Author - Artist - Voice Over Actor

Category: San Diego Comic Con

Missing San Diego This Year

Won’t be at San Diego

This is the second year in a row (not counting Covid) that my wife and I won’t be attending the San Diego Comic Con International.


I’m really disappointed in this, but it comes down to finances. Though I still have a “Pro-Badge” (thank goodness to illustrations I’ve done for Airship 27 Productions), and we can’t afford the hotel rooms down there.

Attending the San Diego Comic-Con each year was a high point in my life since high school (if not earlier). The city itself has a special place in my family’s life, but became all the more so once I started attending Comic-Con.

I attended every year for at least twenty years, while my family enjoyed the sites of the city. I enjoyed the con itself, and did my best to get to know the companies and my fellow artists and writers.

That would not be easy, as I am a terrible introvert and very shy. Trying to talk with people and company representatives. I know I am my own worst enemy when it comes to presenting myself to others. But I didn’t give up and kept going to con every year.

As I’ve told you in a previous post, through school I met up with a professional comic book artist and became his assistant for about a year or so. It was a great learning experience. He was working for Image Comics at the time, and so I did background illustrations for several of his books, as well as doing color compositions for them as well. This got me my first professional credits and it also got me my very first Professional Badge to attend San Diego Comic Con.

I even pitched our webcomic FLYING GLORY AND THE HOUNDS OF GLORY there one year and got a positive response (see previous post).

I’ve had a professional badge ever since. From continuing to do comic work, animation script, our webcomic, and book illustration.

When my wife (before we were married) first moved down to the Los Angeles area, I invited her to go to Comic-Con with me only weeks after she first arrived. I probably shouldn’t have done that. I basically through her into the deep end of the pool with San Diego as her very first Con. We should have started off with one of the smaller local Cons. But she survived, and kept coming with me every year since. Receiving her own pro-badge, the very next year after working in animation.

We’ve both had our pro-badges ever since. We’ve attended every con, not counting Covid, since.

She now as a Master in Library and Information Sciences, and one year recently she got to attend San Diego with me and spent most of the time at the San Diego Library where some special panels were going with SDCC.

As I’ve been training and doing auditions for Voice Acting over the last several years, I’ve been enjoying going to Voice Over related panels at the Con as well. I’ve never had the courage to do one of the Live Reads at the Bang Zoom panel (BZ being a Voice Over recording studio that specializes in Anime, I have taken several classes with them). Plus, the one panel we love to attend every year (at both SDCC and Wonder Con) hosted by Writer/Director Mark Evanier called Cartoon Voices where professional Voice Actors are the panels, and after talking about their own careers (and Evanier talks about the history of animation voice acting), they put on a cold read of a script that he has provided. It is always fun, especially as they change their voices with each new line of dialog.

There are a lot of other VO panels this year, and I’m really sorry I’m missing them all.

We still love going to this Cons, WonderCon has become far more affordable since it is nearby and we can take public transit part of the way.

God willing, we will both be working professionally again soon and renew our badges for next year. Hopefully, I’ll be attending as a Professional Voice Actor next year.

Everything Built to this FLYING GLORY AND THE HOUNDS OF GLORY

My career in comic has been a long and slow journey, but from the very beginning as a child I was creating my own super hero characters.

My first character I created was called… Captain Combo <cringe, I know> – I tried to draw a character that was partially every character I knew in the DC Universe – The Superman Shield, the bat symbol, Flash’s lightning bolt, the Dr. Fate’s helmet with Dr. Mid-Nite’s goggles, and so forth. It was really silly, and long before I discovered the android Amazo which was basically the same thing.

Tales of Yesteryear Told in Future Tense

The year 2020 hasn’t turned out the way any of us had planned it. But looking now my 2020 Vision from the beginning of the year and isn’t all that cloudy.
Along with being an artist and writer, I had begun training to become a voice actor for animation.
Things may have slowed down some, but they haven’t stopped. I’m still writing, and am regularly doing artwork for books by Airship 27 Productions.
I continue taking more classes towards my acting career.
At my wife encouragement I have joined a local chapter of Toastmasters – Toastmasters 4 Writers. What could be more perfect.
At a meeting nearly a year ago, before I officially joined I did an Impromptu ‘Table Topics’ speech which I won, and it set off my Determination to become a Voice Actor.
This past Saturday (August 8th, 2020) I gave my first speech. An ‘Icebreaker’ speech they call it, introducing myself to the group.
As I wrote my speech I began to realize the moment in my life that set me off on the road to being an artist, writer, and now actor. It all began with ‘Old Time Radio.’

What follows is my Toastmasters Icebreaker speech, entitled:
“Tales of Yesteryear Told in Future Tense”.
(Points to those who know what two radio programs that is a reference to.)

Tales of Yesteryear Told in Future Tense

2020 Comic-Con Thoughts

            Nearly forty years ago I went to my first comic book convention.

            It was fun, and quite small.

            Next I would attend a Robotech convention, it was fun, and even smaller.

            A few years later I went to my very first San Diego Comic-Con.

            At the time it was held in the old San Diego Convention Center downtown, I’m not old enough to have attended in the hotel where it first began. But that year, it was quite an amazing experience for the kid who had his hopes set on becoming a comic book artist.

            Two things stand out in my memories of my first Comic-Con. Getting inking lessons from Dick Giordano, (especially how to create ‘Kirby Dots’) and hoping to meet one of my favorite writers. Unfortunately, he missed his panel, afterwards a few of us attempted to have him paged, but he never showed.

            Many years later I spotted him across the lobby of one of the San Diego Comic-Con hotels and I rushed across to talk with him. I told him how much his comics, his writing, his research, influenced the young boy that I was and the man I am. That was probably one of the best experiences of all my Comic-Con visits.

            The year of my first San Diego Comic-Con the attendance was 5,000.

            That sounded like a massive amount of people at the time, but it is nothing compared to the 120,000 to 160,000 that have attended each year over the last decade or so. Many more who hang out in the Gaslamp District.

            In over 30 years I only missed San Diego one time.

            I’ve always been a loner geek, and in a massive con crowd even more so. I’d have to find someone to go with me.

            With in weeks of when the woman who would become my wife moved to Southern California, I took to her to her first convention. To the San Diego Comic-Con. She’d later say I should have started her off small, but she enjoyed it all the same, and has gone with me every year since. Both of us with Pro-Badges now.

            This year things are different, for all of us. Convention season hasn’t been canceled; it has gone virtual. The Convention Center, Exhibit Hall, The Masquerade, the Panels, they all exist in The Cloud right now. On YouTube, Twitch, Twitter, and more.
For San Diego Comic-Con they are now Comic-Con@Home. Wednesday, July 22nd. to Sunday, July 26.

The 2020 Comic-Con souvenir book. Click on the image to download a PDF copy.

            It’s disappointing, but it’s not gone.

As for the future, no one really knows yet. Conventions will probably never be that large again, but maybe that’s a good thing. Maybe it’s time that our love for comics, movies, video games, science fiction, and fantasy returns to being more intimate. Where a small group of fans can enjoy their shared love for a comic book, or good naturedly argue over how a movie didn’t quite get their favorite character just right, and not be crowded out and have to shout over one another. Where Disney Princesses and Transformers don’t have to worry about thousands of feet tramping on their costumes.

            The Cons are about us, the fans, and our love of stories that exist in four-color comics, books, celluloid film, digital pixels, computer screens, smart phones, and much more.

            Speaking of that love, and of our fandoms, I’d like to recommend something:

ONCE UPON A CON

            As I write this blog I am finishing reading a book for the third time. It seemed to be the right book to read in the midst of this Con Season.

            It’s title is GEEKERELLA: A FANGIRL FAIRY TALE, part one of author Ashley Poston‘s ONCE UPON A CON series of novels.

            This book is a love song to comic and science fiction conventions, to comics and science fiction television, to fans and fandom, to just plain being a geek no matter who you are. Are you an actor, a writer, an artist, a blogger, or just a good old fan of an old TV series, you exist inside the impossible universe of Geekeralla.

            While not being able to go to a con and need something to pull on your convention heartstrings, this book will do it.

            Then go pick up the second book in the series THE PRINCESS AND THE FAN GIRL, and coming in August BOOKISH AND THE BEAST.

            Your Inner-Geek will thank you.

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