Posts Tagged ‘Meltcast’


Meltcast 43: Mark Sable, False Start’s Meredith Wallace, Zines, Kickstart Comics, The Boys, Casanova and some Namor love

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We’re down two men as Caleb is a prisoner of the legal system, while the Hammer is in aerial transit. However, we’re picked up by returning fave Mark Sable (writer: Two-Face: Year One, Grounded, Unthinkable, Hazed), and False Start ‘zine proprietress Meredith Wallace (http://www.false-start.com/). Meredith talks about how the web introduced her to DIY/Feminist ‘zine culture, how she started False Start after college, and some of her recent favorites, like INVINCIBLE SUMMER, ALABAMA GIRL #9, & LOVE LETTERS TO MONSTERS #3. Mark enlightens us on his new ventures with Kickstart Comics (and Kickstart’s unique distribution model), which begin with his new comic RIFT RAIDERS w/artist Julian Totino Tedesco (out in comic shops mid-October, pre-order today!).

The show then delves to the deep as Chris tells tales of the Avenging Son thanks to The Sub-Mariner’s new series debut- NAMOR: THE FIRST MUTANT - we discuss King Namor’s history, past series, and the first bromance of the Marvel U with Mr. Macenzie and Doc Doom. We rise from the depths to tackle STUMPTOWN #4, THE BOYS, BATTLEFIELDS, as well as Matt Fraction’s CASANOVA.

Music: Thrice – Open Water / Norma Jean – Leaderless and Self-Enlisted

Meltcast 41: Bruce Wayne, Steve Rogers, Alan Moore, 90′s Bat books, D&D, Avengers and a little Gaga

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We’re brimming with comics goodness today as we break down the new direction of the Bat books (especially BATMAN INC.), compare and contrast the return of Bruce Wayne versus the resurrection of Steve Rogers. We also talk 90′s Bat books, AZRAEL, X-MEN: THE DARK PHOENIX SAGA, Wheden and Cassiday’s ASTONISHING X-MEN, the crew’s personal histories with the X-Men, Chris Claremont, SUPER PRO K.O. by Jarrett Williams, ULTIMATE AVENGERS 3 #1, DUNGEONS & DRAGONS #1, EMERALD WARRIORS #1, UNWRITTEN vol. 2, and THANOS IMPERATIVE #3.

Then we tackle a whole mess of Alan Moore books: ANOTHER SUBURBAN ROMANCE, THE COURTYARD & THE COURTYARD COMPANION, LIGHT OF THY COUNTENANCE and A SMALL KILLING, followed by a discussion of AVENGERS: CHILDREN’S CRUSADE #1, the underratedness of artist Jacen Burrows, absolute format vs. omnibus format, and Marvel Essentials. PLUS! Sam’s comic writing secret origin?

Whew!

Music: Lady Gaga – Poker Face / The Almost – Say This Sooner
Intro: Notorious B.I.G. Who Shot Ya? (remix) + Project 86 The Butcher


Meltcast SDCC Edition: Comic Con 2010 Prt.1

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We kick off our first COMIC-CON 2010 Morning After bonanza by getting down and dirty before friday’s festivities by recapping Chris & Caleb’s con adventures thus far, are wowed by passing costumes and creatures, and get a special visit by BOOM! Editor Bryce Carlson.

The weekend is officially on!

Music: Collective Soul – Simple

Meltcast 030: Peter Murrieta, Nicole Campos, Walking Dead TV series and WTF is Minorites in Matchbooks?

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The Meltcast welcomes two new members to the team – Pop Culture Bon Vivant and Contributor for LA Weekly, Nicole Campos, and Emmy-award winning writer & producer Peter Murrieta (Wizards of Waverly Place, Hope & Faith) – while welcoming back Sam “The Hammer” Humphries from the injured list!  We discuss Peter’s Improv show, The Murrieta Gang, now running at the Bang Theater, the problems translating comics to other media, the upcoming Walking Dead TV series and its implications for comics, and coin a new phrase: ‘Minorities in Matchbooks”

MELTCAST, LIVE TONIGHT! COME AIR YOUR GRIEVANCES.

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Broadcasting live and direct from Meltdown Comics in Hollywood, Meltcast will tape their “GRIEVANCES EPISODE“. Got something to say about the comics industry? Need to vent? Come down from 7-10pm and have your voice be heard.
Meltcast on Itunes.

An Introduction: What Is The Meltcast And Why Does It Call CoolsvilleComics.com Home?

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Well, that first part is easy. The Meltcast is a comics podcast. It’s the brainchild of Chris Rosa, recorded every Wednesday at the renowned Meltdown Comics on Sunset Blvd in LA. Aaron Brewer handles the technical stuff on the recording side, and Francisco handles the technical stuff on the web side. Me, I basically just show up and run my mouth.

Why this particular web address is actually a pretty cool (ba-dum-BUM!) story. Season 19, episode 7 of The Simpsons, “Husbands And Knives” features a story where a new comic shop comes to town. Episode writer Matt Selman has been a long-time Meltdown customer, along with many others of The Simpsons creative family, and they based the hip new shop (Coolsville Comics) on Meltdown. Here’s what Selman had to say about it:

[T]he Springfield kids are sick of Comic Book Guy’s abuse, but he’s got the only store in town. Until — a new comic book store opens across the street, run by a NICE comic book guy. The kids embrace the hip, friendly, fun comic book guy, voiced by Jack Black [A Meltdown shopper in his own right! See MMHR #4 -The Editor], and Comic Book Guy goes nuts.

The new comic book store, called Coolsville, was inspired by an actual store in Hollywood called Meltdown [C]omics. Meltdown was a real breath of fresh air for comic shoppers weary of dusty old stores with only mainstream superhero stuff, endless boxes of back issues, and Punisher t-shirts. Meltdown embraced alternative comics, international comics, crazy toys, children’s books — a whole new universe of visual pop creativity. One day, when I was shopping there, I thought, Bart would love this place. And, he did.

You can read Selman’s full annotations to the episide at TIME.com’s Techland blog here, here and here. Thanks, Matt! Another interesting tidbit: Dan Clowes, who appears in the episode, drew the original Meltdown and Baby Melt logos. The awesome version of Mel in the header above is done by Carl Jones.

Just like Coolsville, we hope to bring a breath of fresh air by making the podcast that only we can make.

We have big plans for the Meltcast. Big plans. We may be a little garage, a little DIY, a little punk, a little rough around the edges right now, but we put it up for you to listen to anyway. Every week.

Which makes our webdress doubly appropriate. Because I don’t think anyone watched those crude original Simpsons shorts that aired on The Tracey Ullman Show in 1987 saw the phenomenal Rozz-Tox juggernaut they would become. But I like to think Matt Groening and James L. Brooks knew it was there.

To paraphrase Lady Gaga: we’re already huge, just nobody knows it yet.