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A fever dream of a concert experience. Join us as we recap our time at the MCR album release for Danger Days: The True Lives of The Fabulous Killjoys. There was everything from a Zone 5 carnival to Show Pony dancing on stage...much to Jenn's horror. What a night!Find the music and artists referenced this week here: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/1bmhC0eEetxC2w7IfccYqx?si=16fa230e091e4a06Please send concert/event stories and questions to girlsattherockshowpod@gmail.comPlease follow us on IG, Facebook, and TikTok @girlsattherockshowpod*Note: We plan to read concert/event stories and questions on the podcast so if you would like to remain anonymous, please let us know. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This week, the gang celebrate Dylan's third decade by checking out his picks for birthday albums this year: Fleetwood Mac's "Rumours", The Killers' "Hot Fuss", My Chemical Romance's "Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys" and Ghost's "Rite Here Rite Now." Will Steve like his second MCR album? Can BC get behind the synth and keyboard sound of the Killers? Tune in to find out! Hosted by Steve Wright, Brian "BC" Chapman and Ryan "BB" Bannon Produced by Dylan Wright Music by Mark Sutorka Spotify Playlist: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/02Yss8FgCDJ0XEoLUcGCIx?si=F7vXCGEPQmmiSDCyXV5CFQ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PTHpodcast
This week, we're joined once again by Becky Cloonan (Wonder Woman / The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys) as we discuss her comics origins, her experience in animation, her new DSTLRY series Somna, and more!IDB is an all-new weekly podcast presented by Ashcan Press and featuring Matthew Rosenberg, the Supple Boiz, and wonderful guests from the world of comic books!Our theme song is “Where's the Poison” by Summer People.Enjoy! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit ashcanpress.substack.com
WELCOME BACK TO IDEAS DON'T BLEED!This week, we're joined by Becky Cloonan (Wonder Woman / The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys) as we discuss her comics origins, her experience in animation, her new DSTLRY series Somna, and more!IDB is an all-new weekly podcast presented by Ashcan Press and featuring Matthew Rosenberg, the Supple Boiz, and wonderful guests from the world of comic books!Our theme song is “Where's the Poison” by Summer People.Enjoy! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit ashcanpress.substack.com
It's time for another hang out episode! In this episode, Gen and Jette talk about what they've been up to and what they've been reading (actually so much!). We may be ready for fall already, but we're making the most of summer while it's still here.Show NotesCheck out our latest blog post, Top 7 Most Anticipated Books for Fall 2023The new show on Netflix about the Sacklers and the opioid crisis is called Painkiller.Our next episode we team up with House of Anansi Press to read a new poetry collection, The All + Flesh by Brandi Bird.Books MentionedIt's Lonely at the Centre of the Earth by Zoe ThorogoodThe Impending Blindness of Billie Scott by Zoe ThorogoodSurfside Girls by Kim DwinellThe Grownup by Gillian FlynnSomething is Killing the Children by James Tynion IV and Werther Dell'EderaThe Cryptid Club by Sarah Andersen The Writing Retreat by Julia BartzThe Book of Phobias and Manias by Kate SummerscaleAlways Never by Jordi LafebreRipple Effects by Jordan Hart and Matthew NoeMy Heroes Have Always Been Junkies by Ed Brubaker and Sean PhillipsHow Far the Light Reaches: A Life in Ten Sea Creatures by Sabrina ImblerThe Beauty by Jason A. Hurley and Jeremy HaunWelcome to Gotham Academy by Becky Cloonan (of The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys), Brendan Fletcher, and Karl Kerschel Stillwater by Chip ZdarskyGhost Tree by Bobby CurnowLife is Strange: Dust by Emma VieceliTell Me Everything: A Memoir by Minka KellyHouse of Slaughter by James Tynion IV (Something is Killing the Children spin-off)You're On An Airplane by Parker PoseyMother, Nature by jedidiah JenkinsThe House Across the Lake by Riley SagerJunior High by Tegan and Sara QuinThe Memory Police by Yoko OgawaThe Book of Magic by Alice HoffmanThe Magicians by Lev GrossmanThe Writing of Fiction by Edith WhartonSteering the Craft by Ursula Le GuinMy Best Friend's Exorcism by Grady HendrixSordidez by E.G. CondéJonny Appleseed by Joshua WhiteheadSyllabus by Lynda BarryRomancing the Beat by Gwen HayesMoonheart by Charles de LintSeven Tears into the Sea by Terri FarleyWho Will Run the Frog Hospital by Lorrie MooreDown Among the Sticks and Bones by Seanan McGuireThe Blue Salt Road by Joanne M. HarrisSealskin by Su Bristow Don't forget to follow us on Instagram, TikTok, and Twitter or email us at hello@anotherbookontheshelf.com. We'd love to hear from you! Sign up for our newsletter and add us to Pinterest!
Después de descartar casi por completo el disco que habían grabado con Brendan O'Brien y perder a Bob en el camino, la banda sentía fluir la creatividad como hace mucho no pasaba, así que tratando de recuperar el tiempo invertido en el 1er intento y dispuestos a romper los moldes, MCR darían pinceladas furiosas para la creación de su 4to álbum de estudio. Danger Days: the true lives of the Fabulous Killjoys sería el álbum más colorido y experimental de la banda, trayéndoles la libertad y la diversión que tanto necesitaban, así como una nueva y joven legión de fans… con este disco nacerían “los Killjoys”. Acompaña a Kemi y Helena en este recorrido.
In which the Curmudgeons pulverize one of this century's most revered rock bands. And also perhaps its stupidest. Bandleader Gerard Way claims in interviews he formed My Chemical Romance after witnessing the Twin Towers fall from his native Northern New Jersey on 9/11. That's bad enough. Way and his mates then unleashed a torrent of disgustingly celebratory stories of vampires who enjoy suicide and cancer patients nearing their afterlives. All while screeching, squelching and stealing from Queen, KISS and...Coldplay?! Yet Rolling Stone lists their 2006 album The Black Parade as the 361st best of all time. So hey, what do we know? Here's a handy navigation reference for this episode: (0:54 - 4:07): Arturo sets the episode's parameters. (5:31 - 15:23): The Parallel Universe--reviews of The Men's New York City and JPEG Mafia & Danny Brown's "Scaring the Hoes, Vol. 1." (16:22 - 33:57): My Chemical Romance's origin story and deep, dark, smelly dumps on the albums I Brought You My Bullets, You Brought Me Your Love (2002) and Three Cheers for Sweet Revenge (2004). (35:36 - 01:03:00): Deep, dark, smelly dumps on the albums The Black Parade (2006) and Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys. Plus, a discussion of how social media has seemingly young people from appreciating the historical lineage of bands like this one. Join our Curmudgeonly Community today! facebook.com/groups/curmudgeonrock Recorded using (the newly, greatly enhanced) Zencastr! zencastr.com Hosted on Podbean! curmudgeonrock.podbean.com Subscribe to our show on these platforms: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-curmudgeon-rock-report/id1551808911 https://open.spotify.com/show/4q7bHKIROH98o0vJbXLamB?si=5ffbdc04d6d44ecb https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy80M
Drew and Travis ride down Walter Hill's Streets of Fire in the third episode of Crimes, Crooks, and Capers month! TIMESTAMPS 00:00:00 - Streets of Fire 00:41:18 - The Shelf 00:47:37 - Calls to Action 00:52:03 - Currently Consuming 01:03:23 - End SHOW LINKS Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys by My Chemical Romance Act II: The Father of Death by The Protomen Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves Inside (2023)
هذه الحلقة منتجت وسجلت بالإشتراك مع بودكاست ستيل شاوت (Steel Shout) أدب السايبربنك يعتبر من أهم الفروع التي ولدت من أدب الخيال العلمي في القرن العشرينما هو الـ(cyberpunk) في الأدب.يمثل الـ (cyberpunk) نوعًا من أدب الخيال العلمي الذي يتميز بتمحوره حول العالم الافتراضي والتكنولوجيا المتقدمة، كما يتضمن العديد من العناصر الأخرى مثل الجريمة والفساد والتحرر والتمرد، ونوع من القصص الغامضة. يعود أصل الـ (cyberpunk) إلى الأدب الخيال العلمي الذي ظهر في الستينات والسبعينات من القرن الماضي، ولكنه انتشر وازدهر في الثمانينات والتسعينات، وذلك بفضل العديد من الأعمال الشهيرة التي تناولت هذا الموضوع، مثل رواية "نيرومانسر" للكاتب وليام جيبسون التي صدرت في عام 1984.تعريف (cyberpunk)تأتي كلمة "سايبربانك" أو "سايبربونك" (Cyberpunk) من مزيج بين كلمتين:الأولى هي "سايبرنيتيكس" (Cybernetics) وهي تعني دراسة النظم الآلية والحيوية والتفاعل بينها.يشير مصطلح "سايبرنيتيكس" (Cybernetics) إلى دراسة النظم والآليات والتفاعلات بين الأجزاء المختلفة في الأنظمة الحيوية والآلية. ويتضمن هذا المصطلح فهم العلاقات المتبادلة بين الجزء والكل في النظام، وكيفية تغيير وتحكم الأنظمة في أنفسها.وتشمل مجالات الدراسة في السايبرنيتيكس مثل هذه النظم المختلفة كالأعصاب والغدد، والآليات المتحكمة في الصناعة والتحكم في المرور والملاحة والطيران، والتكنولوجيا الحيوية والطبية، والذكاء الاصطناعي والروبوتات.يعود أصل مصطلح "سايبرنيتيكس" (Cybernetics) إلى اللغة اليونانية، حيث تعني "kybernetes" باللغة اليونانية "الملاح" أو "القائد" أو "المدير". ولقد استخدم هذا المصطلح في اليونان القديمة للإشارة إلى الشخص الذي يدير السفينة ويتحكم في اتجاهها وحركتها. وفي القرن العشرين، أطلق عالم الرياضيات الأمريكي نوربرت وينر (Norbert Wiener) مصطلح "cybernetics" لوصف الدراسة العلمية للتحكم والتواصل في الآلات والأنظمة المعقدة. وقد استخدم وينر هذا المصطلح للإشارة إلى دراسة العمليات التي تحكم الأنظمة المعقدة، سواء كانت هذه الأنظمة آلية أو حية. ومنذ ذلك الحين، انتشر استخدام مصطلح "سايبرنيتيكس" لوصف دراسة نظم التحكم الآلية والحية، وأصبح مصطلحًا شائعًا في العديد من المجالات العلمية والتقنية المختلفة.ومن المهم أن نلاحظ أن السايبرنيتيكس لا تقتصر فقط على النظم الحيوية، بل تشمل أيضًا النظم الآلية والتكنولوجية، وهذا ما يجعلها مفهومًا مهمًا في العديد من المجالات المختلفة، بما في ذلك العلوم الحاسوبية والهندسة والفلسفة والاقتصاد والعلوم الاجتماعية. والثانية هي "بانك" (Punk) وهي تعني نوعًا من الموسيقى الروك المتمردة والمناهضة للنظام والسلطة وبالتالي، فإن الـ(cyberpunk) يجمع بين عنصرين رئيسيين: العالم التكنولوجي المتقدم والمتمردة والمناهضة للنظام والسلطة. ويتناول هذا النوع من الأدب عادة العالم الافتراضي والتقنية المتطورة بطريقة متمردة ومناهضة للنظام، ويتضمن الكثير من العناصر الاجتماعية والسياسية والثقافية المعاصرة.يُعرف مصطلح "بانك" (Punk) بشكل لغوي على أنه نوع من الموسيقى الروك المتمردة والمعارضة للنظام والسلطة، والتي ظهرت في السبعينيات من القرن الماضي. ويشار في قاموس أكسفورد الإنجليزي إلى أن كلمة "بانك" تعني بشكل عام شخصاً أو شيئاً يتمتع بالقوة والعنف والتمرد والانفصال عن النظام السائد. ويمكن أن يُستخدم مصطلح "بانك" لوصف أي شيء يتميز بالتمرد والمعارضة للسلطة والنظام، وليس فقط في عالم الموسيقى الروك. وعلى سبيل المثال، يمكن استخدام هذا المصطلح لوصف حركات اجتماعية وثقافية وفنية أخرى، مثل حركات الشباب المتمردة وحركات المقاومة السياسية والفنانين الذين يسعون لتحدي النظام السائد.بروس بيثكي (Bruce Bethke) هو كاتب أمريكي ولد في عام 1955، وهو معتبر أحد رواد الأدب السايبربانكي. وقد نشر بيثكي في عام 1980 قصة قصيرة بعنوان "Cyberpunk" في مجلة "Amazing Science Fiction". وقد تم استخدام هذه القصة لاحقًا كدليل لتحديد الأدب السايبربانكي. تتناول قصة بيثكي العالم الخيالي والمستقبلي والذي يتميز بتكنولوجيا متقدمة وتمحوره حول شخصية مخترق حاسوبي يقوم بسرقة بيانات مهمة. وقد اشتهرت هذه القصة بسبب استخدام كلمة "سايبربانك" في عنوانها، والتي أصبحت بعد ذلك مصطلحاً مشهوراً في الأدب والثقافة الشعبية. وقد كتب بيثكي العديد من القصص الخيالية والروايات، وأصبحت له بعض الأعمال الأخرى مثل "Headcrash" و "Wild Wild West" و "Redbeard" و "Rebel Moon"، وقد تم ترشيح روايته "Headcrash" لجائزة نيبولا في عام 1995. وبالإضافة إلى كونه كاتباً، فإن بيثكي يعمل أيضاً في مجال تكنولوجيا المعلومات والحوسبة، ويشغل حالياً منصب مدير تقنية المعلومات في إحدى الشركات الأمريكية.تصريح بروس ستيرلينغ "combination of lowlife and high tech" ليس تعريفًا محددًا للسايبربنك، وإنما هو وصف للجو العام الذي يمكن أن يتميز به عالم السايبربنك. ففي هذا الوصف، يركز ستيرلينغ على تحدُّث السايبربنك عن النزلاء الرَّخاء والمتعطشين للمتع الجسدية والأمور غير المشروعة، والتكنولوجيا العالية والحديثة التي تستخدمها هؤلاء الأشخاص في تحقيق ما يريدونه. ويتناول ستيرلينغ هذا المفهوم في روايته الشهيرة "المرآة الشعورية" (Mirrorshades)، وهي مجموعة من القصص القصيرة التي تعتبر أحد الأعمال الأساسية في أدب السايبربنك.ومع ذلك، يمكن القول أن هذا الوصف ينطبق بشكل عام على أعمال السايبربنك، حيث يتميز هذا النوع الأدبي بتحقيق التوازن بين الجوانب العالية التكنولوجية والجوانب الأكثر شعبية والمرتبطة بالعالم السفلي والجريمة المنظمة. وتنتمي روايات وليام جيبسون وبروس يرلينغ وغيرهما من الكتَّاب إلى هذا النوع الأدبي، ويتعاملون في أعمالهم مع قضايا تتعلق بالتكنولوجيا المتقدمة والحياة الافتراضية والتحديات الاجتماعية والثقافية التي تنشأ بسببها. وتجمع هذه الأعمال بين الجوانب العالية التكنولوجية والجوانب الأكثر شعبية والمرتبطة بالعالم السفلي، وتتميز بأسلوب سريع الإيقاع وشخصيات مثيرة للاهتمام، كما تستخدم لغة فيها الكثير من المصطلحات التقنية والحاسوبية.وبشكل عام، يجمع وصف بروس ستيرلينغ "combination of lowlife and high tech" بين هذه الجوانب، ويعكس الجانب الغامض والمثير للاهتمام في أدب السايبربنك، الذي يتميز بتحقيق التوازن بين العالم الافتراضي والعالم الحقيقي وبين الجوانب الفنية والتكنولوجية والجوانب الاجتماعية والثقافية.عناصر السايبربنك الأدبي:· الجوالـ (Dystopian):o تحكم وتملك المنظمات والشركات للمجتمع.o طبقية الرأسماليةo حياة وضيعة.o تمرد الأفراد على الشركات والمنظمات.o انغماس الأفراد في الجريمة والملذات والشهوات.o غلاء المعيشة · التقنية العالية:o الذكاء الصناعي.o الواقع الافتراضي .o تطورعلم الأطراف الصناعيةo المستنسخين والرجال الآليين.o الاتصالات والتقنيةo الهاكرز او محرك الشبكة (Netrunner)· الثقافة:o موسيقى الـ Punk Rock والـVaporwaveo الازياء o العمران والأضواء (اليابان في الثمانينات ونموها اقتصاديا في العالم الإلكتروني)o المتحري والمحقق الظلامي (Noir)o الرياضات والترفيه أهم الأعمال الأدبية:· رواية نوفا لـ (Samuel Delany) في عام 1968:o نوفا هي رواية خيال علمي من تأليف الكاتب الأمريكي صموئيل ديلاني ونشرت في عام 1968. تستكشف الرواية، التي تصنف رسميًا كعمل فضائي، السياسة والثقافة في مستقبل يتسم بانتشار تقنية السايبورج بشكل شامل (والرواية واحدة من سلفيات السايبربانك)، ولكن يمكن أن تنطوي صناعة القرارات الكبرى على استخدام بطاقات التاروت. تحمل الرواية نغمات أسطورية قوية، وترتبط على حد سواء بمسألة البحث عن الكأس المقدسة وبقصة جايسون والأرجونوتيكا والسعي للحصول على الصوف الذهبي. تم ترشيح نوفا لجائزة هيوغو لأفضل رواية في عام 1969. في عام 1984، قام ديفيد برينجل بإدراجها ضمن قائمته لأفضل 100 رواية خيال علمي كتبت منذ عام 1949. ملخص القصةفي عام 3172، تنقسم السلطة السياسية في المجرة إلى فصيلين: فصيل دراكو الموجود على الأرض وفصيل الاتحاد الثريد الذي ظهر في وقت لاحق. كلاهما لديه اهتمامات في المستعمرات الخارجية الأحدث، حيث تنتج المناجم كميات قليلة من المصدر القيم إليريون، وهو مادة فائقة الثقل ضرورية للسفر الفضائي وتغيير مناخ الكواكب.يتورط قائد مهووس ومشوه من الاتحاد الثريد، لورك فون راي، في صراع بين العائلات الأرستقراطية والاقتصادية القوية، فيجند فريقًا متنوعًا من المختلفين لمساعدته في السباق مع عدوه اللدود، الأمير ريد من شركة ريد شيفت المرتبطة بفصيل دراكو، للحصول على الزعامة الاقتصادية عن طريق تأمين كمية هائلة من إليريون مباشرة من قلب نجم نوفا. وبذلك، سيحدث فون راي تحولًا في توازن القوى في النظام الكوني الحالي، مما سيؤدي إلى سقوط العائلة الحمراء ونهاية سيطرة الأرض على السياسة الفضائية بين النجوم.تتبع الرواية مغامرات فريق فون راي في محاولة الحصول على إليريون من نوفا، حيث يتعرضون للعديد من المصاعب والتحديات، بما في ذلك مواجهة العدو، والتعامل مع الأسرار الغامضة المرتبطة بنوفا نفسها، وكذلك الاستكشاف العميق لشخصيات الأعضاء المختلفين في الفريق.في نهاية المطاف، يتمكن فون راي وفريقه من الحصول على الإليريون من نوفا، ويتغلبون على الأمير ريد وشركته، مما يؤدي إلى تحويل التوازن في السياسة الفضائية بين الفصيلين. وبالتالي، ينتهي السيطرة الأرضية على السياسة الفضائية، وتبدأ مرحلة جديدة في تاريخ المجرة. · رواية (Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep) لـ (Philip K. Dick) عام 1968:o هي رواية خيال علمي كتبها الكاتب الأمريكي فيليب ك. ديك، وصدرت عام 1968. تدور أحداث الرواية في المستقبل البعيد بعد أن تعرضت الأرض لحرب نووية دمرت جزءا كبيرا منها وأدت إلى إنقراض الحيوانات وتحكي قصة ريك ديكارد، الذي يعمل كصائد للروبوتات المتمردة التي تشبه البشر، ويتم تكليفه بمهمة القضاء على ستة من هذه الروبوتات المتمردة. هذه الرواية تشتمل على بعض العناصر التي يمكن وصفها بالسايبرنك، مثل الروبوتات والذكاء الاصطناعي، يمكن اعتبار هذه الرواية الأم لفيلم "Blade Runner" الذي صدر في عام 1982 والذي يعتبر من أهم الأعمال في فن السايبرنك.تدور قصة الحيوانات في الرواية حول شخصية ريك ديك، الذي يعمل كصائد للحيوانات النادرة، وذلك لكسب نقاط مادية تتيح له شراء حيوان حقيقي بدلاً من حيوان اصطناعي. ويحلم ريك بامتلاك حيوان طائر "البطريق الإمبراطوري"، وهو الحيوان النادر الذي يساعده على التفرد والتميز في مجتمع موحد.تعتبر قصة الحيوانات والتركيز على الرغبة في امتلاك حيوانات حقيقية، رمزًا للحاجة إلى التميز والاهتمام بالطبيعة والحيوانات، وكذلك للعلاقة بين الإنسان والطبيعة في عالم مستقبلي متغير. وتعد هذه القصة أحد المحاور الرئيسية في الرواية التي تتناول موضوعات أخرى مثل الهوية الإنسانية الواقعية والذاتية والمجتمعية والروبوتات والذكاء الاصطناعي، والتي تركز على القضايا الأخلاقية والفلسفية المتعلقة بالحياة والوجود والتعايش في عالم متغير ومعقد.رواية (Neuromancer) للكاتب الأمريكي ويليام جيبسون عام 1984 م:تعد من أولى روايات السايبربانك. تعتبر من أهم الأعمال الأدبية في هذا النوع، حيث أنها قدمت للقراء نموذجاً جديداً للأدب العلمي والخيال العلمي، يستخدم فيه (جيبسون) تقنيات ومفاهيم حديثة كالحوسبة والشبكات والذكاء الاصطناعي والروبوتات والتجارة الإلكترونية، وجعل منها عناصر رئيسية في قالب قصته المثيرة والمشوقة. وقد فازت هذه الرواية بجائزة نيبولا لأفضل رواية علمية خيالية في عام 1984.بطلها كيس، وهو هاكر حاسوب عاطل عن العمل يتم استئجاره من قبل صاحب عمل جديد غامض يدعى أرميتاج. يتم تشكيل فريق مع مولي، السايبورغ، وبيتر ريفيرا، اللص والخادع، لتنفيذ سلسلة من الجرائم التي تمهد الطريق للهدف النهائي للمجموعة، والذي يتم تنفيذه في محطة الفضاء المدارية المسماة "فريسايد"، موطن عائلة تيسييه-أشبول الثرية. تم إنشاء اثنين من الذكاءات الاصطناعية (AIs)، وينترميوت ونيورومانسر ، التي هي قوية لدرجة أنها يمكن أن تتصل ببعضها البعض في نقطة واحدة فقط. يتعلم كيس وزملاؤه أنهم تم استئجارهم من قبل وينترميوت لكسر الفصل بين الذكاءات الاصطناعية. يتغلب كيس ومولي على التدخلات القانونية السيبرانية ومحاولة خيانة من ريفيرا لدمج وينترميوت مع نيورومانسر، وينتهي الأمر بكيس يعيش في عالم جديد شجاعأفلام:· Escape from New York (1981)[40][41]· Burst City (1982)[42]· Tron (1982)[43]· Blade Runner (1982)[44]· Brainstorm (1983)[45]· Videodrome (1983)[46]· Repo Man (1984)· The Terminator (1984)· Brazil (1985)· RoboCop (1987)[47]· The Running Man (1987)· Gunhed (1989)[48]· Tetsuo: The Iron Man (1989)· Circuitry Man (1990)[49]· RoboCop 2 (1990)· Hardware (a.k.a. M.A.R.K. 13) (1990)[50]· Megaville (1990)[51]· Total Recall (1990)[52]· Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991)· 964 Pinocchio (1991)[53]· Until the End of the World (1991)[54]· Nemesis (1992)· Freejack (1992)[55]· The Lawnmower Man (1992)[56]· Tetsuo II: Body Hammer (1992)· Cyborg 2 (1993)[57]· Demolition Man (1993)[58]· RoboCop 3 (1993)· Robot Wars (1993)· Plughead Rewired: Circuitry Man II (1994)[59]· Death Machine (1994)· Hackers (1995)[60]· Johnny Mnemonic (1995)[61]· Judge Dredd (1995)[62]· Strange Days (1995)[63]· Virtuosity (1995)· Escape from L.A. (1996)[64]· The Lawnmower Man 2: Beyond Cyberspace (1996)[65]· Deathline (a.k.a. Redline) (1997)[66]· The Fifth Element (1997)[67]· Nirvana (1997)[68]· Andromedia (1998)[69]· New Rose Hotel (1998)· Pi (1998)[70]· Skyggen (a.k.a. Webmaster) (1998)[71]· Dark City (1998)[72]· eXistenZ (1999)[73]· The Thirteenth Floor (1999)[74]· Bicentennial Man (1999)[75]· The Matrix (1999)[76]· I.K.U. (2000)[77]· The 6th Day (2000)[78]· Avalon (2001)[79]· A.I. Artificial Intelligence (2001)· Electric Dragon 80.000 V (2001)[80]· Cypher (2002)[81]· Dead or Alive: Final (2002)[82]· Impostor (2002)[83]· Minority Report (2002)[84]· Resurrection of the Little Match Girl (2002)[85][86]· All Tomorrow's Parties (2003)[87]· Code 46 (2003)[88]· The Matrix Reloaded (2003)[89]· The Matrix Revolutions (2003)[90]· Natural City (2003)[91]· Paycheck (2003)[92]· Avatar (a.k.a. Cyber Wars) (2004)[93]· Immortal (2004)[94]· I, Robot (2004)[95]· Paranoia 1.0 (a.k.a. One Point 0) (2004)[96]· Æon Flux (2005)[97]· Children of Men (2006)· Ultraviolet (2006)[98]· Chrysalis (2007)[99]· Eden Log (2007)[100]· The Gene Generation (2007)[101][102][103]· Babylon A.D. (2008)[104][105]· Sleep Dealer (2008)[106]· Tokyo Gore Police (2008)[107]· District 9 (2009)· Hardwired (2009)[108][109]· Surrogates (2009)[110]· Tetsuo: The Bullet Man (2009)· Tron: Legacy (2010)[60]· Repo Men (2010)[111]· Priest (2011)[60]· Dredd (2012)[112][113][114][115][116]· Total Recall (2012)· Elysium (2013)[117][118]· The Zero Theorem (2013)[60]· Automata (2014)[119]· Transcendence (2014)[120]· RoboCop (2014)· Chappie (2015)[121]· Ex Machina (2015)[122]· Hardcore Henry (2015)· Ghost in the Shell (2017)[123][124]· Bleeding Steel (2017)· Blade Runner 2049 (2017)· Ready Player One (2018)[125][126]· Upgrade (2018)· Hotel Artemis (2018)· Anon (2018)· Alita: Battle Angel (2019)· Reminiscence (2021)· Jung E (2023)القصص المصورة:· Judge Dredd (1977–) by John Wagner and Carlos Ezquerra· The Incal (1981–1989) by Alejandro Jodorowsky· Akira (1982–1990) by Katsuhiro Ōtomo[33]· Black Magic (1983) by Masamune Shirow· Ronin (1983–1984) by Frank Miller· Shatter (1985–1988) by Peter B. Gillis and Mike Saenz· Appleseed (1985–1989) by Masamune Shirow· Dominion (1986) by Masamune Shirow· Ghost in the Shell (1989–1991) by Masamune Shirow· Neuromancer (1989) by Tom de Haven and Bruce Jensen[34]· Battle Angel Alita (1990–1995) by Yukito Kishiro[33]· Martha Washington (1990–1991) by Frank Miller and Dave Gibbons· Barb Wire (1994–1995) by Chris Warner· Transmetropolitan (1997–2002) by Warren Ellis[35]· Eden: It's an Endless World! (1998–2008) by Hiroki Endo· Blame! (1998) by Tsutomu Nihei[36]o NOiSE (2001) – prequel to Blame!o Biomega (2007)· Singularity 7 (2004) by Ben Templesmith[37]· The Surrogates (2005) by Robert Venditti[38]· The entire Marvel 2099 line is an example of the cyberpunk genre in comics, especially Ghost Rider 2099 and Spider-Man 2099.· Marvel's Machine Man Vol. 2· Batman Beyond· The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys (2013-2014) by Gerard Way and Shaun Simon الأنمي:· Megazone 23 (1985)[127]· Neo Tokyo (1986)[128]· Black Magic M-66 (1987)· Bubblegum Crisis (1987)[129]o Bubblegum Crisis Tokyo 2040 (1998)[130]· Akira (1988)[131][132]· RoboCop: The Animated Series (1988)· Beast Machines: Transformers (1999–2000)· Dominiono Dominion (1988–1989)o New Dominion Tank Police (1993–1994)o Tank Police Team: Tank S.W.A.T. 01 (2006)· Appleseedo Appleseed (1988 film)o Appleseed (2004 film)o Appleseed Ex Machina (2007 film)o Appleseed XIII (2011)o Appleseed Alpha (2014 film)· A.D. Police Files (1990)· Cyber City Oedo 808 (1990)[133]· Æon Flux (1991–1995)[134]· Silent Möbius (1991–2003)[135]· Genocyber (1993)[136]· Macross Plus (1994)· Armitage III (1995)· Ghost in the Shell (anime films)o Ghost in the Shell (1995 film)[137]o Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence (2004 film)[138]· Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex (S.A.C.)[139]o Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex (S.A.C.) (2002–2003)o Ghost in the Shell: S.A.C. 2nd GIG (2004–2005)o Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex - Solid State Society (2006 film)o Ghost in the Shell: SAC 2045 (2020–2022)· Ghost in the Shell: Ariseo Ghost in the Shell: Arise (2013–2015)o Ghost in the Shell: The New Movie (2016 film)· Spicy City (1997)· Cowboy Bebop (1998)· RoboCop: Alpha Commando (1998–1999)· Serial Experiments Lain (1998)[140]· Gundress (1999)· Batman Beyond (1999–2001)· Metropolis (2001)[141]· The Animatrix (2003)[142]· Code Lyoko (2003–2007)· Heat Guy J (2003)[143]· Parasite Dolls (2003)[144]· Texhnolyze (2003)[145]· Wonderful Days (a.k.a. Sky Blue) (2003)[146][147]· Burst Angel (2004)[148]· Fragile Machine (2005)[149]· Aachi & Ssipak (2006)[150]· A Scanner Darkly (2006)[151]· Ergo Proxy (2006)[152]· Paprika (2006)[153][154]· Renaissance (2006)[155]· Dennō Coil (2007)[156]· Vexille (2007)[157][158]· Technotise: Edit & I (2009, Serbia)[159]· Real Drive (2008)· Mardock Scramble (2010)[160]· Accel World (2012–2016)· Psycho-Pass (2012)[161]· Tron: Uprising (2012)· Dimension W (2016)· No Guns Life (2019–2020)· Altered Carbon: Resleeved (2020)· Akudama Drive (2020)· Blade Runner: Black Lotus (2021–2022)· Cyberpunk: Edgerunners (2022)مسلسلات· World on a Wire (1973)[162]· The Deadly Assassin (1976)[163]· Overdrawn at the Memory Bank (1983)[164]· Max Headroom: 20 Minutes into the Future (1985), British television movieo Max Headroom (1987),[165] American television series based on the UK TV movie· Wild Palms (1993)[166]· TekWar (1994)[167]· RoboCop: The Series (1994)· VR.5 (1996)[citation needed]· Welcome to Paradox (1998)[168]· The X-Files, two episodes of the series were written by William Gibson and contain cyberpunk themes:o Kill Switch (1998)[169]o First Person Shooter (2000)[170][171]· Harsh Realm (1999)[172]· Total Recall 2070 (1999)[173]· Dark Angel (2000–2002)[174]· RoboCop: Prime Directives (2001)[175]· Charlie Jade (2005)[176]· Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles (2008–2009)· Power Rangers RPM (2009)· Kamen Rider Dragon Knight (2009)[citation needed]· Dollhouse (2009–2010)[177]· Caprica (2010)· Person of Interest (2011–2016)· Black Mirror (2011–2019)· Continuum (2012–2015), set in the present with a protagonist who has time traveled back from a cyberpunk future in 2077· H+: The Digital Series (2012)· Almost Human (2013–2014)· Die Gstettensaga: The Rise of Echsenfriedl (2014)· Mr. Robot (2015–2019)· Humans (2015–2018)· Westworld (2016–2022)· Incorporated (2016–2017)· Altered Carbon (2018–2020)· S'parta (2018)· Better Than Us (2018–2019)· Love, Death & Robots (2019–present)· Meta Runner (2019–2022)· Onisciente (2020)· Upload (2020–present)[178] ألعاب فيديو:· Exapunk The Screamer (1985)[190] Imitation City (1987)[191] Megami Tensei series (1987–present)[192] Digital Devil Story: Megami Tensei (1987)[193][194] Devil Summoner: Soul Hackers (1997)[195] Shin Megami Tensei: Digital Devil Saga (2004)[196] Shin Megami Tensei IV (2013)[192] Soul Hackers 2 (2022) Metal Gear series (1987–present) Metal Gear Solid (1998)[197] Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty (2001)[198] Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots (2008)[192] Metal Gear Rising Revengeance (2013) Akira (1988–2002) Akira (1988)[192] Akira Psycho Ball (2002) Neuromancer (1988)[199] Snatcher (1988–1996)[200] Genocide (1989)[192] Night Striker (1989) DreamWeb (1992)[201] Flashback (1992)[202] BloodNet (1993)[203] Gadget: Invention, Travel, & Adventure (1993)[204] Shadowrun series Shadowrun (SNES) (1993)[205] Shadowrun (Sega Genesis) (1994)[206] Shadowrun (Sega CD) (1996)[207] Shadowrun (2007)[208][209] Shadowrun Returns (2013) [210] Shadowrun: Dragonfall (2014) [211] Shadowrun Chronicles: Boston Lockdown (2015) Shadowrun: Hong Kong (2015) [212] Syndicate series Syndicate (1993)[213] Syndicate Wars (1996)[214] Syndicate (2012)[215] Beneath a Steel Sky (1994)[216] Burn:Cycle (1994)[217] Hell: A Cyberpunk Thriller (1994) Delta V (1994)[218] Hagane: The Final Conflict (1994)[192] Live A Live (1994)[192] Rise of the Robots (1994) [219][220] Policenauts (1994)[192] Appleseed series Appleseed: Oracle of Prometheus (1994) Appleseed EX (2004) System Shock series System Shock (1994)[221] System Shock 2 (1999)[222] CyberMage: Darklight Awakening (1995)[223] Johnny Mnemonic: The Interactive Action Movie (1995)[224] Road Rage (1995) Osman (1996)[192] Blade Runner (1997)[225] Final Fantasy VII (1997)[226] Compilation of Final Fantasy VII (2004–2009) Final Fantasy VII Remake (2020)[227] Ghost in the Shell (1997)[192] Einhänder (1998)[192] Nightlong: Union City Conspiracy (1998) Xenogears (1998)[228] The Nomad Soul (1999) Fear Effect series Fear Effect (2000) Fear Effect 2: Retro Helix (2001) Fear Effect Sedna (2018) Deus Ex series Deus Ex (2000)[229] Deus Ex: Invisible War (2003) [230] Deus Ex: Human Revolution (2011) [231] Deus Ex: The Fall (2013)[232] Deus Ex: Mankind Divided (2016) Perfect Dark series Perfect Dark (2000) Perfect Dark Zero (2005) Oni (2001)[233] Anachronox (2001) Mega Man Battle Network series Mega Man Battle Network (2001) Mega Man Battle Network 2 (2001) Mega Man Battle Network 3 (2002) Mega Man Network Transmission (2003) Mega Man Battle Chip Challenge (2003) Mega Man Battle Network 4 (2003) Mega Man Battle Network 5 (2004) Mega Man Battle Network 6 (2005) Uplink (2001)[234][235] Breath of Fire: Dragon Quarter (2002)[236] .hack series .hack//IMOQ (2002–2003) .hack//G.U. (2006–2007) .hack//Link (2010) Neocron (2002)[237] Enter the Matrix (2003)[238] P.N.03 (2003) Cy Girls (2004) Æon Flux (2005) Dystopia (2005)[239] System Rush (2005)[240] Mirror's Edge (2008) Halo 3: ODST (2009) Cyber Knights series: Cyber Knights (Classic) (2011)[241] Cyber Knights: Flashpoint (2021)[242] Gemini Rue (2011)[243] Hard Reset (2011) Cypher (2012)[244] Cataclysm: Dark Days Ahead (2013) Remember Me (2013)[245] Far Cry 3: Blood Dragon (2013) Alien: Isolation (2014) Jazzpunk (2014) Transistor (2014) Watch Dogs series: Watch Dogs (2014)[246] Watch Dogs 2 (2016) Watch Dogs: Legion (2020) 2064: Read Only Memories (2015) Call of Duty: Black Ops III (2015)[247] Dex (2015)[248] Technobabylon (2015) Soma (2015) Satellite Reign (2015) Digimon Story: Cyber Sleuth (2015)[249] Invisible, Inc. (2016) Mirror's Edge Catalyst (2016) Superhot (2016) VA-11 HALL-A (2016)[250] Digimon Story: Cyber Sleuth – Hacker's Memory (2017)[249] Observer (2017) Ruiner (2017)[251] The Red Strings Club (2018)[252] Ion Fury (2018) Tales of the Neon Sea (2018)[253] Astral Chain (2019)[254] Katana Zero (2019) Dohna Dohna (2020)[255] Cyberpunk 2077 (2020) Ghostrunner (2020) Incredibox V8: Dystopia (2020) Cloudpunk (2020) ENCODYA (2021) The Ascent (2021) Stray (2022) SIGNALIS (2022) The Last Night (TBA)[256] الالعاب الروائية:· Cyberpunk (1988)o Cyberpunk 2020 (1990)o Cyberpunk V3.0 (2005)o Cyberpunk Red (2020)· Shadowrun (1989)· GURPS Cyberpunk (1990)[257]· Necromunda (1995)· Infinity (2005)· Corporation (2009)[258]· Deadzone (2013)· Carbon 2185 A Cyberpunk RPG (2019)
In Episode 112, it's time for another instalment of our unofficial graphic novel book club — this time with Fatale by Ed Brubaker and Sean Phillips. We cover volumes 1 & 2 (with little sneak peeks at volumes 3–5) of this supernatural noir thriller from one of the most celebrated duos in graphic novels today. Show Notes Ed Brubaker has won a whopping 7 Eisner Awards for his work, which includes Batman, Catwoman, Winter Soldier, Criminal, Incognito, and Reckless among many others. Sean Phillips' son also works in graphic novels and has actually done some of the colouring for Phillips' work. We loved diving into all these different decades and getting a bit more of Lovecraft's Cthulhu mythology (even if we still can't pronounce it). For more graphic novel goodness, check out our episodes on Shade, the Changing Girl, The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys, Fun Home , and Something is Killing the Children. And listen to our interviews with Stephanie Cooke, and with husband and wife duo Brenda Hickey and Troy Little of Pegamoose Press. In our next episode we'll be talking about Giovanni's Room by James Baldwin. Other Books by Ed Brubaker & Sean Phillips Reckless Criminal Incognito Fatale The Fade Out Kill or Be Killed My Heroes Have Always Been Junkies
Grimm Grinner, comin' atcha fast and loud, to all the Wasted Washouts and Fabulous Killjoys out in the dirt and dust! Grimm Grinner, The Voice of The Wastes, broadcasting on all channels to update you as he travels towards rumoured settlements and outposts, in search of information, safe places, and some semblance of hope out in the wastelands. Want to support Welcome To The Wastes? Head to buymeacoffee.com/wlcm2thewastes to donate, or pop over to etsy.com/shop/welcometothewastes if you want to grab some merch! Outpost Owners: M3ND3R, Ian Tweedle The Network: Francois Layton, Molly Layton, Corey Palmer, Ron Getz, Melissa Evenden, MAD Ratter, Frost Survival Gaming, Riley Fedor, The Nuka Lounge, Lindsay Sheppard, Peter Van Cott, Cellophane Diamond, Tal Meloche, Shiimapan, Follow Welcome To The Wastes on social media by checking linktr.ee/welcometothewastes Sound effects are from freesound.org See you in The Wastes.. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/welcometothewastes/message
It's the last episode of the year. And what a year it's been... In Episode 84, Gen and Jette look back at 2021. We chat about the ups and downs of the past year, the reading we did (or didn't accomplish), and look ahead to 2022. Books & Media Mentioned The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys by Gerard Way and Shaun Simon A Lesson in Vengeance by Victoria Lee Angora Napkin by Troy Little Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton The Taking of Jake Livingstone by Ryan Douglass The Scapegracers by Hanna Abigail Clarke What Would Frida Do: A Guide to Living Boldly by Arianna Davis This Will All Be Over Soon by Cecily Strong We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson The Martian by Andy Weir The Gray Man by Mark Greaney Station Eleven Defending Jacob Hunting by Stars by Cherie Dimaline Gold Diggers by Sanjena Sathian What Strange Paradise by Omar El Akkad The Hunting Party by Lucy Foley Fun Home by Alison Bechdel Sweet Tooth by Jeff Lemire Hawkeye by Matt Fraction & David Aja Conversations with Friends by Sally Rooney Three Pianos by Andrew McMahon The Umbrella Academy Don't forget to follow us on Instagram, TikTok, Twitter, and Facebook or email us at hello@anotherbookontheshelf.com. We'd love to hear from you! Sign up for our newsletter and add us to Pinterest!
Look alive, Sunshine! It's time for another Book Club episode. Gen and Jette discuss The True Live of the Fabulous Killjoys: California by Gerard Way, Shaun Simon, and Becky Cloonan. It's a great conversation about storytelling, graphic novels, and dystopian aesthetics. Show notes: Killjoys may have begun as an idea for a comic book series, but it first came to life on My Chemical Romance's album Danger Days. The graphic novel picks up where that story leaves off. Watch the music videos for "Na Na Na" and "SING" for more Killjoys content and to see the where the aesthetic of the comic was born. The sequel to Killjoys: California is available in a collected edition called The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys: National Anthem. We came up with about five different essays we could write based on this book and had a great discussion about the use of colour. Gerard Way was cofounder of the DC imprint Young Animal, but both Killjoys and Umbrella Academy were published by Dark Horse Comics. For more graphic novel goodness, listen to Episode 21 where we discuss Shade, the Changing Girl by Cecil Castellucci. Our next book club book is Conversations with Friends by Sally Rooney. We'll be discussing this one in our first episode of 2022! Other Media Mentioned Neverboy by Shaun Simon Collapser by Shaun Simon and Mikey Way The Umbrella Academy The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys: National Anthem You Look Like Death: Tales from the Umbrella Academy by Gerard Way and Shaun Simon Mad Max: Fury Road Blade Runner 2049 Illuminae by Amie Kauffman and Jay Kristoff Don't forget to follow us on Instagram, TikTok, Twitter, and Facebook or email us at hello@anotherbookontheshelf.com. We'd love to hear from you! Sign up for our newsletter and add us to Pinterest!
In episode 76, Gen and Jette discuss their latest book club book, Future Home of the Living God by Louise Erdrich. This dystopian story follows Cedar Hawk Songmaker, a young pregnant woman who finds herself having to hide in a world where pregnancy has become a matter of state security. Evolution is moving backwards and society as we know it is no longer. You know we love a good dystopia, and Erdrich packs so much into this relatively short book. We had such a good conversation about these characters, the end of the world, and the possibility of never seeing snow again. Show Notes: Louise Erdrich's next book, The Sentence, is set for release on November 9, 2021. Check out this article about Future Home of the Living Gods in The New York Times Our next book club book is a graphic novel, The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys: California by Gerard Way and Shaun Simon, illustrated by Becky Cloonan. The novel serves as a sequel to My Chemical Romance's album, Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys, so make sure you listen to that first! Books Mentioned The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood Firekeeper's Daughter by Ageline Boulley (Listen to the episode!) The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins Don't forget to follow us on Instagram, TikTok, Twitter, and Facebook or email us at hello@anotherbookontheshelf.com. We'd love to hear from you! Sign up for our newsletter and add us to Pinterest!
We're back from the dead to restart this movie podcast, and we'll start by talking about music (also movies too though)!!! It's great to be back, and we hope you all have fun listening to the new and improved big ol Optimist Movies REBOOT (kind of, not really)! 4:47: May's 1st album - 4 Your Eyez Only by J. Cole 11:42: Luke's 1st album - Vulnicura by Björk 37:28: May's 2nd album - The Black Parade by My Chemical Romance 50:28: Luke's 2nd album - Trench by twenty one pilots 1:14:57: May's 3rd album - ??? 1:27:29: Luke's 3rd albums - Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys by My Chemical Romance Luke's Letterboxd: Luke Lively’s profile • Letterboxd May's Letterboxd: OptimistMovies’s profile • Letterboxd Thank you so much for listening!!!!
In this review of Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys by my chemical romance, you are going to see two grown men struggle to express their thoughts as they eat a spicy pepper. Great album though! Check out our stuff here! - - - - - - - - POPCULT CODE USE FOR 30% OFF: RAZE ENERGY CODE FOR 15% OFF: the_wannabecritic WEBSITE: wannabecritic.com MERCH: https://teespring.com/stores/the-wannabe-critic SPOTIFY PODCAST LINK DUMP - AVAILABLE ON APPLE AND OTHER SIMILAR PLATFORMS: THE WANNABE CRITIC - https://open.spotify.com/show/2YfA8mF8bJ6J4Wy1aBs7lr GAME CLUB - https://open.spotify.com/show/4D4HWBAMeDoJMp2RnnEKKE A GUY AND HIS WIFE - https://open.spotify.com/show/3zxedppBwVnVX1WbKei3Ut STORY TIME: A STAR WARS PODCAST -Â https://open.spotify.com/show/43F4wOjl5JePsbuyYIGiw2
This week, Drew brings us an offering from one of the 2000s’ most prominent bands to be assigned the “emo” label, My Chemical Romance. The gang discusses their ambitious 2010 release, “Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys.” What did the gang think of this concept album release? Hit play and find out!Watch us record every Wednesday live on TwitchFollow along with us on Spotify.Audio Intro: Jahzzar - I Saw You On TVVideo Intro: Lame Drivers - Frozen EggOutro: Matthew Walton - I'll See You In My Dreams
Comics Bad Mother #3 of 5 from Artists Writers & Artisans | Writer(s): Christa Faust | Artist(s): Mike Deodato Jr. | $3.99 Once and Future #12 from BOOM! Studios (W) Kieron Gillen (A) Dan Mora $3.99 The Vain #1 from Oni Press (W) Eliot Rahal (A) Emily Pearson $3.99 Commanders in Crisis #1 from Image Comics (W) Steve Orlando (A) David Tinto $3.99 Stealth #6 from Image Comics (W) Mike Costa (A) Nate Bellgarde $3.99 Dracula Motherf**cker HC from Image | Writer(s): Alex De Campi | Artist(s): Erica Henderson | $16.99 We Live #1 from Aftershock Comics (W) Inaki and Roy Miranda (A) Inaki Mirana | Colors: Eva De La Cruz | Letters: Dave Sharpe | $4.99 Red Mother #9 from BOOM! Studios | Writer(s): Jeremy Haun | Artist(s): Danny Luckert | Letters: Ed Dukeshire || $3.99 Grendel Kentucky #2 from Artists Writers & Artisans | Writer(s): Jeff McComsey | Artist(s): Tommy Lee Edwards | Letters: John Workman | $3.99 Atlantis Wasn't Built For Tourists #2 from Scout Comics | Writer(s): Eric Palicki | Artist(s): Wendell Cavalcanti | Colors: Mark Dale | Letters: Shawn Lee $3.99 Bleed Them Dry #4 from Vault Comics | Writer(s): Hiroshi Koizumi Eliot Rahal | Artist(s): Dike Ruan | $3.99 Devils Red Bride #1 from Vault Comics | Writer(s): Sebastian Girner | Artist(s): John Bivens | $3.99 Seven Secrets #3 from BOOM! Studios | Writer(s): Tom Taylor | Artist(s): Daniele Di Nicuolo | $3.99 Vampire the Masquerade: Winter's Teeth #3 from Vault Comics (W) Tim Seely (A) Devmalya Praminik True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys: National Anthem #1 from Dark Horse Comics (W) Gerard Way and Shaun Simon; (A) Leonardo Romero - $3.99 Upcoming Comics Big Girls #3 from Image | Writer(s): Jason Howard | Artist(s): Jason Howard | $3.99 Family Tree #9 from Image | Writer(s): Jeff Lemire | Artist(s): Phil Hester Various | $3.99 Gideon Falls #26 from Image | Writer(s): Jeff Lemire | Artist(s): Andrea Sorrentino Dave Stewart | $3.99 Stillwater from Zdarsky & Perez #2 from Image | Writer(s): Chip Zdarsky | Artist(s): Ramon K. Perez Mike Spicer | $3.99 Chilling Adventures Of Sabrina Presents Madame Satan One Shot from Archie Comics | Writer(s): Eliot Rahal | Artist(s): Julius Ohta | $3.99 Edgar Allan Poes Snifter Of Blood #1 from Ahoy Comics | Writer(s): Paul Cornell Dean R. Motter | Artist(s): Dean R. Motter Russell Braun | $4.99 Engineward #4 from Vault Comics | Writer(s): George Mann | Artist(s): Joe Eisma | $3.99 Heist Or How To Steal A Planet #7 from Vault Comics | Writer(s): Paul Tobin | Artist(s): Arjuna Susini | $3.99 Sera And The Royal Stars #8 from Vault Comics | Writer(s): Jon Tsuei | Artist(s): Audrey Mok | $3.99 Shadow Service #3 from Vault Comics | Writer(s): Cavan Scott | Artist(s): Corin Howell | $3.99 Something Is Killing The Children #11 from BOOM! Studios | Writer(s): James Tynion IV | Artist(s): Werther Dell Edera | $3.99 Vagrant Queen Planet Called Doom #5 from Vault Comics | Writer(s): Magdalene Visaggio | Artist(s): Jason Smith | $3.99 The Scumbag #1 from Image Comics (W) Rick Remender (A) Lewis LaRosa, Moreno DiNisio $3.99 Trades Family Tree Vol 2 Seeds TP from Image | Writer(s): Jeff Lemire | Artist(s): Phil Hester Various | $14.99 November Vol 3 HC from Image | Writer(s): Matt Fraction | Artist(s): Elsa Charretier | $16.99 Bitter Root Vol 2 Rage & Redemption TP from Image | Writer(s): David Walker Chuck Brown | Artist(s): Sanford Greene Sofie Dodgson | $19.99
On this week's comic book review podcast: Rorschach #1 DC Comics Written by Tom King Art by Jorge Fornés Commanders in Crisis #1 Image Comics Written by Steve Orlando Art by Davids Tinto The Immortal Hulk #38 Marvel Written by Al Ewing Art by Joe Bennett The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys: National Anthem #1 Dark Horse Comics Story by Gerard Way & Shaun Simon Art by Leonardo Romero Dark Nights: Death Metal #4 DC Comics Written by Scott Snyder Art by Greg Capullo Stealth #6 Image Comics Written by Mike Costa Art by Nate Bellegarde The Vain #1 Oni Press Written by Eliot Rahal Illustrated by Emily Pearson The Avengers #37 Marvel Written by Jason Aaron Art by Javier Garrón Once & Future #12 BOOM! Studios Written by Kieron Gillen Art by Dan Mora DC The Doomed and the Damned #1 DC Comics Written by John Arcudi, Saladin Ahmed, Kenny Porter, Amanda Deibert, Marc Wolfman, Amedeo Turturro, Alyssa Wong, Brandon Thomas, Travis Moore and Garth Ennis Art by Mike Perkins, Leonardo Manco, Riley Rossmo, Daniel Sampere, Tom Mandrake, Max Fiumara, Dominike “Domo” Stanton, Baldemar Rivas, Travis Moore and PJ Holden Redneck #28 Image Comics Written by Donny Cates Art by Lisandro Estherren Amazing Spider-Man #50 Marvel Written by Nick Spencer Art by Patrick Gleason Strange Adventures #6 DC Comics Written by Tom King Art by Mitch Gerards and Evan “Doc” Shaner Marvel Zombies: Resurrection #3 Marvel Written by Phillip Kennedy Johnson Art by Leonard Kirk Seven Secrets #3 BOOM! Studios Written by Tom Taylor Illustrated by Daniele Di Nicuolo Hellions #5 Marvel Written by Zeb Wells Art by Carmen Carnero New Mutants #13 Marvel Written by Ed Brisson Art by Rod Reis Cable #5 Marvel Written by Gerry Duggan Art by Phil Noto SUBSCRIBE ON RSS, ITUNES, ANDROID, SPOTIFY, STITCHER OR THE APP OF YOUR CHOICE. FOLLOW US ON TWITTER, AND FACEBOOK. SUPPORT OUR SHOWS ON PATREON. Full Episode Transcript: Alex: What's up, everybody? Welcome to The Stack. I'm Alex. Pete: What's up? I'm Pete. Alex: And we are talking about comics. What? What? Pete: It just sounds like you're barely making it, man, you're like “What's up everybody, this is the fucking Stack?” Alex: “Oh, God, week 52 of our comic book review.” We actually have a ton of titles queued up for you today, kicking it off with a big one from DC Comics. Rorschach #1 written by Tom King and art by Jorge Fornes. This is a highly anticipated slash, highly dreaded, I think, comic book because it is- Pete: Highly dreaded? Alex: Highly dreaded, it's following up on Watchmen which is always a dicey proposition. Pete: Okay, I see what you're saying now. Alex: In this book we get introduced to a very Manchurian Candidate type scenario. As a Rorschach, I don't want to say the Rorschach, but a Rorschach and somebody else try to assassinate a presidential candidate, maybe. There's an investigator who's looking into it. And by the end, spoiler, three, two, one, but it seems like this assassin may be none other than Walter Kovacs, AKA Rorschach himself. That out of the way, what do you think about this book, Pete? What was your takeaway? What were your thoughts? Pete: Well, I think it did a great job of grabbing the reader. It starts off with Rorschach kind of getting murdered, which is interesting jumping on point. And then you kind of… It's the classic kind of Tom King storytelling where you're getting little pieces of information as you go along. But he does it so well. And yeah, I mean, I think it's… It's weird to say I'm a fan of Rorschach. But there are aspects of Rorschach that I like, and I love the “Where's your gun moment?” I thought that was really awesome. I mean, it's great art, interesting story. I think it's just kind of the election balloons and the stuff with everything that's happening right now. I think it's a very well timed book. And I'm on board. But I was going to be on board when you had a Rorschach #1, so I'm not upset about it. I'm very much enjoying it. I'm looking forward to more. Alex: Jorge Fornes's art, and I believe it's Steve Stewart's colors are great throughout the book. Just very, very good across the board. Clearly delineate what's happening in the past versus what happens in the present. There are a couple of things that I think are kind of fascinating about this book. The biggest one is that Tom King has so clearly been influenced by Watchmen and Alan Moore, down to his panel grids. The way that he lays them out. But he purposefully avoids the nine panel grid here in this book, to the point where there's one page that I think is like a 12 panel grid, or maybe a 15 panel grid or something like that. Alex: But he never goes into that basic Watchmen breakdown of the page at any point, which almost seems like a no brainer for somebody who has built a lot of their career on building his work off of what Alan Moore did. So that's curious to me, the other thing that's curious to me, is the choice of setting. Because it very purposely feels like The Manchurian Candidate meets All the Presidents bad down to the feathered hair that everybody has, and the fashion they're wearing. It seems like it said in the 70s. But Watchmen itself was set in the 1980s. So, when is it set is my question. This is supposed to be now, but have fashions come around to the 70s? Again, what's going on? Are they only doing it because it's supposed to feel like a 70s conspiracy thriller? There's something about that and the lack of clarity there in the world, though I'm sure King, because he's meticulous writer, has thought through it. And we'll find out eventually. I'm just not quite sure with this first issue, there's a wall there for me in terms of where it's at. Pete: Okay, well, it's a weird thing to get hung up on, but I understand what you're saying. But it's just weird to me, because Tom King is kind of famous for, “You're going to have to keep reading to figure out the story.” Alex: Sure. But I think that's important because we're dealing with Watchmen and we're dealing with an ongoing world and we know this is continuing. There are things that are teased here and thrown into the background, whether it's through billboards or advertisements or other things that let us know, “Okay, this is kind of where the world got to from 1985 to here.” And interestingly, some of the things whether it's quite sensitive Not dovetail with Watchmen the TV series. Alex: So that only raises further questions in my mind of is this in continuity with the comic book? Is it going to continue with the TV show? Is it in continuity with the both? Is it's own continuity? And I know that's not the only thing I should be thinking about, I know I should be concentrating on the story which taken on its own, totally divorced from Watchmen is a good conspiracy thriller story. But those are the sort of things that I do think are important to understand, in some sense, when you're saying here, “This is a continuation of Watchmen.” Pete: Yeah, just you kind of sound like me when we were talking about Tom King's Vision. I was hung up on one little thing, and you guys were like, “Hey, get over it.” Alex: I think this is a big thing, though. I think this is a big important thing. It is a big thing. Pete: That will be explained. Sure, but it will be explained. Tom King is piecemealing- Alex: It's a gorgeous comic book, like the best of Before Watchmen, which was a dicey project to begin with, but still had some good comics come out of it. Yeah, this is a dicey project that still seems like a good comic. So I'm happy to follow it along. But I have questions. Pete: My question is, do you know if this is monthly or weekly? Because the election's coming up? And I need to know. Alex: I assume it's monthly. Pete: Oh man, we're in trouble. Alex: All right, let's move on then to the second comic, we're going to talk about, Commanders in Crisis #1 from Image Comics written by Steve Orlando. Art by David Tinto. We talked to Steve about this on the live show a couple of weeks back. And it is basically him doing a Crisis comic book, but with totally original characters. What do you think? Did it pay off on the premise that he sold us on, on the pitch, Pete? Pete: I think it did. I think, I'm in. This is very interesting. This is a cool team. It's fun to kind of see his take on a big crossover event like this. It's fantastic art. I like the team that is kind of in this thing. And there's like a cool kind of like superhero moment where we had the kiss. That was great. Yeah, I'm on board. I think these characters are interesting enough that even if I don't… It's not like a Avengers crossover event where I know every single person, I got enough here to go by. And yeah, I'm excited to see where this goes, it seems like he did a good job of selling it and I'm in. Alex: What's really fascinating about this, to me, is that it avoids any of the archetypes. I expected going in with it, we'd get a Superman, a Wonder Woman, a Batman etc. We don't get any of that these are completely as far as I can tell original characters. There's no analogues from any particular universe. And that only makes Steve Orlando's job harder going into this. But it does make it more interesting to read because their powers are so weird and so interesting. And the hook of it, which he talked about on the show, this is the reveal at the end of the issue. So if you don't want to know turned away, but I still think it's fair to talk about because he mentioned to us is the death of Empathy, which is going to be an interesting thing to see going forward. The other detail that is so weird, but such an interesting specific thing is all the members of the team in the book are from different parallel universes where they were all presidents. Pete: President. Alex: Which is very weird. Pete: Commander in Crisis. Yeah. Alex: Commanders in crisis, they are commanders. They were all like the first Latinx president, the first woman president, the first, etc. resident. But it's a bunch of presidents with superpowers fighting a crisis, which is such a bizarre detail, but it makes so much sense for the title. And yeah, I'm definitely on board. I think like he's set up a weird, interesting, very different world here. Pete: Yeah. And it's even like when you get the kind of splash page introduction of the superheroes it's like “Prizefighter, as strong as the crowd hopes he is.” I was like, “What?” And then it's like “Sawbones, Action Surgeon.” I've never seen those two words next to each other, action surgeon. What is that? Yeah so it's very interesting. Alex: It's intriguing. Pete: Yeah, it really does a good job of like, kind of sucking you in. And then there's the fun kind of like, oh these minions aren't very smart. They have their brains in a backpack. Okay, this is crazy. It's doing a great job. And I think this really ought to be interesting to see how this unfolds. Alex: I agree. Let's move on. Talking about the Immortal Hulk # 38 from Marvel written by Al Ewing art by Joey Bennett. In this issue, the Leader is dominating the Hulk and all of his allies. He is in the Hulk's mind-scape and controlling things from outside when a rogue element comes in and turns around the balance of power. Pete, I know you've been down on this book, but this issue by the end like in the right way, personally, I was like, “What the fuck is happening here?” Oh my God. Pete: Yeah, this is great. This is really great. You got a lot of the kind of horror aspects that's been happening, but this like really gets into kind of the story and action. I'm very happy with this issue. It's really impressive. Very cool. It's got a lot of twists and reveals but man, it's glorious. It really is a great issue of comic book. Alex: Yeah, it's still horrifying, everything that's going on and the visuals that Joe Bennett draws. But everything that Al Ewing has been building up over the past 38 issues is really finally coming to crest here. It feels like the Leader is probably the sub-villain that we need to deal with in this run. But it's still such a good Leader story. And it's such a good Hulk family story that it feels dangerous in the right way. Just great. Gross. Pete: It's really impressive how this book has grown and changed and done so many different things. It's really… I can't imagine the pitch meeting for this fucking thing. Alex: “Okay, so get this. Rick is very long.” Pete: It's a horror hulk. Alex: Yeah, Rick is long, and he kind of bends in a weird way. And that's the pitch. Pete: Has the grossest neck you've ever seen. Alex: Just it's horrible. It's absolutely horrible. Yeah, a great book. Moving on to the True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys, National Anthem #1, from Dark Horse comic, story by Gerard Way and Shaun Simon, art by Leonardo Romero. If you've never read this book, this is basically about a bunch of folks. It's sort of like an extrapolation of, what was the movie? Them. The Kurt Russell movie where he puts on this… No, Rowdy Roddy Piper, puts on the sun glasses, and could see the truth about the world. It's essentially that, but in comic book form, and here, they've beaten the bad guys, they have one as far as they know. And then things start to go horribly wrong from there. Really good book. I like this, it's esoteric and strange, as most of Gerard Way stuff is. If you read Doom Patrol, if you read Umbrella Academy, but it still feels very prescient and timely in terms of the storytelling, which I like quite a bit. Pete: Yeah, it's really impressive. The art and the storytelling is gorgeous and fantastic, and really moves the story very… It moves through this kind of crazy world. And you're kind of really piecing it together. But it's very unique. And just when you think you've got a handle on it just kind of surprises you again. And I love all the different groups that they kind of break down in the middle of it. Yeah, I think this is a great issue that really kind of gets you excited for more in this world, it really sets things up and gets you wanting more. I think it's a great first issue. Alex: And I think you could understand it even if you haven't read the first series, you could jump right in here and go ahead with it. Obviously you're going to have a richer experience, but it's good stuff regardless. Next up, this is what we talked about in the live show a little bit, Dark Knights Death Metal #4 from DC Comics. Written by Scott Snyder art by Greg Capullo, wild stuff happening in this issue. This is bringing together a bunch of the one shots and miniseries that have been running along. We find out what's been going out with the Flash Team, we find out what's been going on with Wonder Woman, Batman and Superman as they sink deeper into the Crisis Dark multi verses, and things- Pete: And- Alex: Yeah, Pete. Pete: It still starts with Uncle Rock in this one. But, you know. Alex: Sergeant Rock. Pete: Sarge Rock. Alex: You call him Uncle Rock. Pete: [crosstalk 00:14:48]. Yeah, I call him uncle Rock. That's what he calls himself in this, which is a funny moment. Alex: He married your aunt. Pete: Yeah that's how that technically works. You're right. But yeah, I mean, this is just amazing art, over the top fun. Darkseid in that chair is unbelievable. It's like Green Lantern's ring chair. So that means the Green Lantern has to sit there and keep thinking about the size and weight of that chair. That's a very intense little thing that doesn't get much attention. It's just they're killing this. This is just so much fun. Each one of these books is really fun to see what mashups of characters they're going to use, and how crazy it's going to look, and it hasn't disappointed yet. Alex: This entire book feels like the dialogue break in a metal song. When somebody's like, “And then Superman is sunk into a pit of fire as Darkseid watched.” The whole thing. Just it's absolutely, really ludicrous. The whole thing is crazy. We talked about it on the show, but it ends with the Darkest Knight aka Batman who laughs winning, turning the universe into the Last 52, a bunch of dark multiverses, it's only going to go from there. Who knows how they're going to win. But it's funny for the insanely highest stakes, that is, honestly just fun the entire time. Pete: It really is. Alex: Let's move on to something that's a little bit grimmer but in the right way, Stealth #6 from Image Comics, written by Mike Costa and art by Nate Bellegarde. We've been loving this series on the show. Pete: It's too bad Justin didn't want to talk about this book. Alex: He got out of here, was like “No thanks. Don't want to talk about Stealth.” Pete: Yeah, he was like, “Listen, guys, I love Stealth. I said it was my pick. But I'd rather watch a football game right now. So fuck all, y'all.” Alex: I don't think that's what's happening. But the other Stealth, if you haven't been reading the book, it's about a guy who's in sort of a all powerful armor [inaudible 00:17:01], who also may or may not have dementia. He's been fighting against a guy called the Dead Hand who can kill people by touching them with his hand. Everything is revealed in this issue. They loop everything back. We finish it up. This is the end of the miniseries. What did you think about the conclusion, Pete? Pete: I was really impressed with this. Like this kind of started and it was like, “Wait, what's happening?” I love the story. I love the action, the art's unbelievable. But I was kind of like, “But man, does this all come together in such an amazing way.” It's one of those books where you read it. And at the end, you're like “God, I want to go back and read it all over again.” It's really great. Really impressive. And I can't compliment the art enough. Alex: In a surprising way too, it's nothing that I think you could have predicted from the first five issues, but it makes total sense at the same time when it's explained, which is a difficult feat to go through. Pass off, whatever the word is. Pete: Yeah, especially us, we've read so many comics, it's hard to surprise us. And this really did a great job of that. Alex: This is a great miniseries, definitely pick it up when it's in trade or individual issues. Next up The Vain, #1 from Oni Press, written by Eliot Rahal, illustrated by Emily Pearson. This is about a bunch of vampires around the turn of World War II who are robbing blood banks. Get it? Pete: You see what they're doing? Alex: And when war breaks out with the Nazis, and then everything changes. I was very surprised and impressed by this book. I thought this is a really fun concept. The characters were good. I liked how the world was laid out. And there's a good nice twist at the end. How'd you feel Pete? Pete: Yeah, I really liked it. I thought it was very cool. Kind of like bank heist, but they're robbing a blood bank. And also like, fun kind of like, the way the vampires kind of handled the crowd and fuck with them a little bit, very enjoyable. And what's also nice is even the undead are like “You know what's really fucked up? Nazis, man. Racism is awful. I'm a fucking undead vampire. But I know this is wrong. So let's go end this.” That was great. Alex: It's a little shaggy in terms of that because it feels like okay, the concept is bank robbing vampires. I get it. And then next issue it's going to be like, okay, it's vampires fighting Nazis, I get it. So I'm wondering if it's going to change every single issue and that's going to be the rhythm of the book. Or if it is something else. Whatever it is, I'm definitely onboard. I had a fun time reading this. I think it's a fun take on vampires. Like I said the characters are good. So definitely willing to follow it. And Emily Pearson's character designs are very good as well. Pete: Yeah. Alex: Next up the Avengers #37 from Marvel written by Jason Aaron, art by Javier Garron. This is kicking off the end of the Age of Khonshu. Pete: Yes, the Age of Khonshu. And this is the finale. Alex: This is the finale. So Khonshu, who is the God of Moon Knight has taken the powers of the rest of the Avengers. This issue they're fighting back as well as Moon Knight who now the Phoenix Power is fighting back. This is playing with toys in the best sense of the phrase. Pete: Well yeah, and that's a great way to put it. Because you do have like a super baby here who is like, “Yo, give me back my toys.” So that was kind of well put there. But yeah, this is a fantastic art. And it kind of reminds me of Snyder's just over the top fun, where a lot of different characters are getting to play with different powers and stuff like that. And I think this is a great kind of finale. And it's cool to kind of see somebody get powered up like this, and then kind of like spoiler, but de-powered, and where those powers go. So it's, again, a writer and artist, having a lot of fun with the different kind of powers and different perspectives. So yeah, I really enjoyed this. I thought it wasn't a huge kind of event. It was just kind of big enough. And I thought it was great. Alex: Yeah, it's playground rules. It feels like every page, and I say this in the best sense, because it's fun to read. But it's the sort of thing where somebody is like, “Oh you're going to attack my pyramid. Well, my wolf men and my mummies are going to attack you.” And they're like, “Fine. Well, now I have the Iron Fist…” That's great. Like, there's not enough of that in comics, where it just feels like people playing and having fun. It all has to mean something. It all has to lead to the next thing. This is the sort of thing where it's like, and I'm probably mis-remembering this, where She Hulk can very briefly get the Iron Fist, and it has no bearing on anything whatsoever, other than a fun splash page that they draw. And that's fine. It's refreshing to read something like that. Alex: Here's another thing that is almost the opposite, where it's fun, but everything means something. Once and Future #12 from Boom Studios by Kieron Gillen, art by Dan Mora. Pete I know you love this series. This is wrapping up the Beowulf arc. Listen, I think textually pretty big revelations for the mythology of the book, as teased to us by Kieron Gillen when we chatted with him a couple of weeks back. How'd you feel about this one? Pete: This just continues to be one of my favorite things on the stands. Art is unbelievable. You have these unbelievable monsters these great kind of stories and fables intertwined here, and then you just got one badass grandma who's not going to take shit from nobody. And this is just such a glorious comic book that is worth your time and money. And it's entertaining, it's smart, it's touching. It's stories that you've kind of know, that kind of are told in this new kind of messed up way and it's very, very enjoyable. Alex: Yeah, Dan Mora's art and character designs and monster designs in particular are so good across the board. But this issue is Kieron Gillen doing his Kieron Gillen thing and wrapping stories together, figuring out how they fit together, figuring out how the mythology of England as an entity fits together. And it's fascinating to read, but it's nowhere near as dense as say Die, for example, but just good, good stuff and so much fun to read. Alex: Let's move on to an anthology DC the Doomed and the Damned #1 from DC Comics, written by John Arcudi, Saladin Ahmed, Kenny Porter, Amanda Deibert, Marv Wolfman, Amedeo Turturro, Alyssa Wong, Brandon Thomas, Travis Moore and Garth Ennis. Art by Mike Perkins, Leonardo Manco, Riley Rossmo, Daniel Sampere, Tom Mandrake, Max Fiumara, Dominike “Domo” Stanton, Baldemar Rivas, Travis Moore and PJ Holden. As you can probably guess, from how I introduced it, as well as the lineup this is a series of short stories teaming up DC Comics characters in spooky situations. As usual, how'd you feel about this one, Pete? And were there any stories that jumped out to you? Pete: Yeah, this was a really nice collection. I had a lot of fun with this. I mean, the Batman versus the kind of monster in the mirrors is great. This is what I want Halloween comics to be like. I want to see heroes taking on the kind of monsters. And this is the classic like if you say a name in the mirror three times, so it was cool to see that. The Raven Wonder Woman story was great. I'm a sucker for a Grundy story. I love the look of Superman in that one store. I thought like he really looked fantastic with the Swamp Thing. It was just super fun. I think there was a lot of cool stuff and even the Green Lantern team up I enjoyed. Alex: Yeah, I like this as well. I mean, if you can't tell from the title this is riff on Brave and the Bold but Doom and [inaudible 00:25:31] instead. So it's a team up book- Pete: Oh, I just put it together. Alex: Which it gives it a very different flavor from other anthologies. I think it gives it more focus, particularly because you usually get a non-supernatural character teaming up with a supernatural character. The best one for me, which you mentioned, is Saladin Ahmed's story, which I just… I love Batman dealing with the supernatural because he does it all the time. But he never believes it. He's always like, “Scientific explanation for this. I got to figure this one out.” And it's great here. He deals with essentially like a Candyman, Beetlejuice type figure, except in Gotham City. And it's a lot of fun. But this is a good collection if you want to pick it up. Next up Redneck #28 from Image Comics written by Donny Cates, art by Lisandro Estherren. This is a title we have not checked out that much, I think, right, Pete? Pete: Well, so this is weird because I saw Redneck and I thought it was Jason Aaron's book called Redneck and it's not. This is a different kind of redneck, not what you think because it's about vampires. Alex: No, Jason Aaron wrote another book. I don't remember what it's called. But it's not Redneck. Pete: Okay. Alex: No, he's, what is it? Southern Bastards. That's what he wrote. Pete: Oh. Right, right, right. Yeah. I thought… But anyways, so this is a very kind of… The art is really fantastic. I love the way they kind of draw the action. And a very interesting, kind of like tale throughout time here that we're dealing with. And I love the way it kind of ended on this cliffhanger for more. I think this is very interesting book, very kind of unique and creative. And I didn't know what I was getting into. And I was pleasantly surprised. Alex: So Donny talks about this in the end matter a little bit, but it is wild reading the first couple of issues of this books, which I think I read the first couple and I just got away from it for no particular reason. But it was what the title said, it was about a bunch of swamp folks dealing with vampires. I was like, “Okay, I get it. Rednecks cool. I'm on it, I get the concepts of this book.” To here where we're like Dracula war, which is a very different sort of thing. Alex: But Lisandro's art in particular is epic throughout the book. As you mentioned, it spans through different time periods. I enjoyed this quite a bit. And it's certainly the sort of thing that makes me want to be like, “Okay, I read the first collection, I read this issue. Now I actually need to read what happened in between, because clearly, I missed a lot.” Alex: Next up Amazing Spider-Man #50 from Marvel, written by Nick Spencer, art by Patrick Gleason. This is picking up right on the last issue, but kicking off a new storyline, where we finally learn the identity of Kindred as well as why he has it out for Spider-Man. Why he has it out for Norman Osborn, what happens to the Sin Eater? Big things happened in this issue. Spider Man is a very dire straits. We're definitely going to get into spoilers here. So Pete, as you feel about this reveal, what do you think about this? Pete: Cool. I mean, when I saw the tombstone reveal, I was like, “All right.” Alex: But so let's walk through this and this is spoiler time. But Kindred pulls up the tombstone, you're supposed to think as a reader, “Oh, okay is he Captain Stacy?” Gwen Stacy's dad. But he's not. Instead, what Kindred has done is he's pulled up the corpses of Captain Stacy and Gwen Stacy, and put them at a dinner table for Spider-Man, classic villain behavior. But it turns out the Kindred is none other than Harry Osborn. Pete: Yeah, at the end there's another twist, where you think, “Okay, we don't know, here's the reveal of the tombstone. That's who he is.” But then at the end, it's like, “He's my son.” And then you're like twist again. Alex: I don't love that. I feel like we're going to have to do a lot of explanation to get why Harry Osborn is this. Pete: Especially when Spider-Man sits down to that dinner and he sees the two dead people. And then he's like, “Wait, but what's this got to do with Harry Osborn?” You know what I mean? Alex: Yeah, I mean, first of all, indoor dining very dangerous right now. Second of all, if you ever get in that situation, just be like, “Check, please.” Pete: Yeah, also, you got to put masks on those corpses, you know what I mean? You can't just [crosstalk 00:30:16]. Alex: I mean come on. Absolutely. They could spread disease. Pete: They're inside. Alex: Yes. Think of the servers. Pete: Yeah, exactly. Alex: This is a good issue. Nick Spencer is doing an intriguing job of the storyline. But like I said, I think though this fills in a lot of holes in what's been going on I need to get to how this happened, which I assume is going to happen soon. This seems to be a big storyline. But why is Harry Osborn Kindred? What does that mean? How did he become Kindred? Are all big open questions here but we're just at the beginning of this storyline right now. Alex: Next up, another Tom King book Strange Adventures #6 from DC Comics written by surprise Tom King art by Mitch Garads and Evan ‘Doc' Shaner. In this issue, as usual, we're jumping back and forth between the planet Ron and what's happening on Earth, as Mr. Terrific investigates the death of Adam Strange and Alanna's daughter. In this issue Mr. Terrific Alanna kind of go on a date a little bit, and parry and check each other out and sort of probe each other's weaknesses. Ends in a very different, very interesting place. I like this issue quite a bit, particularly, because it made me doubt Alanna being the bad guy of this series. How'd you feel about it Pete? Pete: Yeah, yeah. Also, we had a little Seth Meyers sighting. Little talk show clip here. And as we all know, Seth Meyers came on Comic Book Club, big fan of the show. So it's nice to see that. Alex: It was nice to see it finally pay off for him. Pete: Yeah, yeah. Really nice to see Seth Meyers get his due, poor guy, he works really hard. But yeah, I mean, this is just waiting, each Tom King book, you get a little bit more information, a little bit more information. You're trying to piece together this whole story. So it's unbelievable, Tom King, kills it as a writer. And I'm excited to see how this unfolds, and we get a little bit more. And I love the Terrific stuff in this. So yeah, I can't wait until the final kind of domino falls, I can kind of look back and see what we've done here. Alex: I agree. This is definitely a mystery book. It's going to make you reevaluate everything when we finally get to the end there. But every issue just gorgeous to read and gut wrenching and heartbreaking across the board. Another one, very sad Marvel Zombies Resurrection #3 from Marvel written by Phillip Kennedy Johnson art by Leonard Kirk. Spider-Man is taking Franklin and Valeria to the Galactus hive to try to find a cure for the zombie virus that has afflicted the Marvel Universe. Things go predictably, very, very wrong, including a favorite of Pete's, who gets caught in the struggle. I love the twist that Philip gives to the whole Marvel Zombies thing here. It's so smart. So well done. I'm a little hesitant to spoil it. But every issue of this is so dangerous, so harrowing. And it's amazing that he has found a totally different twist on the zombie mythology in the Marvel Universe. How'd you feel Pete? Pete: Yeah, this was really crazy and intense to kind of like, have these kind of reveals of kind of like how this all unfolded. Love the Galactus stuff. Magic stuff is really cool. The character that we're not talking about I was like… All right, but- Alex: We can talk about him. We can spoil it. Pete: I think it's- Alex: We spoiled so much this podcast. Pete: This continues to be a really fun book and if you would have said- Alex: It's Wolverine. Pete: Wolverines. Wolverine. But yeah, I mean, you would think like okay, Marvel Zombies all right, how long we doing this, but this really is a fresh take on it. And it's very enjoyable. Alex: I agree. I'm very nervous, concerned about what will happen at the last issue when we get to that. Moving on to Seven Secrets #3 from Boom Studios written by Tom Taylor illustrated by Daniela De Nicolo. This issue we're following who we still think is our main character but we're not 100% sure, as they go on a mission to become the new secret keeper for this organization. Still don't know what the secrets are, still don't know what's going on. Pete: Yeah. Alex: We just know somebody evil is gunning straight for them. Another great issue of this book as Tom and company continued to build out the mythology. How'd you feel Pete? Pete: Yeah, I liked this. Again, we kind of don't know. I mean, if I'm risking my life over a briefcase, I might take a peek. But I think that this is very creative in the way that it kind of tells his story as it unfolds and the touching like 15 gifts from the father for the 15 years he wasn't there. That got me, that got me a little bit. That was pretty awesome. I've been really impressed with the characters in the book and their story and kind of how this is all moving forward. A lot of great action. Yeah, this continues to impress. Alex: Yeah, great book and Daniela De Nicolo's art is also real good, it's very anime… Excuse me, manga inspired. Yeah, but it feels like the halfway point way point. Pete: The mustache guy reminds me of the guy from Voltron. The new Voltron [crosstalk 00:36:07]- Alex: Interesting. I don't know what you're talking about, but I appreciate it regardless. Before we wrap up here, let's do it. Let's get into the X/10 of Swords block. Three issues out this week. Hellions #5, written by Zeb wells and art by Carmen Carnero. New Mutants #13 written by Ed Price and art by Rob Price. Cable #5 written by Jerry Duggan and art by Phil Noto. Versus last week, where we got a little more of an overarching story each one of these is very much its own thing. Alex: In Hellions we get that team heading off into other world to basically cheat the whole sword contest that's going on by stealing Arakko's swords. In New Mutant's we find out how Cypher is dealing with fact that he's supposed to be a sword bearer. Answer is not very well. And in cable, he is dealing with a sword of his own. When the last we left him, he was with Cyclops and Jean Grey on Sword, the actual space station the people, we find out what happened to them, and what happens next. This is great. I was a little worried that this crossover was going to be just one thing after another just following up on it. But I love that each one of these individual interweaving stories, and I thought each of these issues was a ton of fun all on its own. Pete I know you liked last week's issues. How'd you feel about this one? Pete: I did. I really liked the break from the stacking insane idea on top of insane idea and like here we're just going to have like a showdown you bring your best, we'll bring our best, bring a sword, let's settle this. But this gets a little derailed by the Lollipop Guild where they sit around a table and makes insane decisions like “Hey, we're going to do this big battle to the death, but why don't we cheat? Right? Because we're on our own island by playing by the rules so fuck it let's just cheat, and just throw a wrench in the whole fucking thing.” Alex: So this is in Hellions by the way just to clarify what's going on here. I love this issue. Zeb Wells writes the crap out of these characters. His Empath is such a horrible asshole in a hilarious way. Mr. Sinister is great. Pete: The cape bit is just glorious. It's really fun. Alex: Oh my god. So funny. Just, it's a funny book. And I appreciate that in the middle of this like… Particularly coming off of, I think, the last issue was Storm being like, “I need to potentially destroy a relationship with my husband because it's the head of the world and I need to invade Wakanda.” And then this issue, Mr. Sinister's like wrestling with a horse most of the issue is great. That you could have these different tones of this world is so much fun. Pete: Yeah, it's all right. Alex: And then of course, there's New Mutants, which is I think one of the greatest issues of all time that really just really digs in on Cypher as a character. One of the greatest characters of all time. Gives him his due in the sun, shows up what was going on with Warlock, trains with Krakoa, plays on his insecurities, but in the right way, and fleshes out his relationship with Krakoa, just a great issue across the board. And I know I'm using a sarcastic voice, but I also actually think that. Pete: The art in this book is glorious. The Krakoa, trying to stop him and talk to them but like “If something happens to you I won't be able to…” I thought that was great. But at this point, I'm like, “Okay, guys, a lot of build up to the sword fight. Can we get to this goddamn sword fight.” Like, do I got to sit there and see everybody's origin story to how they got their sword. Alex: There's 10 swords. They're not even halfway through. They'll get halfway through, they'll have all the swords and then they'll have a bunch of fights. Pete: Yeah. Alex: Come on. Pete: Now hopefully I make a [crosstalk 00:40:12]- Alex: And Cable, also fun with like some terrifying weird alien enemies, that was super fun as well. Just a fun month across the board. Right Pete? Pete: Sure. Yeah. What a month. What a year. Everybody's having a blast. Good times. Alex: Yeah, I just ordered a shirt online, actually, they said “2020 having a blast.” Pete: Oh, man. Yeah, I mean, I'll look forward to hopefully getting to the fight. Just, I don't know, I think the last month with the three titles or last week, whatever it was, I thought was better, getting me hyped for this thing, but after this week, I'm kind of like, “All right, get me there already.” But hey, people like reading stuff in between their comic books pages, apparently, because man, they're doubling the fuck down on that. Alex: Oh my gosh. Pete: And at this point I'm just to do it. Alex: Well, I liked these quite a bit. I had a fun time this week. And I'm glad to read all three of them. Pete: Did you like reading about the sword instead of seeing it? Just reading about how much it weighs and that kind of stuff? Alex: You know what they say, do you bring an essay to a sword fight? Pete: Ah right, right. Alex: If you'd like to support this podcast, patreon.com/comicbookclub. Also we do a live show every Tuesday night at 7:00 PM. Pete: We sure do. Alex: We do Crowdcast and YouTube, come hang out and check it out. iTunes, Android, Spotify, Stitcher or the app of your choice to subscribe and listen to the show. At Comic Book live for this pod. You can, I don't know, socially or whatever. ComicBookClublive.com for this podcast and many more. Until next time, we'll see you at the virtual comic book shop. The post The Stack: Rorschach, Commanders In Crisis And More appeared first on Comic Book Club. Support the show: https://www.patreon.com/comicbookclub See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Episode 115 is here! This week, Dan reviews My Chemical Romance's last record, Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys, all the guys give their thoughts on one of the worst most anticipated albums of all time in Chinese Democracy and Taylor reviews "Adaptation" Starring Nic Cage and Meryl Streep. After the reviews we talk what we've been watching, UFC results, Jon Jone's next move, Anderson Silva's retirement, Fernando Tatis's grand slam, the derecho in Iowa, the planned biopic on Ozzy Osbourne, Ben Shapiro's WAP and more on episode 115 of You Watch, I Listen!
This week we're all back together for a Deep Dive into My Chemical Romance's discography full of concept albums, and Hagen has a game for us. What We Listened To I Brought You My Bullets, You Brought Me Your Love (2002) Three Cheers for Sweet Revenge (2004) The Black Parade (2006) Danger Days The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys (2010) Follow @dftapodcast on Instagram Follow @dftapodcast on Facebook Support Artists During COVID-19 Email Us
Max, Cassie, and Beth discuss "The Kids From Yesterday", a song from MCR's (as of this recording) most recent album, Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys
It's time to do it now and do it loud!! On this episode of emo trash, we bring on DIY writer and resident MCR Historian Ari Jindracek (@ari_vitus) to talk about the seminal and underrated 2010 album, Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys!Ari's on twitter, writes for your local emo trash heap, and contributes to Dental Records Mag!You already know what My Chem does/is doing, feel free to check out this dope article ari wrote about the comeback kids.As always, Intro and Outro- Sleep Schedule by The Lovely Future Teens
Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys by My Chemical Romance. Cameron doesn't want to talk about Sha Na Na, Nathan confuses subs and dubs, and MCR sings its mediocre swan song. Click here to join our Discord! (https://discord.gg/5vpqXaS) Learnin' Links: Rush trys to metaphor (https://genius.com/Rush-the-trees-lyrics) Hollow point bullets (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hollow-point_bullet) The scorpion and the frog (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Scorpion_and_the_Frog) Borrowed chords (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Borrowed_chord) Robert Pattinson hates Twilight (https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=54&v=nFA6Ycch1EM) Water Ice (https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2016/08/10/489217423/water-ice-phillys-classic-summer-cooler-gets-hot-across-the-country) The No True Scotsman fallacy (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No_true_Scotsman) Godwin's Law (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Godwin%27s_law) How Hall & Oates work together these days (https://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/daryl-hall-john-oates-dont-creatively/story?id=49844527) Listen along to Danger Days here! (https://open.spotify.com/album/2wPnKggTK3QhYAKL7Q0vvr) You can support us in several ways: Kick us a few bux on Patreon! (https://www.patreon.com/boxset) By becoming a supporting member, you'll gain access to special bonus episodes, including a weekly mini-show, What's in the Box Weekly! Buy T-shirts, sweatshirts, and more at our merch page! (https://boxset.threadless.com/)
This week, the guys discuss the final My Chemical Romance album, Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys, and the work of writer/ director Drew Goddard. Next Weeks Homework: Three Cheers for Sweet Revenge by My Chemical Romanceand Author, Gillian Flynn
Danger Days, here we come. Get your masks on and grab those ray guns - it's time to delve into The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys. We are, at long last, discussing the first few tracks of Danger Days. Deserts, laser beams, bright colors, and Grant Morrison. Look alive, sunshine, we are burning rubber on Route Guano and we stop for no one.
When you find yourself staring at miles of dirt and no rest stop in site, you need the right music to feel invincible, this album is the one. Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys.
Get ready for a double dosage of Umbrella Academy in this week's episode, as we cover both The Umbrella Academy comic book and The Umbrella Academy live action Netflix Original Series! We took the time out to just focus solely on Umbrella Academy this week so we can call out Easter Eggs, and nods to the comics; but also give you guys insights on what creative liberties were taken for the show and how that differentiates from the comic book. The Umbrella Academy is a Netflix Original Series based on the comic book of the same name (The Umbrella Academy). Written by Gerard Way (My Chemical Romance, Young Animals: Doom Patrol, The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys & Spider-Man: Edge of Spider-Verse). Make sure to tune in next week as we go HIGHER, FUTHER, FASTER BABY! Hope you guys enjoy this week's episode and as always we want to thank you all for the support and if you are willing to take that extra step in supporting The Nerdy Basement, check out all of our links below! As always, Stay Nerdy My Friends! Check out the official Nerdy Basement website: http://thenerdybasement.com Keep up with The Nerdy Basement: https://www.instagram.com/thenerdybasement/ https://twitter.com/nerdy_basement https://www.facebook.com/thenerdybasement/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC2lHF3rulYJ186MkSb9PhPw https://www.twitch.tv/thenerdybasementpodcast https://www.patreon.com/thenerdybasement Keep up with Comics in the Basement: https://www.instagram.com/comicsinthebasement
Shade the Changing Girl, Vol. 1 Earth Girl Made Easy From writer Cecil Castellucci and artist Marley Zarcone, Shade the Changing Girl, Vol. 1 Earth Girl Made Easy—a bold new reimagining of one of comics’ maddest and most memorable characters and part of the DC’s Young Animal imprint led by rock-star Gerard Way. Loma Shade may be from another planet, but she’s still like every other twentysomething who feels that their life is going nowhere fast. Bored out of her mind, her solution is to drop out of school, dump her boyfriend and leave her homeworld of Meta behind—courtesy of the infamous “madness coat” of renegade poet Rac Shade, which is not so much a garment as it is a multidimensional gateway. After stealing the coat and astrally projecting herself across space, Loma ends up in the body of Megan Boyer, an Earth girl who seems to have it all: youth, beauty and a conveniently damaged brain. Following her “miraculous” recovery, however, Loma finds there’s just one problem with being Megan: Everyone hates her. She was a bully who terrorized her enemies and her friends alike, and now Loma’s stuck with the consequences.To make matters worse, back on Meta there are dark forces that want Rac’s dangerously valuable coat for their own nefarious purposes, and they’re closing in on Loma’s vulnerable physical body. At the same time, the primal madness that the coat channels is slowly, irresistibly eroding Loma’s equally vulnerable soul. With two new lives to live, can this Changing Girl survive either one without losing her mind? Cecil Castellucci is the author of books and graphic novels for young adults including Boy Proof, The Plain Janes, First Day on Earth and the Eisner-nominated Odd Duck. She is currently writing Shade the Changing Girl, Vol. 1 Earth Girl Made Easy, an ongoing comic on Gerard Way's DC Young Animal imprint. Her picture book, Grandma's Gloves, won the California Book Award Gold Medal. She lives in Los Angeles. Cave Carson Has a Cybernetic Eye Vol. 1: Going Underground DC’s classic Silver Age hero is revived in Cave Carson Has a Cybernetic Eye Vol. 1: Going Underground, the first chapter of a trailblazing new saga from artist Michael Avon Oeming (Powers) and writers Jonathan Rivera and My Chemical Romance’s Gerard Way, the visionary founder of DC’s Young Animal imprint! Cave Carson was once the world’s greatest underground adventurer—but that was a long time ago. When he settled down with his wife, Eileen, to raise their daughter, Chloe, he traded the controls of his vehicle, the Mighty Mole Mark 1, for a desk and keyboard. Since then, Cave has led a quiet life—even with the constant distraction of his otherworldly cybernetic eye. But when a sudden illness claims Eileen’s life, Cave’s tranquil existence is shattered—and he and Chloe soon find themselves hurtling down a terrifying tunnel of danger, discovery, mayhem and madness. At the bottom of that tunnel lie secrets buried for decades—secrets that hold the key to thwarting a conspiracy that threatens to consume the surface and subterranean worlds alike. But will Cave and his intrepid team of super-spelunkers be able to overcome this new generation of evil—or is there less to this hero than meets the eye? Collects issues #1-6. Gerard Way is the Eisner Award-winning writer of The Umbrella Academy and the comics miniseries The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys. He is the creative mind behind the new grassroots imprint, DC's Young Animal, whose retro-inspired lineup bridges the gap between the DC Universe and Vertigo. Way is also widely known for his former role as the lead vocalist and co-founder of the alternative rock band My Chemical Romance. Jon Rivera is a writer of comic books and graphic novels, best known for his work on DC's Young Animal. Cave Carson Has a Cybernetic Eye, co-written by imprint founder Gerard Way, is one of the line's inaugural titles. Doom Patrol Vol. 1: Brick by Brick The spirit of Grant Morrison's groundbreaking Doom Patrol is captured in this debut series starring the cult-favorite misfits as a part of Gerard Way's new Young Animal imprint. Flex Mentallo, Robotman, Rebis, Crazy Jane, and more are back to twist minds and take control. This new take on a classic embraces and reimagines the Morrison run's signature surrealism and irreverence. Incorporating bold, experimental art and a brash tone to match a new generation of readers, Gerard Way's Doom Patrolestablishes radical new beginnings, breaks new ground, and honors the warped team dynamic of the world's strangest heroes. This abstract and unexpected ensemble series nods at the Doom Patrol's roots by continuing to break the barriers of the traditional superhero genre. Collects issues #1-6. Doom Patrol is the flagship title of Young Animal--a four-book grassroots mature reader imprint, creatively spearheaded by Gerard Way, bridging the gap between the DCU and Vertigo, and focusing on the juxtaposition between visual and thematic storytelling. Gerard Way is the Eisner Award-winning writer of The Umbrella Academy and the comics miniseries The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys. He is the creative mind behind the new grassroots imprint, DC's Young Animal, whose retro-inspired lineup bridges the gap between the DC Universe and Vertigo. Way is also widely known for his former role as the lead vocalist and co-founder of the alternative rock band My Chemical Romance. Mother Panic Vol. 1: A Work in Progress As part of the new DC’s Young Animal imprint, a bold new take on the world of the Batman comes from writer Jody Houser, artists Tommy Lee Edwards andShawn Crystal and DC’s Young Animal mastermind Gerard Way—Mother Panic Vol. 1: A Work in Progress. The shadow of the Bat falls over all of Gotham City, from its dark alleys to its glittering high-rises. But a new vigilante has just stepped away from that shadow, and she has her own brand of violent retribution to deal out to the city’s corrupt elites. Meet Violet Paige, a rich young celebutante with a bad attitude and a worse reputation. No one would ever suspect that this tabloid-fodder wild child has a secret hidden beneath her spoiled heiress exterior—a secret that has driven her to become the terrifying force of vengeance against her privileged peers known as Mother Panic! But even as Violet launches her all-out assault on the rich and twisted, her shaky allies threaten to betray her, and every one of Gotham’s guardians—from Batwoman to the Dark Knight himself—is hot on her trail. Will Mother Panic continue to strike terror into her enemies’ hearts? Or will her violent quest for justice reach an equally violent end? Collects Mother Panic Vol. 1: A Work in Progress #1-6. Jody Houser is the creator behind the webcomic Cupcake POW! Houser has written Faith for Valiant Comics, Max Ride: Ultimate Flight and Agent May for Marvel, and Orphan Black for IDW. She has been a contributing writer to numerous comics anthologies, including Avengers: No More Bullying, Vertigo CMYK: Magenta, and both Womanthology series. Houser contributed to Justice League of America: Road to Rebirth and is currently writing Mother Panic for DC. Event date: Friday, September 1, 2017 - 7:30pm
In this episode we talk one of Chris’ favourites – My Chemical Romance and a new find for us both – Jain. Zanaka and Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys are both bangers, in their own very different ways, even if Danger Days is more of a Chris banger.Read more
依然是勺子专场,但勺子有嘉宾!今天我们请到的是从武汉远道而来的CD老师。 化学专业的CD和勺子将告诉大家化学是怎样统治世界的(邪恶笑)! 本期我们会向大家介绍跟化学有关的10首音乐作品。 本期歌单 The Chemical Brothers - Star Guitar @ Come with Us (2002) 熊天平 - 火柴天堂 @ 火柴天堂 (1997) David Guetta Ft. Sia - Titanium @ Nothing But the Beat (2011) 東京カランコロン - スパイス (1999) They Might Be Giants - Meet the Elements @ Here Comes Science (2009) Nirvana - Lithium @ Nevermind (1991) CHEMISTRY - Period (2010) Thievery Corporation - Philosopher's Stone @ Radio Retaliation (2008) My Chemical Romance - Na Na Na (Na Na Na Na Na Na Na Na Na) @ Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys (2010) 刘烨 - 琥珀之歌 @ 琥珀 舞台剧音乐原声大碟 (2005)
Multiversity's David Harper hosts a conversation with creators Becky Cloonan (The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys, Demeter) and Sean Murphy (The Wake, Punk Rock Jesus) to talk about all things comic art, the difference between being a writer/artist and an artist, where artists are at today in comics, and more.
This month your pal's from Optic Blast get together to discuss SAGA #13! This month the crew dives in to issue 13, full speed ahead! Screw the iceberg! Saga, Vol. 2 By Brian K. Vaughan, Fiona Staples Intro Music:Party Poison by My Chemical Romance Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys By My Chemical Romance Outro Music: Summer is Gone by Slime girls Vacation Wasteland Slime Girls
IT'S JIMMY EAT WORLD WEEK AND THE GUYS FAIL TO ME THEIR OWN EXPECTATIONS RESULTING IN A DISAPPOINTING EPISODE!! KENNY REFUSES TO DROP THE WHOLE SUMMERSLAM THING AND IS LET GO. THE GUYS PLAY "BLISTER" BY JIMMY EAT WORLD A BUNCH OF LISTENER QUESTIONS ANSWERED! THESE GOOD COMICS - Avengers Arena #13 by Christos Cage and Karl Moline from Marvel Comics - Infinity Part One by Jonathan Hickman and Jim Cheung from Marvel Comics - The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys by Gerard Way, Shaun Simon and Becky Cloonan from Dark Horse Comics - The Walking Dead #113 by Robert Kirkman and Charlie Adlard from Image Comics - East of West #5 Jonathan Hickman and Nick Dragotta from Image Comics - Saga #13 by Brian K. Vaughan and Fiona Staples from Image Comics MICHAEL AND ANDREW TALK BREAKING BAD FOR THE NEXT 6 EPISODES AT THE END OF THE PODCAST!!! CHECK IT OUT!!! www.thisgoodrobot.com twitter.com/thisgoodrobot twitter.com/thisgoodpodcast twitter.com/thisgoodidiot twitter.com/robbierags twitter.com/andrewsclafani twitter.com/kennycavs twitter.com/crapocolyspe
It's CAT STEVENS WEEK on THIS GOOD PODCAST So naturally the gang discuss where they would put their second penis (sorry,mom) Kenny mentions WWE and gets kicked out of the band Andrew comes back from Vegas alive Some asshole cuts off Vinny's shirt for no reason Crab is obscene. Performances of "Another Saturday Night" & "Father and Son" by Cat Stevens Listener questions answered This week Terence and Michael talk about the new Beware the Batman cartoon along with the following new comics: - Sheltered: A Pre-Apocolyptic Tale #1 by Ed Brisson and Johnnie Christmas - Rachel Rising #18 by Terry Moore - The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys #2 by Gerard Way, Shaun Simon and Becky Cloonan - East of West #4 by Jonathan Hickman and Nick Dragotta - Batman #22 by Scott Snyder and Greg Capullo - Justice League #22 (Trinity War Part One) by Geoff Johns and Ivan Reis Also, special guest phone call from Zach in the bathroom!! #longlivethisgoodrobot www.thisgoodrobot.com Upcoming Shows: https://www.facebook.com/events/510837362316555/?ref=14&suggestsessionid=fac9a4da375767462fe95f4b7bbf774a https://www.facebook.com/events/377913392308354/?ref=14 https://www.facebook.com/events/517516088296150/?ref=14
Doctor Who, Jason Pearson and Body bags, Dexter #1 by Jeff Lindsay and Dalibor Talajic, Indestructible Hulk, Greg Pak, Peter David and X-Factor, Winter Soldier and Jason Latour, the Image Expo, Private Eye by Brian K Vaughn and Marcos Martin, Under the Dome, Arrow, Adventure Time: Playing with Fire by Danielle Corsetto and Zack Sterling from KABOOM!, Batman animated, ROM, Grendel, Ashley Wood's Machine Sabbath from IDW, the Parker books by Darwyn Cooke and IDW, The Fabulous Killjoys by Gerard Way and Becky Cloonan, Rick Remender and John Romita JRs Captain America, and a whole mess more!
This week on BREAKING THE 4TH WALL, Cobble and the crew discuss news, speculation, and ramble on about various topics. They also cover some new comics, including: Six Gun Gorilla, The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys, Superman Unchained, Breath of Bones: A Tale of the Golem, Thumbprint, and Harbinger Wars. And stick around til the end of the show for our spoiler-y discussion of MAN OF STEEL. It's episode 23, available now on the Con Artist Entertainment Network!
For this month's BS Jim, Jordan and Russ discuss The state of DC/Marvel, Thanos Rising, Batman Zero Year, The Fabulous Killjoys, Age of Ultron, The Manhattan Projects, Avengers/New Avengers, Valiant, Dark Horse Star Wars, Boom Ape Books, Guardians of the Galaxy, Nova, Heroes Con and Comicpalooza
For this month's BS Jim, Jordan and Russ discuss The state of DC/Marvel, Thanos Rising, Batman Zero Year, The Fabulous Killjoys, Age of Ultron, The Manhattan Projects, Avengers/New Avengers, Valiant, Dark Horse Star Wars, Boom Ape Books, Guardians of the Galaxy, Nova, Heroes Con and Comicpalooza
This is the first episode of this good podcast!!! Michael meets the band! Vinny flies planes?! Crab cooks shit?! Hear a brand new old this good robot demo "Guy Patterson (Jimmy Wanted it Slow)"!! Comics: The band reviews The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys, Batman Zero Year and Superman Unchained! Robert sees Less Than Jake on a boat! Andrew lived on a boat??? Kenny walks out!!! This Good Robot acoustic performance of "Friendly, Friendly World"! Listener Questions!!! Check out http://sanduskybayposterworks.com http://thisgoodrobot.com #longlivethisgoodrobot
How well did X-Men #1 sell? Is Marvel Heroes worth your time? What is the coolest thing in the Talking Comics crew's comic collection? All this and more is covered on this week's Listener Question focused Talking Comics Podcast! We talk about the news of the week (namely E3), monthly sales and of course this week’s Books of the Week. Some books included in our discussion are: The Wake, The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys, X-Factor, Moth City, Chloe Noonan: Monster Hunter, Wolves, Bikini Cowboy, Brain Camp, The New York Five, Swamp Thing, Green Lantern, Daredevil, Astro City, Red She-Hulk, Fearless Defenders, The Movement and more.
John and Steve are here to get you ready for the huge in comics! We have the start of Zero Year as well as the launch of Superman Unchained from DC, we revisit the three Thors and Peter Panzerfaust sets off for a new arc. The Pulls podcast is ready to get you set for June 12th's New Comic Book Day, come and get it. Show Notes: Black Beetle: No Way Out #4 (01:27) Savage Wolverine #6 (02:14) Deadpool #11 (02:49) Dream Merchant #2 (03:29) Thumbprint by Joe Hill #1 (04:30) Helheim #4 (05:09) Guardians of the Galaxy #3 (06:15) Peter Panzerfaust #11 (06:53) The Manhattan Projects #12 (07:50) The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys #1 (08:12) Thor God of Thunder #9 (08:56) X #2 (09:31) Great Pacific #7 (10:17) Alpha Big Time #5 (11:02) Wolverine & The X-Men #31 (11:36) Six Gun Gorilla #1 (12:28) Most Wanted Books of the Week: Batman #21 (13:52) Superman Unchained #1 (14:36)
This week Andy and Derek flip through the April Previews catalog, highlighting the various comic books, collections, and original graphic novels solicited this month. They point out a variety of upcoming titles such as Dark Horse's The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys and Battlepug, DC/Vertigo's 100 Bullets: Brother Lono and The Sandman Omnibus Volume 1, IDW's Edison Rex, Image Comic's Lazarus and Infinite Vacation, Archaia's Rubicon, Boom! Studio's Six-Gun Gorilla, Dynamite's Uncanny, and new collections on the works of Steve Ditko (two of them!), Jack Cole, and Al Feldstein. As what usually happens, their discussions of the comics takes them down curious and sundry avenues, some on-topic, some tangential, and some way the hell off course. But keen insights and fun pop culture talk is guaranteed for all!