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 Monday, December 31, 2007
Updating
Posted by maggie
With 2007 barrelling to a close, I find my mind drawn to the ongoing challenges of updating. It's something most news suppliers find challenging, and many use that challenge as little more than a footnote, at best.
But here we are with recent losses including Wayne Howard and Paul "Zeus" Grant and (on a different note) the ending of Tom Ryan's TUMBLEWEEDS, and I realize all over again just how many people in the industry I haven't managed to keep up with.
It was great to see Gary Friedrich appearing at some conventions in 2007. How many other well-known figures from years back have we lost touch with? These aren't necessarily Facebook-type folks; whom should we be seeking out these days, anyway?
Son Stephen got an entire book out on this sort of project years ago (TENACITY OF THE COCKROACH), but can't we start tracking down people in a less elaborate way?
12/31/2007 1:47:55 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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 Sunday, December 30, 2007
Yes, I'm Still Lurking About
Posted by maggie
It's been a bit since I posted here, though I've put up a couple of items on CBGXtra.com. Life is more complicated electronically, when a full computer is not at hand. I'm babysitting at the moment, Grandkids Jonah and Grace just having paraded through the room, announcing, "We're grounded, because we don't like anybody."
Could it be a reference to the 2008 primaries?
In any case, comics are still a part of life. SpongeBob has been a part of Christmas festivities in the homes of both my kids, and Jonah's bedtime reading night before last was the Christmas story of Donald, Uncle Scrooge, and the kids and the giant gold nugget. Hoo hah!
12/30/2007 9:56:10 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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 Sunday, December 23, 2007
You ARE Reading Mark Evanier's Blog, Aren't You?
Posted by maggie
Whether it's for behind-the-scenes information on the Writers Guild strike, for views of classic cartoons with more background than I'd ever find on a DVD disc, or for such factual matters as the posting of the correct (as opposed to Wikipedia) date of birth for John Severin, I try to check out Mark Evanier's blog every day.
Oh, and he's also got his own links to comics news -- such as this one regarding a worker being fired for posting a Dilbert cartoon. Geez.
I've linked here -- but there's an ongoing link to Mark in the "More Links" to the left, for your convenience.
12/23/2007 6:50:47 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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 Wednesday, December 19, 2007
What the Heck?
Posted by maggie
It's just been brought to my attention that at least one Internet site says CBG is discontinuing itself in 2008. As we're all aware, absolutely everything on the Internet is True -- so I'm bewildered. Which is to say what you're probably already aware of: You should always try to verify stuff you may come across on the Internet. Especially the report that CBG is going away. Because we're not. In fact, we're simultaneously (in CBG #1639) tooting our horn over CBG's celebrating its 25th anniversary in Iola and planning issue #1640. Stay tuned.
12/19/2007 1:49:31 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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Keep These in Mind As You Shop for Gifts
Posted by maggie
I meant to post these Christmas morning -- but I'll be miles away from my scanner then. So take a look now. (Though you may not be able to see the dates on these scans, by the way, they both appeared in newspapers in 1993.) Ho ho ho!  
12/19/2007 8:41:40 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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 Tuesday, December 18, 2007
Dang! No Posts Since Last Week?
Posted by maggie
Sorry, sorry, sorry! Things have been crazy, of course. In olden times (when Don and I were publishing Newfangles, which predated CBG and TBG before that), comic-book companies would stub their toes in the dirt about missed shipping schedules and say that the reason for foul-ups this time of year was that there were complications because of Christmas. Such excuses continued into TBG days and occasionally into CBG days -- and we would occasionally point out that publishers might do well to invest in a new device called a calendar and plan accordingly. Because Christmas shouldn't come as a surprise; it could actually be planned for. And, yes, we've wrapped up Comics & Games Retailer today and plan to wrap up CBG tomorrow and then go on with our lives. But to do that, most other things have been set aside. For example, tonight I plan to scan comic-book panels that display less than accurate drawings of archers in action. (Just wait. You'll see the letters column next year.) But at the same time we've been wrapping the issues, I've been wrapping (and shipping) family gifts (including a huge box of doll furniture for Granddaughter Grace; don't tell her). Which sort of activity has precluded a lot of blogging. So what are your holiday plans?
12/18/2007 5:41:14 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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 Thursday, December 13, 2007
If You're Trying to Reach NYC People Today ...
Posted by maggie
And, according to the automatic fill-in gizmo on this site, I've used exactly that header before ... Anyway, most of those who work in the city or thereabouts and who commute to get to work have headed for home by now. There's freezing rain and snow, and all commuting is affected by that. So leave them alone and let them get home -- and wish them all safe traveling.
12/13/2007 3:01:17 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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Then, NPR Featured Virgin Comics
Posted by maggie
Not only did my day begin with Stephen's report on Christmas music, it continued with an extensive feature on comic-book stories produced in India for Virgin Comics. "Ancient Indian Tales Inspire a Modern Indian Art" by Laura Sydell takes listeners behind the scenes, and the Internet version features art from Virgin.
Check it out.
12/13/2007 6:33:20 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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Waking to Christmas Music
Posted by maggie
My clock radio, set to NPR, went off, and I lolled in bed, listening to news, followed by features. And then ...
Then ...
Then I heard something about an 18-hour drive from Washington, D.C., to Gresham -- and my eyes opened.
A familiar voice began, "I've always enjoyed hearing new Christmas music, but there's just so much of it. Every fall, I receive dozens of new holiday CDs -- countless hours of music to sift through in the long, agonizing buildup to Christmas."
So began "18 Hours of Christmas Music: My Holiday Hellride," a report on Christmas CDs, and the reporter was my son, Stephen Thompson.
A bonus of the website version of his report is a list of all 21 CDs he listened to on his trip: a list accompanied by thumbnail reviews of each with the bonus of sample tracks.
12/13/2007 6:15:56 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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 Monday, December 10, 2007
Socially Secure
Posted by maggie
Huzzah for the kindly folks at the Social Security office! It becomes clear why I had to wait; the interview was detailed, personal, and painstaking. The office hours ended at 4; we talked till about 5:15 -- with me never being rushed. Excellent experience -- and those confused old people I mentioned in the previous post? I'm sure they'd have ended up as happy as I am. Seriously: excellent!
12/10/2007 5:17:39 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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Cohort Dan Will Be Posting More Videos Soon
Posted by maggie
Have you especially enjoyed one of our videos posted at CBGXtra over any of the others? Should I be seeking out a specific type of interview? I have in my files a brief nterview with Sergio Aragones. And a quick intro to the OSU research files. And, for that matter, clips from the Mid-Oho-Con Maggie Roast. Thoughts?
12/10/2007 3:48:28 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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When You Become Ancient
Posted by maggie
It becomes a perfect time to blog. Because, when you're sitting in a Social Security Administration office, there's little else to do, if you were foolish enough to forget to bring a book.
For starters, I'd finally settled down with the stacks of insurance come-ons that had been piling up for months -- and had picked out the outfit I wanted -- but wups! I had to fill out info from my Medicare card. What card?
I asked some friends, and they said I'd probably received it weeks ago but it wouldn't have been in a distinctive envelope. I check online and it says I can get a replacement in a Social Security office, and the nearest is an hour's drive away. So I drove. Took a number, and had to wait less than 10 minutes to be called. Cool.
But I'm not in the records. What's the problem? Oh, she finally determines, I'm not getting SS payments. Correct. Just want that missing Medicare card; I'm not retired. Oh. Sit down, and they'll call me. They wouldn't have sent me a card, because I'm not getting SS payments. OK. So it's now about 3/4 of an hour since I got here and they've called FOUR names (as opposed to those numbers handed out first).
I guess my point is that I can read and write (well, blog anyway), and this is confusing and annoying for me. So what's it like for others without my advantages, slim though they may be? But they HAVE called out one more name. So there's hope.
12/10/2007 3:17:33 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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 Sunday, December 09, 2007
More Video Is on the Way
Posted by maggie
After an absence necessitated by the inability of my DVD recorder to open its li'l disc tray, I'm about to return to video posting, thanks to purchase of another DVD recorder. (Have I mentioned how little enjoyment I get out of working my way through yet another booklet of instructions?) At Brent's request, my first project was making a DVD of the Maggie Thompson Roast held at November's Mid-Ohio-Con. I'm not saying any of that will end up at CBGXtra, but you never know ...
12/9/2007 7:09:16 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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 Friday, December 07, 2007
Gifts
Posted by maggie
It occurred to me last night (as I was in the midst of last night's Comic Book Talk Radio show with Jason Miner) that there are a couple more gift suggestions fans might make to people who say, "What do you want this year?" Some of those people aren't likely to make it to your favorite comics shop -- but they might have a craft store they visit. So you might suggest an assortment of acid-free items that are, surprisingly, now pretty widely available.
For example, I still see pros at shows signing items with run-of-the-mill black Sharpie pens. Nothing against the Sharpie, which has many, many uses. But an autograph with a Sharpie or one of those gold or silver pens that suspend tiny metallic flakes in some sort of oil will age speedily and nastily. I'm not saying acid-free metallic ink will never age -- but I think it'll hold up better than some of the inks I see at shows these days. Or ballpoint-pen ink.
Maybe acid-free products (and check out Bags Unlimited and Bill Cole for cool ideas) could be part of a more elaborate "Travel Kit" for collectors. I bought a photographer's vest from eBay a year or so ago, and it provides both mobility and the "place for everything and everything in its place" convenience that has eased my increasing travel load. My autograph pens and other writing tools fit in the pen pockets, my cell phone fits in the pocket high enough for me to hear it easily, cash and credit cards go in a zipper pocket, reading glasses go in a compartment next to the compartment that holds my Palm Pilot and a small writing pad. Just a thought.
12/7/2007 9:05:40 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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Shopping
Posted by maggie
Yesterday afternoon, I decided it was long past time to pick up my comics from the downtown Stevens Point comics shop where my pull list goes. It had literally been months, and Galaxy Comics beyond-the-call-of-duty continued to set aside an ever-increasing stack o' stuff.
Today, of course, will be partly devoted to putting all that in order (though Galaxy had done a great job on the preliminaries) -- and otherwise digging out from "things-to-do" that had been piling up. (The Spamalot CD I ordered after seeing the show is helpful in keeping me moving. However, I strongly suggest you wait to listen to it till after you see the musical, since part of the delight of the experience of watching it came from the surprises embedded throughout.)
The shopping trip also reinforced my annoyances at progress. Yes, I'm finally becoming one of those annoyingly grumpy people who complains about real improvements. I earlier groused about the 75-ohm video connectors and the difficulties of administering them, so one of my goals yesterday was to find a good cable and the modifiers that convert the nasty pointy nuts into a slip-on input. Got the cable. Got the modifiers. So yesterday I continued the quest to find a VCR (and maybe a VCR-DVD recorder) to replace my son's antique VCR on his primary (moderately old) TV. The RCA plugs have seemed to lack effectiveness on this TV (though it has several input options); the 75-ohm input has worked the best. Moreover, the cable output (supplied by the cable folksĀ less than a year ago) was of the 75-ohm variety. Hey, guess what most of the new equipment doesn't have? Yep, a 75-ohm input. It's all S-connectors and RCA plugs. (A Shopko shelf notice said that, if you had to adapt things for the needly inputs, you should buy an adaptor, to be found in the "Accessories" area. Do I have to say there was no such adaptor in that area?)
Thing is: We're in a stage of such transition that (as proud owner of more than 1,000 Beta tapes in addition to the later VHS tapes to which I was forced to adapt) I have no interest in buying The Newest of the New until (a) prices come down, (b) broadcasts demand it, and (c) the Format of the Future is settled -- settled for at least, say, the next five years. So I intend (as, I would guess, do most other members of my family) to limp along with technology of the past for a little longer.
But, wow, it's getting more and more difficult.
12/7/2007 8:41:22 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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 Tuesday, December 04, 2007
And Then There's the Cataloging
Posted by maggie
You think it's a pain to keep track of the comics in your collection? Hah! One of the biggest challenges in a collection is maintaining a list of what you have -- or, as Don used to say, the difference between a collection and an accumulation is an index. So one of the jobs staffers face at the Ohio State University Cartoon Research Library (27 W. 17th Ave. Mall, Columbus -- (614) 292-0539, usually open Monday through Friday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. -- just thought it was time to remind everyone) is maintaining the inventory. When Carolyn Kelly and I visited the facility, we spent some of the time trying to help -- and I intend to go again for such things in the future. What Carolyn is doing here is what we both did: enter inventory information for some of the Sunday comic strips in the collection. For example, I started with Thimble Theatre Sunday strips from 1940. I pulled the envelope marked for the strip for 1940, pulled out the strips in the envelope, and set them next to the white sheet with a year's worth of daily grid. I noted the credited creators and year and rough dimensions (in cm.) of the majority of the strips in the envelope, then pencilled an "X" in the dates on the strip, and noted anything unusual at the bottom of the sheet. (For example, one strip was unsigned. Another needed a repair.) The completed folder and its sheet was set aside, and the next envelope was opened. (By the way, finding the date was sometimes a challenge. On the Sundays, an installment date was sometimes determined by a date on the strip on the back of the inventoried strip.) Our hands were clean and ungloved. Much of the collection is handled only with white gloves, but potential damage from snagging frail newsprint edges is greater from gloves than from bare hands. It's detail-driven, painstaking work, but the results are the difference between a collection and an accumulation. 
12/4/2007 2:34:26 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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Oh, You OSU!
Posted by maggie
(By the way, OSU is working with other research facilities. Michigan State University is another repository of important comics documents; in fact, OSU's Lucy Caswell commented that her collection coordinates some of its collection with what's to be found at MSU. No need to duplicate shelf space for, say, Amazing Spider-Man #174, if MSU has it. So this ongoing rant about OSU is not to be taken as ignoring what MSU and others have to offer.) OSU doesn't limit its interests to what you or I as collectors might obsess on. My interests are many and varied but are, after all, the things in which I'm interested; on the other hand, if it's sequential art, OSU cares about it. And cares fiercely. For example, one project involves manga, and that includes the manga being produced right this minute in Japan. Here are some of the shelves devoted to taking in and cataloging current manga series. You'll note the individual identification slips. Each volume is read and catalogued with a summary [in English] of contents [in Japanese] and then integrated into the collection. 
12/4/2007 2:01:49 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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Oh, Oh, Oh, OSU!
Posted by maggie
Now that I'm back in a set-up that will let me post some of those
pictures I took a couple of weeks ago, I'm in the midst of mentally
revisiting the trip to Ohio State University's incredible comics
research facility. It's in the Wexner facility at 27 West 17th Avenue
Mall in Columbus, and the first time there requires a bit of guidance.
Nevertheless, it's worth the complexity, because it's a fantastic
resource for students of comics history.
And by "students," I don't mean you have to be enrolled in a course to
take advantage of what's there, if you're researching something.
The current display involves the work and career of Milton Caniff.
Displays benefit from the fact that Caniff didn't throw things away.
Check this out. It's original art for the nose of an Air Force plane in World War II. 
12/4/2007 11:48:12 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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Back in the Office
Posted by maggie
Haven't yet dared to check office e-mail. Will do soon.
12/4/2007 8:03:16 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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 Monday, December 03, 2007
Yay!
Posted by maggie
There's a plane here. There's a pilot here. My seat assignment may be wrong; we shall see. But on to the next challenge. (I bet my office e-mail is, um, plenty full.)
12/3/2007 11:09:37 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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The Fun of Flying
Posted by maggie
I hear more comments about the flight being canceled, but the gate and monitor say it's on time. But there's no plane at the gate. But it wasn't scheduled to leave for more'n an hour. I think this is one reason many folks aren't eager to fly; it's certainly why I'd like to be home today. Just the constant shift in plans. Hope I make it before dark, what with reports of (surprise) icy roads in Wisconsin.
12/3/2007 10:31:12 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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Is Anyone Traveling Today?
Posted by maggie
I'm sitting in the Baltimore airport, and it's the most deserted I've ever seen an airport during the day. And now I overhear someone saying his Chicago flight has been canceled. And I think it's mine. What the?
12/3/2007 10:14:37 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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 Sunday, December 02, 2007
Return on Sunday? Not So Fast!
Posted by maggie
Ah, that's not something you want to hear: "Everyone on the 9:40 flight, line up over there! That flight has been canceled." Kudos to daughter-in-law Denise, who'd insisted on joining me at the ticket counter instead of (as I'd suggested) dropping me off at the entrance.
12/2/2007 10:13:59 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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 Saturday, December 01, 2007
Owwww! Or Why Did Anyone Think ...
Posted by maggie
... of making 75-ohm connectors painful to use? I've come off more than an hour's contortions of trying to line up cable to a VCR (old Panasonic) equipped with a 75-ohm input spot only accessible to a lemur. Eventually, I gave up -- with hopes of finding more recent electronics that work. But gee whiz.
12/1/2007 3:56:43 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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December Is Here. Are You?
Posted by maggie
Suddenly, the countdown to end-of-year holiday celebrations takes on urgency. I'm sure the Post Office is already suggesting that slower-moving packages be shipped NOW. I have a few items picked out (none wrapped), but I'm having to mail virtually everything, so it's time to get things in gear. Boxes, bags, backer boards, comics, and what else? Oh, and now we have quite a few videos posted at CBGXtra. Have you looked at any yet? What more would you like to see?
12/1/2007 8:42:32 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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