Friday, July 30, 2010

It's not just about me: Dug, Kev & Dayton...and...



While we still deal with that "compressed time" between Comic-Con and Vegas Trek...

... Here are a couple of shout-outs for some Treklander buds:


First off, amazing and funny Trek fanpro guy Doug Drexler of drexfiles.com fame (among OTHER things) is unearthing some of his video shot from work days around the Trek stages and such over the years, and sharing in a new blog at the slimmed-down and relaunched startrek.com ....a MUST-see.

(Hmmm... The new startrek.com: Must give that a closer look...)

And THEN: if you are in shoutin' distance of KC MO, check out bith this weekend's Saturday performances of Khaaaaan: The Musical with my fellow Comic-Con survivors and former Communicator  writers  (oh, and incredible Trek author team) Kevin Dilmore & Dayton Ward—who will be on hand with books and sigs for both shows. (Check out this video: The show cast lead was born after Wrath of Khan? Oh my... )

All of which brings to mind the fact that I've never had a blog roll for ongoing shout-outs to Trekland buds of various stripes, for some reason. I think that's about to change.....

Monday, July 26, 2010

LA ALERT: Joining a great panel tonight on writing opps

Squeezed but by no means lost in the post-ComicCon, pre-Vegas rush...

If you're interested in hatching or exploring some creative new avenues for your talents as a writer, the Independent Writers of So Cal asked me to join a panel tonight on just that topic.

In Culver City at 7:30-9 tonight, join us for

Making Your Own Opportunities in Writing

Panelmates include TERRI CHENEY, author and mood disorder expert; JON DORF, award- winning author and playwright; PAUL RYAN, actor, TV host, producer, teacher; TRACY TRIVAS,A Princess Found and The Wish Stealers....and as moderator: MARILYN ANDERSON, comedy writer, speaker, and screenwriter. 

 

 

 


Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Meet me in Sandy Eggo: Comic-Con confluences

I guess I could be accused of "burying the lead" below my Comic-Con dissection Tuesday, but just for Quick Reference here's some good ways to stalk me this weekend if you need to:

—Selling and chatting all things Trekland in Autograph Alley at my times:
--11:30a-1p Thursday
--1-5p Sunday
, for the dazed survivors
...or...
—Crashing the Roddenberry party earlier/Geek Girls bash later, both Friday night—with Daryl and Curtis' Twilight Zone interactive anthro panel in-between at 8p
—Finally checking out Wil & Co.'s W00tstock phenom Thursday night, off-campus
—Eyeballing all the chotskis for the new startrek.com at the mobbed CBS booth (4129)
—And grabbing any and all peeps wherever we run smack into each other .... including Gary's lineup at LightSpeed Fine Arts, of course (3745).

Again, this list is a sample, but loose and random. The way I like 'em. (Not to impugn at all the Star Trek booth babes from '08, above. You didn't really want to see just another CC square logo, didja?)

Don't forget, too:
2010 is the year we make contact... via Twitter. I'm so up-to-date.
You can always just twack me by tweets, Tweklanders!

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Comic-Con time! And some reflections..

It's funny, this Comic-Con thing.

And I say that like I’m some battle-hardened San Diego veteran. Oh hell, maybe I am. But would only four real trips on the resume count as "veteran"? Or, do we count that one-day virgin visit way back in ... 2005? I mean, I'd meant to get down to San Diego for a lark during those crazy mid-Aughts years—but other cons, other conflicts got in the way. And after all, it was really just a "comic con," right?—and I was hardly ever a "comics guy"—even with the wild rumors that more and more Treklanders were turning up down there, just on general principle.

When Trekland itself turned upside down around here in 2005—end of magazine, end of producers, end of studio*—I suddenly found myself with a future in flux, an empty weekend in late July ... and old buds Neal and Jana in San Diego, ready to ease me over to Comic-Con consciousness. Just for a couple nights and a day visit, mind you, since I was a bit out of sorts. Just to see what the fuss was about.

Five years hence, my surviving standout memory of that day (at left) was actually watching those passionate Browncoats swarming all over their huge fan table—Firefly fandom, the only thing I've seen in my day that even comes close to the vibe and intensity of early Trek's. I felt young, as if the world was new... And the mojo began to flow again.

But my newfound bud Lee with his secret, fan-in-businessman's-clothing comic habit and longtime gang of CC suite crashers made it official when they dragged me down for a full-on stay the next year. I was now learning the ropes of this creature. I was hooked. And now I can talk tales from the trenches like the best of 'em, back to when you could still by a ticket on-site ... much less just park and walk in right there. There was none of this massive entrance/exit route room ballet choreography like Disneyland. Why, that first year I went, the attendance was only @ 80,000; now it's topped 120,000!

Well, Comic-Con was hardly a Trek con, either in the sacred fan style of things, or the oft-disdained pro set. Neither was it an old-fashioned lit-snob con. It was truly a trade show for pop culture—with ever more Hollywood studio folk and New York toy makers insanely swelling the ranks. I do love my Trek cons—viva Vegas, salute Starfest, take me on Shore Leave!—and I've seen the litcons hang in and make a comeback, too.

But this critter... well, forget the naming: Comic-Con San Diego—and various others around the country who share only the name and the intentions, nothing more—is very much a cross-genre beast of its own now. Oh sure—like Voyager 10 at the heart of V'Ger—there's still a revered core essence of the old 70s comics collectors' and artists' show in the center of it all that survives, even as all the other stuff that dwarfs it.

But the story of Comic-Con transcendence is very much the story of what's happened to fandom, and to mainstream tastes alike: it's all overlapping, all over the place. "Narrow-casting" may still be the key behind the 500-channel cableverse... or is it? These days, the lesson seems to be: Get out of your ruts!

And that may be the biggest and best Comic-Con lesson of all.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Oh, and my 2010 Comic-Con highlights? Join me if you can:
—Selling and chatting all things Trekland in Autograph Alley at my times: 11:30a-1p Thursday, then 1-4p Sunday
—Crashing the Roddenberry party earlier/Geek Girls bash later, both Friday night—with Daryl and Curtis' Twilight Zone interactive anthro panel in-between at 8p
—Finally checking out Wil & Co.'s W00tstock phenom Thursday night, off-campus
—Eyeballing all the chotskis for the new startrek.com at the mobbed CBS booth (4129)
—And grabbing any and all peeps wherever we run smack into each other .... including Gary's lineup at LightSpeed Fine Arts, of course (3745).

Or you can always just twack me on Twitter, Tweklanders!
(See? Yes another Comic-Con first for yours truly).

------------------------
* = Communicator, Rick Berman Era, Viacom united—respectively

Monday, July 19, 2010

You can't keep a good crew down

I got there later than I'd meant, I missed a chunk of folks I wanted to see...and it's even taken me a week to get this. But I did not want to miss sharing...

For when you TRULY talk about "Treklanders," this is the best of the bunch: the guys-n-gals who made the Trek shows go for almost 20 years.. or more in some cases...and they finally got a reunion.

Thanks to Liz Castro, that is... VGR/ENT visual effects coordinator (and later VFX producer of Pushing Daisies and Flash Forward)... who—what else?—organized a Facebook page for the old Trek family, and then a reunion in LA's Griffith Park July 11. Just like anyone would do to see old colleagues again—wedged in between a family reunion and a birthday party. Except this time the paper-plate diners at THIS park outing have names like Michael Westmore, Dan Curry, Peter Lauritson... plus many, many folks you never got the names for (unless you were a close reader of our old Communicator, or the other finer behind-the-scenes sources.)

I didn't take stills or video, and the two huge group pictures are staying "in the family" and private for now ... but here's a typical snap: me with two of the NX-01's finest background actors, 4-year vet Evan "Ensign Tanner" English from the helm, and realtor Cricket Yee, Linda "Hoshi" Park's stand-in and an on-camera med tech from Season 2 onward. I got to reconnect with a lot more whose tales I want to get "on the record" and share in the future (no pun intended).

All told, in two major shifts, I bet there were at least 100 folks who once toiled in the 22nd, 23rd or 24th century, plus their kids and spouses; the "most veteran" sash went to fan favorite Bobby Clark, he of the "Arena" Gorn suit way back in 1966! A lot of people from all five series had work out of town or other prior commitments, or it would have been much, much higher—and sidebar vendors were welcome whether or not their pay stubs said "Paramount."

And, Liz promises: wait'll next time!

And hey: Without chasing down pics from "reunionees": if anyone else who wants to can "clear" a small group pic from the Evite or Facebook galleries, send it to me and I'll add it, too.

It's the Quarter-Millenium!

By the way, by my ticker, that last post amounted to Trekland visit Number 250. Saaa-loot!

Monday, July 12, 2010

Forget soccer: make way for Con Moms!

This.... THIS is why Comic-Con is busting at the seams.

In the words of a mom in Middletown, Conn., commenting re: an online news story about a local convention:
"This is my third year taking my kids to the Con - now ages 8, 13, 15 and 18.

We look forward to it all year.

Just a word to parents. If - like me - you worry about the passive watching of cartoons, playing video games and reading endless manga/graphic novels - then take your kids to the Con! It all comes to life and they are having play battles with foam swords, meeting new people over games of apples to apples and Risk, taking photos of other kids dressed up as characters and meeting the artists who draw the webcomics they read online. It's really a positive environment. But bring some healthy snacks - I was mobbed by teens when I pulled out a bag of cherries of and blueberries.

See you there? "

Forget soccer moms. Or even geekgirls. Welcome to con moms!

I just happened to come across this little snippet of real life, this little snapshot of why Hollywood has swollen San Diego Comic-Con into a crowd bigger than the largest city of eight U.S. states ... why it's easy for Trek to be cool again and have a zillion genre cousins in the same boat: and why all things geek are mainstream (are we going to have to just break down and redefine "geek"?)

why new ones are popping up all over and the middling ones are booming too....

It's as homegrown and innocuous as can be. What's the big deal, you say?

The backstory: the recent ConnectiCon in Waterbury, Conn., elicited *gasp* a straight, on-the-nose news story in the straight, on-the-nose Republican-American newspaper's online pages. Time was when even your city's typical "alternative weekly" tabloid couldn't resist taking a few token pot-shots at the local Star Trek or comic or gaming con. And the con comm would be thrilled to have it.

Especially since all they'd ever get out of the local TV coverage is the token "get the face-painted alien geeks in costume" shots ... at 11 p.m. .... on SUNday. Thanks guys--insults, AND too late to Harness the Power of Mass Media in time and let it help get us anyone new in the door. And believe me--back in the day in Oklahoma City with SoonerCon and ThunderCon, I stood in those shoes all TOO often.

But see, pioneers get to be martyrs. Those who follow on today's trails just get to be real, and read about it. No one even realizes how easy it is to get both respect and normality. Or how impossible it was only a short while back.

But back to "Middletown Mom" and the Republic-American Dot Com: praise be to reporter Kristi Tousignant. It took a generation before all the Trek fanboys (and girls) got old enough to get pro credentials and WRITE the shows they wanted, dammit; looks like Kristi is in the same mold, on the news front.

ConnectiCon is a sort of modern-day Star Trek convention, targetting the wide-ranging sci-fi interests of today's younger generation. ...

"I really just enjoy seeing people with similar interests to myself in one building," ConnectiCon chairman Matt Daigle said. "It's like a vacation weekend."

Taking a step into the convention center Friday was like walking through the looking glass into Wonderland. People wearing fuzzy tails and ears walked past Hello Kitty characters and knights in full metal armor. There was Captain Jack Sparrow, Darth Vader, Queen Amidala and even a few scantily-clad Na'vi from "Avatar."

Hardly news to us—but that's not the point. It's hardly "news" to anyone—but now, it's a nice "color" feature story.

And then, that blessed comment from Middletown Mom. Actually, I know of several Con Moms who exist already. As do you, I'll bet.

Yep. Talk about the Next Generation? Well, there it sits.

PHOTO: Darlene Douty/ Republican-American
NOTE: News link may require free registration

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Riddle me this, again: The return of "A Fistful of Data"

Yes, it's got to be The Most Momentous Comeback in Star Trek History (which, you know, spans the millennia). Or ...perhaps that's just hype.

Either way, grab your new copy of Star Trek Magazine—or get one off the stands, if you haven't.

I'm proud to say that we're back: my "A Fistful of Data" column in this esteemed publication, the currently official title from Titan Magazines in the U.K. Ever since Issue 34 back in December 1997, I've had the fun and privilege of fleshing out meaty, thoughtful A's for the Q's of U.K. fans —and in the States since 2006.

Then we took a hiatus while all things JJ-verse settled the past couple years—until now, with Issue 154, or #27 in the US (at right), showcasing the return in a cool new huge splashy art style. (And yes, the same goes true for "Lost and Found," my archival photo tales column whose informative coolness continues unabated since #117/UK.)

So, spread the word! Now that the SubPrime Time Line has been assimilated, I trust the newbies and oldsters alike will erupt for a new age of enlightenment. In this first issue alone we tackle the source of "Cardassian," the Enterprise-B bridge layout, and a TOS music cue question.

Best of all, Treklanders, all three came in from you, via the "Ask Dr. Trek" link (long story) at LN.com. You can still use that link for "Fistful," too—and when we have a flood o' emails, I'll answer the overruns addressed to me right here. You can also write to either snail address at Titan, UK or USA, or the Titan email: startrekmail@titanemail.com, marking FISTFUL in the memo line

"Fistful" is the easiest and most fun part of my job, because it gets back to the roots of why we're here in the first place, and why Star Trek fandom is no flash-in-the-pan fad. A big part of that is due to the way Gene Roddenberry set the tone of respect for his audience in all things, and passed that along as his own Prime Directive to whoever worked on the shows. It's a way I've always embraced, as well, to anyone who takes the time to ask and write in: no questioner is worth a diss, or a quickie answer—no matter what. I know how I always felt when I just wanted an answer to a question... or to eight handwritten pages' worth, like my first letter to the Star Trek Welcommittee ...and by golly, they came through, too.

Oh, and if you think it's all been asked before—it hasn't. The e-mailbag is already starting to fill up ....

Friday, July 9, 2010

Fan mail from some flounder?*

No wonder everything in Trekland, and MediaWorld in general, is so topsy-turvy these days.

I got a fan letter today. Not an email, or a tweet, or a Facebook "DM" ... but an honest to god letter. On paper. Using ink. With a stamp on it. And—bless my heart—a SASE** inside to boot.

If you think I am mocking, I am not. I think it's adorable. And very revealing: Steve H. is a con-going fan who is very much not ready to climb into his own empty photon torpedo tube just yet. He just wanted me to sign a photo card, and an old Official Fan Club Enterprise-E sketch postcard giveaway. I'm touched, and also mindful that once again the leading edge is only because of what's behind it: the other 98%.

See, Steve's little missive stopped me dead in my tracks. How could this be? Smack in the middle of our insanely socially-mediafied world of both words, and word-spreading? Okay, so he had actual physical materials to transmit, but still: It wasn't even in a postal Priority Mail, er, mailer.

It just goes to show that the human contact is still at the heart of fandom: Actor, creator, designer to fan. Communicator to fan. Fan to fan. Social media is incredible and can almost beat subspace radio today for speed... but some things the bits and bytes just can't do. And some folk still live by them. And.... we all need to take a breather sometimes and remember that. Not everyone, even the Xs and Ys, "do" EVERYthing. Every where.

Oh—and BTW Steve, I hope you don't mind me sharing everything (but the addresses) re: this. Somehow, I think you don't mind at all.


*"Fan mail from some flounder"—You're looking for help? See 2nd section of the link. (Sorry, there's no good YouTube, but we do have audio.) Bottom line: With 500-channel cable, there's no excuse not to know your Pop Culture Touchstones.
**"SASE": At one point, the lifeblood of fandom.

Monday, July 5, 2010

Egghead time for fandom: Take Daryl's survey!

If you have not had the pleasure of seeing Prof. Daryl Frazetti use Spock or Yoda or Bilbo to suddenly make anthropology understandable ... and even entertaining ... then you better keep an eyeball out for him at San Diego Comic-Con, New York Comic-Con, and a passle more. I owe him a lot for opening a few doors for me at those locales and more: my well-traveled "Between the Cracks" Trek show has seen a huge new audience this year, and I've had the chance to see a whole new swath of fandom of ever widening flavors. (At right: Seattle's Emerald City Comic-Con)

He's also on track to organize fellow educators who use genre franchises to get their point across, and do a lot more publishing in the same field as well.

SO: Until you get the treat of hearing Daryl in person, please help him out with this crusade—the use of all our genre faves in teaching—by taking this survey about your fan habit and outlook. (Word for the day: can you say "ethnographics"?)

It's confidential, of course, and just 23 questions, most of them multiple-choice. The results will all be collated to chart trends and demographics in his pop culture research. And what fan can resist telling the world just how it really is?

Saturday, July 3, 2010

Yes, but do those molecules purr?

This life-imitating-art thing is just getting way outta control ...

Now, if only they can find The Klingons Among Us.

The Trouble With Tribbles In Diabetes
Main Category: Diabetes
Also Included In: Genetics
02 Jul 2010

Named for the furballs whose astonishing fecundity made them stars in early Star Trek episodes, the tribbles protein, first identified in fruit flies, aids in regulating many cell processes in humans. Joslin Diabetes Center researchers now have identified mechanisms triggered by a variant of the tribbles gene that cause trouble in insulin-producing pancreatic beta cells and that offer a promising target for therapies for people with type 2 diabetes, even if they don't carry that gene variant. ...