Remarkably, my impulse decision to donate blood while I was
there did not come back to bite me in the rear. I fully expected it to, since
it was one of the first things I did, and it occurred to me partway through the
bleeding (and did she have to set the tube on top of my arm, where I could feel the warmth of the blood that was draining away from me?) it might not be a wise idea to spend the next 6 hours walking
constantly through a loud place full of people a pint low. Oh well, I only got
dizzy once, and that was when I stood up too fast after I spent a few minutes
crouching against a pillar because my knees were tired.
I did buy some back issues, something I’ve fallen out of the habit of doing at conventions lately, preferring to save my
cash for art, but there was at least one vendor with a large set of
well-organized longboxes, and so I found a couple of issues of PAD’s Supergirl
run I was looking for, and quite a bit of Sensational She-Hulk. I’m kind of
kicking myself for not remembering to look for Birds of Prey (or buying more of
the She-Hulk issues), since all the comics were a buck a piece.
There was a fellow at one of the tables, one of the ones selling
homemade jewelry and such, when I looked at him, the description in my
brain was “fat, grumpy cowboy Ian McKellen”. I don’t think it was a cosplay, just how he looked. There were quite a few cosplayers. At least 5
Deadpools, including one couple (I guess they were a couple, I saw them holding hands, could have been a joke, Deadpool self-love or something), where the young lady wore the standard
costume, and the fellow wore the black and grey X-Force outfit. There was a
really good Scarlet Spider I knew I had to get a picture of as soon as I
saw it, and a couple of different groups of Ghostbusters (including a family of
4 with 2 little girls). Saw a Kamala Khan Ms. Marvel, which was nice. Lots of
Adventure Time characters, saw both Pearl and Steven from Steven Universe
(supposedly there were a couple of Amethysts, but I never saw them), a fair few
Kim Possibles (Christy Romano, her voice actress, was at the convention) Claire
Redfield from Resident Evil Code Veronica X (complete with a red jacket with the correct art on the back, she told me she had it airbrushed on there), a Scorpion from Mortal Kombat, who
had the fight music set to play on command. That was a nice touch, though I
would probably have that music play all the time in the background for me, or
at least whenever I was feeling chippy. We might need to put a moratorium on
letting non-Star Wars characters have lightsabers. I get Princess Zelda having
one, saves her having to wait for Link to get off his Hero of Time butt and
save the day, but there was an Indiana Jones with one, which, let’s try to be
serious now, is completely out of place in that universe. I'm joking, but I think there was a Ring-Wraith with one, too. So everybody gets lightsabers now.
I don’t normally approach actors’ tables. I
have no idea what to say, and approaching people I don’t know is possibly a
bigger issue for me than needles. I definitely hemmed and hawed over whether to
wait in line to meet James Marsters longer than I did about whether to give
blood, but my friend met him at a Las Vegas convention in April and said he was
really cool, and I own one of his band’s albums, so what the hey. He was
pretty cool. It’s not like we had a long conversation, but he talked a little
about why he enjoyed making and performing his own music, and when I mentioned I had a friend who DJed, and how the idea of getting up there would terrify me, he agreed it is
terrifying, but I think that’s part of why he
enjoys it? It’s an attitude I can understand in general, if not in that
specific context. I sometimes force myself to do things which scare me, just to
try and confront it. I don’t like needles, so give blood. I don’t like heights, go to the top of that fire tower.
Oh, and I mentioned I needed to get something to eat,
because this was about 3 hours after giving blood and I still hadn’t done that,
and his manager gave me a chocolate bar someone had given him. I had actually
meant to phrase it in terms of asking where he’d gone to lunch (he had stepped away briefly to get lunch when I was about 6 people away, which gave me time to sit down), and I figured asking about convenient
dining options might make good conversation? Though why I was doing that as I
was getting ready to leave is beyond me, and it just went haywire. That said, that was really nice. Except now I feel bad I didn’t make it to the band’s
show that night, but I just felt gassed by the time I got home. And, you know,
clubs are not really my scene, though I imagine this one might have been more
relaxed than at one of Alex’ shows.The volume likely would have been lower, and I doubt there would have been as many drunk people bumping into me.
Missed opportunities aside, I did purchase
some art. Alex Ogle has this nice ink sketch style that uses negative space, which is a technique I find interesting (Joe Quesada's use of it was one of the things that helped The Ray stand out in my mind), but haven’t ever managed
successfully in my limited dabbling. So I bought a couple of prints (the Ghost
Rider one was what caught my eye), and asked for a Deadshot, in the Marshall
Rogers-designed costume. I think it turned out very well. Mandy Anders did a
chibi version of Vance Astrovik in his Marvel Boy costume, levitating himself
and Niels, Speedball’s cat. I only requested that perhaps Vance could be
levitating something, she came up with Niels on her own, which was an
outstanding choice. So that wraps up the Nicieza/Bagley New Warriors sketch
hunt, a scant six years after I began. Criminey Pete. I picked up the
first volume of Jamal Igle’s book Molly Danger, since I’ve heard nothing but
good things online about it. The first read through confirmed that, which is
always nice. That was about it. There were some other artists with stuff I
liked, but I couldn’t afford it. Neal Adams alone had several prints I was
interested in, I could have blown a third of my cash on him easy, but I like to
spread it around a little more. Maybe next time.
2 comments:
It sounds as though you had a lovely time. Incidentally, I DO have the whole run of Sensational She-Hulk, and it is a hoot.
I have most of the first 3 years now, so I understand why people say Bryan Hitch started as an Alan Davis clone (a style I much prefer to his current one), and I liked Steve Gerber's stint writing (Simon Furman's, not as much).
Post a Comment