: the report from every quarter seems to be that HeroesCon 08 was an unqualified success! Tons of smiling fans everywhere, the biggest guest list we’ve ever had, and dealers from wall-to-wall! It would be tough to hit all the points from over the weekend, but I’ll try to as briefly as I can–brief for me is twice as long as most people’s “long”, so it should even itself out.

STAFF

It’s not the sexiest place to start, but our staff usually gets mentioned last, and this year they were so amazing that I want to recognize them first. While you may not have noticed it–the infrastructure at a convention is designed to be invisible–this year’s show was one of the smoothest-run I’ve ever been a part of. I don’t mean me or Shelton, either: the credit mainly goes to our “lieutenants”, each of which went over and above what was asked of them to provide the best possible con experience for everyone they came into contact with. Todd Harlan and Phil Southern crushed it at the Heroes booth; Steve Saffel, Dana Hayward, and Shelley Drum ran the smoothest registration ever; Charlie Foesch was hysterical and tireless at the Info Booth; Karla Marsh checked in most of the exhibitors almost single-handed; Doug Merkle ran shuttles to and from the airport all weekend; on and on. I’m leaving out a ton of our actual paid staff, who were awesome of course–but these guys each ran a prime sector of the convention, and the relative lack of problems is a testament to their abilities.

But I can’t leave out two people who I’d personally nominate as show MVP’s as far as staff goes: Andy Mansell and Seth Peagler. Andy, who we don’t pay a dime, handled a giant panel schedule armed with nothing more than a cellphone and an inexhaustible wellspring of energy. It might sound easy, but it involves a lot of running up and down stairs all weekend, as you corral panelists, handle last minute problems, and generally keep everything looking smooth for the attendees. If you went to a panel and had a good time last weekend, thank Andy Mansell. I think the photo above is about as apt a description of what he did all weekend as anything I could describe.

Seth Peagler has been working for us for barely a year, but if we could clone him a couple of times we could run two or three more HeroesCons every year. I can’t say enough about how ready to handle any problem Seth was, including many of my own problems. You can see how selfish my MVP suggestions are: both Seth and Andy did a TON of work that usually goes to me, so I actually worked less this year than in the past. Hurray me!

FRIDAY MORNING

So Friday morning, everything’s going smoothly, due mainly to the staff I just praised above, and just before we’re about to open the doors for fans at 11am, Shelton calls down to ask if I’m going to take a picture of the line. “Oh, is it a long one? I haven’t been upstairs.” “Oh, it’s a long one,” he says, “but you’d better run if you want a picture–these people want in.”

Holy mackerel! This was Friday morning, too–usually the big line comes on Saturday morning. So this was definitely a good indicator of the kind of weekend we were going to have.

Once the doors were open and the fans streamed onto the floor, HeroesCon had begun! I have to say that the only real problem we had this year, and probably 70% of the fires I had to put out, had to do with tables in Artists Alley. When there’s a misunderstanding and someone sits in the wrong table, it creates this chain reaction of table moves that takes a lot of head-scratching to solve. It helps that most of our invited guests are super patient when this kind of stuff happens, so thanks to everyone who was nice to me as I tried to get everyone seated correctly so they could start meeting fans. Also thanks to Steve Epting‘s sketch line, which I had to move TWICE on Saturday. People love some Steve Epting. Poor Steve deserves a big thank you, as he was feeling under the weather and STILL signed autographs and did sketches for a ton of fans.

RINGO TRIBUTE

By Friday night I was so wiped that all I could do was invite myself to dinner with some of my favorite Indie Islanders (more on I.I. later) and then sit there nursing a Coke and 4 orange slices. I admit–I totally broke down. If you want endurance, Shelton is definitely your man. What sucks about this is that I missed the tribute party for the late great Mike Wieringo, which from the pictures looks like a ton of fun. We had it across the street from the convention center, and it featured a ton of Ringo’s buddies and collaborators talking about their friend, the new Ringo scholarship fun that Ringo’s brother Matt has started in conjunction with SCAD, and just a little bit about some cops that showed up mid-party but then ended up being pretty friendly. Don’t embarass us, Todd Dezago!

OH, THOSE GUESTS!

Man, if there was one thing we weren’t short on this year, it was guests! Even with a discouraging number of cancellations in the couple of weeks prior to the show, we had every table crammed with someone all weekend. From first-timers like Darwyn Cooke and Frank Cho, to old salts like Adam Hughes and Matt Fraction, there were big name guests all over the place, all of whom seemed to have a great time. It helps that we definitely try to skew our guest list toward guests we like and who like us–that friendly vibe on the show floor doesn’t happen by accident, you know! Plus a lot of guests recommend us to their buddies, as in Brandon Peterson and Frank Cho, Allison Sohn and Stephane Roux, etc. So it builds a big neighborly vibe on the floor that’s pretty singular, from what I understand. Shelton knows better than I do–he does a lot more shows than I do. See earlier for reports of Shelton’s powers of endurance.

We don’t really play favorites or anything, but I gotta say I was impressed with Darwyn Cooke, although I barely had time to do more than shake his hand and introduce myself at one point. We worked this guy to DEATH, not only at the show, but beforehand. Besides doing the amazing art for our advance ticket incentive print this year, he had to sign ONE THOUSAND of them as soon as he showed up at the hotel. That’s no small feat, if you’ve ever signed 1000 of anything. From all reports, Darwyn was a super-popular guest, and signed and sketched pretty ceaselessly all weekend, with his wife at his side.

A cool thing that we had a lot more of this year was podcasters–there were people holding microphones all over the place, across Artists Alley. The cool thing about that is that there are a ton of interviews across the internet for you to listen to, not to mention a bunch of our panels that the good guys at The Dollar Bin recorded for us. Those guys were SUPER awesome, and I know that main sound dude Adam worked his little earphones to the bone racing from panel to panel with his tricked out audio setup in tow.

Another cool thing about having so many friendly guests is the hotel bar scene–as Tom Spurgeon pointed out in his excellent HeroesCon report, there was a real mix of established veterans, hot newcomers, small pressers, and publishers of all stripe toasting each other in the Westin bar, which was cool. One of my favorite sights was seeing Jaime Hernandez in the corner, holding court and chatting with Evan Dorkin, Dan Nadel, Frank Santoro, and Sammy Harkham. I would have loved to sit in on that conversation, but I was getting pulled all over the place slapping high fives with everybody. Also great was Matt Fraction–wherever he went he was surrounded by a ton of funny people, in a kind of storm cell of hilarity. I joined in a couple of times, but him and Ivan Brandon, Rick Remender, and those guys are way over my head when it comes to funny. Best to get your shot in and leave on a high-note, Costanza-style. Although I will say: do NOT under any circumstances get into a discussion about Barack Obama with Matt Fraction, especially at 2am the night before the convention you’ve been working on all year is set to open. It’ll make getting up the next morning so hard…

But leave us not forget to mention:

PANELS

The event schedule at many comics conventions, including ours at times in the past, can be something of an afterthought. It’s not so much that the convention organizers aren’t interested, but they most likely have a ton of things on their minds already, and organizing panels is highly labor-intensive. Just ask Tom Spurgeon, who has endured an endless barrage of e-mails from me for the past year. Besides just deciding what it is you’d like to do, you then have to get all your panelists onboard, which is a lot more e-mailing and phone work, etc. Then at the last minute, suddenly everybody decides that oh-yeah-they’d-like-to-do-a-panel-too, thus bunging up your carefully planned schedule.

Tom Spurgeon ran something like 7-10 different panels this year, and I missed almost all of them. If you don’t know him already, Tom runs the Comics Reporter website, which is definitely my favorite comics blog to read. I don’t read many comics blogs, though, so maybe I’m naive. Either way, he’s a super smart dude, and a superb panel moderator–Tom just asks a couple of well-thought out questions and then gets out of the way, trusting the panelists to make things interesting.

Don’t take my word for it; as I’ve mentioned elsewhere, the jolly guys at The Dollar Bin recorded most of his panels, and they’re getting put up over at their site one by one. I listened to the 75 minute Collaboration In Comics panel, featuring Darwyn Cooke, Matt Fraction, Jimmy Palmiotti, Cliff Chiang, and Barry Kitson the other day, and it was really fascinating. My personal favorite panel by far was the one on Religion on Sunday, featuring Sammy Harkham and Kevin Huizenga, who are probably 2 of my 3 favorite cartoonists right now. I admit that I abused my role as organizer a little on this one, as it was kind of a dream panel for me. Apparently some of the staff thought so, too, as Seth and Rob were both in attendance, as well as a few volunteers.

INDIE ISLAND

This year’s Indie Island was our biggest ever, with 46 tables and 8 booths crammed with cartoonists and publishers from all over the country. Most of the reports I’m getting are pretty excited about it, especially reports from people who have exhibited there over the years and loved all the new faces–and so many new faces! Sammy Harkham, Kevin Huizenga, Brian Ralph, Nick Gurewitch, the Chapman Bros of Homestarrunner… the list goes on and on. My personal favorite parts of Indie Island this year were meeting Scott Campbell, who did the art for our Indie Island print this year, which we turned into a giant 15′ banner at the back of the section! The other favorite was getting to hang out with the awesome New York/Portland wing of comics, including Alec Longstreth, Liz Prince, Aaron Renier, Kaz Strzepek, Greg Means, Laura Park–all those peeps. They were so fun, and were very kind to let me hang around with them in the hotel bar after hours.

The only down side for Indie Island this year were reported crummy sales for some of the new exhibitors, including Buenaventura, Picturebox, and Bodega. This was the first HeroesCon for all three, and their books weren’t as recognizable to our admittedly highly superhero-centric crowd. But I trust that future appearances will see those sales climb, as they build a regional audience. Chris Staros of Top Shelf told me that they’d had one of their best HeroesCon’s ever, and that sales last weekend were on par or exceeded many of the other “big” indie shows they attend. So it’s six of one, half dozen of the other. But as the guy responsible for Indie Island (along with the kind indulgence and budget of Shelton, who really has let me do things my way with the section), I take these sorts of things to heart, and am already churning my brain for how to address them next year, when our regular exhibitors are joined by Jeff Smith and Fantagraphics, as well as I’m sure a ton of other new faces! Either way, hanging out with the guys from Buenaventura and Picturebox and Bodega was awesome, they’re all super nice guys, which is right up my alley.

The cool thing about Indie Island was that all the guests were so much fun–even the ones that weren’t doing great selling stuff were big fans of each other, or just plain friends, so there was a fun vibe everywhere. And for some reason, everyone kept saying how much they liked that the Indie Island table skirts were yellow rather than blue, and how nice it looked. I thought they were hideous, but that just shows what I know.

ART AUCTION

I go to the Art Auction every year–as I tell new guests who are wondering whether or not to attend, “It’s twice as fun as you think it would be.” And this year we tried all kinds of new stuff. For one thing, we held the Auction in The Alley Cat, an uptown club that contains two or three full bars, a miniature version of the excellent Penguin restaurant, and a much more organic atmosphere than a hotel ballroom, where we’ve had it the last several years. What did the Alley Cat lack this year? Rosario Dawson. No problem! Shelton was kind enough to rent me a white pinstripe tux, and for the first time ever, I was the auctioneer.

Things almost got off to a rocky start, when a sudden thunderstorm dropped a month’s worth of rain on Charlotte precisely when people were leaving the hotel to walk the 6 blocks uptown to the Alley Cat. I thought for sure the attendance would be killed, but when I finally showed up, the room was packed from wall to wall and front to back, and people only seemed a little disappointed to learn that I was not, as they may have thought, Rosario Dawson. I do what I can with what I’ve got, and if you ask me, I did okay. I think at the end of the night, the Auction total, despite the much-less-attractive auctioneer, rainy start, and new venue, pulled in just a hair less than last year’s record amount, and that’s not including items included in our Silent Auction on Saturday and Sunday at the convention itself. I’ve heard a few complaints about the acoustics in the Alley Cat, but I think those are easy to address next year, as the room was set up for a band following our event.

In fact, the band was probably the biggest pro and con of the night. We promised the kind owners of the club that we would be done by ten o’clock, and done we were, but at such a speed! It’s hard to talk for three hours straight really fast, especially when some of pieces are so dazzling! Allison Sohn was the unofficial star of the night, bidding on several pieces very aggressively, often throwing out epithets at the audience if she didn’t feel like people were bidding enough. I myself got into a brief bidding war over the original painting Scott Campbell did for our Indie Island print, which finally went for a wallet-bursting $750! Holy mackerel! But what can I say, I had to have it. Once that credit card bill is paid off (around HeroesCon 2010), I’ll be able to stare lovingly at the framed painting without thinking so much about all that money.

Other “big” pieces including the biggest of the night, Stephane Roux‘s Harley Quinn and Poison Ivy painting, which he did onstage at the show. Plus “live” pieces from Brian Stelfreeze, Jim Mahfood, Josh Cotter, Tommy Lee Edwards, Darwyn Cooke, and a ton of others. Even going fast, it was pretty dizzying to see so much amazing talent whizzing by. Reports we’ve heard are still split on the faster, leaner Auction: on the one hand, many of the pros I talked to afterward were EXTREMELY positive about a shorter Auction, not to mention starting at 6.30-7pm, rather than between 8 and 9 as has happened in the past. Other people liked the longer, marathon-style auction, although I haven’t heard from them as much. Much of the credit for the earlier start goes to Michaele Drum and Trey Alexander, who shepherded the Auction all weekend, and Allison Sohn, who was a huge help (as always) in coordinating everything.

THE WRAPUP

Believe it or not, I could go a lot longer with this report. I’ve left out a ton of stuff–the guests I witnessed sneaking 40’s of Colt .45 into the hotel bar, the incredible patience of Roy Richardson, June Brigman, and Rod Whigham, how cool it was to see Al Feldstein hanging around our convention, on and on. Plus a neverending list of people to thank for their kind indulgence and enthusiasm.

But all good things must come to an end! By the end of the show on Sunday, Phil Southern and Andy Mansell cranked up their awesome load-out machine. I’m not proud to say that I helped almost none at all, although they had it well in hand to all appearances. By Sunday night I could barely move, and was having a hard time thinking about anything more complicated than “need water” or “feet hurt.” Fortunately others on the staff are made of sterner stuff. Later we all repaired back to our store, where Shelton threw a giant party for all the guests and staff. Talk about a Who’s Who! By the time I showed up, it was standing room only already, and I had to wade through Frank Cho, Al Feldstein, and Dexter Vines just to get in the door! Our buddy Billy Reid helped serve a ton of food from Mac’s Barbeque, and our other buddies Pete and Michelle kept making beer runs, but everyone was happy and slapping each other on the back.

Speaking of slapping each other on the back, here’s a back-slap for us: one of the coolest things about HeroesCon is how focused on comics it is. Believe me, it’s not by accident, and we talk a LOT about anything that might be at odds with that. Even as tired as I was on Sunday, I sat down with my new best buds Alec Longstreth and Aaron Renier, with my plate of BBQ, and looked around at all these minicomics dudes, then at the table next to me were Al Feldstein, Jim Scancarelli, and Don Sherwood. In the store Matt Fraction and Rick Remender were cracking up a crowd of people, and not far from them Robert Kirkman and Brandon Peterson were doing the same with a different crowd. Such a crazy mix of people, all here at the place I’ve worked (with a couple of interruptions) since 1996! And all because of HeroesCon.

Regardless of all the time and effort we put into it, for what is often no profit at all in terms of revenue, I’m proud that Shelton has built HeroesCon into what it is over the years; I’m even more proud of what I have to do with that, but maybe I’m just self-centered. But believe me when I tell you that HeroesCon has a paid staff of like 12 people, only 4 of which are full-time. And all of which run the best comic book store in the country all year long as well. So surely it can’t be all our fault that our show has become famous for being so great. No, we strongly suspect that most of the blame rests squarely on YOUR shoulders.

And we sure do appreciate it.

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Filed Under: Comics Industry, DISCUSS, EVENTS, HeroesCon, HeroesCon News

HEROESCON 08 :: A Quick Word While We Unpack And Get Our Voices Back

June 23, 2008 at 5:20 pm By:

Well, holey moley! We’re still unpacking everything, trying to wade through the hordes of sweet congratulatory e-mails already pouring in, and generally nursing sore hips and backs–but we wanted to drop a quick word. In case you didn’t make it to HeroesCon this year, you missed the

BEST.

HEROESCON.

EVER.

I’ll get to work on a overwritten, over-exhaustive con report tomorrow first thing, and photos will be added to our Flickr stream for probably weeks into the future, as some of the many photographers and press that were on hand get them to me.

But for now I thought I’d leave you with Tom Spurgeon‘s pretty excellent report, which is certainly better-written than I could ever do. Tom ran about 75% of this year’s panels for us, and from the few I had time to sit in on, he was pretty great at it. If you don’t already start your comics-blog-reading mornings at The Comics Reporter, I’d recommend you check it out. I’ll leave you in Tom’s capable hands until later in the week. See you then!

[pictured above from left: Kathryn Immonen, Whit Spurgeon, Tom Spurgeon, Stuart Immonen, and Chris Duffy]

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Filed Under: HeroesCon, HeroesCon News

HEROESCON THIS WEEKEND: FRIDAY/SATURDAY/SUNDAY!

June 19, 2008 at 12:27 pm By:

We’re in the middle of loading in right now, so the next post you see from me will likely be photos from the floor of the show. BUT if you want all the scoop, read the special edition of the Heroes Hotline we sent out this morning in advance of the show, right HERE. See you this weekend!

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Filed Under: HeroesCon, HeroesCon News

HEROESCON :: Art Auction Is Large And In Charge!

June 18, 2008 at 2:38 pm By:

Hi there! Remember me? It seems like it’s been a while, but over here we’ve all got our noses to the grindstone getting everything in place for this weekend’s HeroesCon. THIS WEEKEND’s HeroesCon–crazy, no? Just think, a couple of weeks from now this blog will be back to talking about comics and our store again–imagine!

But not yet: I wanted to let you in on the details of this weekend’s coolest con-event–our Annual Art Auction! This has become one of the most popular events on the comics convention calendar, and this year we’re pulling out all the stops.

First of all, we’re having it for the first time in Charlotte’s coolest uptown club, to give you all a bit of local flavor. This year’s Art Auction will take place Saturday at 6.30pm at THE ALLEY CAT, located at 314 N. College St., just five blocks from the convention center. Heckfire, if you’re feet are tired, you can take the Light Rail! Feel free to quiz us at the Info Booth on how to get there once you’re at the convention.

One of the coolest things about the Alley Cat is that right inside is a miniature version of the famous Penguin burger restaurant–for the first time you can go to the Auction, have a great dinner, and bid on original art all at the same time. Plus there’s a full bar and a super-friendly staff on hand, so this should be our most fun Auction yet!

Also new this year is our Silent Auction–because of the HUGE number of donations we get for the Auction, we’re going to place most of them in a Silent Auction, to take place throughout the weekend at the front of the convention. Near the end of each day we’ll award pieces to the winners, so each day there’ll be new works to bid on!

Oh, one more thing–while I’m no Rosario Dawson, this year I will be auctioneering the Auction, so things are going to have a distinctly ME flavor to them. Hopefully that’s a good thing, but we’ll see.

Oh, and one MORE one more thing–the Auction couldn’t happen with the help of our friend Allison Sohn, one of our most tireless supporters. We wanted to mention someone that I forgot to get on the guest list in time was going to be set up at the convention–Allison’s friend Mark McHaley, who’s done a ton of trading card art for companies like Rittenhouse Archives and Topps, including the recent Indiana Jones series. He won’t be in the program book, but search him out at table AA-214 this weekend!

Okay, tons more to do, but I wanted to drop that knowledge on you really quick. More coming!

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Filed Under: Guest List, HeroesCon, HeroesCon News, Schedule

HEROESCON :: Darwyn Cooke Advance Ticket Incentive!

June 13, 2008 at 4:34 pm By:

Well, we may have not made as big a deal of it this year as in the past, but as you can see it’s not for lack of an incredible piece of art! We’ve been busy pretty much from sunup to sunup for the last forever, and as you blog readers may have noticed, not been posting with our normal regularity.

But hopefully this makes up for it! Presenting, ladies and gentlemen, the HeroesCon 2008 Advance Ticket Incentive Print! Featuring all-new artwork by Darwyn Cooke! Everyone with an advance 3-day pass will get one of these 11″ x 17″, signed and numbered EXCLUSIVE prints, printed on sexy thick paper and ever-so suitable for framing! FREE! The design may change a little bit by the time of the show, but that art will always be awesome, no matter how my design may screw it up!

Speaking of advance tickets: the deadline is Tuesday night, June 17, at 9pm. After that we will not accept anymore ticket forms. You can call for tickets at 704.375.7462, or go here and use the pdf form to fax a charge in. If I could get some time one year, we’ll get all that automated online, but for now you’ll have to step back into the 80’s, technologically speaking. And remember to be patient–our phones are RINGING OFF THE HOOK with ticket orders, and this isn’t going to help any! So give whoever answers a break, if you could–they’ll appreciate it!

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Filed Under: HeroesCon, HeroesCon News

HEROESCON :: Ivan Brandon Can Replace Any TWO Men!

June 10, 2008 at 10:07 am By:

Lo, tis sad news I bring you, ye faithful–Ed Brubaker has been forced to cancel his trip to his first HeroesCon this year due to some unavoidable developments at home. We’re crushed! I was personally looking forward to meeting Ed, who comes highly recommended by constant collaborator Matt Fraction. But Ed sends his most heartfelt apologies, and has already confirmed for 2009, so dry those eyes!

Also forced to cancel, again due to last-minute and unavoidable circumstances, is Daredevil artist Michael Lark. Oh, the hurt! But that still leaves 300+ guests for you to lose your mind over–imagine a HeroesCon so big that two big guests are forced to cancel, and the room is STILL packed!

But there’s a light on the horizon! As in the classic “Where The Red Fern Grows“, a tender shoot emerges from the soil to replace what has gone before! Joining the HeroesCon 08 Guest List this morning is writer Ivan Brandon, he of SECRET INVASION: HOME INVASION, MACHINE MAN, THE CROSS BRONX, NYC MECH, and the Eisner-nominated Image anthology 24SEVEN! Whoa Ivan!

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Filed Under: Guest List, HeroesCon, HeroesCon News

HEROESCON :: Event Schedule Roundup!

June 9, 2008 at 11:17 pm By:

Another late-night blog post! That’s what conventioneering is all about! I’ll cut out the chatter and get to posting: presenting the last of the additions (at least the ones that will get into the program book) to our HeroesCon 08 Event Schedule:

COVERING COMICS: Criticism, Reportage, and Gossip Room 219
The digital age has allowed a deeper understanding of comics criticism and reporting than has ever been possible before. Tom Spurgeon of the Comics Reporter moderates this discussion featuring some of the leading lights on the comics journalism scene, including Heidi MacDonald of The Beat, Tim Hodler of the Comics Comics magazine and blog, Matt Brady of Newsarama, and Johanna Draper-Carlson of Comics Worth Reading. From industry reporting and journalism to criticism and good ole gossip, this is sure to be a fascinating behind-the-scenes look at the comics news!

STATE OF THE INDUSTRY DISCUSSION Room 207
The Comics Reporter‘s Tom Spurgeon moderates what’s sure to be one of the most fascinating conversations of the weekend, in this roundtable discussion featuring artist and Image publisher Erik Larsen, DC Executive Editor Dan Didio, artist and DRAW! MAGAZINE editor-in-chief Mike Manley, writer/artist Jimmy Palmiotti (COUNTDOWN, JONAH HEX), and writer and Boom! Studios Editor-In-Chief Mark Waid.

THE SILVER AGE OF COMICS Room 216
It’s hard to imagine a period in comics history filled with more creativity and experimentation than the Silver Age–and who better to lead a discussion on it than Roy Thomas, former Marvel editor-in-chief and current ALTER EGO editor. Roy is joined by GHOST RIDER co-creator Gary Friedrich, HULK #181 penciller Herb Trimpe, MARVEL TWO-IN-ONE penciller Ron Wilson, and others to be announced!

THE NEW ART COMICS Room 219A
From critical favorite hits like MAGGOTS and POWR MASTRS, to prominence in influential anthologies like KRAMER’S ERGOT, “art” or “abstract” or “out” comics are pushing the boundaries of the avant garde in comics. Join Tom Spurgeon of the Comics Reporter as he sits down with Picturebox publisher Dan Nadel, KRAMER’S ERGOT editor Sammy Harkham and publisher Alvin Buenaventura for a frank discussion of this leading edge of art in comics!

DISNEY’S KINGDOM COMICS PRESENTS: HOLLYWOOD AND THE GRAPHIC NOVEL Room 217A
Join recently announced Disney’s Kingdom Comics co-heads Ahmet Zappa and Christian Beranek as they discuss what it takes to navigate between graphic novels to film and back again.

COLLABORATION AND STORYTELLING IN TODAY’S COMICS Room 217BCD
Super panel moderator Tom Spurgeon conducts this chat with a who’s who of artists and writers, featuring Darwyn Cooke (DC NEW FRONTIER), Matt Fraction (INVINCIBLE IRON MAN), Jimmy Palmiotti (COUNTDOWN), Cliff Chiang (GREEN ARROW & BLACK CANARY), and Barry Kitson (AMAZING SPIDER-MAN). From collaboration with other creators, editors, or big company-wide crossovers, it can be tough to get your creative vision out there sometimes. This is sure to be a great discussion by some really entertaining creators!

NOT THE USUAL GANG OF IDIOTS: EC COMICS PANEL
Part 1: Kurtzman for Beginners

In the first half of this look at two of EC Comics most important creators, we present a Harvey Kurtzman retrospective that’s a veritable smorgasbord of presentations and events, including an overview of Kurtzman’s career by Thought Balloonist blogger Craig Fischer, and a close reading of “3-Dimensions!” a MAD story by Kurtzman and Wally Wood, by MIDNIGHT SUN cartoonist Ben Towle. Plus: a sneak peak at the new Kurtzman COMPLETE HUMBUG collection, forthcoming from Fantagraphics!

NOT THE USUAL GANG OF IDIOTS: EC COMICS PANEL
Part 2: A Chat With Al Feldstein (and Friends)

Ben Towle and Craig Fischer host an in-depth interview with Al Feldstein, EC artist and writer and MAD MAGAZINE editor extraordinaire! Along for the ride is a pair of celebrity funsters—FRED THE CLOWN and FIN FANG FOUR cartoonist Roger Langridge and CUL DE SAC comic stripper Richard Thompson—ready to roast and grill Feldstein about The Lighter Side of Editing America’s #1 Humor Magazine!

KIDS LOVE COMICS! Room 216
Featuring “Kids Love Comics” creators Jimmy Gownley, (AMELIA RULES), John Gallagher (BUZZBOY), and Josh Elder (MAIL ORDER NINJA), plus Michele Gorman, the Teen Services Manager at Charlotte’s amazing ImaginOn youth library, and the author of GETTING GRAPHIC: COMICS FOR KIDS. This is sure to be a fun and informative panel for kids and parents alike, with some of the country’s best all-ages cartoonists!

Holy Mackerel, those are some sweet panels. For all the times and days, check them out on our Event Schedule page–they’ll be the ones in red.

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Filed Under: HeroesCon, HeroesCon News, Schedule

HEROESCON :: Last Minute Additions Rick Remender and Tommy Castillo!

June 8, 2008 at 11:13 pm By:

Woo-ee, talk about a last-minute update! But this one will make our man Rusty pretty happy!

Brand new to the HeroesCon 08 Guest List is good ole Rick Remender, the writer of a ton of stuff including THE ATOM, FEAR AGENT, CRAWL SPACE, SEA OF RED, STRANGE GIRL, THE END LEAGUE… I could go on all day. I would, too, except I’ve got eight other things I need to get to, one of them being bed–so to really experience the majesty of Rick Remender, I suggest you go right to the source at the convention.

But that’s not all–also new to the Guest List tonight is BATMAN and DETECTIVE COMICS artist Tommy Castillo. Besides his comics work, Tommy’s also worked extensively in movies and other media, and has a couple of art books to his credit, including DRAGONS, MYTHS, & MAYHEM!

Okay, time for bed–see you tomorrow! Tons more announcements to make!

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Filed Under: Guest List, HeroesCon, HeroesCon News




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