Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Get to know Mr. Media's host and producer, Bob Andelman

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Since February 2007, Bob Andelman has  produced and hosted the  popular “Mr. Media Radio” celebrity and media newsmaker online interview show heard on his own site, as well as syndicated to TrueSlant, BlogTalkRadio, Poynter Online, Podfeed.Net, Podcast.De, Blubrry, Zencast, Zimbio, LimeCast, Vox, Podcast Alley and Odeo. The show averages approximately 1,000 visitors/archive downloads a day.

Andelman is also the author or co-author of several best-selling biographical, business, management and sports books, including:

The Profiler: My Life Hunting Serial Killers and Psychopaths (Hyperion/Voice, May 2010), written with nationally recognized criminal profiler and frequent CNN contributor Pat Brown. The book will be excerpted in the April 2010 issue of Reader’s Digest.

Four Seasons: The Philosophy of a Business (Portfolio/Penguin, 2009), by Isadore Sharp, founder and chairman of Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts. Andelman did not author or co-author this book but came in and helped Sharp near the end of the writing process by conducting dozens of interviews with Four Seasons managers and executives and contributing additional material to the finished manuscript.

Fans Not Customers (Portfolio Penguin, ----), written with Commerce Bank founder and chairman Vernon W. Hill II, was completed and accepted by the publisher in May 2007 and in typesetting when Hill was forced out of the bank.

Will Eisner: A Spirited Life (Dark Horse/M Press, 2005), the biography of the legendary artist and writer who is often credited with taking comic books out of the ghetto in the 1940s and establishing the market for adult, long-form comics – graphic novels – in the 1970s. A Spirited Life has been translated for Spanish and Italian editions. Andelman also read for the audiobook edition. http://www.aspiritedlife.com 

The Profit Zone: Lessons of Strategic Genius from the People Who Created the World’s Most Valued Companies (Times Books/Random House, 1997), with Adrian Slywotzky and David Morrison, partners in Boston-based Mercer Management. The Profit Zone is Andelman’s best selling book overall with more than 100,000 hardcover copies in print after 10 printings. Worldwide, The Profit Zone has been translated into Chinese (Complex and Simplified), Dutch, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swedish, and Turkish.

Built from Scratch: How a Couple of Regular Guys Grew The Home Depot from Nothing to $30 Billion (Times Books/Random House, 1999), on which he collaborated with Home Depot co-founders Bernie Marcus and Arthur Blank. CNBC’s “Mad Money” host Jim Kramer endorsed the timelessness of Built From Scratch when he told his viewing audience, “Built from Scratch is the best of all those business biographies.” Built From Scratch was translated for a Japanese edition.

Mean Business: How I Save Bad Companies and Make Good Companies Great (Times Books/Random House, 1996), with Albert J. Dunlap, chairman and CEO of Sunbeam. Published in hardcover, paperback and audiocassette. Mean Business was a finalist in the Financial Times of London Global Business Book Awards.

For more information:
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/bobandelman
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/andelman
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/andelman

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Wednesday, January 06, 2010

Tony Isabella, 1,000 COMIC BOOKS YOU MUST READ historian: Mr. Media Radio Interview

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By BOB ANDELMAN

I remember the day I met Tony Isabella back in the mid-1970s.

I was in the back of my friend Bob Pinaha’s brown Ford Pinto—the car in which I later learned to drive—and we drove to Newark International Airport to pick up Tony for an appearance at a comic book convention we organized.

I was a star-struck teen fanboy—Isabella was a writer and editor for Marvel Comics! How cool was that?

Wish I could remember something that Tony and Bob discussed in the car that day, but after “Hello,” the rest is just a blur.

We’ve crossed paths a few times since then, most recently when Isabella wrote a more than kind review of my Will Eisner biography for the Comics Buyers Guide. And now it’s my opportunity to return the favor.
Hear it now!AUDIO EXCERPT: "Superheroes have always been a big part of it but I wanted to show how many different kind of comics there have been. I wanted to show every genre; there is a comic in there on colitis!" 
Tony just published a new book, 1,000 Comic Books You Must Read, and it’s a four-color, four-star, polished gem. I’ve had such a good time reliving so many fun comics of my acne-blemished past while paging through this coffee table book. If you love comics, you’ve gotta get this guide. (Website)

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You can LISTEN to this interview with TONY ISABELLA, author of 1,000 COMIC BOOKS YOU MUST READ, by clicking the audio player above!

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Two FREE Audiobooks RISK-FREE from Audible

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Monday, January 04, 2010

Geoff Becker, SHOCKER TOYS founder, acting CEO: Mr. Media Radio Interview

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Image of Shocker Toys from FacebookImage of Shocker Toys
By BOB ANDELMAN

A six-inch action figure of Will Eisner’s The Spirit has a permanent place of honor on my desk.

Mixed in among some family photographs on a table to my right is an oddly transparent, 12-inch Spider-Man action figure and, next to him, a 12-inch talking Silver Surfer—although the batteries are apparently dead.

In the hallway, where most of our books are shelved, is a 9-inch high growling Incredible Hulk, and a 12-inch set of the original TV Green Hornet and Kato.

Out in the garage, still in boxes, are at least a dozen female action figures that I bought for my daughter when she was a baby, thinking she might one day like to play with them.

She didn’t.

The point of all this? I like action figures. Which is why I invited Geoff Beckett, acting CEO of Shocker Toys, to be my guest today.

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You can LISTEN to this interview with GEOFF BECKER, founder and acting CEO of SHOCKER TOYS, by clicking the audio player above!

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Two FREE Audiobooks RISK-FREE from Audible

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Friday, July 17, 2009

COMIC-CON SPECIAL: Paul Fitzgerald, WILL EISNER AND PS MAGAZINE author: Mr. Media Radio Interview

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In my life, it seems all roads lead back to Will Eisner.

In 2002, I met the American master artist and writer for the first time over lunch and embarked on a three-year project to research and write his biography, Will Eisner: A Spirited Life. The project outlasted Will himself, publishing nine months after he died.

Along the way, I met and interviewed a bunch of wonderful people who continue to be a part of my life today.

One of them is Paul Fitzgerald, the first managing editor of PS Magazine—which was founded by Eisner—and a friend of Eisner’s for the rest of his life. Fitz worked with Eisner longer than probably anyone else. They traveled overseas together and shared many social moments in each other’s company.

A long time dream of Fitz’s was a book that shared with the world one of the lesser known periods of Eisner’s life, his 20 years at the art helm of PS Magazine, the Army’s preventive maintenance magazine. The book, Will Eisner and PS Magazine, hit many fits and starts over the last few years before finally publishing this month.

You can only order the book directly from Paul Fitzgerald at his website, willeisnerandpsmagazine.com. It is an absolute must for any Will Eisner collector and fan.

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You can LISTEN to this interview with WILL EISNER & PS MAGAZINE author PAUL FITZGERALD by clicking the BlogTalkRadio.com audio player above!

Mr. Media Extra: Paul Fitzgerald, Cindy Jackson & Stuart Henderson roundtable discussion on the legacy of Will Eisner & PS Magazine

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Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Steven Paul Leiva, THE SPIRIT ANIMATION producer: Mr. Media Interview

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Brad BirdBrad Bird image by Steve Rhodes via FlickrI know a thing or two about comic book artist and American master Will Eisner and his best known character, "The Spirit."

I spent almost three years researching and writing the only biography of the man – Will Eisner: A Spirited Life. And in the course of that, I spent a great deal of time with Will, in person and by phone.

Because of that time and intimate knowledge, I’ve been dreading the Frank Miller-directed movie, The Spirit, which opens on Christmas Day, December 25. Will’s attitude toward the many attempts at making a movie based on “The Spirit” was simple; he loved collecting the annual rights option checks but hated the idea of anyone actually making a movie on his beloved character.

He described the first effort, an ABC television movie of the week, as “cardboard.”

And I don’t think he would ever have approved Frank Miller as a director for The Spirit if it were up to him. Read the book Eisner/Miller and see if you get the impression he would want Frank doing the creative for his pride and joy.

Anyway, I tell you all that as way of introduction to tonight’s guest, Steven Paul Leiva. Several years ago, Leiva worked with Brad Bird in the early stages of development for a Spirit animated film. Bird, of course, is best known for creating and directing The Incredibles.

Unfortunately, I couldn’t get an interview with Bird in time for my Eisner biography so I never learned much about the never finished Spirit animated film. Until early December 2008, that is, when Steven Paul Leiva wrote about the project for the Los Angeles Times. It’s a great story and fills in a major gap in the Eisner cinematic story.

You can LISTEN to this interview with STEVEN PAUL LEIVA, a producer of a proposed THE SPIRIT animated film, by clicking the BlogTalkRadio.com audio player below!



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Wednesday, January 07, 2009

Bill Schelly, MAN OF ROCK: A BIOGRAPHY OF JOE KUBERT author: Mr. Media Interview

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Cover of Cover via AmazonArtist Joe Kubert’s lines are among the most distinctive in the comic book profession, not in the least because there are so many of them!

Kubert’s work is intensely detailed and stylized, whether he’s drawing "Sgt. Rock" from World War II or "Tor" from One Million Years B.C. Fans can spot his product from ten paces the same way that Jack Kirby, Will Eisner, Jim Lee or Frank Miller stand out like quality beacons from the newsstand shelves.

In his new, richly researched book, Man of Rock: A Biography of Joe Kubert, author Bill Schelly takes a long overdue look at the life and career of one of the comic book industry’s most enduring, successful and beloved icons.

You can LISTEN to this interview with BILL SCHELLY, author of MAN OF ROCK: A BIOGRAPHY OF JOE KUBERT, by clicking the BlogTalkRadio.com audio player below!




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Thursday, November 20, 2008

Will Eisner Index to Mr. Media Interviews

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The
Mr. Media
Interviews

By Bob Andelman


Subscribe to Mr. Media in iTunes!


WILL EISNER: A SPIRITED LIFE INTERVIEWS

Michael Uslan
The Dark Knight, Will Eisner’s The Spirit, Batman, Batman Returns, Batman Forever, Batman and Robin, Batman Begins, Catwoman, Constantine, National Treasure, Swamp Thing, Shazam!, The Shadow, Constantine


Deborah Del Prete...
On Frank Miller and Producing “The Spirit” Movie


Steven Paul Leiva
On Brad Bird and trying to produce “The Spirit”animated film


Darwyn Cooke...
On Reviving “The Spirit” for the 21st Century


Paul Fitzgerald, Cindy Jackson and Stuart Henderson...
On Will Eisner & PS Magazine


Howard Chaykin...
On Fighting with Will Eisner


Drew Friedman...
On What’s Wrong With the Biography, Will Eisner:A Spirited Life


Andrew D. Cooke...
On Producing the Documentary, Will Eisner: Portrait of a Sequential Artist


Pete Poplaski...
On Working With Will Eisner, Now and Then


Gary Chaloner...
On Refitting Eisner’s “John Law” Character for the 21st Century


Gary Chaloner Podcast



Bob Andelman...
On Writing the Biography, Will Eisner: A Spirited Life


Benjamin Herzberg...
On Working With Eisner to Craft Fagin the Jew and The Plot”


Ted Cabarga...
On Working With Eisner in the 1960s at PS Magazine


Mike Richardson...
On Publishing Eisner’s Last Day in Vietnam


Denis Kitchen...
On What’s New at Will Eisner Studios


Scott Hampton and Bo Hampton...
On Being Eisner’s Studio Assistants


Abraham Foxman...
On Publishing Prospects for The Plot in the Middle East



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Comic Book Creator Index to Mr. Media Interviews

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The
Mr. Media
Interviews

By Bob Andelman


Subscribe to Mr. Media in iTunes!


COMIC BOOK CREATOR INTERVIEWS

Dave Gibbons
artist, co-creator, “Watchmen”


Mark Wheatley, Robert Tinnell
comics artist, writer, “EZ Street”


Gene Colan
Marvel Comics, Iron Man, Daredevil, Howard the Duck, DC Comics, Batman


Bill Schelly
author, “Man of Rock: A Biography of Joe Kubert”


Mike Gold
ComicMix.com editor


Blake Bell
Strange & Stranger: The World of Steve Ditko, I Have to Live With This Guy!


Darwyn Cooke...
The Spirit


Daniel Pink
The Adventures of Johnny Bunko, Free Agent Nation, A Whole New Mind


Jonathan Riggs
Prism Comics: Your Guide to LGBT Comics, Instinct Magazine


Arie Kaplan
Speed Racer, MAD Magazine


Paul Fitzgerald, Cindy Jackson and Stuart Henderson
Will Eisner & PS Magazine


Danny Fingeroth
Disguised as Superman, Superman on the Couch, Spider-Man Editor


Wendy Pini and Richard Pini
Elfquest; Masque of the Red Death


Pete Von Sholly
Capitol Hell; Morbid


Joe Sinnott
Fantastic Four/Brush Strokes with Greatness


Chuck Dixon
The Simpsons Comics


Peter Kuper
Stop Forgetting to Remember


Trina Robbins
GoGirl!


Drew Friedman
Old Jewish Comedians


Dennis O'Neil
Batman


Mike Richardson
Dark Horse Comics


Aaron Warner
The Adventures of aaron


Jim Lee
Heroes Reborn


David Hajdu
The Ten-Cent Plague: The Great Comic-Book Scare


Howard Chaykin
American Flagg


Gary Chaloner
John Law


Gary Chaloner
John Law Podcast






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Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Movie Director, Producer, Documentary Filmmaker and Screenwriter Index to Mr. Media

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The
Mr. Media
Interviews

By Bob Andelman


Subscribe to Mr. Media in iTunes!


MOVIE DIRECTOR, PRODUCER,
DOCUMENTARY FILMMAKER,
and SCREENWRITERS INTERVIEWS

Dave Gibbons
artist, co-creator, “Watchmen”


Michael Uslan
The Dark Knight, Will Eisner’s The Spirit, Batman, Batman Returns, Batman Forever, Batman and Robin, Batman Begins, Catwoman, Constantine, National Treasure, Swamp Thing, Shazam!, The Shadow, Constantine


Deborah Del Prete
Will Eisner’s The Spirit


Steven Paul Leiva
animated film producer, “The Spirit”


Jim & Maureen Tusty


David Spaltro
indie film writer, director, “…Around”


Gary Scott Thompson
“Knight Rider,” “Las Vegas” show runner, executive producer; The Fast and The Furious, 2 Fast 2 Furious, Hollow Men, Split Second screenwriter


Jeremy Redleaf
“Juneau” Sarah Palin parody


Kyle Schickner
Steam


Paul Hertzberg
CineTel Films


Robbie Cavolina, and Ian McCrudden
Anita O’Day: The Life of a Jazz Singer


Norman Pardo
O.J. Simpson friend, publicist, documentarian


George Motz
Hamburger America


Scott Miles
Little Chicago, Remember the Titans, October Sky, Star Trek Voyager

Chuck Workman and Stephen J. Kern
In Search of Kennedy, Superstar: The Life and Times of Andy Warhol, The Source


Richard Brody
Everything Is Cinema: The Working Life of Jean-Luc Godard


Katy Chevigny
Election Day, Deadline, Arctic Son, Arts Engine, Media That Matters Film Festival


Bob Balaban
Bernard and Doris


David Sington
In the Shadow of the Moon


Bret Carr
RevoLOUtion


Alex Ferrari
Broken


Jules Feiffer
”Feiffer,” Popeye, Carnal Knowledge, The Man in the Ceiling


David Sterritt
author, “The B List”






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Thursday, July 03, 2008

Todd DePastino: BILL MAULDIN: A Life Up Front and WILLIE & JOE: The WWII Years: Mr. Media Interview

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If you were a dog soldier in World War II, there were probably days when the only thing you had to look forward to was the latest issue of Stars & Stripes and the single-panel cartoons of Bill Mauldin.

Mauldin’s adventures of "Willie & Joe" became legendary for the laughs they brought to America’s soldiers – and the contempt they generated in high ranking officers.

Mauldin was the first artist to make a reputation for himself in the military, always signing his name to his work. Soldiers pledged allegiance to the American flag, baseball, apple pie – and the cartoons of Bill Mauldin.

Todd DePastino brings us a triple-dose of Mauldin to the artists’ legion of fans this year, first with his biography, Bill Mauldin: A Life Up Front from W.W. Norton, and second with Willie & Joe: The WWII Years, a collection of the beloved artist’s cartoons, published in a two-volume deluxe set by Fantagraphics.

You can LISTEN to this Mr. Media interview with TODD DePASTINO by clicking the BlogTalkRadio.com audio player below!

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Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Jules Feiffer, EXPLAINERS cartoonist, author: Mr. Media Audio Interview

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The word that comes to mind when I think about the comic strips of Jules Feiffer is this: soliloquy.

My Microsoft Word dictionary - hey, it's convenient! - defines it as “the act of speaking while alone, especially when used as a theatrical device that allows a character’s thoughts and ideas to be conveyed to the audience.”

That sounds about right to me, because the best of Feiffer’s strips – known, incidentally, as “Feiffer” –usually consisted of one character looking at the reader – breaking the so-called fourth wall - and going on for six or eight panels. The results weren’t always funny, but they were always sure to be thought provoking.

This month, Fantagraphics published Explainers, the first of four dense collections of Feiffer’s entire run of weeklies in The Village Voice. This volume of 500 strips is from 1956 through 1966; the strip ran through 1998.

Oh, and he won a Pulitzer Prize for his comic strip, too.

Jules Feiffer is one of comics’ great characters himself. He famously got his start with Will Eisner, creating and drawing a children’s strip called “Clifford” and eventually writing during the last years of “The Spirit”’s original run in the late 1940s and early 1950s.

Besides his long-running strip “Feiffer,” he might be best-known for his children’s work, from illustrating The Phantom Tollbooth and writing the original screenplay for the Robin Williams film, Popeye, to his book The Man in the Ceiling, which is being adapted as a musical by Disney. He also wrote the original screenplay for Carnal Knowledge, starring Jack Nicholson.

Feiffer’s also just completed his memoirs, which will be published in 2009.

I could keep going, but then you’d never get to hear from the man himself.

You can LISTEN to this interview by clicking the BlogTalkRadio.com audio player below!

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Saturday, May 17, 2008

David Hajdu, THE TEN-CENT PLAGUE author: Mr. Media Audio Interview

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Run for your lives!

Hide the women and children!

There’s a Ten-Cent Plague loose upon this fine land!

My guest today, David Hajdu, is the author of a new book that – at the very least – probably has the best title of the year, The Ten-Cent Plague: The Great Comic-Book Scare and How It Changed America.

In this book, Hajdu looks back at a hysterical period in American history – one of many, to be sure – when comic books were considered such a threat to our way of life that the industry nearly vanished.

Hajdu is also the author of Lush Life: A Biography of Billy Strayhorn, and Positively 4th Street: The Lives and Times of Joan Baez, Bob Dylan, Mimi Baez Farina and Richard Farina. He teaches at the Graduate School of Journalism with another friend of the Mr. Media podcast, Sree Sreenivasan – and is the music critic for The New Republic.

You can LISTEN to this interview by clicking the BlogTalkRadio.com audio player below!

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Thursday, May 15, 2008

THE TEN-CENT PLAGUE! Author David Hajdu Live on Mr. Media, Friday, May 16, 1 p.m. EST

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David Hajdu, author of the bestseller The Ten-Cent Plague: The Great Comic-Book Scare and How It Changed America, will be the live guest on the Mr. Media podcast on Friday, May 16 at 1 p.m. EST.

The one-hour show is broadcast live over BlogTalkRadio.com and takes listener calls. There is also an accompanying web chat.

Listeners can catch the interview live - or later as a downloadable archive - by clicking here!



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Wednesday, May 07, 2008

'Spirit' moves up release to Dec. 25! (Hollywood Reporter)

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Samuel L. Jackson, Scarlett Johansson star in the film



By Carolyn Giardina

May 6, 2008, 10:52 PM

Hollywood Reporter


Lionsgate has moved up the nationwide release of its comic adaptation "The Spirit" -- written and directed by Frank Miller -- to Dec. 25.

The film, based on the comic book series created by the late Will Eisner, was originally slated to open Jan. 16, 2009.

Also slated to open on Dec. 25 are Disney's "Bedtime Stories" and Fox 2000 Pictures' "Marley & Me."

Of the move, Lionsgate president of theatrical films Tom Ortenberg said: "Comic-Con fans (in New York in March) resoundingly confirmed what we felt in our bones about 'The Spirit': this is a great film and an irresistible piece of entertainment. ... For all of us, it was an easy decision."

"The Spirit" stars Gabriel Macht, Samuel L. Jackson, Scarlett Johansson, Eva Mendes, Sarah Paulson, Stana Katic, Dan Lauria, Jaime King, Paz Vega and Louis Lombardi. Odd Lot Entertainment and Lionsgate are production partners.

International release dates have not yet been announced. Sony Pictures Releasing International is handling distribution in many European territories and Latin America. Odd Lot International is distributing to the rest of the world, except for the U.K. and Australia, where the film is being released by Lionsgate.











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Sunday, April 20, 2008

Eva Mendes as "Sand Saref" in New The Spirit Movie Poster! (CanMag.com)

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The folks at CanMag.com just put upthis image she signed exclusively at New York Comic-Con from Frank Miller's Will Eisner's The Spirit movie. Not bad!

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Saturday, April 19, 2008

The Spirit Movie Trailer!!! (MTV.com)

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So what do you think? The trailer, not surprisingly, looks quite stylish - a lot like Frank Miller's Sin City, but distinctive nonetheless. But what do you think of the brief interview with Frank Miller that follows it? Why is he dressed as The Spirit? Bright red tie, hat, shirt sleeves pushed up - shouldn't actor Gabriel Macht, who plays The Spirit/Denny Colt, be out there in the costume?

And how about Eva Mendes?

Love to get your comments here!

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Friday, April 18, 2008

New Spirit Movie Poster on AintItCoolNews.com

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Quint was first was with the new poster for Frank Miller's Will Eisner's The Spirit. See what he had to say about it HERE. And as soon as the first trailer posts online, we'll get you the link. Stay tuned!

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Thursday, April 17, 2008

Will Eisner & PS Magazine Discussion LIVE on Mr. Media, Friday, April 18, 1 p.m. EST

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With the announcement last week that Virginia Commonwealth University Libraries has posted complete scans for 145 regular issues, 3 special issues, and 14 index issues of Will Eisner's rare PS Magazine, I thought it would be fun to have the VCU librarian in charge of the project, Cindy Jackson, as well as the author of the upcoming book, Will Eisner & PS Magazine, Paul Fitzgerald, come on Mr. Media and talk about this little known period in the comics master's career.

As Eisner's authorized biographer -- you have read Will Eisner: A Spirited Life by now, haven't you? -- I certainly have a little extra interest in the topic. And with all the hype for Frank Miller's upcoming film, Will Eisner's The Spirit, the time seems extra-ripe for this!

Eisner drew and was artistic editor for PS Magazine from its inception in 1951 until 1972 and these are truly rare examples of his incomparable art work and direction. In an effort to encourage soldiers to keep better care of their equipment, the US Army hired Eisner's American Visuals Corporation to do a digest-sized publication focusing on preventive maintenance. Each issue consisted of a color comic book style cover; eight pages of four color comic continuity story in the middle; and a wealth of technical, safety, and policy information printed in two color.

Won't you join us LIVE on BlogTalkRadio.com this FRIDAY, APRIL 18 at 1 p.m. EST? CLICK HERE: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/mrmedia/2008/04/18/Cindy-Jackson-and-Paul-Fitzgerald-WILL-EISNER-PS-MAGAZINE-VCU-librarian-and-author-Mr-Media and you can participate in a simultaneous web chat or call in and ask the experts your own questions at (646) 595-3135.

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Friday, April 11, 2008

Maxim Magazine Pimps The Spirit Movie Babes

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You can't blame the producers of "Will Eisner's The Spirit" for the avalanche of advance publicity promoting the movie's release - although it is still eight months off. Today I picked up the latest issue of Maxim - which I read for the pictures, not the stories - and the cover photo is of Jaime King, one of the many beautiful actress featured in Frank Miller's upcoming film. And the cover also teases a page of photos of another co-star, Scarlett Johansson.

And let me add this: as his authorized biographer, I can't say whether Will Eisner would have liked Miller's version of The Spirit, considering he always opposed the idea of Hollywood adopting his character. But as man who loved beautiful dames, I think it safe to say he would have approved of Miller's female cast!





















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Wednesday, April 09, 2008

Raging Debate Over Frank Miller's "Interpretation" of Will Eisner's The Spirit

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We hear a lot of whispering about Frank Miller's upcoming cinematic take on Will Eisner's "The Spirit." And with the first trailer due to be released in just a few days at New York Comic-Con, the whispering is picking up steam, especially as the first green screen images were leaked to the fan press a few days ago.

Of course, if you're old enough to remember the brouhaha about Michael Keaton as "Batman," you know it's too early to accurately judge.

On the other hand Brandon Routh as "Superman"? Terribly miscast, poor guy.

Anyway, if you'd like to keep up with the debate - or participate in the conversation - check out this message board over at The Comics Journal. You can also see green screen shots there of Gabriel Macht as The Spirit, Samuel L. Jackson as The Octopus, and several more, including a hot shot of Eva Mendes.























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Saturday, April 05, 2008

The Spirit Movie Countdown Clock! (Get Yours!)

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Monday, March 31, 2008

Danny Fingeroth, DISGUISED AS CLARK KENT, SUPERMAN ON THE COUCH, author, comics editor: Mr. Media Interview, Part 1

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Danny Fingeroth spends a whole lot of time thinking about superheroes.

For several years, he did it as the editor of the Spider-Man group of titles at Marvel Comics. Today, he’s the editor of Write Now! magazine and author of two books that go behind the four-color glory of men in tights.

Already the author of Superman on the Couch, Fingeroth’s latest examination of comics, Disguised as Clark Kent, explores why so many of the enduring characters of the golden and silver ages of comics can trace their heritage back to young American Jewish artists and writers such as Will Eisner, Jerry Siegel, Joe Shuster, Jack Kirby, and Stan Lee.

His next book, Rough Guide to Graphic Novels, will be released by Penguin in 2008.
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ALSO AVAILABLE AS A PODCAST ON iTUNES.


BOB ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: Danny, let’s jump right in. Tell the truth here: Jews aren’t really responsible for the comic book industry, but because we control the media, we can say whatever we want, right?

DANNY FINGEROTH: Well, Mr. Media would know that better than anybody. “Mr. Media” is translated from the Hebrew, I think. Isn’t it in the Bible, I think? Early in Genesis, there’s a mention of the “he who controls all media.”

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: Well, it’s true. And Nostradamus predicted the coming of me also, yes. Quite true. What inspired you to write Disguised as Clark Kent? And before you answer that, I have to say that is a great title.

FINGEROTH: Oh, thank you. We went through about 10 different titles, and when we hit on that, it was one of those things that stares you in the face. You hear that preamble to the “Superman” TV show from the time. You’re pretty literate, basically, just hearing that from the TV show, and I think it was even the preamble to the radio show and just suddenly it popped out, yeah, Disguised as Clark Kent. So the book, it became a very personal thing for me, or it started out as a personal thing and became even more so, which made it, in many ways, more difficult to write than my previous book, Superman on the Couch. And I’ll talk about that if you want later. But the inspiration was really, as you know as Will Eisner’s biographer, when you’re a Jewish guy of a certain age growing up in the New York area as I did, you suddenly realize that the people who created the superheroes, Siegel and Shuster and Lee and Kirby and Irwin Hayes and Arnold Drake, all those guys, Bob Kane, Jerry Robinson, could’ve been my uncles or my father. They were from that same generation and from similar backgrounds in the Bronx and the other boroughs. So on a personal level, I found it fascinating that these comics and these characters that I had loved since I was a child were, in many ways, very much connected to my own personal background.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: It’s funny. And by the way, I’ll make the plugs here. Thank you for mentioning the Eisner biography.

FINGEROTH: Oh, you’re welcome.







ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: But it’s funny you say that because I actually felt that way. I spent about two and a half years with Will working on the book, and I couldn’t help shaking that he seemed very much like one of my uncles.

FINGEROTH: Right.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: I’m from New York/New Jersey myself. And the way he spoke, his point of reference, it was all very familiar. So, yeah, I get that entirely. Were you at all influenced in the timing of this by Michael Chabon’s novel, The Adventures of Kavalier & Clay?

FINGEROTH: Well, when you say the timing, I’m not sure…

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: Well, that had to come out first.

FINGEROTH: Alright. Well, it certainly was an interesting take on it. So I’d say that was always in my mind, but even though there, I think, are some quotes or interviews that he did with Stan Lee and Gil Kane, that was a work of fiction. And ultimately, while I love that book, I think while much of it is set against the backdrop of the comic book industry, it’s ultimately about a lot of other things. He’s that kind of novelist. He’s got this imagination that just reaches all over the place.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: And I hate him for it, personally.

FINGEROTH: You have to hate a guy like that. Like I said, I think maybe it made me aware that there was an audience that might be interested in the topic because, if it was just a personal memoir, then I would just keep it in my diary or, I guess, these days in a blog. It’d just be between me and 2 million of my closest friends. But I think it was an interesting parallel history to the well-known histories of comics, and yet I saw all these nuggets in there that certainly were not there intentionally in the stories. But from our vantage point of the 21st century, we can sort of look back and interpret certain things in the work.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: I know, in my case, in reading Kavalier & Clay, and the reason I thought of it was, even working with Will, I hadn’t really thought so much about how predominant Jewish voices were in the comics, and that kind of brought it to a head because even though it’s fiction, there’s a big nugget of truth in the history that’s presented in that book. I was kind of curious along that line.

FINGEROTH: I think having worked in the business for so long -- I started working at Marvel in 1977. On the one hand, the industry certainly has that classic kind of Godfather movie, New York ethnic, early 20th century immigrant mix of Jews, Italian, and Irish-descended people, but certainly in the comics, everybody of every race and background was represented, but still it clearly seemed that most of the companies and much of the staff in those early days were from Eastern European/Jewish backgrounds.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: One of the theories that you put forth is that Jews wound up there because, and all kidding aside about controlling the media, they couldn’t get jobs anywhere else.

FINGEROTH: Well, I think there were a couple of houses that were known as Jewish houses, but mostly, publishing was pretty much closed off to Jews as was advertising. Again, from a vantage point of the present day, it seems almost like an alternate dimension or something. Although it’s close in history and although a lot of the early creators are still with us and many of them still active, it still is just a quantum distance in terms of what social boundaries people couldn’t cross.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: And I’m going to try very hard to make this my last Will Eisner reference.

FINGEROTH: Let’s talk about Eisner the whole time.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: No, no, no, no. That would be pushing the line, I think. But one of the things that he had said to me, and I think he said it to other people in talking about that time was that, yes, Jewish writers and artists could get work in comics, but today, we hold it in some esteem cause it’s more of an adult medium than it was then, but then, as he put it, it was “just one step below pornographers,” working in it.

FINGEROTH: Even today, if you go to a movie or watch a TV show and they want to indicate that somebody is socially maladjusted or just an idiot, what do they do? They have them reading a comic book, or -- I’ve noticed this a lot in TV dramas lately -- very often the killer in a “CSI” or something or in a “Law and Order” will be a comic creator, and either he’s really the killer or he’s suspected of being the killer because he’s so screwed up because he’s a comics creator. So I think even though…

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: But those guys are never Jewish.

FINGEROTH: There’s sort of that TV kind of could-be-anything-looking and name. But even today, that stigma of comics is still there. So even with Maus and all of Will’s later work and Persepolis and all those things that have allegedly brought respect to comics, it’s still short-hand with somebody either being stupid or crazy in most other media. And that’s how we like it.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: Well, you know. Did you find when you were at Marvel that it was still profession-dominated in some ways by Jews, or did that change by the late ‘70s and ‘80s?

FINGEROTH: I think the ownership was still -- whether by chance or I think more by chance -- a traditional kind of Jewish media executive. But I’d say in the rank and file of the writers and editors, it had become the kind of thing where people would travel to New York the way people would go to Hollywood to be in the movies, whereas in Eisner’s day and the ‘30s, ‘40s, ‘50s, it was really a local phenomenon. I think it was probably 90 percent of the people in the business were from New York or were living in New York when they got into it Whereas, I think, starting in the ‘70s with the advent of the fan turning pro, I think people would come to New York from the Midwest and from the South and from other countries to pursue a career in comics just the way they might come to pursue a career in fashion or in finance. I think it started to change in that era, which is also when things like advertising and publishing had, by that point, become much more open to Jews to get into.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: One of the things that you picked up on, which I found fascinating over the last few years, is that a lot of these early comics guys all went to the same high school, DeWitt Clinton. Being from that area, did you know anything about that going into this, and what did you learn about that school?

FINGEROTH: It’s funny. I went to Bronx Science, which was like the next subway stop after DeWitt Clinton. Clinton was an all-boys’ school so there were no girls around to distract the guys, and I think if you lived in the Bronx, you lived above whatever street, that was pretty much where you went. Now I can’t figure out if in the era when Stan Lee and Will Eisner and Bob Kane went there if you had to take some kind of a test to get in. I never thought you did, but then things I’ve read indicate that maybe there was. But, in any case, the Bronx was the next stop after the Lower East Side. If you had developed a little bit of savings and a little bit of upward mobility as an immigrant or as the children of immigrants, you would take the subway up to the wide open spaces of the Grand Concourse and then in other less luxurious neighborhoods in the Bronx. These guys went to that school, I think, just by chance. It was really just the local high school. It’s phenomenal, not just comics guys but Lerner and Lowe and Rodgers and Hammerstein, Dan Schorr from NPR. If you go to their alumni page, it’s phenomenal who went there.







ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: As you were saying that, I was just trying to look up in the back of the Eisner book the list that I had. The guy who wrote “Singin’ in the Rain” went there, and yeah, it’s phenomenal. I wish that I could say that my high school in New Jersey turned out anything like that. Oh, here, I found the list. I’m just gonna bore people with this for a second – James Baldwin, Avery Fisher, Ralph Lauren, Burt Lancaster, Richard Rodgers, Neil Simon, A.M. Rosenthal from The New York Times, Paddy Chayefsky, Daniel Schorr, Fats Waller, Jen Murray, Avery Corman, David Archibald, Judd Hirsch from “Taxi,” Stubby Kaye, there’s a lost name, Don Adams from Get Smart, Martin Balsam, Arthur Gelb, also from The New York Times, Gary Marshall, the producer, father of Penny Marshall.

FINGEROTH: No, no, it’s father or brother? I think brother.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: Is it brother?

FINGEROTH: Yeah.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: Alright, brother. Bernard Kalb, the journalist, Bruce Jay Friedman, novelist and father of Drew Friedman, cartoonist, and of course, Stan Lee. It’s just a phenomenal thing.

FINGEROTH: There must’ve been something about the school, I imagine, that encouraged creative activity as well. That would be something that you or I or somebody would maybe need to do research or see if, compared to other high schools in the city, they were receptive. I know Eisner and Kane, I think, were on, I forget if it was the school paper or the yearbook. I’ve heard different reports of that, but certainly, there were avenues for them to utilize their creative abilities of painting backdrops for plays and so on.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: And the reality was they were all just doing it to get closer to girls.

FINGEROTH: At DeWitt Clinton? Oh, doing the creative stuff? Yes, that’s true, of course.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: That was a boys’ school.

FINGEROTH: That goes without saying.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: But, no, it was all an outlet. Obviously, there were no girls.

FINGEROTH: Well, there was a sister school called Walton High School. I’ve never seen the alumni roster there, but it wouldn’t surprise me if there was a fairly impressive list of women who went there.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: See, at those same-sex schools, you create all that sexual frustration.

FINGEROTH: Right, exactly!

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: It pours out in different ways. Danny, tell us a little bit about how you came to the theories that you did. Just the title, Disguised as Clark Kent. And for folks who haven’t seen the cover, it’s very cool. You have this immigrant family, and then you’ve drawn -- I don’t think it’s officially Superman, but clearly…

FINGEROTH: It is not. It is definitely not Superman. It is a…

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: A Supermanish character.

FINGEROTH: Yes. It’s the same character that was on the cover of Superman on the Couch but with a different chest insignia.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: Tell us a little bit about how you kind of came to the theories that you did for this book in connecting the superhero to these very mild-mannered, young, Jewish/Eastern European immigrants.

FINGEROTH: Well, it has to do with what Jules Feiffer has written about and other people - the idea that if you come to another country as an immigrant, you live at least a dual identity. You have your life at home where you speak possibly a foreign language that your parents may have mostly spoken, and then there’s that life with your family and your culture from the old country. And then there’s this desire to fit into the American melting pot and to really become part of the mainstream.

As Chabon says in Kavalier & Clay, who else but a Jew would come up with the name “Clark Kent”? It’s such a purposely bland kind of name. So you have your life at home, your life in school with the idea being that you feel like you have all this secret knowledge and secret power, and yet you don’t want to excel. There’s the immigrant urge to excel, and yet the fear of being singled out and being discriminated against because of excelling. It’s the whole secret identity where everybody thinks, “If only people knew why I seem like a jerk, they’d understand,” or, “If only people knew the secret power that I’m just too responsible to unleash on them.” So it plays to fantasies that are specifically immigrant but then have become universal, and it also has to do with the ability of an immigrant and especially, I think, the Jewish immigrants in the ‘30s and ‘40s to look at a culture they come into and kind of reflect back to it, its image of itself. That’s sort of the whole Jewish thing with being prominent in entertainment. I think it’s traditionally immigrant groups in general that bring a new, fresh idea for entertainment cause they can reflect the dominant culture back to itself.







ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: Boy, I’m tempted to ask you; I don’t know if I want to. We have this whole discussion these days about immigrants and their place in the United States. As you look back on all this and all that these immigrants brought, how do you feel about the current debate?

FINGEROTH: I think it’s the same thing repeats itself. America, with all its flaws, is still pretty much regarded as the best place on the planet, and people want to come here. And then people who are already here want to close the door after themselves.

One advantage that, say, the European immigrants in general and the Jewish immigrants in particular had was they may have had certain ethnic, physical characteristics, but essentially, they looked like Americans. They could generally pass, as the saying goes, whereas people whose ancestors came here as slaves or Native Americans or anybody with a different skin color had to deal with that whole other element of racial prejudice. And I think that goes on today where America is totally schizophrenic about that. We’re founded on this immigrant ethic, but everybody who’s here wants to close the door after them and not let the next group in. But the next group always has something to contribute. If you go to comics conventions now, the teenage kids who are bursting with talent bring you around their portfolios, many of them Asian, many of them Mexican, just from all different groups. I think that still the contribution of the immigrant is still alive, and the debate over it will never die because I think it’s human nature. You get to a place, and then you go, “Okay, close the door now, I’m here, so tough luck everybody else.” It’s that constant struggle.

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