Archive for the ‘Real Life Disease’ Category

San Diego Comic Con Sexual Harassment

Saturday, August 16th, 2008

Bully and John’s blog, Comics Oughta Be Fun, is usually filled with laughs, win and (naturally) fun. Unfortunately, there’s some serious business going on and this needs to be passed along.

(from this post)

Overheard at San Diego Comic-Con while I was having lunch on the balcony of the Convention Center on Sunday July 27: a bunch of guys looking at the digital photos on the camera of another, while he narrated: “These were the Ghostbusters girls. That one, I grabbed her ass, ’cause I wanted to see what her reaction was.” This was only one example of several instances of harassment, stalking or assault that I saw at San Diego this time.

1. One of my friends was working at a con booth selling books. She was stalked by a man who came to her booth several times, pestering her to get together for a date that night. One of her co-workers chased him off the final time.

2. On Friday, just before the show closed, this same woman was closing up her tables when a group of four men came to her booth, started taking photographs of her, telling her she was the “prettiest girl at the con.” They they entered the booth, started hugging and kissing her and taking photographs of themselves doing so. She was confused and scared, but they left quickly after doing that.

3. Another friend of mine, a woman running her own booth: on Friday a man came to her booth and openly criticized her drawing ability and sense of design. Reports from others in the same section of the floor confirmed he’d targeted several women with the same sort of abuse and criticism.

Quite simply, this behavior has got to stop at Comic-Con. It should never be a sort of place where anyone, man or woman, feels unsafe or attacked either verbally or physically in any shape or form. There are those, sadly, who get off on this sort of behavior and assault, whether it’s to professional booth models, cosplayers or costumed women, or women who are just there to work. This is not acceptable behavior under any circumstance, no matter what you look like or how you’re dressed, whether you are in a Princess Leia slave girl outfit or business casual for running your booth.

On Saturday, the day after the second event I described above, I pulled out my convention book to investigate what you can do and who you can speak to after such an occurrence. On page two of the book there is a large grey box outlining “Convention Policies,” which contain rules against smoking, live animals, wheeled handcarts, recording at video presentations, drawing or aiming your replica weapon, and giving your badge to others. There is nothing about attendee-to-attendee personal behavior.

Page three of the book contains a “Where Is It?” guide to specific Comic-Con events and services. There’s no general information room or desk listed, nor is there a contact location for security, so I go to the Guest Relations Desk. I speak to a volunteer manning the desk; she’s sympathetic to the situation but who doesn’t have a clear answer to my question: “What’s Comic-Con’s policy and method of dealing with complaints about harassment?” She directs me to the nearest security guard, who is also sympathetic listening to my reports, but short of the women wanting to report the incidents with the names of their harassers, there’s little that can be done.

“I understand that,” I tell them both, “but what I’m asking is more hypothetical and informational: if there is a set Comic-Con policy on harassment and physical and verbal abuse on Con attendees and exhibitors, and if so, what’s the specific procedure by which someone should report it, and specifically where should they go?” But this wasn’t a question either could answer.

So, according to published con policy, there is no tolerance for smoking, drawn weapons, personal pages or selling bootleg videos on the floor, and these rules are written down in black and white in the con booklet. There is not a word in the written rules about harassment or the like. I would like to see something like “Comic-Con has zero tolerance for harassment or violence against any of our attendees or exhibitors. Please report instances to a security guard or the Con Office in room XXX.”

The first step to preventing such harassment is giving its victims the knowledge that they can safely and swiftly report such instances to someone in authority. Having no published guideline, and indeed being unable to give a clear answer to questions about it, gives harassment and violence one more rep-tape loophole to hide behind.

I enjoyed Comic-Con. I’m looking forward to coming back next year. So, in fact, are the two women whose experiences I’ve retold above. Aside from those instances, they had a good time at the show. But those instances of harassment shouldn’t have happened at all, and that they did under no clear-cut instructions about what to do sadly invites the continuation of such behavior, or even worse.

I don’t understand why there’s no such written policy about what is not tolerated and what to do when this happens. Is there anyone at Comic-Con able to explain this? Does a similar written policy exist in the booklets for other conventions (SF, comics or otherwise) that could be used as a model? Can it be adapted or adapted, and enforced, for Comic-Con? As the leading event of the comics and pop culture world, Comic-Con should work to make everyone who attends feel comfortable and safe.

I’ve never been to the SDCC, but the other cons that I’ve been to always seemed like a chance for different types of people to hang out without having to put up with any harsh nonsense. Whether she’s wearing regular street clothing or dressed like a comic character, women and girls should be able to comfortably enjoy themselves at a convention as much as we guys can. From now on, we need to keep a sharper eye out for stuff like this and keep it from happening and alert security when it does. If some sickos were doing the same to somebody’s kid, would you just stand by and let it happen? I hope not. Don’t let it happen to female con goers either.

NewOld Computer problems

Thursday, June 26th, 2008

This is one of those posts that I just point out something that I don’t feel like typing over and over again. You’ll see why once you read point number 2.

My original computer stopped working in late May. I’m currently using a used computer that a friend hooked me up with. There are a few problems that I still need to work out with this.

1.) Everything that I was working on is trapped on the hard drives of the old computer which won’t power up now. My backup CDs are pretty out of date (most seem to be Nov. 2007) and I can’t even find all the backups now. The HD enclosure I ordered from TechSunny is on the way and it will (hopefully) let me pull the stuff off the old hard drives. If I was working on something for you recently, it’s probably trapped on one of those two drives. Oddly enough, I just started making back-ups of stuff and started with things I planned to delete to make HD space for some video captures. So I have backups of useless stuff!

2.) Here’s the the current big issue: freezes. This computer freezes at random times and doesn’t start back up unless I restart the machine. It froze twice this afternoon within the span of 3 1/2 hours but sometimes I can go hours with no problems. There are times that I forgot to retype and send messages that were lost after having to restart the system. If you’re wondering why most of my responses to everything are so short, this is why. I’m trying to work this out myself before asking for help. Of course, this is slowing down any computer-based work.

I’m sorry for the delays on everything and I’ll add new posts in the NewOld Computer category to keep you updated on this.

Belated Birthday

Saturday, June 14th, 2008

It was my 35th birthday two days ago. I’m not a big fan of my birthday but not for the usual crying about getting a year older. Long story short, messed-up things have happened either days before or right on my birthday. Not just to me or people that I know, but people that I’ve never even heard of until after the stuff went down. I’d like to thank everyone everyone who wished me a Happy Birthday and those who were nice enough to give me gifts. I’m not enough of a jerk to demand or expect gifts, but it’s always nice to get ‘em.

It was a regular workday on the 12th so I have to celebrate tonight. I’m going to watch two films that I’ve never seen before: National Lampoon’s Movie Madness and the Shaw Brothers classic kung-fu film Come Drink With Me. Movie Madness may turn out to be bad, but the Shaw Bros. flick is said to be one of the best in the genre. I’ll probably get some video gaming in, too. There is only one meal worthy of such a night. That’s right: Pizza and Root Beer.

Random: Not Michael Ironside, Little Caesar, more

Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

The new computer still locks up from time to time now, but the scanner finally works. No, not the mindblowing Michael Ironside kind of Scanner but the one that I can put artwork in and magically make it appear inside my computertron thingy. So now it’s just the freezes and sound that need fixing.


The Boodocks season 2 DVD set is out and Newsarama’s Steve Fritz did his usual job of writing a good review of things that he knows about. He mentions in one of the commentaries mentions someone that comic fans have been bugging him about for years: Caesar. Yes, Caesar. For those who don’t know, Michael Caesar rolled into the Boondocks comic strip later into the run, hung out with Huey, and just tried to get the poor dude to lighten up a bit. They formed an unstoppable tag-team that fought injustice, tried to get Condoleezza Rice a man and hosted “the Most Embarrassing Black People of the Year Award” ceremonies. Word has it that they are waiting for the right time and voice actress to bring Caesar to life. I’m keeping my fingers crossed that Brooklyn’s favorite son gets his chance to shine in animated form.

Back with a new system

Tuesday, June 10th, 2008

A few weeks ago, my old HP computer started freaking out and wouldn’t even make it to Safe Mode. I kept trying to fix it in DOS but it eventually stopped working at all. Someone hooked me up with another computer so I’m back on the internet. This machine blows my old one away but there are still some things that need fixing and updating.

Besides current problems with sound and my scanner, nearly everything else works. One big thing is adjusting to Windows XP after years of using Windows ME. Just about everything I installed worked nicely and I can now run stuff that wouldn’t work for W-ME. The first one that I ran to was the Lego Digital Designer and I’ll probably get that Amazon.com MP3 Album thing once I can hear things on this system. I’ll have to set up DosBox to use a lot of my favorite programs (M.U.G.E.N. tools) and emulators (Genecyst and NESticle for graphic-extracting purposes).

My sites won’t have any big updates until I get the data off the old computer. There isn’t much of a reason to update Illmosis until I can scan artwork again and there are a lot of bits on ScrollBoss that were only on my old hard drive. Plus, I want to wait until everything is stable before installing the Apache and PHP programs that let me test out all those funky PHP features. Of course, all Works-in-progress are on hold until I can pull them off the old PC. The irony is that I finally started making data backups but started with unnecessary stuff so I could delete it to make room for raw video captures. S-M-R-T.

Anyway, I apologize to anyone that I’m doing work for and I’ll try to get things back on track as soon as possible.

Why I haven’t been around: part 39,184

Wednesday, March 26th, 2008

To hell with long explanations. Here’s the 1040EZ why no one on the internet has heard much from me lately:

Work: Started working a third cleaning account two weeks ago but I’ll be back down to two next week unless more sudden news pops up.

Hands: Right hand still has a clickly middle finger and is at 90% and the left hovers between 50% and 80%. Good enough to draw without pain. Progress slowed down by working three accounts instead of two.

Ear vs. Steak Knife: The steak knife is gone for now but I still have some throat pain and a buzzy headache. Progress slowed down by working three accounts instead of two.

Legs & Spine: Not really getting better since having to move during the crappiest week this winter. All these aches may worse thanks to the Ear vs. Steak Knife virus/allergies/whatever-the-butt-it-is. I spent part of last weekend walking with a cane but was still faster than most people walking through Wal-Mart. Progress slowed down by working three accounts instead of two.

Illmosis site comic design: Most this week’s free time went into writing a comic script/template/page design for the site that works like my galleries do. You can see a poot-butt preview version of it by clicking that link. For now, it only needs to be just good enough for the upcoming Nutroll:the Illness including redrawn panels. Guess what? Progress slowed down by working three accounts instead of two and aching hands that hurt when typing.

Sorry for not being around on the internet too much lately. I’ll try to post some good news, fun stuff and reviews once I get the chance.

Ear vs. Steak Knife

Wednesday, March 19th, 2008

I’m currently having fun with some of the following symptoms:

  • a pain like Sonny Chiba punched me in the throat hard enough to make my neck explode in slow motion.
  • my head being inflated by the guy from Dig Dug but not enough to explode because he had to turn around and pump up a Pooka that was sneaking up on him.
  • the feeling that someone tripping off Angel Dust is feverishly rattling a steak knife around inside my right ear as if there’s still some peanut butter stuck in the corners and grooves.
  • that time Monday night when I coughed up Slimer from the Real Ghostbusters cartoon.

If you know me from anywhere else, I apologize for not posting much and for how my posts are more garbled than usual.


My search on Sunday night didn’t turn up the Nutroll page layouts but I did find the fat brick of multipurpose paper I use for artwork and other stuff. I also found a sketch of a storefront that appears on page 2 so I’m getting closer to having everything that I need to start this. I still haven’t found the small sketchbook and I’m starting to think that the layout sketches are still in that. I took another shot at laying that page out while in “Ear vs. Steak knife” mode this morning and even got around to designing the makeshift mask for an upcoming character redesign. I’ve given up looking for the older layouts because I’m sure I’ll only find them after I draw from the so-so sketches that I just did. I’m just telling you this to lower your expectations for the comic just in case they weren’t low enough already.

Time keeps on slippin’

Thursday, March 13th, 2008

So now I’m working a few more hours a week at the real-life cleaning job. It’ll be good to be making more money but bad for two reasons. The first reason is easy to explain. More time at work means that I have less time to work on other things. I have NO idea if I kick out as much Nutroll comicness for April as I had originally planned. On top of that, ScrollBoss will be dead beyond dead until May with none of the usual stealth updates. I’m okay with that. The main problem is that every part of my body that I messed up while moving/shoveling/working weeks ago won’t improve as quickly, if at all. My hands are getting better but the left one still sounds like the Juggernaut is tap dancing on a pile of bubble wrap. I’ll have to keep my typing down to a minimum, so don’t expect to see me ramble too much here or anywhere else for a while.


I’ve been so busy lately that I missed the fact that Xombi brought the blog-style posts back to the front page of the-Breaks.com. As always, he had some interesting thoughts and links on deck. My favorite is this eSkeptic article about the flaws of television news.


Happy Birthday to comic shop owner, swamp creature connaisseur and blogger extraordinaire, Mike Sterling!

Master with Cracked Fingers and more Kung-Fu fun

Tuesday, February 26th, 2008

Everything on my body, including my eyebrows, still aches from moving. Instead of the usual back and leg problems, my hands caught the most hell thanks to the speed-shovelling technique I used to get vehicles free from the snow and ice. My hands don’t just ache but they snap, crackle and pop enough to fool people into thinking that Bobby Badfingers is throwing a gig in the same room. I keep stretching the fingers and that is probably why they’re getting better. I shoveled some snow today and the pain came right back for a while. I may have just returned to the internet last week, but I’ll have to stay low-profile for a while and let my hands heal properly heal.


From the moment I got into making things for M.U.G.E.N. (that customizable fighting game that people are now making random-assed videos from and poppin’ it on the YouTube) I had a mental list of things that I’ve always wanted to make or recreate in it. I finally finished one yesterday: the Shaw Brothers Studio introduction.

Shaw Brothers intro for MUGEN

The logos and text were made with screenshots of the Celestial/Dragon Dynasty DVDs but the rest comes from my pathetic attempt to recreate the graphics. It’s not much, but something about having that kick off a fighting game that makes me smile. If you have M.U.G.E.N. and want to give it a try, download the intro here and read the instructions to learn how to install it. If you don’t have M.U.G.E.N. and want to learn more about it, go here.