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Saturday, July 05, 2008

Author: John Jackson Miller Created: 1/9/2008 8:29 PM
Faraway Looks is the blog of John Jackson Miller, writer of comics, books about comics, games, and books about games.

By John Jackson Miller on 6/26/2006 12:00 AM

Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic #6 went on sale today, concluding the first arc of the series.The production notes for the issue are now up, too. Please use this thread for comments about the issue.

By John Jackson Miller on 6/19/2006 12:00 AM

A quick note: The fine folks at Diamond Galleries have done an interview with me about the new Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic storyline "Flashpoint." Be sure to check it out!

By John Jackson Miller on 6/7/2006 12:00 AM

I missed it last week, but the Christian Science Monitor ran a piece on politics in super-hero comics.

 I had actually forgotten doing the interview, but it was kind of a funny moment. The reporter called asking for what I knew about recent attempts to put political themes into super-hero comics -- not knowing at first that I was the guy who made Iron Man into the Secretary of Defense. So I wound up having more to say than I probably would have!

By John Jackson Miller on 6/2/2006 12:00 AM

Another busy week. My latest issue of Knights of the Old Republic hit the shelves on Thursday; the production notes are now online, here.

I also have a new interview up at the Lightsabre site -- click the link here to see it.

I also finally got DSL out here in the sticks, replacing my satellite internet service, which was in the process of imploding. Should hopefully translate to more frequent updates in the future!

By John Jackson Miller on 5/22/2006 12:00 AM

Back in from Motor City Con — and a unique convention experience it was, in a lot of ways!

It was great to get to talk with fans of my comics, and it was good to catch up with my friends in the industry. I also got to meet a lot of folks I'd only known as names on the computer screen — like Dave Dorman — or faces on the TV screen, like Tony Dow, John Wesley Shipp, Lisa Loring, and (Millard from my Faraway Looks series would be so proud!) Charlene Tilton.

The big surprise, of course, for me as, I imagine it was for everyone else there — came on Friday, with the sudden introduction of the Long Arm of the Law into the assembly center, in search of videos on behalf of the movie and recording industries. This is a topic I've opined about in the past, but in this circumstance, being in the thick of it, I quickly reverted to my reporter roots and began asking questions. The result was a midnight post from the hotel on CBGXtra.com, which turned out to be one of the first news pieces about the event, along with pix by Jim Johnson. (Thanks for everything, Jim!)

In case anyone hasn't seen it, this was what I posted for CBG — joint copyright, I guess, since I was at the show on vacation. And lest we all forget — in the long run, this was basically a blip on what was a terrific show. I really appreciate the hard work of the organizers — and especially their patience, during and after all the craziness went down!

Novi, Mich. (CBG) -- State and local police, accompanied by investigators from the recording and film industries, conducted a major anti-piracy raid of video dealers at Motor City Con on May 19, seizing pallets of videos and escorting several dealers from the floor.

In what has become an increasingly familiar occurrence at American pop culture conventions, undercover agents from the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) and the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) entered the convention's new home at the Rock Financial Showplace early on opening day, visiting the booths of dealers selling DVDs.

Around 5 p.m., Michigan State Police, assisted by members of the Novi, Mich., police, raided an estimated 14 different booths in the hall, according to Con Promoter Michael Goldman. Novi officers were seen leading four dealers from the floor in handcuffs, and police said 10 additional dealers were escorted to police headquarters.

Dealers were not arrested, but instead brought to the station to provide statements and officially surrender certain merchandise, one such dealer returning to the convention said. Several booths were back in business before the end of the day, police keeping any items on their warrant. Dealers who reopened told CBG police were targeting both films and certain television recordings they suspected of being bootlegged. Some dealers never actually closed, as police targeted a number of dealers for whom videos were a small part of their merchandise. One retailer had only 20 videos on his table, his partner said.

Officers had been prepositioned to cover various ends of the large hall, a Novi officer told CBG -- and rolling pallets were brought into the hall to remove videos that were on their list of suspect items.

The sudden appearance of uniformed officers and agents wearing RIAA apparel in the hall -- and the subsequent searching and complete removal of entire booths -- attracted attention throughout the hall, and convention staffers fielded questions from many attendees.

Motor City Con 2006 has more than 200 dealer booths and more than 250 creator and media guest tables -- and while the number of raided booths was small, they were spread across the long hall, making the raid visible to most attendees. Convention officials said this is the largest Motor City Con in the show's 18 years.

Goldman told CBG that the Motor City Con exhibitors' agreement clearly forbids the display or sale of bootleg items. A similar raid previously occured at Wizard World Philadelphia.

JJM's UPDATE, 5/23: Well, I sure didn't expect this little adventure would result in the highest-traffic day in the site's history by far, but that's what it did. (Hey, and speaking of intellectual property, could all you folks reposting the photos from here please credit Jim Johnson? Thanks!) Anyway, now that I'm not sitting in a hotel lobby, I can add a few more notes.

Again, I was not attending in the role of a reporter, so there is an element of hearsay here; all I can say is that what I heard I did hear from dealers, organizers, and investigators.

• Why here? Several dealers and insiders I spoke with said they had been told that a video dealer under charges in another municipality had "flipped," directing police to four specific dealers at the convention. Then, once in the hall, the RIAA had the police expand the search to include ten other dealers, some of whom had very small amounts of merchandise relative to their other wares. The officers I spoke with on the scene did not confirm or deny these reports. Another source said one of the RIAA's few field offices is in Detroit.

• Both film and TV programs were apparently targeted. Looking at items that were left on shelves after the raid — and allowed to be returned to shelves later in the day — many speculated that, either owing to the limits of the MPAA's bailiwick or perhaps something in the warrant, TV programs and anime weren't targeted in the raid. But a source closer to the investigation said there was actually a "hit list" of specific items that did include some prerecorded television programs. (Since many of the same studios that make films also own TV content, that makes a certain amount of sense.) And contrary to one of the rumors that circulated, I must say that on my several tours of the room before the raid took place, I did not see any visible signs of any "in-theaters-now" films on DVD. I obviously can't swear there was no Da Vinci Code or the like in the room somewhere, but there were no blatant displays such as I've seen at other shows "back in the day," when one might see new releases playing on TV screens in booths.

• Local TV showed up, but didn't make it into the room. At least one local TV station did a report on the raid from the scene on Friday, but the cameras remained outside the actual assembly center. There did not appear to be local newspaper coverage immediately afterward, either — the Detroit News running a "Holy Comic Con, Batman!" piece on Saturday touting the Batman TV show anniversary celebration and making no mention of the arrests. (Actually, as of this writing, there still doesn't appear to be anything in the Detroit News about it.)

• Tempers flared. Right at the beginning of the raid, CBG columnist Jim Johnson and I were standing at the booth of one agitated dealer who was in a heated discussion with a plainclothes officer over whether the state had a right to look inside his booth. The dealer contended that, as he was subletting the space from the convention as an agent of the Rock Financial Showplace, that space thereby became his "store," and thusly the state would need a search warrant specifically for that -- as opposed to one for the entire center.

The officer was adamant, saying that if the dealer didn't cooperate, the entire booth would be impounded -- as happened elsewhere (as seen in Jim's images of comics boxes and all being carted away). The dealer called his lawyer and finally assented, shutting down the booth temporarily. His partner reopened the booth later in the evening, shifting merchandise displays to compensate for the material that had been removed.

• It was a Friday phenomenon. Because of the reopened retailers altering their displays — and because of neighboring retailers claiming the booth space of retailers who did not return to set up — there was no way on Saturday or Sunday for a newcomer to tell that anything had happened on Friday. Except, possibly, in that the selection of video merchandise was thinner...

 

By John Jackson Miller on 5/14/2006 12:00 AM

If you're in the Detroit area, Star Wars fans should check out this year's Motor City Con in Novi, May 19-21.

Joe Corroney of Star Wars: Empire and many other Star Wars projects will be there -- and I'll be there signing what few copies I have left of KOTOR. (I've never had a book vanish so fast -- so you may want to bring your own copies!) Joe and I worked together on Crimson Dynamo a few years back. We're hoping to get a Star Wars panel going; check with us there.

Other Lucasfilm folks of note include Matthew Wood, General Grievous from Episode III, Jabba puppeteer Dave Barclay, and Karen Allen from Raiders of the Lost Ark -- and the 501st will be turning out, I understand. See you there!

By John Jackson Miller on 5/6/2006 12:00 AM

Free Comic Book Day was great, as usual. Here's the photos from my signing at Galaxy Hobby -- thanks, guys, it was fun!

As well, here's one of the articles I was interviewed for before the event in the Columbus, Ohio Dispatch. I do a lot of marketing behind the scenes to help promote the day -- which, incidentally, got its start in Joe Field's columns in one of the magazines I edited, Comics & Games Retailer. Everything's connected...

There's also a healthy thread about FCBD running on CBGXtra.

If you didn't get to your store this year, check it out anyway — you never know, there may yet be some FCBD editions left!

By John Jackson Miller on 4/23/2006 12:00 AM

 Visited the comics shop today -- where, lo and behold, Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic #4 awaited.

I'm thrilled with how this issue turned out -- it's quite my favorite one to date. Kudos to Brian Ching and Michael Atiyeh for their work on this one. 

Update: The "behind the scenes" page is now online here -- and your responses to the issue are welcome to this blog entry. I also can announce at that very comics shop in a week and a half I'll be doing a Free Comic Book Day event from 1-3 p.m., Saturday, May 6. That's at Galaxy Hobby, 2626 Post Rd., Plover, Wisconsin. See you there!

Read More »

By John Jackson Miller on 4/9/2006 12:00 AM

Readers familiar with my interest in comic-book circulation history (a lot of which is in the Standard Catalog of Comic Books) now have a place on the web to find more of my research. After months of clean-up work and posting, all of my estimates for comics sold by Diamond Comics Distributors since Marvel's return to Diamond in April 1997 are now online at the CBGXtra website.

Amounting to nine years of reports, preorders or final orders are available for more than 32,000 comic books and 4,200 trade paperbacks; also available are market shares and my estimates of average prices and overall market size. This amounts to the largest resource for circulation data ever online.

Topps Comics, Acclaim, Awesome, Marvel's "minus-one issues" - these names from the past and more can be found in the earliest sales charts posted.

All trade paperbacks for which Diamond has ever released indexed sales reports now appear. (The first indexed sales chart of any kind released by Diamond for TPBs was a Top 10 list in February 1998 simply labeled "Books," which also included a couple of price guides!) But even before then, CBG's reports include a rough estimate of trade paperback preorders based on a statistic Diamond did provide - the ratios of dollar preorders represented each month both by comics and by trade paperbacks.

All of Diamond's "Final Order" market shares appear now, going back to October 1997, when the distributor first released that calcluation. Prior to that point, CBG provides dollar market shares based on the Top 300 comics for which Diamond provided indexed sales figures.

The next mission ahead will be the posting of data from the period in which Heroes World was Marvel's exclusive distributor - a period that ended in March 1997. CBG has much of this data from the defunct distributor - it appears in the Standard Catalog of Comic Books but the reporting will be a little more complicated given that the data are from two different sources.

By John Jackson Miller on 4/3/2006 12:00 AM

There are times you don't want life to imitate art -- especially when you're the passenger on a C-5 Galaxy, and the art is the climax of my "Best Defense" storyline, from Iron Man #78.

Readers of that issue may remember Iron Man's mid-air rescue of a C-5 Galaxy military transport, bringing it down it in one piece in the reflecting pool on the Mall in Washington, D.C. That scene seemed nearly unimaginable -- until yesterday, when a C-5 landed in three pieces in nearby Dover -- and everyone lived!

Check out the AP story here, where former pilots credit the design for the survival of the occupants. I came to agree with them as I dug into the design specs for the C-5 quite a bit in working out that arc -- the "Operation Babylift" disaster, mentioned in #77, was a real-life event worked into the background of the story. I knew the plane could take a lot of punishment -- just not quite this much!

At any rate, I'm glad everyone aboard yesterday's flight made it -- and props (no pun intended) to Lockheed. That's amazing...

By John Jackson Miller on 3/28/2006 12:00 AM

Finally back from Midsouthcon 24, and as usual it was full of surprises. I've been going to the con since the fourth or fifth one, and attending this year as the comics guest of honor was a real, well, honor!

A cool extra this year came from Dark Horse, which, working wth programming coordinator Carlin Stuart, provided enough copies of the Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic/Rebellion special for everyone in the show.

The panels were exceptionaly well attended this year -- quite a contrast to that strange year when the Transportation Security Administration took over the hotel and we all wound up meeting in the hotel restaurant. Friday night's comics-writing panel with Rich Burlew of Order of the Stick and webcomics creator Orion generated a lot of great questions -- I'll be looking at adding some kind of seminar for the educational track next time out. Saturday's Knights of the Old Republic panel was a lot of fun, too. And thanks to the brave attendees who made that 9 a.m. Sunday morning panel -- where we all decided not to turn the lights on in the panel room because it was waaaaay too early...

It was also great to meet author David Weber, a fellow Horatio Hornblower fanatic -- as well as all of this year's guests.

I must say there was a sense of deja vu in watching the University of Memphis playing in the NCAA tournament at the con -- we were doing the same thing at the con back in the mid-1980s, back when it was still called Memphis State. Sorry to see the Tigers lose, but at least I came out OK in the office pool in spite of that. I can quit now...

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© 2008 by John Jackson Miller