Friday, February 6, 2026

DSTLRY to Pause Publishing

DSTLRY is taking a break. They're not shutting down or going bankrupt, they're just, "Pausing." Yes, the publisher of assorted fun comics that are generally magazine-sized is going to take a break and plot out hte best way to market, print, and distribute their comics for a maximum impact, as DSTLRY tells it. I understand the desire for a publisher to not only survive, but thrive. I mean, DSTLRY has been through the wringer. They were with Lunar, went exclusive with Diamond two months before they declared bankruptcy and proceeded to screw everyone over, then shift to Penguin Random House. That's a lot for a year or so for a known publisher, and DSTLRY had only splashed onto the scene in 2023.

The plan for DSTLRY is to, "..regroup, reset, and return with a more stable, consistent publishing rhythm.” I wish them the best and really hope we eventually get the third and final issue of, "White Boat," someday. That comic was really good.

Thursday, February 5, 2026

Neil Gaiman Picked NOW to Address Allegations?

A little more than a year ago, there was a big article in, "New York Magazine," that laid out how Neil Gaiman had allegedly sexually assaulted a number of women. I wrote about how it might take a bit for the whole truth to be figured out, but things looked bad. Thought of as a literary hero for quite some time, the allegations were extremely upsetting for big fans of Gaiman, and he denied any wrongdoing before he went radio silent. Various legal cases have been occuring but Gaiman posted nothing. However, now, Gaiman has made a new blog post, "...again denying the allegations, before hyping up his untitled next novel, and thanking fans who have supported him." 

Look, whether everything is true, some of it is true, or somehow nothing is true, the timing is awful. It is almost as if Gaiman saw all the Epstein files being released and thought, "Hey, maybe I'll remind everyone about my fiasco while sex predators are a trending topic!" I guess he really wants to promote upcoming work and link to a random Substack newsletter named TechnoPathology, which is heavily focused on discussing how its author believes Neil Gaiman is innocent (Gaiman claims no direct involvement). Again, regardless of Gaiman's guilt or innocence, he picked a Hell of a time to contribute to the dialogue going on about famous people and sexual assault.

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

Diamond Comic Distributors Screwed Over Everybody One Last Time

Diamond Comic Distributors is dead. It ceased any form of operations on December 31st, 2025. That said, they have managed to screw over everybody one last time from the metaphorical grave. Folks may recall that Diamond was in Chapter 11 bankruptcy at first and supposedly planned to pay back everyone what they were owed. This led to some fiascos as they tried to liquidate inventory in their warehouses that did not belong to them from publishers...who they needed to sell the stuff to pay back--talk about borrowing from Peter to pay Paul, as the expression goes! Eventually, everything shifted to Chapter 7--meaning there would be no reorganization as opposed to totally shutting down and being stripped for parts. This led to some hope that there would be a bit of money for the many parties owed funds. Well, as Bleeding Cool posted, " It appears that the millions raised from selling parts of the company to Ad Populum, Universal Distribution, and the managers of Diamond UK, will be wiped out by legal fees and bank fees, which have been mounting up over the past year." 

So much was spent on all the lawsuits and bank fees that there are zero dollars for the people Diamond entered bankruptcy in the first place to supposedly pay back. That means,"...looking at the detailed individual listings, no one is getting anything in those Final Allowed Amount columns. Whether you are Penguin Random House, owed $8,941,467.05, or a former employee, Chris Powell, owed $11,900. The legal case continues through the courts, especially over the consigned inventory, but it seems the courts have already found against comic book publishers Valiant, Netcomics, and Digital Manga." 

Yep, everyone gets nothing, nada--to quote Willy Wonka, "You lose! Good day, Sir!" This is the equivalent of going to a reading of a will and finding out your dear departed Granny left all her money to the pool boy/girl, and all your books you had at her house were being used as collateral for her gambling debts. I joke...but not really? It remains wild to think how Diamond spent 2025 declaring bankruptcy in January and being dead and gone by December. Now, it's both depressing and a bit impressive that it managed one final, "Up yours," to everyone. 

Tuesday, February 3, 2026

Dynamite and Coffin Comics to Co-Publish

Coffin Comics is the indie publisher owned by Brian Pulido that has pubished a number of series, with the big one being, "Lady Death," since he got the rights back some years ago following some nasty lawsuits with Avatar Press. That said, Lady Death used to be a part of the Chaos! Comics publishing line, along with other characters including Evil Ernie, Purgatori, Chastity, and more. The rights to those characters ended up with Dynamite, making it quite interesting that the Chaos! Comics line, in a sense, is reunited now that it has been announced Coffin Comics is going to partner with Dynamite and co-publish.

When Diamond Comic Distributors went under it was hard for Coffin as they were bigger than a micro-publisher but not large enough to interest Lunar/PRH, it would appear. By partnering with Dynamite, they can do more than direct to consumer and Kickstarter (although they've had immense success with those methods), and it makes the rights a bit less messy to republish a bunch of old Chaos! Comics--which is already planned via an, "Evil Ernie," three-volume set of his earliest adventures that haven't been collected in years, or ever. Diamond going under made things hard for lots of publishers, but many have--thankfully--found a way to survive and even thrive!

Monday, February 2, 2026

Groundhog Day, Politics, and the Power of Belief

It is Groundhog Day. The day ties into one of the funniest movies around--"Groundhog Day," with Bill Murray--and features multiple cities with rodents supposedly predicting how much winter we will or will not be having this year. I could be snarky about how people ignore climate scientists and listen to a groundhog, but you know what, in 2026, I'll take someone who believes a groundhog over anyone who still supports Donald Trump. I have forgiven people who admitted voting for Trump in 2016 and then not supporting him again after the travesty that was his first term. If someone told me they voted for him in the most recent election, even, but didn't know things would get so bad and regretted it, okay. If, in 2026, seeing how awful things are, someone still supports Trump, though? That's more delusional than believing with 100% certainty that a rodent predicts and/or controls the weather.

Between the silencing of journalists, using ICE as a personal Gestapo, lying about things we outright see with our eyes (people being murdered in the street and painted as domestic terrorists), having it illustrated in the smidgen of Epstein files released Trump is a rapist (we all knew that already), and shutting down programs that educate people and keep the populace healthy...just, how can anyone in their right mind support this? Five-year-olds getting arrested and detained, citizens killed with it claimed they are terrorists, concrete proof that Trump was sexually assaulting children on a rape island, and so forth. The first term was dumb, the second term is pure fascism. We had a breather between Trump terms with Joe Biden, but now we live in a surreal Hell of America's own making. So yeah, it isn't that crazy to think some people take a perfectly innocent groundhog seriously when there are people out there still excusing Trump instead of calling for him to be behind bars. In other words, Punxsutawney Phil for President in 2028--at least he isn't the Epstein files.

Sunday, February 1, 2026

Do You Enjoy the, "Fallout," Show? Pay a Bunch for Some DLC in a, "Fallout 76," Cash Grab!

The, "Fallout," television show will be wrapping up its second season soon--there is just one episode left. There are no, "Fallout," games currently in the works that we know of (despite rumors of remasters), so the most recent one would be, "Fallout 76," which is an online multiplayer affair that launched as a buggy mess in 2018 but has, apparently, become quite fun and workable. Without spoiling too much, the penultimate episode of the show's season featured a really snazzy Power Armor from the Northern California Republic being taken out of storage to fight some Deathclaws. This event was celebrated in, "Fallout 76," with some tie-in downloadable content...that costs thirty bucks.

To put all this in perspective, when, "Fallout 76," launched it was sixty dollars at the time. For half of the initial cost of the game, you can get an admittedly cool power armor design, a handful of items, and little else. Right now, the game is eight bucks! Fans are understandably perturbed that they can't even use in-game currency they could have accumulated via playing the game for a while to buy this Power Armor; it is cash money or bust. I love some of the single-player, "Fallout," games, but didn't really vibe with, "Fallout 76," as outside of when I used to play, "World of Warcraft," I don't do big ol' Multiplayer worlds much. If I were playing this game though, I'd refuse to drop thirty smackers on even the coolest Power Armor. Bethesda can charge what they want, but I support fans saying, "Nah," too.

Saturday, January 31, 2026

I Read and Enjoyed the Strangest Two-Volume (Raunchy) Manga

As 2025 wound down I was reading, "The Comics Journal," and their massive article where contributors discuss their favorite books of the year. Helen Chazan talked about how she loved a variety of comics, including, "Dogtangle," which I also was quite fond of, and one with a surreal and long title. Written and illustrated by Karasu Chan, "What Happened After My Place Got So Humid It Grew Magic Mushrooms and I Ate Them and Got Super Horny," my interest was piqued. Chazan wrote about it, "I am dead serious, one of my favorite comics this year was this ero-manga with that title. Visually inventive and deeply funny pornography about a woman's delusional quest to make a real friend, bolstered by energetic mark-making and impeccable comedic timing. Likely the comic I have recommended to people in conversation the most this year, tied with the majesterial Dogtangle (usually brought up in different company, mind you ... Usually.)." I mean, if I loved how odd, "Dogtangle," was maybe this manga about mushrooms that make a lady hallucinate and become super-horny would be worth a read? Having purchased and enjoyed volume 1 and 2, it was pretty wild and quite good.

"What Happened After My Place Got So Humid It Grew Magic Mushrooms and I Ate Them and Got Super Horny," is extremely explicit. It takes place in a World that has humans, humanoid with unique genitals, and is full of bodily fluids being drawn in quite a detailed fashion. It isn't just porn, however, although it is quite pornographic in spots. It has a shocking amount of heart and sentimentality. Our main character just wants to make friends and assumes a lot of sex will make people like her and maybe, just maybe they'll stick around after to play video-games. As both volumes point out, however, real friendship, "Isn't transactional." Whether this is learned from seducing a deliveryman or trying to find chums on a camping excursion, friendship comes from truly caring about someone.

There is a lighthearted playfulness to much of the story, and Karasu Chan is a skilled illustrator, with another review I found online digging the art style as well. This is a really fun little two-volume story, and I'd encourage anyone who isn't too prudish to check it out! One store selling copies of "What Happened After My Place Got So Humid It Grew Magic Mushrooms and I Ate Them and Got Super Horny," is Robert's Anime Corner Store. That's the site I found my copies on and they were great to order from! In closing, this was a superb ero manga, and I rate it...
5 out of 5 Stars.

Friday, January 30, 2026

Catherine O'Hara Has Passed

In news that I read and immediately said, "This sucks," in response to, Catherine O'Hara has passed at the age of 71. It was confirmed she had suffered from a, "Brief illness," before her death. O'Hara was a delight in anything that featured her. From, "Schitt's Creek," to, "Beetlejuice," "A Mighty Wind," "Best in Show," and a recent turn in, "The Studio," O'Hara was amazing. My favorite movie moment with her, however, has to be in, "Home Alone 2." There is a moment where she and her husband speak with airport security about how they lost/forgot Kevin, again, and then she cracks up about how they lose track of their child but never their luggage while the security guard stares at them unamused. The sheer cringe in the scene with O'Hara is pure gold. Observe:

The World is a bit less fun with O'Hara having left us. She will be dearly missed.

Thursday, January 29, 2026

Someone Did the Funniest Thing With Venom's First Appearance (or Cameo, or Whatever You Call It)

I'm in a bunch of Facebook groups about comic-books and in one, someone made a post about something they did that was absolutely hilarious. Jason Bogdanyi wrote,

"Lots and Lots of controversy around the first venom appearance. So I did something crazy to get a unicorn and original page to me. 

Ripped out a page from ASM 299 (low low grade) and sent it in hoping Todd would read my request to do a remark and well the slab now speaks for itself. 

DEBATE OVER"

As you can see in the picture, Mr. McFarlane was willing to sign his name and write, "First Venom Appearance." I mean, McFarlane has publicly said, "Amazing Spider-Man," #299 is, in his opinion, Venom's first full appearance and not a, "Cameo," or such. That said, in the same way, "Incredible Hulk," #180/#181 has many debates about Wolverine, everyone argues about this series and issue #299/#300 in regards to when Venom appears in full. I've always said an appearance is an appearance and that I don't get the whole, "Cameo versus full," debate. A video by streamer Swagglehaus discusses this new slabbed contribution to the dialogue regarding Venom's, "True," first appearance, and I reached out to Jason to get his permission to talk about this, and he told me one of his goals was to get a reaction and spark conversation. He succeeded!

Wednesday, January 28, 2026

A Game Studio Head Whined About Reviewers, Missed the Point of REVIEWING Things

The CEO of Larian is named Swen Vincke. He's been involved in the creation of some fantastic games, including, "Baldur's Gate 3." I don't recall any games his studio has made getting especially bad reviews, so it was odd to read an article discussing how he went on a mini-diatribe about reviewers. He had valid points about how personal attacks are bad (obviously), but said some reviewers just are too negative and need their own ranking system like Metacritic. I mean...reviews are subjective, my dude. Sometimes, a lot more people like or dislike something. I've not been into things some people loved, and I've posted reviews because I have a blog (thanks for reading it now, ya'll) where I share my opinion.

Toxicity is bad. Sharing an honest thought about a game/movie/comic/book/whatever is good. Sugarcoating your opinion and saying something is, "Perfectly good," when it is actually, "Hot garbage," is simply disingenuous. Reviews are not to be taken as gospel. They are what someone thinks. It is good to consult multiple reviews about something for that reason. If a reviewer is simply being a troll, they suck, yeah, but many reviewers just want to be sincere. Sometimes, a game is agreed by many to be bad, and it needs to be stated how there is little enjoyment to be wrung from it. I'm not going to be effusive with praise and mislead people regarding how I feel about something. On the other hand, if I adore a creation, the populace will know, guess why? That's the point of a review! In closing, don't purposely set out to be mean if you're reviewing something, but do make it a point to be transparent.