Baron von Loathsome
Member
You all use your real names here right?
Shit
The von Loathsome clan is a proud one.
You all use your real names here right?
Shit
Yeah they all call me Gian-Carlo except for a few who call me GC.Like GH said, I would never have expected your real name to live up to a username as exciting as "Tyrant Rave," but your name pulls it off. Haha. What do your friends call you though? Do they call you Gian-Carlo?
And regarding Animal Man, just like the beginning of Doom Patrol was, you ain't seen nothin' yet. You're in for a wild and awesome ride.
But yeah, that family dynamic is really great.
Don't forget to cover your chest in oilNext time you give a sexy beard, can I have it? I can't grow a decent beard at all.
Whats all this talk about names?
whatsinaname
Member
(Today, 10:44 AM)
Reading Velvet just makes me want another No One Lives Forever game. That sure as hell ain't happening though.
And I was sadly spoiled on one of the reveals at the end of Animal Man, but luckily that was it. Everything else is going to be a complete surprise to me so I'm looking forward to reading more!
The answer is always Heroes Con. Everyone go there.
Football*Soccer player.
Liiiist!
Batman Eternal #23
Batman Futures End
East of West #15
MPH #3
Magneto #9
Football*
I sympathize more with villains though.
Random question, but why aren't there more comics based on Warhammer and Warhammer 40K? I don't understand why Games Workshop took the license away from Boom! Studios, if they weren't going to do anything with it?
It's amazing the brain washing that both Marvel and DC have employed to get so many people to read bad comics they don't enjoy for so long.
Am I allowed to post the list of the trades I will get next week? Or is this Floppies only?
This is a OT discussion thread with the moderation of a community thread. Feel free to tell us how your day is going.
It's a nice sunny day actually. I'm probably gonna hang out with a friend in an hour, if she remembers. So far it's an enjoyable Sunday before I go back to class tomorrow.This is a OT discussion thread with the moderation of a community thread. Feel free to tell us how your day is going.
I like the nervous excitement permeating your post. Is all of this from Cincy con too?I never know what to say when I meet people.. Joe Mad was petty cool though, he held the line up talking to me a little while. It was cool as hell I was eating lunch at one and Mark Waid and Devin Grayson sat with us and I was all OH shit.. kinda freaking out because I loved his Flash so much it got me back in comics with Supergirl and Aquaman that were out around the same timeblah blah and he was cool about it and they signed a napkin and gave it to me, haha. and Steve Lieber I was just wandering around the tables and I'm not so talkative but I'm glad he pulled me over there. I think he was showing me stuff for like 40 minutes, drew me some things, talked me into buying his books ...BUT I"M GLAD, because they were awesome(Whiteout). Greg Rucka is super damn nice..I was dorking out with him a little. One I was most excited for was Peter David and that one kind of crushed me. One of my favorite comics ever is his Supergirl and I got nervous when I got to him and he got all wierd on me, I was just trying to tell him how awesome it and Atlantis Chronicles were and he probably hears it all the time but blah he goofed on me or something I don't even remember, but I was really disappointed..sad..he's still one of my favorites though. ooh big post.. sorry, I'm depressed or something, gonna go play Diablo maybe
Normally I'd do a Moment of Miller on Sunday, but instead I want to quickly recommend a non-Big Two book ya'll might enjoy called Beasts of Burden by Evan Dorkin and Jill Thompson.
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Beasts of Burden is about a group of talking dogs(and one cat, natch) that investigates paranormal events in their suburban neighborhood of Burden Hill. If this sounds a bit like Hellboy, that's ok cuz its from the same publisher and they actually team up with Hellboy in a stupidly adorable fashion later on.
![]()
The book stands in opposition of the popular mode of decompression for genre comics in the past decade or so, where every single page really counts. There is more joy to be found in the first 8-page story than most $3.99 22-page books can muster. Evan Dorkin's plots and scripts are stupidly delightful, keeping a tone of fairy tale whimsy and morality despite the dark and horrific places the Beasts explore. Its a harder than you think blend of charming absurdity that never undercuts the drama of the supernatural events. Its wry, good-natured cast of characters are quickly drawn and easy to like. Jill Thompson's painterly images are always in service of the story and its characters, the craft working towards accessible, dense storytelling and never obtrusive showy innovations. Her look completes the book's lighthearted haunted house atmosphere, equally adapt at playful asides of humor or the dramatic crazy events. Her attention to detail is impeccable, always mindful of the various dogs' established characterization from panel to panel, scene to scene, page to page.
I guarantee you will like this book, its too heartfelt and hilarious to hate. Its like $15 books for a bunch of stories, give it a shot.
I'm gonna go to Chipotle and buy a burrito on Wednesday and maybe some comics
I'm gonna go to Chipotle and buy a burrito on Wednesday and maybe some comics
Normally I'd do a Moment of Miller on Sunday, but instead I want to quickly recommend a non-Big Two book ya'll might enjoy called Beasts of Burden by Evan Dorkin and Jill Thompson.
![]()
Beasts of Burden is about a group of talking dogs(and one cat, natch) that investigates paranormal events in their suburban neighborhood of Burden Hill. If this sounds a bit like Hellboy, that's ok cuz its from the same publisher and they actually team up with Hellboy in a stupidly adorable fashion later on.
![]()
The book stands in opposition of the popular mode of decompression for genre comics in the past decade or so, where every single page really counts. There is more joy to be found in the first 8-page story than most $3.99 22-page books can muster. Evan Dorkin's plots and scripts are stupidly delightful, keeping a tone of fairy tale whimsy and morality despite the dark and horrific places the Beasts explore. Its a harder than you think blend of charming absurdity that never undercuts the drama of the supernatural events. Its wry, good-natured cast of characters are quickly drawn and easy to like. Jill Thompson's painterly images are always in service of the story and its characters, the craft working towards accessible, dense storytelling and never obtrusive showy innovations. Her look completes the book's lighthearted haunted house atmosphere, equally adapt at playful asides of humor or the dramatic crazy events. Her attention to detail is impeccable, always mindful of the various dogs' established characterization from panel to panel, scene to scene, page to page.
I guarantee you will like this book, its too heartfelt and hilarious to hate. Its like $15 books for a bunch of stories, give it a shot.
I'm one of like 5 people that bought the Dark Horse One-Shot from like 3 years back. Love these dogs.
I endorse your post ViewtifulJC, beasts of burden is excellent reading. Jill Thompson is amazing. I'm watching football with the redzone channel. Dreading when the cowboys show up and ruin everything
I never know what to say when I meet people.. Joe Mad was petty cool though, he held the line up talking to me a little while. It was cool as hell I was eating lunch at one and Mark Waid and Devin Grayson sat with us and I was all OH shit.. kinda freaking out because I loved his Flash so much it got me back in comics with Supergirl and Aquaman that were out around the same timeblah blah and he was cool about it and they signed a napkin and gave it to me, haha. and Steve Lieber I was just wandering around the tables and I'm not so talkative but I'm glad he pulled me over there. I think he was showing me stuff for like 40 minutes, drew me some things, talked me into buying his books ...BUT I"M GLAD, because they were awesome(Whiteout). Greg Rucka is super damn nice..I was dorking out with him a little. One I was most excited for was Peter David and that one kind of crushed me. One of my favorite comics ever is his Supergirl and I got nervous when I got to him and he got all wierd on me, I was just trying to tell him how awesome it and Atlantis Chronicles were and he probably hears it all the time but blah he goofed on me or something I don't even remember, but I was really disappointed..sad..he's still one of my favorites though. ooh big post.. sorry, I'm depressed or something, gonna go play Diablo maybe
I'm cleaning right now and it's an awful way to spend a Sunday.
This is a OT discussion thread with the moderation of a community thread. Feel free to tell us how your day is going.
glad we already got some fans here and I'm not talking crazy.
Cowboys always mess up, I feel its their superpower.
I like the nervous excitement permeating your post. Is all of this from Cincy con too?
Who does this belong to?
Normally I'd do a Moment of Miller on Sunday, but instead I want to quickly recommend a non-Big Two book ya'll might enjoy called Beasts of Burden by Evan Dorkin and Jill Thompson.
![]()
Beasts of Burden is about a group of talking dogs(and one cat, natch) that investigates paranormal events in their suburban neighborhood of Burden Hill. If this sounds a bit like Hellboy, that's ok cuz its from the same publisher and they actually team up with Hellboy in a stupidly adorable fashion later on.
![]()
The book stands in opposition of the popular mode of decompression for genre comics in the past decade or so, where every single page really counts. There is more joy to be found in the first 8-page story than most $3.99 22-page books can muster. Evan Dorkin's plots and scripts are stupidly delightful, keeping a tone of fairy tale whimsy and morality despite the dark and horrific places the Beasts explore. Its a harder than you think blend of charming absurdity that never undercuts the drama of the supernatural events. Its wry, good-natured cast of characters are quickly drawn and easy to like. Jill Thompson's painterly images are always in service of the story and its characters, the craft working towards accessible, dense storytelling and never obtrusive showy innovations. Her look completes the book's lighthearted haunted house atmosphere, equally adapt at playful asides of humor or the dramatic crazy events. Her attention to detail is impeccable, always mindful of the various dogs' established characterization from panel to panel, scene to scene, page to page.
I guarantee you will like this book, its too heartfelt and hilarious to hate. Its like $15 books for a bunch of stories, give it a shot.
Beasts of Burden is about a group of talking dogs(and one cat, natch) that investigates paranormal events in their suburban neighborhood of Burden Hill. If this sounds a bit like Hellboy, that's ok cuz its from the same publisher and they actually team up with Hellboy in a stupidly adorable fashion later on.
Chipotle then comics has become a weekly ritual for one of my friends and I. So good.I always get Chipotle or Panda Express to go with my comics. :3
Duty calls sometimes. One week I bought my books digitally because I didn't feel like going to my carI never got to the store this past Wednesday. Had to go get a new muffler for my car instead. Everything I picked up was digital :/
Normally I'd do a Moment of Miller on Sunday, but instead I want to quickly recommend a non-Big Two book ya'll might enjoy called Beasts of Burden by Evan Dorkin and Jill Thompson.
![]()
I feel sorry for you guys that have to go to big cons and wait in line forever. Cincy is a small con with some good talent. The biggest line was Fraction and at worse it was only 15 minuets long. For the most part, you could find creators by themselves at some points.
When we first got there, Ryan Browne was all by himself so my wife said she wanted to go get our stuff signed by him. So we went up and told him how much we liked the first issue and he was really cool. He then asked instead of signing it, if he could draw on it. Then I mentioned my friend is who got me to check the book out. Now my friend being Tim who I never met yet, but he is my friend. Ryan not knowing this, started asking me a bunch of questions about Tim and I finally had to admit that man, I really never met him, at the moment he was my "internet/comics" friend.
Now Ryan, being the weird guy that he is just wanted to go further down the rabbit hole and started asking me about if I was nervous and stuff about meeting Tim. Lol. You could really see him imagination at work through his words. It went on for like 10 minutes of just straight weird talk. It was funny and uncomfortable at the same time.
God Hates Astronauts.