Tag Archives: pipa

Fantagraphics is Against #SOPA. Go Support Them With These Suggestions

Fantagraphics is one of two brave publishers willing to take a stand against the Stop Online Piracy Act (and we’ll be doing this for that other publisher too).  They put out some great books and here’s a few suggestions of books I think people coming to this site would be interested in, ones I’ve purchased myself and/or ones that have gotten a lot of praise from others.

21: The Story of Roberto Clemente

The biographical 21: The Story of Roberto Clemente is a human drama of courage, faith and dignity, inspired by the life of baseball star Roberto Clemente.

No other baseball player dominated the 1960s like Roberto Clemente and no other Latin American player achieved his numbers. Born in 1934 in Puerto Rico, Clemente excelled in track and field and loved baseball. By the age of 17 he was playing in the PR Winter league. Spotted by the big-league scouts because of his hitting, fielding, and throwing abilities, he joined the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1954. A fierce competitor, within two seasons he was hitting above .300 consistently. He played like a man possessed, fielding superbly, unleashing his rifle arm, and hitting in clutch situations. Despite his aesthetic brilliance, he faced prejudice throughout his career and was given his due only after his unexpected and tragic death in a 1972 plane crash.

Why I Like It:  This graphic novel has gotten nothing but praise making numerous lists as to one of the best comics last year.

The Hidden

Is this the end of the world? How did it happen? Why did it happen? There is one man who knows…

Take a walk with the dazed survivors of a mysterious worldwide catastrophe. They are bound for a place, somewhere in the desert, where a terrible truth awaits them.

This is the full-color, unadulterated horror graphic novel that Sala fans have been waiting for. This nightmarish story combines classic and modern horror themes and genres with a unique twist, and Sala’s painted artwork has never looked better (or more gruesome).

Why I Like It: Nothing wrong with a good apocalypse story.

The Last Rose of Summer

With the Great Depression looming and about to define America’s next decade, three strong-minded women related by marriage form an uneasy household in the summer of 1929. Forced by her husband Harry to uproot their two small children from Illinois and take up residence in East Texas, Marie Hennessey struggles to find a place not only within her mother-in-law’s home but in a Southern town whose troubling unfamiliarities compound her marital woes and homesickness.

Why I like it: A prose book with an interesting concept.  Something in the description caught my attention, could be a nice read during the winter.

Estonia: A Ramble Through the Periphery

Any journey with Alexander Theroux is an education. Possessed of a razor-sharp and hyperliterate mind, he stands beside Thomas Pynchon as one of the sharpest cultural commentators of our time. So when he decided to accompany his wife — the artist Sarah Son-Theroux — on her Fulbright Scholarship to Estonia, it occasioned this penetrating examination of a country that, for many, seems alien and distanced from the modern world.

For Theroux, the country and its people become a puzzle. His fascination with their language, manners, and legacy of occupation and subordination lead him to a revelatory examination of Estonia’s peculiar place in European history. All the while, his trademark acrobatic allusions, quotations, and digressions — which take us from Hamlet through Jean Cocteau to Married… with Children — render his travels as much internal and psychical as they are external and physical. Through these obsessive references to Western culture, we come to appreciate how insular the country has become, yet also marvel at its fierce individuality and preternatural beauty — such is the skill of Theroux’s gaze.

This travelogue of his nine months abroad also brims with anecdotes of Theroux’s encounters with Estonian people and — in some of its most bitterly comedic episodes — his fellow Americans whom he at times feels more alienated from than the frosty, humorless Europeans.

Why I Like It: I’ve loved the graphic novel travelogues I’ve read.  This prose version sounds just as amusing.  Sign me up.

Oil and Water

When ten Oregonians travel to the Gulf Coast in August 2010 to plumb the devastation wrought by the Deepwater Horizon spill, they discover that “Oil and Water” is just the first of the insoluble contradictions. Between the tarred sands of Grand Isle and the fouled waters of the Louisiana bayou, they come to find out that Gulf Coast residents are economically dependent upon the very industry that is wreaking havoc on their environment. In the shadow of the greatest ecological disaster of our time, they are forced to reassess their roles as witness, critic and environmental steward.

In this 144-page graphic novel — written by Steve Duin, a columnist for The Oregonian, and illustrated by Eisner-winning New Yorker cartoonist Shannon Wheeler — readers will tour the shark-pocked beach at Grand Isle with the local head of Homeland Security; step aboard the crabbing boat of a 20-year-old Mississippian who works 16-hour days and spends his nights dreaming of M.I.T.; enter the “Hot Zone” where volunteers work desperately to save brown pelicans drenched in British petroleum; and hear shrimpers, Vietnamese and good ol’ boys alike, describe what happens to their livelihood when 200 million gallons of oil flood the scene. The readers’ perspective on what hope and what mission remains along a ravaged coastline, and one awash in both seafood and oil, will be changed as irrevocably as that of these ten Oregonians.

Why I like It: A first hand account in graphic novel form of the disaster was the Deepwater Horizon spill?  Yes please.  This is a no brainer for the politico in me.

Fantagraphics Books Comes Out Against #SOPA

We’ve been fighting the Stop Online Piracy Act and Protect IP Act for months now, but unfortunately the chorus of others in the comic book industry vocally opposed have been few (but growing).

Yesterday I received the below and can proudly say that Fantagraphics Books has added their voice to those opposed to the legislation making them the largest publisher to do so.  Below is a statement from their President:

“We are opposed to SOPA on the grounds that it gives the state too much unilateral authority to censor or exercise its power so that the result is effectively censorship once removed. It doesn’t provide sufficient safeguards to mitigate our concern over potential harm to free speech. Fantagraphics Books has been traditionally a proponent of 1st Amendment rights —we have vigorously fought four private lawsuits that have attempted to violate those rights— and although we also believe in intellectual property rights, we believe this bill is deleterious to the former and too draconian for the latter.” – Gary Groth, President of Fantagraphics Books

We applaud their stance and willingness to speak out and hope this encourages others in the comic book industry to join the growing vocal publishers, creators and bloggers opposed to this trampling on free speech.  We also encourage everyone to show their support for Fantagraphics by Tweeting thanks and more importantly buy their books!

Around the Tubes

We’ve got a big announcement at 10am!  Come back then, trust me….

SOPA/PIPA News:

Mashable – Reddit Announces Blackout to Protest SOPA

GamePolitics – Change.org Petition Asks EA to Oppose SOPA

GamePolitics – Center for Democracy & Technology’s Big List: Who is Against SOPA

GamePolitics – The Jimquisition: A Bleak Future With SOPA as Law

 

Around the Blogs:

Marvel – Attend Class at the Jean Grey SchoolGreat use of social media.

MTV Geek – CES 2012: Mimoco Reveals New MimoMicro Card Readers And USB Drives – Want!

Bleeding Cool – Parallel Universes Teach Polygamy – A “Christian” Response To Gay Archie WeddingFunny and sad.

Bleeding Cool – London Comic Mart Organiser Gets One Year Suspended Sentence For Collection Of One Million Paedophile ImagesWhat the hell is wrong with people!?

Kotaku – Here’s Lex Luthor (and More Villains) from the Superman Video Game That Got Hit by Cancellation KryptoniteYeah, guessing it was bad.

Kotaku – The Heroes and Villains of DC Universe Online Are a Crafty BunchI really need to get around to playing this.


Around the Tubes Reviews:

Ely Standard – Fear Itself: Ghost Rider

Library of Economics and Liberty – Health Care Reform

Publishers Weekly – Comics Reviews January 2012

Around the Tubes

It’s Tuesday…. we’re adding a new section to these posts dedicated to the Stop Online Piracy Act and Protect IP….

SOPA/PIPA:

Mashable – Boycotting SOPA Supporters? There’s an App for That

Mashable – Paul Ryan, Target of Reddit Campaign, Won’t Support SOPA

Mashable – Fears of SOPA ‘Unfounded,’ Says Bill’s Sponsor

TechCrunch – As Congress Resumes Discussing SOPA And PIPA, Show Your Opposition With #BlackoutSOPA

GamePolitics – Consumer Electronics Association CEO: ‘SOPA is Shocking’

GamePolitics – Rick Santorum Comments on SOPA at NH Campaign Stop

 

Around the Blogs:

ComiChron – Retailers bought at least 3 million more comics in 2011 – So the industry is on the upswing? It even?

Bleeding Cool – Dave Dorman Speaks Out Against Breastfeeding In His ComicsUm… ok.

The Marines – Comics 4 HeroesGreat idea!

Bleeding Cool – DC Comics’ Kris Longo To Join Bonfire AgencyCongrats!

 

Conventions:

Washington City Paper – Photos: MAGfest X

 

Around the Tubes Reviews:

CBR – O.M.A.C. #5

CBR – Uncanny X-Men #4

215 Ink Speaks Out on #SOPA

The amount of publishers, creators and blogs speaking out about the Stop Online Piracy Act in the comic book industry has been a bit disappointing.  Last night we got a few to stand up to the legislation including writers Jonathan Hickman, Jeremy Holt, Len Wallace, Blake Chen, the blog PING! Mother Box PING! and Ashcan Press along with publisher 215 Ink.  They put it best in a series of tweets.

You can join Graphic Policy and Thwipster with our joint effort Dear MarvelYou can see the full list of those for and against here.

Graphic Policy Radio – The One Where We Talk Best of 2011 and #SOPA

After a hiatus in December, we’re back!  Graphic Policy Radio hit the air last night with the whole crew, Brett, Elana and Ken.  On this episode we talked “best of 2011” and the Stop Online Privacy Act.

You can get involved in the SOPA fight at Dear Marvel.

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You Can Be Against #SOPA and Be a Publisher

via Thwipster

Publishers and creators have been rather quiet to denounce the Stop Online Piracy Act and Protect IP Act.  But, the same can’t be said in the video game industry.  While the Entertainment Software Association supports the legislation, many publishers are denouncing the legislation, saying it goes too far.  They realize, you can be against this legislation and still be against piracy.

If you want to add your name to our list and show you support free speech, against censorship and the further erosion of our civil rights (due process), let us know.  Cong. Lamar Smith has called us that disapprove of the legislation a “vocal minority,” lets prove him wrong.

If you can’t get them to implement your law….

Wikileaks is just one example of a website that would likely be shut down due to the passage of SOPA and PIPA.  Many think the legislation is in response to the site.  Well, thanks to that site and 100 leaked documents, we’ve learned that the United States was instrumental in getting Spain to pass strict anti-piracy law.

Via GamePolitics:

In a letter dated December 12th sent by US Ambassador Alan D. Solomont to the Spanish Prime Minister’s office, the US expressed “deep concern” over the failure to implement the SOPA-style law.

“The government has unfortunately failed to finish the job for political reasons, to the detriment of the reputation and economy of Spain,” read the letter obtained by El Pais.

Solomont gave one last push to Spain before the president left office:

“I encourage the Government of Spain to implement the Sinde Law immediately to safeguard the reputation of Spain as an innovative country that does what it says it will, and as a country that breeds confidence,” he wrote.

The letter, which was also sent to Minister of Culture Ángeles González-Sinde, he noted that Spain is already on the Special 301, the annual report prepared by the Office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR) detailing ‘trade barriers’ based on intellectual property issues.

Hmmm, interesting.  So I guess this backs up my belief that the SOPA and PIPA are direct attempts to circumvent international sovereignty.  The fact is, corporations should fight these fights using the laws of the countries in which violators reside or under international law.  And why is the United States becoming the personal lobbyist and prosecutor for the entertainment industry?

If you need further convincing….

Forbes has a great editorial as to why SOPA and PIPA and wrong.

Graphic Policy Radio Returns This Sunday!

We took the month of December off, but Brett, Elana and Ken are back this Sunday at 8pm EST for the return of Graphic Policy Radio.

Up this week is a review of last year.  Brett posted his best of list, lets see what everyone else thinks.

We’re also talking about the Stop Online Piracy Act and Protect IP Act and “Dear Marvel.”

Join, Brett, Elana and Ken this Sunday and make sure to join in on the conversation.

So listen in live on BlogTalk Radio and make sure to call in or Tweet us to chat!

Dear Marvel, Stop Supporting #SOPA and #PIPA

I’ve been pretty damn outspoken when it comes to the Stop Online Piracy Act and Protect IP Act, truly believing it’s going to have a chilling result on the internet including erroneous website seizures.  Marvel Entertainment (along with their parent company Disney) are in favor of the legislation.

I’ve gone through the reasons to not support the legislation and started to track where the various websites, creators and publishers stand.  Well, now it’s time for action.

Along with Thwipster, Graphic Policy has teamed up to launch Dear Marvel.”  A initial step in getting comic book fans to show their displeasure with Marvel’s stance.  You can read Thwipster’s stance and we fully back their point that being against SOPA and PIPA doesn’t mean that you’re pro-piracy.

A more robust action center is coming from Graphic Policy where this particular action will take center stage but there’ll be more ways to get involved.

Take a moment, sign the petition and make sure to spread the word.

Is a Boycott Over SOPA or PIPA Realistic

Know what the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) and Protect IP Act (PIPA) are?  I’ll give you a moment to catch up…  Here’s also where the comic book industry stands.  The below was passed along to me by a friend and was posted by Tom Merritt as to the reality of a solid boycott concerning companies’ supporting SOPA and PIPA.

The list of supporters is massive and runs across more than just the entertainment industry.  As Merritt posted, below this is what you can’t do under a SOPA and PIPA based boycott.

Watch TV (ABC, NBC, CBS, News Corp Independent Film & Television Alliance)
Listen to Music from members of AFM or written by members of ASCAP or BMI or on any major label
Watch TV or movies with actors int hem (SAG/AFTRA)
See a play (The National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) and most theater orgs)
Support Tax Reform
Read Books (Association of American Publishers, all major publishers)
Call the cops (Association of State Criminal Investigative Agencies – Fraternal Order of Police (FOP – International Union of Police Associations))
Go into buildings (Building and Construction Trades Department)
Sing Church Music (Church Music Publishers’ Association)
Fight fires (Congressional Fire Services Institute)
Use the Better Business Bureau (Council of Better Business Bureaus)
Use State government services (Council of State Government)
Wear Makeup (Revlon, Estee Lauder or L’Oreal)
Register a domain name with GoDaddy
Buy anything delivered in a truck (International Brotherhood of Teamsters)
Use electricity ( International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW)
Watch baseball (Major League Baseball – Minor League Baseball (MiLB))
Watch NFL football
Watch UFC
Watch Tennis (United States Tennis Associatio)
Read Marvel comics
Use a credit card
Buy Manufactured goods (National Association of Manufacturers (NAM))
Enter a city (National League of Cities)
Buy prescription and OTC drugs (Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) – Pfizer)
Buy or wear jewelry from Tiffany

A boycott just isn’t realistic.  Hell, last night I was watching a UFC fight.  And personally my thought, if you can’t be consistent in your beliefs or actions, you’re just a hypocrite.

While we set up our action center, here’s something you can do right away, write your Representative and Senators and tell them to oppose the legislation.

Full disclosure: Brett consults for the Entertainment Consumers Association which opposes SOPA and PIPA

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