Category: Comic Show
Comic Conventions: Todd McFarlane to Appear at Comikaze Expo!
His groundbreaking artwork on Marvel’s Spider-man and Venom turned him into a household name. His creation of Spawn, formation of his own toy company and achievements as an animation filmmaker made him a comic book superstar.
Meet Todd McFarlane, Founder and President of Image Comics, Creator of Spawn and iconic industry entrepreneur Saturday only for a limited signing engagement in West Hall and panel with Stan Lee and friends on the Hot Topic Main Stage.
| Plan your show PANELS, SURVIVAL GUIDE, SIGNING AND PHOTO SCHEDULES with the Comikaze Expo – Buy Tickets Survival Guide! |
| Find out about how you can pick up your badge early (A ticket gets you a badge! A badge gets you in!), the new layout of the hall and other tips and tricks to make sure you have the best Comikaze possible. Check the webiste to see the full signing and photo schedule, as well as a complete list of panels.
The Comikaze Expo Survival Guide will help you get the absolute most out of your Comikaze Expo experience! Plus…Save money on gas and parking when you sign up for LYFT! Use code word COMIKAZE for a FREE ride (up to $20) to the L.A. Convention Center! |
Long Beach Comic Con 2014 Review & Photos
Las Vegas Comic Expo 2013: Convention Report
Here’s my “photo” report from this September’s inaugural Las Vegas Comic Expo held at the Rivera Hotel in Las Vegas, Nevada.
1. The Floor
The convention was held in the distinctly older Riviera casino and the show floor and parking area show it’s age. Thankfully the set-up and floor space were done to allow maximum space between booths and tables so there was no back-up that lasted significantly.
Ticketing pick-up took longer than expected and the lack of volunteers and staff did prolong wait and show information. The overall experience though was successful in that you can readily figure out the location and spots of the booths and artists you were looking for since the space isn’t enormous and the wait times to meet creators didn’t stretch hours like SDCC. The longest wait both Saturday and Sunday was for Jason Scott Campbell who continually had a long line but was significantly faster moving than at other conventions I’ve seen him at (see the line photos below for JSC).
- Chrissie Zullo
- JG Jones x2
- Mark Brooks
- Stephane Roux
- Len Wein
- Eric Basaldua
- Adam Hughes
2. Creators- Part 2
- Carlos Pagulayan
- Stephen Segovia
- Philip Tan
- Jay Anacleto
- Simon Bisley working on a Venom sketch
- Tim Bradstreet
Long Beach Comic & Horror Convention 2012: Convention Report
Here is the report for the 4th Annual Long Beach Comic & Horror Convention held in Long Beach, California 2013.
A fun convention with the ability to interact with the creators in a more personal, less-heavy traffic convention compared to San Diego Comic Con. Attendance seemed a little lower this year than last year with the possibility of the Con being held after Halloween this year and also not being part ofa “Zombie Walk” that Long Beach held last year to try and break a record.
A few non-returning creators such as David Finch, Bob Layton, etc. also meant a few less artists to drive fans on attending both Saturday and Sunday. My eye spotted less buyers as well unless a booth had 50% off trades or the one 50 cent back issue booth which stayed packed.
Purchasing your tickets in advance allowed you to get a free copy of Creator Owned Heroes by Jimmy Palmiotti and Steve Niles with a special Long Beach Con cover by Amanda Conner as well as a 30 minute early admittance to the convention on Saturday.
Photo Report Review! Images are called out clock-wise.
A. The convention and cosplayers.
- The line to get in the comic convention which is at the bottom floor at the Long Beach Convention Center with panels on the main floor. There was an indoor garden expo happening that same weekend.
- Thundercat’s Cheetarah and Pumyra
- Lady Punishers x2
- Walking Dead-type Zombie
- She-Ra
- Baroness and Ms. Marvel
- Stilt-Waking Spider-Lady with Dr. Who and Angel Baseball Fan
- JonBoy Meyers (G.I. Joe, Hulk)
- Tim Vigil (Faust)
- Bernard Chang (Deadpool, Wonder Woman)
- Trent Kaniuga (Creed, Ghost Rider, Twilight Monk)
- Amanda Conner (Silk Spectre, Power Girl)
- Tommy Yune (Speed Racer, Robotech) being interviewed
- Jon Bogdanove (Superman, Power Pack)
Stan Lee’s Comikaze Expo 2013: Convention Report
Here’s my quick recap and “photo” report from this past weekend’s “Stan Lee’s Comikaze Expo” for 2013.
A lot bigger than last year’s “parking garage” set-up at the LA Convention Center from 2012. More A-list comic creators such as McFarlane, JS Campbell, McKone, Tony Moore, etc. from 2012 which continued this year with Marc Silvestri, J. Scott Campbell, Chris Burnham, Joe Jusko and others as well as the usual mid-tier celebs hawking expensive autographs.
Captions will be listed in semi left-to-right reading order.
1. The lines and entry to the event.
Parking was a lot easier if you got in via the back of the center. Long lines for pre-purchasers, heard almost that it stretched half-way around the convention center outside in one of the hottest days of the Summer in LA.
The security lines got long, but still, the con-goers were cool and didn’t cause any issues with the waiting.
Images of the main stage during the masquerade contest.
1. Jason Scott Campbell. Selling prints and sketch books. Commented on my Deadpool Kills the Marvel Universe reprints with his cover that it was the first time he’s seen it out.
3. Marc Silvestri doing an interview. Super-long wait since everyone and their dogs wanted a photo with him. So many statues signed.
4. Joe Benitez getting his Lady Mechanika books ready.
5. An artist doing a really super-fast robot sketches, Megatron.
6. Transformer artist Livio Ramiodelli.
1. Batman’s Adam West checking out the comic aisles.
2. Catwoman, Julie Newmar signing for fans. Had on cat ears!
4. Sean Patrick Flannery
Convention Report: San Diego Comic Con 2012
Here’s my photo bomb report that was San Diego Comic Con 2012. A fun convention that has become too big for its own good and is quickly losing its “comic” convention heritage in favor of media conglomerates.
*Photo descriptions noted from top-down, left-to-right…
1. The line and convention center.
-Line to get into the Main Hall
-Image Comics booth
-Outside of convention view from the Hilton
2. The Artists 1
– Frank Cho (Liberty Meadows, Mighty Avengers)
– Mark Schultz (Xenozoic Tales/Cadillacs and Dinosaurs)
– Jock (Judge Dredd, Detective Comics)
– CP Wilson III (Stuff of Legend)
– David Mack (Kabuki, Daredevil)
3. The Artists 2
– Jim Balent (Catwoman, Tarot)
– Kevin Eastman (TMNT, Heavy Metal)
– Peter Nguyen (Gotham City Sirens, Arkham City)
– Brent Anderson (Astro City)
– Dan Jurgens (Superman, Booster Gold)
– Serigo Aragones (Groo, MAD)
– Steve Leialoha (Fables, Spider-Woman)
4. The Artists 3
– J. Scott Campbell (Gen13, Spider-Man)
– Larry Hama (GI Joe, Wolverine)
– William Tucci (Shi, Sgt. Rock)
– Herbe Trimpe (Hulk, GI Joe)
– Trevor Von Eeden (Batman, Black Lightning)
… and on the last few minutes on Sunday at the con, a very tired Francis Manapul (The Flash, 7 Warriors) along with Agnes Garbowska (You, Me and Zombie).
5. The Ladies 1
– Star Trek girl made-up to look like Frank Cho’s SDCC print (@ Cho’s booth)
– Star Trek girl & bad Mary Marvel.
– Power Girl
– Harley Quinn
6. The Ladies 2
– Batgirl
– Emma Frost
– Lady Deadpool & Mompool
– Magik
– Catwoman
– Lady Thor’ess
– Steampunk Lara Croft
– Tat’d Booth Lady
– Elle Driver (California Mountain Snake) from Kill Bill
– Katniss from Hunger Games
Long Beach Comic & Horror Convention 2011 Review
Mark Waid (The Flash, Irredeemable)- Did signings at Hero Initiative on Saturday and for a couple hours at his booth on Sunday. He was hosting a writing panel as well. Nice gentleman and I pretty much got his signature on all my D.C. comics I had of his in my collection.
Here are my humble suggestions:
1. More publishers! Apart from Top Cow & IDW, there were none of the other big name houses in attendance. Where was Dark Horse, DDP, Archie, Bongo, Valiant, Image and most importantly Marvel & DC? In order to try and establish the show as a preeminent comic book convention in the U.S., LBCC will need to get more support from the big dogs. Some of the publisher’s top artists already set-up booths, so why not have the pubs truck their booths from SDCC and set-up in Long Beach as well? Would love to get signings from Geoff Johns and Jim Lee at a D.C. booth, Joe Q. and Lenil Francis Yu at a Marvel booth.
2. Cosplay is one of the big draws to a convention, look how it exploded at SDCC and also how gigantic Anime Expo is with cosplay? Well LBCC is smack dab in the middle location of both of them (with AX in L.A.), so why not ramp up the promotion of the event? The masquerade inaugural ball this year was a good step, too bad it was starting one hour AFTER the convention hall closed so unless people were going to hang out for an hour they left. It would be nice to had greeters telling people at the door when the convention was closing that the masquerade ball was happening still to help remind them. Invite the “key” name cosplayers to attend the event and have them in panels, copy how the new Comikaze event is having Yaya Han at their show.
3. Bring in MORE comic book dealers. Make it a priority presence to keep increasing the dealer booths, bring in modern dealers, TPB/HC resellers, manga, CGC and old-school comic dealers to attract the different niche collectors.
4. Where are the original art dealers? One of the things I liked at this year’s SDCC were the many OA dealer booths where you could peruse artwork and purchase them from a wide range of periods and artists. At LBCC there were none apart from the artists selling their own OA pages. Bring in some OA dealers and combine the comic book experience.
5. Add more check-in booths for pre-registered ticker buyers. Don’t keep people waiting in line longer than 15 mins. Trying to get their badge or you’ll turn off their giddiness by waiting in line for so long. I’ve read reviews from first-time attendees and they’re not coming back because they were so turned off by the line and wait time on Saturday.
San Diego Comic Con 2011 (Sunday) Report & Review
Bill Sienkiewicz- Again also didn’t know he would be there and had no books on me.
Long Beach Comic Expo 2011 Event Review
The Long Beach Comic Expo is indeed a small comic convention, it doesn’t use the main convention center’s ballroom (compared to the regular Long Beach Comic Con) and actually the event is held in one of the side banquet rooms. Even though the room and Expo event wasn’t gigantic by any means, the room was packed and by noon you could expect to bump into people while traversing the aisles or going through comic long boxes.
I originally thought that since the convention hall was small that I would be out of there in less than an hour… I ended up spending most of the day there mostly checking out the artist area and a few comic booths. You could actually walk through and see all the booths in about 10 minutes if you wanted to at a brisk pace.
This is a comic-related focused event, and unlike the LBCC or Wizard World Anaheim shows, there were no “celebrities” manning booths here. Booths were primarily comic-oriented with a good amount of golden/silver/bronze age dealers, comic artists (seasoned & independent) as well as a few booths selling cosplay-related goods.
Personally, I’m a modern comic reader/collector and this Expo only had a few booths selling modern comics. Bargain hunters note that I spotted only a three bargain-related booths; one booth with a couple short boxes of 50 center comics and a big booth selling dollar comics that was packed full of buyers throughout the day. I still prefer the Frank & Sons event for bargain-basement cheap reads, but I was able to get a backpack full of comics here as well to help fill in some gaps in my collection.
Shame that a couple aisles and the front of the center were blocked off where they were filming some web-show thing and the crew kept telling people that certain areas you couldn’t walk into.
The positive part was the artists for me (I’m not a big GA/SA comic collector), so being able to meet, get signatures/sketches/OA was cool. Some artists seemed very busy throughout, though some did start packing up around 4p.m. Most of the artists did say they were planning on attending the Wizard World Anaheim Convention, a few saying only on Saturday though.
A few Cosplayers attended with mainly the Star War’s 501st Legion group in full-force. Since the ballroom was small, there was not much space for the cosplayers to march around and show their wares. Many of the cosplayers were nice and didn’t mind picture taking with some of the attendees.


























































