Mystery postcards highlighting comics gender issues hit mailboxes — SOLVED

104 Comments POSTED ON Jun 14 2011 AT 12:33 pm BY The Beat

We've heard from some of our pals in the comics industry that they have received two anonymous postcards -- both postmarked in Chicago -- with various statistics on gender disparity in the comics industry. One highlights problems with the materials:

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The happiest LADY cartoonists of all time?

1 Comment POSTED ON Jun 13 2011 AT 12:50 pm BY The Beat

A few years ago we pointed you at a 1950 Life Magazine spread that included various NCS cartoonists happily scribbling on swimwear covered models. Well, in the spirit of that shoot, but also to show how times have changed in 61 years, the Sequential Arts Workshop has updated these images with Ball Point Boxers which finds cartoonists Sara Varon, Leela Corman, Joan Reilly, Emily Flake, Hilary Allison and Jungyeon Roh recreating the stunt, this time with male boxers from Gleason's Gym.

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X-MEN: FIRST CLASS, race and gender

11 Comments POSTED ON Jun 10 2011 AT 10:55 am BY The Beat

For a movie about mutants, X-MEN FIRST CLASS has led to a lot of interesting discussion. Set in the '60s -- a time of great social change and timeless fashions -- filmmakers Matthew Vaughn and Jane Goldman had more on their mind than just fighting.

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Chinese prisoners forced to play World of Warcraft for money

2 Comments POSTED ON May 27 2011 AT 5:02 pm BY The Beat

It's a new style of pimping. Instead of selling their bodies, or busting their backs digging ditches, some Chinese prisoners are forced to play World of Warcraft and pass the winnings on to cruel prison guards.

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To do: Marvels and Monsters

1 Comment POSTED ON May 27 2011 AT 3:04 pm BY The Beat

With all the talk about comics and racial stereotypes, this show running at NYU sounds like a must see. MARVELS AND MONSTERS looks at images of Asians in comics from the stereotyping of World War II through to the 80s. Curator Jeff Yang has some installation in progress photos on his Facebook Page. Sadly we missed the opening talk and reception last night but it looks to be a very comprehensive show, looking at different stereotypical roles including The Alien, the Kamikaze, the Brute, the Lotus Blossom, the Guru, the Brain, the Temptress, and the Manipulator. How well we know all those. The show runs until August 19th. Deets below:

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Wonder Woman: What happened and why she is wearing shorts

68 Comments POSTED ON May 24 2011 AT 8:05 am BY The Beat

Since the announcement that Wonder Woman pilot had not made NBC's schedule, there has been no dearth of analysis about what it says about Wonder Woman, about us, about women, about...EVERYTHING, dammit. The Wonder Woman pilot getting dropped may just be the most significant event of our time! First off, a picture of the variant "shorts" costume has been making the rounds. Would showing a bit more thigh have tipped the balance for the show? Probably not. With Wonder Woman nothing can ever, ever be simple.

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Can you be a hot girl AND a nerd?

99 Comments POSTED ON May 05 2011 AT 4:00 pm BY The Beat

Now that Nerd Culture is just regular Culture, thanks to the Internet, you'd think everything would have been settled, but there are still some skirmishes going on. And only this week a new mini-ruckus erupted and oddly enough, it was among the girls. Now, one of the GOOD things about the internet is that it has allowed girl geeks to be just as proud and out as boy geeks and to, indeed, show that they like geek stuff, something that was doubted for a long time. Speaking as a lifelong nerd myself, I can testify that back in the neolithic age of nerditry, if you had girls genes you were not taken seriously as a comics fan, wrestling fan, Star Wars fan, or anything else that boys thought was just for them. Oh, the looks I got when I said I had read Robert E. Howard. For a long time, I felt like I was the only one. In fact while I was at WonderCon, I was chatting to Sergio Aragones about the olden days and he said, "Remember when you were the only girl?" and I could only laugh in agreement.

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What the critics are saying about Paying For It

11 Comments POSTED ON Apr 11 2011 AT 12:22 pm BY The Beat

Chester Brown's PAYING FOR IT is destined to be one of the most talked about graphic novels of the year -- we'd suspect it may be THE most talked about. It's a great work of comics that is nonetheless problematic for the views it espouses about human relationships and commerce. Just in case you aren't sitting on the edge of your seat waiting for the book to come out, PAYING FOR IT is a memoir by Chester Brown about his experiences employing prostitutes. Brown's previous works include such masterworks as I NEVER LIKED YOU, ED THE HAPPY CLOWN and the historical narrative LOUIS RIEL, which is considered an important political work in Brown's native Canada. As one of the pioneers of the most successful schools of autobiographical comics, Brown is a major figure of the art comix era.

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Scott Adams argues as well as he draws

24 Comments POSTED ON Mar 25 2011 AT 5:53 pm BY The Beat

Scott Adams is the author of the very popular workplace comic strip Dilbert. Although its humor is very accurate for those trapped in cubicle hell, it has also been held up over the years as an example of, er, declining standards in comic strip art. Still, it is very popular, a frequent object of refrigerator adornment and the books sell very well. Scott Adams also has a blog. And one day he was asking what he should write about, and some men's rights activists suggested that as a topic, (do these guys have a name, like Man Firsters?) so he wrote about men's rights. After he'd posted his little piece, he didn't much like the comments he was getting, so he took it down. For some reason.

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Why isn’t Jane Goldman a guest at Kapow!?

38 Comments POSTED ON Mar 23 2011 AT 10:00 am BY The Beat

This post by Kirsty Walker rounds up all the evidence FOR the upcoming KA-POW comics convention in London being a total sausage fest -- all the guests, award nominees and face time people are men.

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Beating around SXSW Interactive

1 Comment POSTED ON Mar 11 2011 AT 2:18 pm BY Jen Vaughn

Austin's South By South West has long been hailed THE place to play your new Renaissance-powered noise band or screen your documentary on the failings of mankind. As a former Austinite myself, I know the activity of the town pulses as if the city itself is running a marathon. The University of Texas students are off on Spring Break allowing for a different sort of tourist to take their spaces at the taco carts, oddly-named bars (hello, Mooseknuckle) and marvel at the bats of Congress Bridge.

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Until the answer is yes, we must never stop asking

41 Comments POSTED ON Mar 08 2011 AT 8:00 am BY The Beat

It's international Women's Day, yo. To celebrate, let's watch this video of Judi Dench (M) interrogating Daniel Craig (uh, James Bond) who appears in drag. "We're equals, aren't we, 007?" asks Dame Dench. Let's also look at the day in nerd gender relations. There was much tweeting yesterday about the new TCJ.com and the number of lady contributors. Melinda Beasi at Manga Bookshelf sums up the whole thing, and the comments have it out and then everyone sat down and ate a hearty lunch.

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Comics finally make The Daily Show — anti-jihadist comics, that is

14 Comments POSTED ON Mar 02 2011 AT 2:37 pm BY The Beat

Last night Bosch Fawstin, the former-Muslim-turned-ant-jihadist crusader, was quizzed on the Daily Show regarding his alarm over Nightrunner, Batman's parkour-practicing Muslim French sidekick. Aasif Mandvi does the interviewing, and he also gets Chris Sims (one 'm') from Comics Alliance to explain what's happening from a comics blogger point of view.

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Comics and porn connect in Vegas

11 Comments POSTED ON Jan 22 2011 AT 10:00 am BY The Beat

It's strange, I suppose, to find a show so entrenched in geek culture as CES almost completely devoid of comics influence, only to discover a porn show roughly three miles away swimming in the stuff.

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Never forget

5 Comments POSTED ON Jan 17 2011 AT 4:00 pm BY The Beat

Obviously, DC doesn't want to risk losing the dollars of its core audience in the hopes of gaining a broader selection of readers. What if those new readers don't come? Hey, that’s a serious and valid question. Money isn't exactly pouring in. Taking a risk is scary when a comic selling 25,000 copies is considered a solid book. And so...you do nothing. You make awkward jokes when fans ask questions at cons. You put minority characters who rarely appear in big pose down images as if they are an integral part of the story. You hope to keep complaints from both sides to a very low rumbling.

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