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Description First-time guest Ryan North to discuss a comic book he wrote, Fantastic Four #19, “The Perfect Storm.” Ryan North is known for the webcomic Dinosaur Comics, as well as writing for Marvel Comics and other comic companies. In his … Continue reading →
Writer Ryan North joins the show to talk about his career and relationship with comics, as well as his work on Fantastic Four and the upcoming The Rise of Emperor Doom. North discusses his busy travel schedule, balancing his life, how he got into comics, the origins of Dinosaur Comics, the advantages of constraints, the impact of his computer science brain, collaboration, how he chooses projects, Fantastic Four's structure, his approach to continuity, how he builds arcs, Johnny Storm's mustache, The Rise of Emperor Doom, the greatness of Doom, working at the center of Marvel, what keeps him coming back to comics, and more.
Bearded Comic Bro got to sit down and talk with Ryan North the writer of Fantastic Four, The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl, Adventure Times , Dinosaur Comics and more. Make sure you watch the video and check out all the links below and go check out this book.Follow Ryan on Social Media Instagram: @qwantzBlueSky: @ryannorth.caTwitter: @ryanqnorthhttps://www.ryannorth.ca/
In this episode, we are talking comics with the prominent comic book author of "Dinosaur Comics", "The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl", "Power Pack" and others, Ryan North. We talked about the continuity dilemma in comics, the approach to drama vs. comedy in writing, how the internet changed in the 2000s, his books "How To Take Over The World" and "How To Invent Everything" and more. Enjoy!
My guest this week is comedian Rebecca Kaplan! Have you read Scott McCloud's Understanding Comics? What was The Yellow Kid? Why was he called that? What's the deal with Krazy Kat? How much does Brett like Fun Home? Has Brett seen Fun Home the musical? What is Barnaby? What do you learn about history by reading newspaper comics? What the heck is Dreams of the Rarebit Fiend? Who was Windsor McCay? Where does Brett get most of his comic strips these days? What happened with the comic strip Nancy? What happened with For Better or Worse? What is Hark! A Vagrant about? Who is Sarah Vowell? What is xkcd famous for? What is Dilbert really about? What happened to Dilbert? What did Scott Adams say? What is Dinosaur Comics? Reading list: The Yellow Kid Krazy Kat Pogo Barnaby (free on Comixology Unlimited) Fun Home The Annotated Alice in Wonderland xkcd books Peanuts Dreams of the Rarebit Fiend For Better or Worse (free with Kindle Unlimited) Watch list: Citizen Kane
Strange New Worlds and Open Pike Night are having a VERY animated discussion! Episode 7 is here and John, Jesse, and Cam are joined by author Ryan North, creator of Dinosaur Comics and an upcoming Lower Decks comic adventure, along with an amazing group of new and returning callers.Join us tonight as we discuss Portals and tunnels, the Star Trek embodiment of those laughing crying masks that represent acting, Who we would visit if we could go back 120 years, and which warp engine sound is our favorite!Support the Entertainment Community FundCall the AMPTP - 818-995-3600Send your voice hail to OPNSign up for the OPN NewsletterVisit our new website OpenPike.comPlease Check out our MerchSupport us on PatreonFollow @openpike on TwitterFollow OpenPike on InstagramFollow Openpike on YoutubeSend your voice hail to OPNSign up for the OPN NewsletterVisit our new website OpenPike.comPlease Check out our MerchSupport us on PatreonFollow @openpike on TwitterFollow OpenPike on InstagramFollow Openpike on Youtube
Jonathan welcomes Canadian comics writer Ryan North, a contributor to major Marvel titles such as Fantastic Four, Secret Invasion, and Squirrel Girl. North talks about writing Dinosaur Comics, and other YA graphic novels like Danger and Other Unknown Risks, How to Invent Everything, and more. Check out North's work at: https://ryannorth.ca/ For more of Jonathan's work: https://twitter.com/jonathanballcom https://www.instagram.com/jonathanballcom/ https://www.strangerfiction.ca/ --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/strangerfiction/message
Thanks to iFanboy Patrons, it's Talksplode time. Ryan North made a career with Dinosaur Comics, a comic strips of fixed art, wit, and an incredible tenacity. He became better known to comics readers with fifty issues of The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl, along with artist Erica Henderson, as well as several other diverse comics projects. Because he never stops, now you can find him handling writing chores on Marvel's first family, Fantastic Four, along with a revamp of Secret Invasion. So yeah, Ryan has some wide ranging creative talents. Total Running Time: 01:15:28 For more on Ryan North and to read the still ongoing Dinosaur Comics, go here. Music: “Dinosaur Act" Matthew Sweet Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Before he was Squirrel Girl's physics professor, Ben Tippett hypothesized an explanation for Superman's powers and Case and Jmike want to to talk about it with him! Ben Tippett is on to talk about his paper and he has past guest and host of the “Science… Sort of… podcast”, Ryan Haupt, with him to translate!
On today's episode, I talk to comics writer Ryan North. Originally from Osgoode, Ontario, Ryan was on a path to a career in computational linguistics before a small webcomic he started, Dinosaur Comics, launched him in a somewhat different direction. Since then, he's become a New York Times-bestselling and Eisner Award-winning writer whose work includes the non-fiction book How To Invent Everything, the semi-fictional graphic novel adaptation of Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse-Five, and the so-far-fictional Unbeatable Squirrel Girl comic and podcast for Marvel. He's also written Adventure Time, Jughead, The Midas Flesh and many other comics as well, and his most recent work is another non-fiction book How To Take Over The World! This is the website for Beginnings, subscribe on Apple Podcasts, follow me on Twitter.
Meet the man that supervillains with megalomania have been waiting for! He's the inimitable Ryan North, the creator and author of Dinosaur Comics who has also written for the comic series Adventure Time and Marvel Comics' The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl. Ryan is a New York Times best-selling author who happens to be a pretty sharp science guy. His “sinister” masterpiece is his latest book, “How to Take Over the World: Practical Schemes and Scientific Solutions for the Aspiring Supervillain,” and it's laugh out loud funny with the coolest approach to scientific possibilities. Of course, you're best not to try any of Ryan's scenarios at home!
Ryan North is a writer for television, video games, and especially comic books. Some of his most recent projects include 'How To Invent Everything: A Survival Guide for the Stranded Time Traveller', a graphic novel adaptation of Kurt Vonnegut's 'Slaughterhouse-Five', and the 'Unbeatable Squirrel Girl', which he wrote for Marvel Comics for five years. He also writes, as he has done since his early 20s, Dinosaur Comics, which is a daily webcomic using the same images with different words every day. Ryan speaks about his childhood as a nerdy kid in rural Canada, his route to becoming a professional comic writer even though he can't draw, navigating gender in comics and graphic novels, and why human beings are so drawn to this idea of superheroes. You can read a full transcript of the conversation here: https://www.theosthinktank.co.uk/comment/2021/12/01/ryan-north-on-kindness-comics-and-the-appeal-of-superheroes Follow us on Twitter @sacred_podcast
In this episode, Ryan North, author of How to Invent Everything, and the creator and author of Dinosaur Comics, along with haven written for the comic series of Adventure Time and Marvel Comics' The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl, while his works have won multiple Eisner Awards and Harvey Awards, manages to drop in to chat about the wonders of having the ability to invent everything.
Back in 2017, Carrie and Jake has a lot of questions on their minds: Can four kids with a toolbox build a mall? What if they're bruiser studs? Also, what are the worst gifts to bring to a baby shower? What is Jake's secret history with Luke Perry? Which is better, making out or being a detective? We delved into all of this, and oh so much more, in this week's episode of 'Denial Ain't Just A Riverdale In Egypt', in which we discussed Riverdale Chapter 8: The Outsiders. The theme song is "JOSIE HAS THE UPPER HAND" by Josh Woodward. Free download: http://joshwoodward.com/ This episode contains an excerpt from a song by Dürty Folk, and a reference to Dinosaur Comics. I think I should also note that this episode of Riverdale has a subplot involving abortion, which we do talk about a fair amount. Welcome to our comedy podcast!
Facts About Dinosaur Comics! Credits: Executive Producer: Chris Krimitsos Voice: Jimmy Murray "Upbeat Forever", "Winner Winner!" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ Facts from Wikipedia Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
Bob and Joey sit down with the Eisner Award-winning Ryan North!!! Fans of the pod will know Ryan from such hits as THE UNBEATABLE SQUIRREL GIRL, JUGHEAD, and ADVENTURE TIME. Ryan chats about his start with DINOSAUR COMICS and all about his Choose-Your-Own-Path Shakespeare adaptations as well as saying goodbye to Squirrel Girl.The Comic Book Podcast is brought to you by Talking Comics (www.talkingcomicbooks.com) The podcast is hosted by Steve Seigh (JoBlo.com assistant EIC & news editor), Bob Reyer, Joey Braccino, Jessica Garris-Schaeffer, and Sarah Miles who weekly dissect everything comics-related, from breaking news to new releases. Our Twitter handle is @TalkingComics and you can email us at podcast@talkingcomicbooks.com.
The topic of this Episode is O-type stars, the biggest, brightest stars in the universe! Astrophysicists Dr. Benjamin Brown and Hannalore Gerling-Dunsmore break it all down for our guest Ryan North (of Dinosaur Comics, and Squirrel Girl).
Grant is having misgivings about his facial hair, so Mark tries to set him straight. No strong conclusions are made, except that microphone discipline must be reinforced.Grant brings a Stone Soup comic as he ponders the nature of his relationship with his parents. Mark seems a little less concerned, but they both agree it’s quite the odd situation.Mark taps in to Dinosaur Comics, and Grant is not very pleased about it. After a tough read, amd Mark explaining jokes, Grant opines on the state of technology.Send feedback to comicalstart@gmail.com.
Imagine you're a time traveler whose time machine has functioned somewhere in Earth's past — after humans have evolved but before they've, say, invented language or agriculture or any of the other pillars civilization was built upon. How might you try to kickstart that process with all these hominids you keep meeting? And how would you avoid rebuilding civilization with all of the flaws of our current world? That question is the basis of Ryan North's new book How to Invent Everything, a hugely enjoyable book that really does come close to achieving what's promised in the title. (You'll even learn how to invent a computer using a river!) North is probably best known to this point as the writer of comics like Adventure Time and The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl, as well as the creator and writer of Dinosaur Comics, a webcomic that has run since 2003 using the exact same clip art (of dinosaurs, of course) in all six panels for 15 years. Todd and North talk about the foundations of society, what you learn writing a comic whose art doesn't change from day to day, and why the best meals are sometimes those you can never have again. Then: Todd is joined by astronauts Mae Jemison and Leland Melvin to talk about leaving behind Earth's orbit — and how we just might find humanity's future on our next-door neighbor Mars. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this episode of Talk Nerdy, Cara speaks with the creator and author of “Dinosaur Comics,” computer programmer-turned-writer Ryan North. From his incredible new book “How to Invent Everything: A Survival Guide for the Stranded Time Traveler,” they discuss how one might build a civilization from scratch (if, you know, it comes to that). Follow Ryan: @ryanqnorth.
In this episode of Talk Nerdy, Cara speaks with the creator and author of “Dinosaur Comics,” computer programmer-turned-writer Ryan North. From his incredible new book “How to Invent Everything: A Survival Guide for the Stranded Time Traveler,” they discuss how one might build a civilization from scratch (if, you know, it comes to that). Follow Ryan: @ryanqnorth.
In addition to being a programmer and computational linguist, Ryan North (@ryanqnorth) is the writer behind Dinosaur Comics, Unbeatable Squirrel Girl, the Adventure Time comic book series, and Romeo and/or Juliet, and he joins Andy and Matt to discuss his new book How To Invent Everything, a survival guide for stranded time travelers who need to figure out where they've landed in time, and how to get civilization back to the present by inventing everything from writing and farming to buttons and birth control.
Dave and Brad welcome Ryan North, two-time Eisner Award winner, creator of Dinosaur Comics and writer for Marvel Comics' Squirrel Girl. We discuss his upcoming book, How to Invent Everything and his successful Shakespearean choose-your-own-adventure To Be or Not To Be. Along the way, we go deep on several topics involving writing — getting ideas, subconscious plagiarism, self-plagiarism, rejecting unoriginal ideas, creativity as a compulsion, juggling multiple projects, exorcising ideas, and much much more. BUT FIRST — Brad explains how zinc is more precious than gold for your good health. Show notes 9:13 — How did Ryan first get into writing for comics? 12:37 — Rejecting an idea if it's not completely original 16:30 — Creativity as a compulsion 18:08 — Getting the idea for "To Be or Not To Be" 19:10— Capturing ideas 24:14 — Writing Squirrel Girl fro Marvel Comics 30:06 — The "minced oath" 31:51 — Avoiding subconscious plagiarism 38:34 — Juggling multiple projects and how to decide which ideas get used in which projects 41:57 — "Exorcising" ideas 43:13 — Self-plagiarization on social media 45:47 — Ideas are easy. Execution is hard. Great rewards when you support ComicLab $2 — support the show $5 — submit a question for possible use on the show AND get the exclusive ProTips podcast $10 — record an audio question for possible use on the show AND get the exclusive ProTips podcast $50 — Sponsor the show! We’ll read a brief promo for your comic/product and read it twice during the show AND you get the exclusive ProTips podcast Brad Guigar is the creator of Evil Inc and the editor of Webcomics.com Dave Kellett is the creator of Sheldon and Drive.
It’s a fifth Wednesday minisode! In this shorter episode we talk about lessons learned from this year’s National Novel Writing Month. Content warnings for strong language. We discuss and/or spoil Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, Dinosaur Comics, A Game of Thrones, Dorothy L. Sayers Mysteries: Harriet Vane Collection, The Lord of the […]
Follow Travis on Twitter @traviswatt; and check out his show Relationship Status at Scratch Deli Notes: Lincoln Lawyer by Michael Connelly; Before the Fall by Noah Hawley; Diesel Sweeties by Richard Stevens; Dinosaur Comics by Ryan North (also Unbeatabe Squirrel Girl); Player vs. Player by Scott Kurtz; Edison Hate Future by Warren Ellis; A Softer World by Joey Comeau & Emily Horne; Irredeemable by Mark Waid & Peter Krause; Runaways by Brian K. Vaughan; The Magicians by Lev Grossman; The Gunslinger by Stephen King Theme song from Schnupp & the pups (schnuppthepups.bandcamp.com/album/demo Follow Brent @blentfryberg; brentflyberg.com Follow Kelly @kerlyhan; kellyhannahcomedy.com
It's the last episode of Unprepared of 2016! We made it! And by we I mean Jesse and Kevin. You and I know both know that measures of time are pretty arbitrary, and the whole "2016" meme doesn;t actually mean anythign will get better in th new year. But you have to start somewhere. Happy end of 2016 everybody. This week Jesse and Kevin talk about Star Wars. Links Jesse disagrees with, but enjoyed the The Dark Knight episode of Movies with Mikey. Ryan North is the amazing person behind Dinosaur Comics, Adventure Time comics, Squirrel Girl, Project Wonderful, and getting stuck in a hole with his dog. Kevin was involved in an "international incident" because of the Machine of Death Kickstarter. The only thing that Jesse has kickstarted was season one of Put This On. This story about a failed Kickstarter drone is wild. "Coffee Joulies" were a dumb kickstarter that used magic metals to do absolutely nothing to your coffee. Todd VanDerWerff wrote a good Rogue One review with a "confusing" headline. Kevin is going to make Alton Brown's hot cocoa mix and has made his eggnog before. Kevin enjoys drinking batch-pasteurized milk. We discuss a variety of survival shows. Apparently millennials don't buy fabric softener. Listerine invented bad breath to sell mouth wash.
While print sales of adult fiction are down in the last decade, the juvenile market – which includes young adult literature or "YA" – has actually gone up 40 percent. In this episode, two YA authors talk about their writing, their audience, their inspirations, and the role that Shakespeare plays in all of it. Molly Booth’s first novel, "Saving Hamlet," was published in 2016 by Disney-Hyperion. It tells the story of an American teenager who time-travels back to Shakespeare’s Globe during the original production of "Hamlet." Ryan North, best known as the creator of Dinosaur Comics, is the author of two titles that take a “Choose Your Own Adventure” approach to Shakespeare. "To Be Or Not To Be" was originally self-published in 2013 and was Kickstarter's most-funded publishing project at the time. His second, "Romeo and/or Juliet," was published by Riverhead Books in 2016. Ryan and Molly are interviewed by Barbara Bogaev. From the Shakespeare Unlimited podcast series. Published November 29, 2016. © Folger Shakespeare Library. All rights reserved. “The Quick Fire of Youth” was produced by Richard Paul. Garland Scott is the associate producer. It was edited by Gail Kern Paster and Esther Ferington. Esther French is the web producer. We had technical help from Thomas Devlin at WGBH in Boston, Gord Richards at Oak Recording Studio Toronto, and Jeff Peters at the Marketplace studios in Los Angeles. http://www.folger.edu/shakespeare-unlimited/ya-novels-ryan-north-molly-booth
Those who think comic book geeks and computer nerds are two mutually exclusive groups have never met Ryan North. The Toronto resident and writer behind The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl, Adventure Time and Dinosaur Comics also holds a masters in computer science with a focus on Computational Linguistics — teaching artificial intelligence how to speak more naturally. His love of computer science also bleeds into the pages of the Unbeatable Squirrel Girl, aiding in its progressive picture of what makes a female heroine. Even his effort to bring back the choose your own adventure genre – Romeo and/or Juliet – refuses to define society along gender lines. Not bad for a guy who can’t draw, but still left what his parents called, “a respectable profession” to create comics.@ryanqnorthwww.ryannorth.caEpisode Sponsor: Hairy Tarantula
Hey there Word Nerds! Thanks for joining me for today's awesome DIY MFA Radio interview with author Ryan North. When one of my contacts over at Penguin told me Romeo and/or Juliet and asked if I wanted to bring the author on the show, my immediate reaction: “Shakespeare meets choose-your-own adventure? Yes please!” The fact that the play being parodied was Romeo and Juliet clinched it for me. Why? Because Romeo and Juliet is perhaps Shakespeare’s most overrated (and ridiculous) play. On one hand, this play features one of Shakespeare’s most complex, interesting and all-around badass characters (i.e. Mercutio). On the other hand, this play also centers around the star-crossed lovers--Romeo and Juliet--who might just be the two most banal, boring characters in all of literature. (In case you haven't noticed, have very strong opinions about Shakespeare.) I simply HAD to see how Ryan was going to apply his choose-your-own-path model to this particular play. Let's just say, the result did not disappoint. In fact, it was even more awesome than I anticipated. If you aren’t familiar with Ryan North’s work, he is a NYT bestselling author and cartoonist, and his first choose-your-own-path Shakespeare book, To Be or Not To Be, became Kickstarter’s most-funded publishing project when it first launched. Now with Romeo and/or Juliet he has crafted a story with over 40 quadrillion possible journeys for a reader to take. It’s sort of like a book-meets-video-game with over one hundred possible endings and original illustrations from amazing artists. Embed Episode Here In this episode Ryan and I discuss: The power of memorizing poetry Choose-your-own-adventure and the art of storytelling Shakespeare's big mistake Keeping track of everything when your story has many moving parts Making sure that your characters have choices that feel real and have an impact while coping with the reality of the world they live in. Engaging readers in with the text Plus, Ryan’s #1 tip for writers. Romeo And/Or Juliet In this choose-your-own-path version of Romeo and Juliet, you choose where the story goes every time you read! Romeo and/or Juliet has over 40 QUADRILLION possible journeys for a reader to take. Readers can choose to play as Romeo or Juliet, as Romeo and Juliet together, as Juliet’s nurse, or even as an unlockable fourth mystery character. All of the endings—there are more than a hundred—feature original illustrations from incredible artists. Written with the unique humor that fans of Dinosaur Comics and the Adventure Time comics know and love, Romeo and/or Juliet turns the Bard's beloved play into fodder for madcap comedy. Shakespeare has never been this entertaining, or this weird. We can’t think of a better way to… “celebrate” the 400th anniversary (2016) of Shakespeare’s death. To learn more about Ryan, visit his website or follow him on Twitter. If you want to get your very own copy of Romeo and/or Juliet (and you totally should because it's hilarious!) we hope you'll do so via this Amazon affiliate link, where DIY MFA gets a small commission at no cost to you. Thank you for supporting DIY MFA! For more info and show notes: DIYMFA.com/104
Today we travel to a future where it’s possible to know exactly when you will die. Do you chose to find out? Now, this is, impossible. Totally impossible. And I’m not even going to try and come up with some strange pseudoscientific explanation for how this might happen. It’s not a thing. Just go with me here. Some people asked for more weird episodes this season, so, here you go! We start the episode talking to Chanel Reynolds, the founder of a site called Get Your Shit Together which helps people get their shit together around death and dying. Stuff like: writing a living will, getting it executed, getting disability insurance, putting together an emergency plan, all that shit that, if you’re like me, you do not have together. Chanel started Get Your Shit Together a few years after losing her husband to a sudden accident, and realizing that she really didn’t know what to do, and didn’t have any of her own shit together. And she tells us about all the reasons it’s good to think about your own death, even if it’s really far away. You never know what might happen, and you don’t want to leave your family, pets and loved ones without a good sense for how you want the end of your life managed. Then we talk to Sheldon Solomon a professor of psychology at Skidmore College and one of the leading researchers in a field called terror management theory. Terror management theory basically says that we live, all of us, all the time, with this underlying rumble of terror beneath the surface. Terror that we are going to die. Which, we are, at some point. And when we’re reminded of death, that terror bubbles up and impacts our behavior in some not so good ways. Sheldon has done tons of experiments that show that when you remind someone of their own death, just for a fleeting moment, a tiny reminder, it can make you more racist, xenophobic, hateful, war mongering and rude. They’ve done experiments where they’ve asked people to evaluate ideas or other people after seeing a death reminder. And in tons of experiments they’ve found that death reminders make us worse people. They make Christians dislike Jews more, they make Germans more likely to sit next to other people who look German and away from folks who look not-German, they make Iranians more supportive of suicide bombers and they make Americans more supportive of Trump (seriously). So, in this future, if we know exactly when we’re going to die, and we think about it all the time, we might turn into horrible people. There is other research that says that for some people, these effects aren’t as strong, and for some they’re actually positive. But researchers don’t really know what makes someone more likely to become better or worse after being reminded of their own death. Next we talked to Ryan North, the creator of Dinosaur Comics. Back in 2005, Ryan published an episode of Dinosaur Comics that outlined the premise of the machine of death: you go to the machine, it takes a blood sample, and it spits out a card that sells you how you’re going to die. Maybe it says “poisoned apple,” or “drowned,” or “old age.” Ryan thought it would just be a one off joke, but his friends Matthew Bennardo and David Malki started exploring little short stories based on the premise, and eventually they opened up the idea to general submissions. So far there have been two Machine of Death anthologies, each full of stories about what happens when the machine of death comes to town. They’re really fun, I highly recommend them. Ryan and I talked about all the weird ways that the option to know your death date might change the world. Does health insurance even make sense anymore? Can you get your kids tested? Should you get your kids tested? Could you make armies of people you knew wouldn’t die that day? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
A wide-ranging, career-spanning interview with Ryan North, in which we get to learn all about the creation of Dinosaur Comics, Ryan's move into published comics such as Adventure Time for boom studios and Squirrel Girl for Marvel. We also talk about To Be or Not to Be: That is the Adventure, Ryan’s Shakespeare-based choose-your-own-adventure illustrated novel, which was the most successful "publishing" project ever on Kickstarter.
This week on View from the Gutters our topic work is??The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl, by Ryan North (of the long running??Dinosaur Comics webcomic) and??Erica Henderson. First appearing in the early 90s, Doreen Green???teen superhero extraordinaire???is the unbeatable Squirrel Girl with the proportionate strength and speed of a squirrel. Also she can talk to squirrels and [???]
Bienvenidos al duodécimo episodio de Mi Gato Dinamita, el podcast que te tira las cartas pero no te dice qué significan. Duración total: 1:20:00.0:00:01-0:13:56 - Bienvenida esotérica a cargo de Susanette y Guille, con relatos de adivinaciones inexplicables, premoniciones mortales, tarot y fantasmas en las casas.0:13:57-0:21:43 ¿Cuánto tendrían que durar las sesiones de análisis? ¿Eh?0:21:44-0:24:36 - Música: "Into the Mystic", por Van Morrison.0:24:37-0:28:42 - El momento de apreciación de nuestro podcast por Canadá.0:28:43-0:33:42 - Entintado habla del final de A Softer World y de Dinosaur Comics, otro gran webcomic canadiense.0:33:43-0:37:20 - Música: "Feel the Pain", por Dinosaur Jr.0:37:21-0:42:42 - Nos vuelve a visitar Horacio, nuestro vecino favorito, que nos deja una duda acerca de las susurradoras.0:42:43-0:45:54 - Música: "Cicadas and Gulls", por Feist.0:45:55-0:57:12 - Horacio ahora se revela como adorador de los bebés en general (y Felipe en particular), así como picaflor e incendiario accidental.0:57:13-1:03:43 - Música: "The Future", por Leonard Cohen.1:03:44-1:17:54 - Pasa a charlar Ludo, el niño prodigio, que nos cuenta acerca de su interés por estudiar psicología y su desinterés por Susanette.1:17:55-1:20:00 - Saludos finales a oyentes y podcasts amigos.En un momento Susanette habla de su blog de sueños, que pueden visitar en https://vidadescafeinada.wordpress.com/. También va una mini-fe de erratas: Van Morrison es de Irlanda del Norte, no Canadá. Y terminamos ilustrando este episodio con dos fotos de Cachita (el antes y el después) y una de Tango, los gatos de @anisvil. Como siempre, podés disfrutar de este episodio online con el reproductor de acá arriba, bajártelo en formato .mp3 haciendo clic en donde dice "Download" o escucharlo en SoundCloud. Si querés suscribirte a este podcast con tu aplicación favorita, buscanos en iTunes o usá nuestro feed RSS.
We had Ryan North on the podcast! This dude is the funniest. Ryan North is creator of the groundbreaking Dinosaur Comics, The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl, the Adventure Time comics, and the upcoming Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure, and much more. Don't miss this. Tim even wrote him a haiku: Ryan North rules Invented the Internet Textiles talk to him Find Ryan's amazing work at dinosaurcomics.com. Follow Us On Twitter @supertim82@personman44@ryanqnorth Follow Us on the Internets (giving us ratings is super dope):iTunesStitcher Listen to Other Awesome BenView Podcasts:BenViewNetwork.com is the where you can discover the wonder of BenView! Love the Theme Song?The Fantastic Plastics are rad!
Artist & author Dan Hogan returns to chat Redshirts, webcomics, cartoons, and Tim Hortons. Also joining the conversation is the always hilarious Tina who shares podcast recommendations and laughter with us. Allergies, yo! New Equipment is rad. This is Dan’s second visit to the show. Last season he was on the show and he was a recent guest on Film Frown. Don’t click this, Thicke of the Night. Chris giggles like a teen girl about South Park’s Go Fund Yourself and Freemium Isn’t Free. We talk Kickstarter, pluses/minuses. Dan reminds us of Dinosaur Comics, talks Ryan North’s book, To Be or Not To Be and the podcast he heard the story on, MakeItThenTellEverybody. The happy podcasters review John Scalzi’s Redshirts, a parody of Star Trek. Honestly, you can enjoy the book without any prior Star Trek knowledge. In fact, you can read the first few chapters here. Secret of the Lizard People (Star Trek: The Next Generation - Starfleet Academy #7) & Full House: That’s the Way It Crumbles, Cookie are recent book finds by Dan. Tina is reading the The Daily Mail because she’s heard enough about Star Trek. Burger King wants to buy Tim Hortons to be closer to Chris. Well, that and to move their HQ to Canada and pay less in taxes. Dan found Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom very interesting and from there Chris & Dan whirl down the Cory Doctorow rabbit hole, talking Little Brother and Rapture of the Nerds. While Dan & Tina lament the size of the GVSU campus, Chris shares important advice about avalanches. Dan suggests that you participate in NANOWRIMO and check out his new shirt design. The Saturday Morning preview with Scott Baio? Benji, Zax & the Alien Prince, Hammer Man, Little Rosey and Gravedale High. We discuss the first episode of Film Frown. Podcast recommendation: Dads Being Dads. Webcomic recommendation: The Molebashes. Support Montreal Sauce on Patreon
Ryan North, writer of The Midas Flesh, Adventure Time and Dinosaur Comics, is on the show this week to talk about all-ages comics, being tall, genocide, the Canadian video game tip line, comics being autobiographical, comics not being autobiographical, and much more! Plus, an X-Men themed Every Story Ever list!
Chris Yates is a polymath. A sculptor, artist, woodworker, cartoonist, entrepreneur, dog-kennel assembler, musician, and more. He's best known now for his handmade jigsaw puzzles. He's on the show to talk about his zigzag path to making a niche for himself. Sponsors New Relic helps everyone's software work better, and if you're in any business today, you're in the software business. Software powers our apps, runs our databases, manages our accounts, and runs ecommerce sites and email programs. New Relic monitors every move your application makes, across the entire stack, and shows you what's happening right now. Visit newrelic.com/disruptors to find out more. What do Lil Wayne, Black Girls CODE, and Humans of New York have in common? They've all raised funds on Indiegogo! Indiegogo has hosted over 100,000 campaigns since 2008 and distributes millions of dollars every week around the globe. There is no application process or waiting period associated with launching a campaign; individuals can start raising funds immediately. Listeners visit tnd.indiegogo.com to receive a 25% discount on fees. Abraham Finberg, CPA: From dealing with those pesky 1099Ks to complex accounting needs, go to finbergcpa.com for all your financial support. Services can be as simple as a 15-minute phone consultation session all the way up to outsourcing your whole internal accounting office. Use promotion code DISRUPT to get a free phone consultation today! Show notes Chris displayed with Topatoco at Emerald City Comicon recently; he works a lot of conventions. He created 50 Comic-Con Questions as a tongue-in-response to what people ask. Chris is almost sui generis. The "Quilt of No Return" has a difficult rating of 9.3 out of 10. Chris's cartoon, Reprographics, ran from about 2004 to 2013. Ryan North of Dinosaur Comics is possibly the nicest guy in the world, based on his reputation. David Lynch did Angriest Dog in the World for quite a while. xkcd by Randall Munroe turned not being able to draw into an asset. Chris worked early on with David Malki, interviewed on New Disruptors in September 2013. Ceaco sells mass-produced versions of Chris's invention.
Ryan North and Dan Berry talk about writing Dinosaur Comics comic for ten years, writing the Adventure Time comics, the webcomics marketing economy and running the largest kickstarter publishing project.
This week we're interviewing Ryan North...you read correctly! Ryan North, the man behind Dinosaur Comics who is trying to kickstart his awesome Choose-Your-Own-Adventure-Series 'To Be or Not To Be' So we'll be asking some questions about that...and you know...his life Please don't forget to visit "www.thefortunebooks.com" for some plain old fashioned awesome and maybe follow me on twitter for more news and updates: @KarlcanBlog You can find information about the Kickstarter here: http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/breadpig/to-be-or-not-to-be-that-is-the-adventure Also why not follow him on Twitter too? Spread the love: @RyanqNorth
Leonard Richardson joins the show from across the Atlantic to talk about games as plot devices, generative content, storytelling, games which exploit the player, and dadaism. You may know Leonard as the creator of Robot Finds Kitten, the maintainer of Beautiful Soup and the author of Constellation Games, among his many other works. Candlemark & Gleam. The Constellation Games Semi-Official Home Page (A production of The Great Hall Of The People And Also Science). Holly's blog post with statistics garnered from her research. The incredible spreadsheet. Wikipedia on Lucky Wander Boy. The generative artworks of Adam Parrish. Spurious, for all your sonnet needs. Since the recording of this episode, Leonard fixed the bug mentioned, so the sonnets are true Queneau Assemblies. Dada Da Dada Da Dum, Leonard's all-new limerick Queneau assembler inspired by Andy's remark. Not mentioned on the show, but Dinosaur Comics fans should take a look at Dadasaurus Rex. Jonathan Whiting on Nethack on Games We Have Known And Loved. @MarkovGuybrush. Speaking of Twitter, @leonardr. We noticed after the recording that Amazon UK lists Constellation Games without any punitive shipping costs. Tracklist Psapp – About Fun Adam Parrish's Frotzophone Darren Korb – Twisted Streets (from the Bastion soundtrack) Alex Smoke – Anima Jenny's Twitter avatar by Beth Lerman Send feedback and comments to show@scienceoffiction.co.uk.
It's my old Friends Rupinder Brar and Joanna Woo! Today we get to talk to Ryan North of Dinosaur Comics fame. We try to explain how planets around other stars get detected. Also Star Trek gets mentioned. There's some edited-out conversation after the end music, for those of you who like to hear people talk even more about star trek. May The Force Live Long And Prosper With YOU!!!
What time is it? It's podcast time, of course. It's also time to talk about ADVENTURE TIME. Ryan North (creator of Dinosaur Comics) joins us to talk about adapting the animated series in comic form. We also give a run down of this week's comics and news.
A very quizzical episode in which we discuss giant corpse eating badgers with monkey heads, evil laughing wizards and the future blouse. - We finally achieve our goal of defeating the almighty (and musical) Cop Rock. - The man with two faces trades up. - Vicki dates the elephant man... for a price. - The 11 year old, egg eating YouTube crowd heckles Vicki. - Cosmopolitan determines several new nicknames for Ben: 'The Crab', 'Cancer Guy' and 'The Ben' are all acceptable. - Vicki's horoscope recommends for her to pit panda's and wolves against each other and crank her sexual zeal. - We lure hot girls in with our collective nakedness. - We pools our useless information that will one day help us win Who Wants to Be a Millionaire. - We anticipate the arrival of Mass Effect 2 and its future blouse. - Ranger Vicki: That's the second biggest monkey headed, giant corpse eating badger I've ever seen. - Double Craig's segment: We sit on a creepy guys lap and topple the laughing wizard's stack of cats. - Vicki feels non petrol buying guilt. - Vicki invents audio books. Several years too late. - Rodney goes fishing and gets into a car accident. - Vicki wishes for shoes and gets banned from hotels. - Homance Questions Part 1: 'Where Has Papa Danced' parties, xkcd, Dinosaur Comics and barracudas. - Psychic Vicki ends the show with words to live by: "The future blouse never comes, and that is where our hope lies. In always striving for a more futuristic blouse."
A very quizzical episode in which we discuss giant corpse eating badgers with monkey heads, evil laughing wizards and the future blouse. - We finally achieve our goal of defeating the almighty (and musical) Cop Rock. - The man with two faces trades up. - Vicki dates the elephant man... for a price. - The 11 year old, egg eating YouTube crowd heckles Vicki. - Cosmopolitan determines several new nicknames for Ben: 'The Crab', 'Cancer Guy' and 'The Ben' are all acceptable. - Vicki's horoscope recommends for her to pit panda's and wolves against each other and crank her sexual zeal. - We lure hot girls in with our collective nakedness. - We pools our useless information that will one day help us win Who Wants to Be a Millionaire. - We anticipate the arrival of Mass Effect 2 and its future blouse. - Ranger Vicki: That's the second biggest monkey headed, giant corpse eating badger I've ever seen. - Double Craig's segment: We sit on a creepy guys lap and topple the laughing wizard's stack of cats. - Vicki feels non petrol buying guilt. - Vicki invents audio books. Several years too late. - Rodney goes fishing and gets into a car accident. - Vicki wishes for shoes and gets banned from hotels. - Homance Questions Part 1: 'Where Has Papa Danced' parties, xkcd, Dinosaur Comics and barracudas. - Psychic Vicki ends the show with words to live by: "The future blouse never comes, and that is where our hope lies. In always striving for a more futuristic blouse."