Wednesday, November 20, 2024

Spider-Man is Going to Fight The Predator in 2025

Marvel has done a couple of series where The Predator of Fox film fame crossed over with a Marvel hero. There was the surprisingly great one with Wolverine and a mini-series where a number of Predators go up against the Black Panther was also quite good and just wrapped. Sometimes these crossovers can feel like a mixture of a cash grab and empty fan service, so I've been pleased with how great the first two were with a lot of the credit for that going to writer Benjamin Percy and the assortment of artists who have tackled these crossovers (oh, and there have been some Predator-only focused comics at Marvel too that were perfectly fine and just got less buzz). Now, Benjamin Percy and Marcelo Ferreira are bringing us the most well-known (Marvel) hero of them all going against the infamous alien. Yep, we're getting, "Predator Versus Spider-Man." That sounds cool, doesn't it?

I'm excited about this series as Percy killed it (no pun intended) on the first two books and based on the teaser art it appears this new mini will be taking place smack-dab in NYC--a place I don't think a Predator has been since the, "Concrete Jungle," comic at Dark Horse decades ago or technically the stand-in, "New Way City," of the, "Predator: Concrete Jungle," video-game on the Xbox and PlayStation 2. Yes, the phrase, "Concrete Jungle," seems popular with media that relates to the Predator, but I digress from my main point--Spider-Man and the Predator are going to fight! That sounds cool and assuming this takes place over four issues in the same manner as the Wolverine and Black Panther crossovers the event will be nice and snappy, keeping us enthralled while not wearing out its welcome. I look forward to when this new mini-series begins in 2025!

Tuesday, November 19, 2024

An Assortment of Free Comic Book Day Titles Have Been Announced for 2025

Free Comic Book Day occurs the first Saturday of May ever since its inception (some COVID-era wonkiness aside). The day features a special comics publisher release for the event and the next one will be on May 3rd of 2025. As of today, some of the comics that will be on offer have been announced!

In regards to Marvel, they'll be spotlighting the Fantastic Four (which makes sense with an MCU movie on the way) and have a combination comic featuring some Amazing Spider-Man goodness and a tease of an upcoming Ultimate Universe event. Since it began I would say Marvel has shown shocking levels of restraint in regards to the latest Ultimate Universe, not putting out a ton of titles or immediately forcing it to do an event. As the series has been moving in real-time somewhat (each month of a comic is treated as an actual month) and counting down to The Maker escaping a prison in a manner of months, it makes sense that would lead into an event--my hypothesis would be that is what's approaching.

Out of some other announced comics, one thing I would not have predicted was a crossover between the Thundercats and Powerpuff Girls, but that's what we're getting! There will also be an issue set in the Energon Universe for Skybound (which has been popular with its original content, G.I. Joe and Transformers). Other interesting releases include a Conan comic from Titan, a Minecraft comic, Archie-themed goodness, and more! These are just some of the comics to expect for FCBD and plenty more will be declared, so I look forward to the next Free Comic Book Day for sure!

Monday, November 18, 2024

Music Mondays: "Bed Chem," is the Raunchiest Song I've Heard in a Bit

I've been upfront about how I usually hate really cute and peppy pop music but for some reason, the tunes of Sabrina Carpenter melt my ice-cold heart. I love the hit tunes, "Espresso," "Taste," "Feather," and, "Nonsense." I could take or leave, "Please, Please, Please," with its country-music vibe as I don't like most country stuff, but its passably entertaining. Carpenter's music is really listenable and often quite suggestive, but man, "Bed Chem," is incredibly horny.

It has a nice synth-heavy feel and features lyrics about tossing each other around intimately and phrases that are barely coded discussing, "Arriving," at the same time to an orgasm and a thermostat being set at, "69," which is also a double-entendre for an act people engaging in romance sometimes do (if you don't know go ask your experienced friend, we all have one). It's a good song, and the fact it doesn't outright say the dirty stuff somehow makes it even more frisky than some songs that outright state what's going on--e.g. how, "W.A.P." leaves literally nothing to our imaginations. 

The, "Bed Chem," song has also made waves as it seems to reference a celebrity at times linked to Carpenter, Barry Keoghan. Regardless of whom she has good chemistry in bed with, however, she clearly is having a good fictional time in the tune. Some folk don't like her (one college I attended in the past has a recent opinion piece really ripping into her, for example), but Carpenter and her collaborators make fun songs, darn it.

Sunday, November 17, 2024

Early Impressions on, "The Monster and the Mirror," and Thoughts on, "Hope by Terry Fox," Too!


I haven't had a ton of free time lately between sick kiddos, teaching a college class virtually, and life itself. That can make it hard to read a full-fledged book at times. That said, I was offered a review copy of, "The Monster and the Mirror," a bit ago and it sounded fascinating. Written by K. J. Aiello, it is a bit of a memoir and a bit of a reflection on the power of popular culture/piece of cultural criticism, discussing how mental illness impacted both the author and how it is reflected in mass media (e.g. with it generally treated as something villainous or as a punishment). I'm earlier-on in the book, but really digging what I've read so far!

K. J. Aiello has some extremely wise points about how most popular culture is terrible at how it portays mental illness as something monstrous and scary. There aren't that many tales where a hero happens to have a mental illness of some sort, after all. These observations come from Aiello telling a very personal story of their own childhood and their own life with mental illness that wasn't understood very well until they were older. This is not a book for those who can't handle some difficult stuff--Aiello has a lot to share and I thank them for being willing to dig deep and expose hard times for us to observe and learn from. I look forward to reading more of, 'The Monster and the Mirror," as it is fascinating!

5 out of 5 stars (from what I've read so far).



On a side note, I was at first actually sent the wrong book to review by the publisher. I received, "Hope by Terry Fox," which was crafted/edited by Barbara Adhiya. It is about a man named Terry Fox who had his right leg amputated above the knee at age 18 due to cancer and in the interest of raising money to cure the disease began doing fundraising runs all across Canada. The book features tons of informational interviews, pictures, maps, and such that Adhiya acquired from a bunch of people from Terry's life (he passed in 1981). Since his passing over 850 million has been raised via the Marathon of Hope he founded. It's a fascinating story I was not familiar with and would encourage people to check out, "Hope," as it is an intriguing true tale!

5 out of 5 stars.

Saturday, November 16, 2024

Mike Tyson and Jake Paul Fought and We All Watched For Some Reason

I don't generally use the word, "Hate," much as it can be overutilized and lose its impact. I save it to truly express how I loathe and despise something. That said, I loathe the Paul brothers (Jake and Logan). They are annoying so-called, "Influencers," on social media. They post idiotic videos, come up with stupid catchphrases, and otherwise annoy other people in the name of entertainment. Jake Paul has become a boxer these past years and got it in his mind he wanted to fight Mike Tyson. Now, Jake is 27 and in prime physical shape. Mike Tyson is 58 and has had a number of health issues over the years even if he tries to keep a solid physique. The two fighting makes little sense, but the internet wanted it, so it happened last night.

60 million or so people logged into Netflix around the World to witness some fights before Tyson and Paul and then the main event finally occurred after midnight Eastern time. Even though Netflix worked to have a lot of bandwidth, the main takeaway from the event is they really should've spent even more money on their internet infrastructure. As the live show went on the buffering, glitches, and outright crashing of Netflix was the main topic on Twitter about the fight as opposed to any actual fighting. That said, Tyson is a complicated man with a messy history of his own, but many people seemed to hope he could get some good licks in on Paul because--like myself--a lot of people just don't like Jake or his brother.

I never watch boxing events. Back in the old days, they cost money on Pay-Per-View and I would've spent that money on plenty of other items. That said, this was free if you had Netflix and could get through the buffering. That resulted in myself and millions of other people shrugging and figuring they would tune and watch some random fights before the main event. I wasn't bored, especially in the last big fight before Tyson and Paul where Katie Taylor and Amanda Serrano showcased some real speed, skill, and the blood flowed in a shocking manner. I was ready for bed when the reason we all were watching finally started, but I had already committed so I stayed awake. 

Paul and his brother had an absurdly over-the-top entrance as they rode into the arena with a fancy car that had its sunroof down and, "In the Air Tonight," blasted through the stadium. When it was Mike Tyson's turn to appear, he just walked into the arena with his black trunks on and a look that was half-rage and half-resignation that this was probably the last big fight of his career (one he maybe didn't even want, but money talks). I knew Tyson was bound to lose this fight, but I wanted him to at least show a bit of the, "Iron Mike," everyone has talked about for decades. Then the bell started ringing for the first round.

Mike came out hard. For a split-second, you could've thought he might win this thing. The problem, however, is that while Mike Tyson at age 58 could easily take down a regular bloke off the street with a few choice punches, this was eight rounds of Tyson against someone who is 27 and one has to admit (even if they hate him) has developed a legitimate boxing career. Tyson got in some solid punches, but at the end of the day, he's literally an older generation fighting in vain against the new guard. Still, it went all eight rounds and now Paul gets to brag he officially won against Tyson (never mind it was a Tyson past his prime) and Mike can hold his head high that he lasted against a younger fighter in peak physical condition. The whole thing was more of a soap opera than a real fight in the end (Tyson and Paul, I mean, the other fights were legit brawls to varying degrees), but so many of us watched when we weren't stuck staring at a red circle spinning around to indicate the latest technical snafu. The fight itself was weak, as many concur, but the drama of it all was fun. 

Still, is this a stain on the record of Tyson, doing such a blatant cash-grab? He honestly does not care, telling a 14-year-old reporter who asked him about his own legacy, "[It] means absolutely nothing to me. I’m just passing through. I’mma die, and it’s going to be over. Who cares about legacy after that? I’mma die, I want people to think, 'I was this, I’m great…'No, we’re nothing. We’re just dead. We’re dust. We’re absolutely nothing. Our legacy is nothing." Tyson basically told us nothing matters in the end, and I suppose if you went into this match with the same viewpoint then the sheer anticlimax of when they were actually fighting is a bit less disappointing. Even if you're less nihilistic than Tyson, however, it still is apparent main winner in the end was Most Valuable Promotions, who organized and profited immensely off the fight. Guess who is a co-founder of MVP? Yep, Jake Paul, so of course he laughs all the way to the bank in the end. Beating up an old man and getting rich(er) doing it, that's the true American dream.

Friday, November 15, 2024

Amazon is Killing Freevee



You may have known of Freevee but not realized it was owned by Amazon. It was like Prime but had shows you could watch for free with ads--like Pluto/Tubi/etc. The thing is, Amazon Prime tacked on advertisements a short time ago unless you pay extra (which, yeah, I won't pay any more than I already do). Hence, what purpose Freevee was serving the company was unclear and it's been decided that Freevee is gonna be shut down with Jeff Bezos himself (assumably) laughing manically as he pulls the plug on the service.

This is unfortunate as I like, "Freemium," content, and Freevee had cool stuff (like, "Jury Duty,") but I also understand why Freevee is of little to no use for Amazon. this isn't like Quibi where people outright rejected a service and it croaked, this is just a case of the water getting too muddy between Prime with ads and Freevee. Pour one out for another streaming service biting the dust in an era where I'd wager more will disappear as there are still too many between paid/free/ads/etc.

Thursday, November 14, 2024

Netflix Has Been Building a Cinematic Universe of Christmas Movies

A lot of companies were working at making cinematic universes a short number of years ago due to how popular and successful Marvel had been. Many failures occurred from a false-start of Universal's monsters in a, "Dark Universe," to DC having to get James Gunn to do a reboot for their flicks after they started to crater at the box office. Cinematic Universes don't seem to be much of a focus for companies anymore, so imagine my surprise at reading how Netflix has quietly been building one...with Christmas movies. Yes, seriously.

"Hot Frosty," is a new Netflix flick that looks equally silly and fun. It features Lacey Chabert and a snowman who magically comes to life--he also happens to be a totally ripped hunk played by Dustin Milligan. One assumes the movie features them falling in love, but it just came out the 13th on the streaming service so I haven't watched it yet. That said, I read an article discussing how, "Hot Frosty," ties in slightly with a 2022 film starring Lindsay Lohan known as, "Falling For Christmas," and makes allusions to another movie titled "Single All the Way," where that exists as a fictional production plus, "Christmas Prince," has elements riffed on too. In addition, there are some throwaway jokes that reference, "Mean Girls," just for fun. Still, it is clear that Netflix is building some kind of Christmas-themed movie universe where things tie together, somehow, and that is interesting (the "Mean Girls," stuff is more of a joke than any true continuity, however).

Romance and inter-film continuities!

Could we be leading up to some kind of epic crossover full of wild CGI fights (like Marvel always has) and Christmas cheer? Probably not the former, but I'd imagine we'll get a lot of the latter as even if this is more of a wink-and-nod cinematic universe Netflix has with their holiday flicks, it still is a rare example of one outside of Marvel succeeding so far--even if it is just a handful of films, but that's pretty impressive in some ways considering how many cinematic universes died a terrible death after a single production flopped (sorry, Valiant Comics and your movie plans for after the, "Bloodshot," one). Whether this is a complex multi-layered storyline Netflix is building or just fun easter eggs, I applaud them on inadvertently doing what so few studios have been able to do, make a cinematic universe people actually like watching besides Marvel.

Wednesday, November 13, 2024

"Sunday," by Olivier Schrauwen Explores the Intriguing Within the Tedious

I've got some friends (stop laughing, I do have friends) who work over in the comic biz and know what kinds of odd comics I like. Hence, when one emailed me and said there was a new book by Olivier Schrauwen titled, "Sunday," that they thought I would dig, I found myself intrigued. I'd previously read, "Arsène Schrauwen," by the same author some years ago and enjoyed that surrealist tale of a man visiting a colonist jungle in the 1940s, so I had supplied to me for the purposes of review a copy of, "Sunday."

Published by Fantagraphics, the book arrived a couple weeks ago and it took me a bit to read it because, "Sunday," is a thick publication. It is large in overall page size and a hefty read. It makes sense, though, because a lot is going on within, "Sunday," while at the same time, very little of consequence occurs too. If that sounds confusing, bear with me and I'll explain. You see, "Sunday," follows the day of a (fictional) cousin of the author. Thibault is his name, and we see/"Hear," his stream-of-consciousness thoughts as he goes about wasting much of his day. Very little happens for much of the story, but that is the point. If I had to compare, "Sunday," to any other form of media then the play, "Our Town," oddly enough springs to mind. I say that as a big compliment.

While we witness Thibaults thoughts, the visuals/camera-of-sorts moves around and we see a lot of other things. A cat chasing a rat, friends of Thibault planning a surprise birthday party for him, Thibault's partner making her way back home after a long trip, and a man getting into a fight at the bar. As I said, there is a lot going on while at the same time, nothing much happens for a good chunk of the book. Thibault's thoughts are quite random too, often not syncing up to what's going on in other places--but why should his assorted musings do so? It is all very quirky and looks gorgeous as Olivier's illustrations have a fascinating mix of pencils, pens, and watercolor-style beauty. It makes it so that even when we're just staring at Thibault in the tub, its exciting as the panels shift and break down with the beautiful colorations.

With, "Sunday," a lot of the enjoyment from the book comes from when it meanders whilst looking beautiful. I would recommend, "Sunday," to any readers after something a bit different and very experimental. I had a good time and would rate, "Sunday," as being 5 out of 5 stars.

Tuesday, November 12, 2024

November 2024 News and Links

 It is Finally Cooling Off 

Welcome to November of 2024. October was weirdly warm but now we're feeling a chill--after all, the month kicked off with an election that I already shared plenty of thoughts about. We will conclude November with Thanksgiving seemingly really late this year too. In the meantime, here are some pieces of news I found interesting.

News and Stuff of Interest

The movie, "Wicked," has a lot of toys that are going to tie in. Someone who isn't aware of the correct movie URL might try to just go to Wicked as a website instead of the movie one and discover that the former warns folks it is a grown-up site that wants you to clarify you're grown and okay with seeing adults doing adult stuff. No harm no foul if you mess that up. However, if Mattel were to accidentally put the wrong website on their boxes for Barbie toys, that would be quite a mistake. Somebody got in big trouble at Mattel but Wicked (the adult site) is laughing all the way to the bank as they've hit a 12-year high in traffic visiting the site. If even a small percentage of people who are now aware of this site subscribe to it that's a nice chunk of change. Ironically, the mature site has a bunch of spoofs of movies as the news will tell ya, but nothing relating to, "Wicked," itself. That's the real shame here.

In other movie news, Marvel showcased more of their upcoming, "Captain America: Brave New World," and, "Thunderbolts*," movies at their D23 Brazil event. These actually are looking pretty good and like they could draw some crowds after a chunk of Marvel projects have been received with less buzz lately (flicks with Deadpool and/or Wolverine aside).

The new, "Absolute," books DC is putting out have been extremely well-received to the surprise of some who weren't expecting much beyond alternate-universe takes on popular characters. I have read the first issues of the Batman, Wonder Woman, and Superman series and they all are pretty cool. I (and many individuals I've spoken with) really was into the, "Batman," title but see some big potential in the other two as well. Between the Absolute stuff at DC and shockingly good Ultimate titles at Marvel, I guess sometimes a new take on an old classic is what a story can quite benefit from.


"Saturday Night Live," struggled a bit deciding what to say with their first episode since the Presidential election. There was one skit people seemed to either really enjoy or quite dislike that had nothing to do with politics, however. Presented as a bit of an advertisement with host Bill Burr discussing a band called, "Snake Skin," and their greatest hits album, it is glorious. Snake Skin is a fictional 80's band and I personally found the skit hilarious in how much it really did sound like a hair metal band from the 1980s singing about how much they want, "Nah-Nah," along with other raunchy absurdities. I do mean some people hated this sketch, but I was cracking up.

A gentleman playing, "Red Dead Redemption 2," on the PC modded it so that every horse and carriage moved at the speed of a missile and became extremely deadly. The results were both stupid and hilarious. I mean, we gotta do something to pass the time while we wait for, "Grand Theft Auto 6," don't we?

Lastly, everyone has been telling me how much I need to watch that, "The Penguin," show on MAX that spins out the Matt Reeves/Robert Pattinson, "Batman," movie. Colin Farrell is a great actor and person, so I plan to tune in. I just need to find the time to also watch that actual, "The Batman," movie because it is almost 3 hours long and life can be a bit too busy to sit that long. Maybe if I split it up into a few viewing sessions that could work? We'll see as I do really want to watch that, "The Batman," flick and then its Penguin spin-off show as it is getting rave reviews.

Monday, November 11, 2024

Tony Todd Has Passed

Tony Todd has passed away at the age of 69. The man had tons of credits in movies, television, voice-over gigs, and leaves behind a huge body of work. That said, I bet tons of people would immediately know him best for, "Candyman," as that was a series in which he played a huge part. That said, Todd did so much work you've doubtlessly seen him in other productions (or heard him) even if you refused to watch his, "Candyman," work for how damn scary it could be. Tony Todd brought a level of skill and professionalism to his work that whether it was a big blockbuster he happened to pop up in or a micro-budget flick that could barely afford a decent set (let alone someone of his caliber), Todd always made anything he was involved in better with his presence. He'll be missed.