Comic-Con 2010: Spotlight on Ray Bradbury

Saturday morning, I gathered my peeps to head down to stand in line. They headed over to the massive cattle herd that is Hall H while I went over to the sails pavilion to try to score a ticket for an autograph from Ray Bradbury and his official biographer, Sam Weller. I was told to head over to the lobby of Ballroom 20. Sweet, it looked like there was may only 100 people in line. As I was about to jump in line, the security informed me the line was outside on the stairs. When I got outside, I saw that the line winded up and down the stairs three times. As I headed towards the bottom of the stairs, the people in line pointed across the street towards Embarcadero Park, “This line begins down there.”

As I stood in line, making conversation with the people around me, I found out the line was for ALL of the ticketed autographs, not just Bradbury. A sense of relief fell over me. As the line finally began to move, we actually felt like we were running. The fast pace line then broke off to many smaller lines in the sails pavilion. It was here I stayed for about an hour continually going through the line in attempt to pull a bunny out of a hat (well, a ticket with a bunny stamp on it from a felt bag). The people in this line were pretty awesome. After they had scored a ticket for themselves, they went back in the line to try for a random stranger who had been standing in line for a long time. By the end, I had two people pulling for me… but it wasn’t enough. Well, the session was the real reason I came so the disappointment was not gut-wrenching.

After hanging around the exhibit hall for a few hours, I went to secure my place in the surprising non-existant line. Well, I was there three hours before the session. So I managed to get a little writing in before jumping into a session with an unknown panel (at least to me). The panel after that was from the Cartoon Network. With each panel, I moved closer to score an awesome seat front and center (plus two for my friends). I am sly.

When Ray Bradbury was lifted on stage, the crowd rose and cheered for the man who was clearly the hero of the day. My heart soared and the tears already started to well. Sam Weller took his seat right next to Bradbury, cozied up like father and son. A short video of interviews Weller conducted shared Bradbury’s mental capacity and drive in his old age but also his frailty as his hand wavered in signing on of his books.

Weller has had the privilege to spend quality time with Ray Bradbury for the last ten years documenting his life story. The backstories that had never been told, Bradbury opens his heart and life to the world through Weller first through The Bradbury Chronicles then through Listen to the Echoes: The Ray Bradbury Interviews

The dynamic between the two of them on stage was perfect. Weller knew the exact questions to ask Bradbury to prompt a certain story or situation from his life. The most memorable moments included:

  • Bradbury’s push for space travel. To him space travel and the progression of moving to the moon and Mars, is how we will live forever. Space travel is the solution to world environment problems and over-population. He says, “We are all Martians. I am a Martian.”
  • His unorganized faith in believing in oneself and not talking about things, just doing them. Just do.
  • The thoughts of previous sexual encounters like Bradbury’s brief discussion of  Bo Derek, reminds me of my grandfather in his dying days… maybe old guys like to rehash these moments.
  • Bradbury’s extreme disgust and hate towards the internet and e-books. I’m not sure about technology as a whole, but for sure he is a bibliophile to the end. This discussion is one of the main factors of why I am not taking my computer with me on my two-week trip to England.
  • I had the opportunity to ask a question about how he got involved in the Horton Plaza project. For those of you who don’t know, Bradbury helped in the design of Horton Plaza… he is the one to blame if you get lost, because that is the point. The answer came after he was requested to help with building design for the New York World’s Fair. Subsequently, he was asked to help with Epcot and en a number of other projects including Horton Plaza.

In less than a month, Ray Bradbury turns 90; his mind still fresh with the memories of being born. He is a national treasure, one that often does not receive credit for his work. But as you go through life, you will find his influences abound, from the buildings you stand in, the flat screen monitors you stare at everyday to the ear buds for your iPod… these all had the markings of Bradbury. Without him, the world would not be as we know it.

Comic-Con 2010: RiffTrax Panel

Rushing  straight downtown after work, I manged to score street parking closer than Wednesday night and hop in line for the RiffTrax panel roughly an hour and a half before the scheduled time. Luckily, I jumped in line when I did, as many people behind me did not make it in.

The program started with clips from previously riffed movies including Avatar, Lord of the Rings, and Twilight. The crowd roared in favor of “team what-the-hell-is-this-sparkly-vampire-bullshit.”  Mike Nelson, Bill Corbett and Kevin Murphy, all from the original Mystery Science Theater 3000, joined by moderator Veronica Belmont, exchanged short quips before launching into a live riffing of a black and white 1950′ educational film called “Buying Food.” The movie explained the dangers of impulse buying (really, who can ever eat three pints of oysters) while Mike, Bill and Kevin indulged us in their take on the film. The subtle and sometimes very direct humor  really come straight from our own heads. The boys are just better at vocalizing it for everyone’s benefit.

Much of the rest of the session was reserved for opportunities for the audience to give 20 second (or so) pitches for movies the team could riff. Immediately, there was a rush to the mic, a scuffle and a victor. The first up threw out a clear crowd favorite, The Last Airbender. Later another guy displayed his pure passion for needing this movie riffed. I swear he was going to bust into tears. Spoiler alert: this is one of the movies chosen to be done in the next year.

Other movies people shared including 2012, Sex in the City, Black sheep, Cold as Ice, and the remake of Clash of the Titans. A number of children’s movies received shout outs including Disney’s Pocahantas, Mighty Morphen Power Rangers, Super Mario Brothers and Hook. The latter came with boos from the crowd and chanting of “Rufio, Rufio!” Several movies I had never heard of and subsequently didn’t even write them down.

Some of my favorite moments included:

  • The suggestion of  Passion of the Christ came with the question, “Too soon?”  The look on the panels faces seemed to indicate the time will never really be right for that.
  • Some girl offered to take her top off for her suggestion to be used. I don’t even remember now what she was pitching.
  • Someone else suggested Jonah Hex to bid a final farewell to Megan Fox’s career.
  • Blade Runner was pitched to some serious boos and the guy dug himself deeper with continuing his pitch. He should have feared for his life after stepping away from the mic.

In the end, the panel chose 2012, Clash of the Titans (remake), The Last Airbender, and the 1973 SciFi classic, B-rated movie, Zardoz. I think this year will be an awesome year for riffing but considering I haven’t seen any of the chosen movies, the first time I see them, they will be hilarious. Thanks for making my world my “three pints of oysters.”

Comic-Con 2010 preview night

With little expectations of actually accomplishing much or seeing anyone in particular, I ventured downtown Wednesday night after work to see the hubbub that is Con (well, that seems to be the word on the street). Once at the convention center after walking a fair bit from my free parking spot in East Village, I managed to grab my pass with considerable ease to the point I was unsure if I cut in front of a huge invisible line.

Immediately, security ushered me towards the exhibit hall where I suddenly felt very small. Without direction and too impatient to look in the event guide, I started poking around looking for something I could relate to. DC and Marvel were concepts and characters I knew more like advertisements on a cereal box: colorful, frozen lifeless forms trying to sell me something and not really of interest to me. Without cable shows like Doctor Who, True Blood and Community completely passed me by. And I am NOT a collector. Anytime my husband and I receive two like objects, they are immediately separated for fear someone may see them, assume we are collectors of said object, and proceed to buy us more.

Booths rousing my curiosity ranged from the Asian pop culture magazine/toy vendor, Giant Robot…. to the creative Haunted Memories changing portraits… to the simple stick figure drawings of the Kingdom of Loathing role-playing game. As many times as I have sent my family the hilariously funny Hoops and Yoyo greeting cards, it  seemed vaguely appropriate to pose for a photo with the life-sized versions and include a link to their amusing Sarcastic Wednesday animated e-card. By the way, they are not so entertaining in real life.

Lines formed in every direction for the super fans or just the super cheap to get their limited edition items or free crap give-aways. I managed to escape with very little crap… only the gi-normous bag that I will never in a million years wear or use. I might have to give it away to one of the many people whose bag straps broke from the mounds of memorabilia they gathered in the first few hours (maybe even minutes) of being at Comic-Con.

The best part of my night was discovering a friend from my high school art class, Tony Washington is now artist for World of Warcraft comics. It was late in the evening, so we didn’t have time to chat, but I will be heading back this weekend to catch up on old times. If you are around, check him out in the Artist Alley, booth #FF-22.

The only thing I found disappointing was the lack of costumes. Perhaps it was because it was the opening night with theoretically mostly industry and media peeps, but still sad. Far and away the best costume of the night was the sock monkey. Hopefully these geeks step it up this weekend. I expect more flair of the extreme variety!

Skateworld Rally

Friends of Skateworld Roller Rink have set up a rally to help save Skateworld, the last roller skating rink in San Diego… or rather bring awareness to the cause… or just to have a party to rally in support of Skateworld. I am not even sure how rallies really help anything in the long run, but on Wednesday, July 28 from 6:00pm to 9:00pm, Skateworld is opening its doors for its own version of a rally. Basically you will find an all ages party with free admission and skate rental (or you can bring your own skates).

They suggest to bring signs and banners to skate inside the rink and on the sidewalks in front of the rink to “be seen and be heard.” It sounds like a fun, family friendly free event, but I can’t begin to tell you how it will show my support for San Diego’s ONLY remaining roller rink or show the city council that I want Skateworld to stay… Maybe there will be media? Who knows.

I love these guys to death, but I still don’t think they know what they are dealing with.

What I Learned Today… family con

Comic Con brings family and friends together, especially this year.

Since securing a four-day Comic Con pass with preview night included, I have been making plans to meet up with people from all walks of my life. It dawned on me today that even if I don’t go, Comic Con bears a huge impact on my life both socially and familialy. 

I know my home is prime real estate for going to Con (for those with cars at least). So I have always wanted to house friends during their stay rather than having them pay astronomical prices for a downtown or Mission Valley hotel. Well… this is the year.

I have friends from college staying over for Friday night that I haven’t seen in  nearly two years. Then I have a cousin who works at the zoo (practically next door to where I work and live) who I haven’t seen in at least two years, as well, that I hope I’ll connect with. Plus there are dozens of other friends I hope to run into at this monstrous event. You say, that’s nearly impossible… friends usually get lost from each other in the mayhem, not find each other.

Well, this year Comic Con is stepping things up a bit. You can pre-plan what events you plan to attend and share them with your friends in the social media of your choice. I love the fact I can directly compare my friends’ schedules with my own making it more likely that we will actually meet up.

A couple of downsides to the way they have it set up:

  1. You can only sign in with one social media site… which mean that if I am signed in through Twitter, I can not see what my friends who signed in through facebook are doing. Lame but I sort of get it. I wish there was a way to tie the two together. Let me know if you somehow figured this out.
  2. The app for the iPhone/iTouch they created has a lot of bugs and does not include many of the “My Schedule” functions. Again, I understand they were working under a short time frame, but I think they shouldn’t have built it half ass. It is better to have no app, than a crappy one.

With my few complaints out-of-the-way, I am truly excited to reconnect with my family and friends in this mega-event of the year. Thank you Comic Con!