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Interested
in having Gene Ha do a signing at your Con or Store?
The deal is simple. If you can provide for transportation,
a decent meal, and decent lodging for my wife and me, I'm
willing to schedule an appearance. Go to the Mail
link and send me a note! |
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2003
News Posts
2004 Political Rants
2004 News Posts |
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Random Photo Meme
Lowell Francis tagged me for a meme-- The rules are simple. 1.Go to your pictures folder and open the sixth one. 2.Post the sixth picture. 3.Tag six people Simple for most people, at least. I don't use the Vista Documents Pictures folder. Just a few sample photos there. I decided to go to my "Friends Photos" folder, as opposed to my work folders. I then went to the sixth folder, and took the sixth picture from it:  It's a picture of me and Lisa with our friends Erika, Simon, and an old friend of theirs. We're outside Quartino in Chicago, a good Italian tapas/dim sum kinda place. Good for drinks and shared snack plates. We handed my camera to a stranger, and she told us to all point at the camera. Now, if I go through my work folder.....  I won't explain what it is, beyond saying it's for a creator owned project I'm hoping to do. Outside of Facebook, I'll tag Art and Lowell too!
The Difference Between Digital Comics and Print
Thanks to The Comic Journal's Journalista for the link. Balak from DeviantArt creates a brilliant webcomic to show the differences between digital comics and print comics. It is seriously brilliant. Scott McCloud has created some brilliant webcomics, of course. But he's showing off things that are easy online, but difficult or impossible to print. Small bits of animation, or panels that would be 4 inches by 60 inches in print. What Balak has done is stuff that could be printed, but would be a horrible comic book in print. He's showing things that work better online than they do on paper. If an art student showed me a printed comic of this stuff, I'd point out what would seem to be basic storytelling mistakes. But because it's online clickables on a single page, not multiple pages, it works beautifully. It shows the difference in medium in a way that McCloud's comics never hinted at. It takes on some of the virtues of animation, without actually using animation. It's worth reading for the theoretical experiments, but it's also just damn readable. Click the link.
Top 10 drawing listening
Last week I listened, and sometimes watched, Generation Kill on DVD. It's a docudrama about the Marines in Iraq, and seems to be well received by those very Marines. Sometimes it makes them look like asses, or crazy, but they do their job and mostly do it heroically well. I say that from as a lifelong civilian, for whom doing 10 chin ups is an aspiration. This week I'm listening to the audiobook by a lieutenant from those Marines, Nathaniel Fick. He includes a long quote from a novel about the famed 300 Spartans: Captain Novack had pinned a quotation on the classroom wall from Steven Pressfield’s Gates of Fire, about the Spartans at Thermopylae:
This, I realized now watching Dienekes rally and tend to his men, was the role of the officer: to prevent those under his command, at all stages of battle – before, during, and after – from becoming “possessed.” To fire their valor when it flagged and rein in their fury when it threatened to take them out of hand. That was Dienekes’ job. That was why he wore the transverse-crested helmet of an officer.
His was not, I could see now, the heroism of an Achilles. He was not a superman who waded invulnerably into the slaughter, singlehandedly slaying his foe by myriads. He was just a man doing his job. A job whose primary attribute was self-restraint and self-composure, not for his own sake, but for those he led by his example. A job whose objective could be boiled down to the single understatement, as he did at the Hot Gates on the morning he died, of “performing the commonplace under uncommonplace conditions.”
Novack sometimes interrupted class to point at the paper on the wall. “Gents, it’s all there. We don’t carry swords, but our job’s the same.” I wrote the quote in my notebook to take with me to the Fleet. It was obviously a lot of hassle for Lt. Fick to put that quote in his book, so it probably meant a lot to him. An army always risks turning into a mob, and it's always worth the effort to keep order. Oddly enough, this concept is contreversial today. In 2004, pundits thought we could win in Iraq by "taking off the gloves." Thank God we didn't. Postscript: The audiobook is One Bullet Away. The quality of Marine officer training, and it's relevance to modern international chaos, is stunning.
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