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14 Mar 11:41

onipress: Oni Press Presents CONVENTION PENALTY CARDS! Is some...



onipress:

Oni Press Presents CONVENTION PENALTY CARDS!

Is some wack-ass buster polluting your personal zone with negative vibes or inappropriate behavior?  Then simply give them one of these handy cards to send them a clear, concise message.

Comic conventions should be bastions of unfettered fun, enthusiasm, and safety; but lately it seems like nary a con can go by without some complaint of uncouth or downright inappropriate behavior on the part of some attendees.

While these cards are by no means a solution to a systemic problem, we hope they might prove useful should one find themselves in the damnable position of encountering said behavior.

This set of cards is printable both as a JPEG here and as a downloadable PDF here, and we’ll also have them on hand to give away at our booth at the many shows we’ll be exhibiting within this year.

We hope to see as many of you as possible as we exhibit across America over the next year; and we hope you have as fun, safe, and downright nerdy a time as you deserve!

Best,

Your friends at Oni Press

14 Mar 11:40

royalboiler: 1. scott snyder’s Severed  2.Farel Dalrymple’s Pop...





royalboiler:

1. scott snyder’s Severed 

2.Farel Dalrymple’s Pop gun War 

3. ECCC Heroes designed by Michael Avon Oeming

4. Mike Norton’s Battlepug

5. Wendy and Richard Pini’s Elfquest (petalwing on top of the Invincible dude’s head) 

6.Matt Fraction and Chip Zdarsky’s sex criminals 

7. Joe Ketinge and Leila Del Duca’s Shutter 

8. Robert Kirkman and artist Cory Walker’s Invincible

9. Egypt Urnash’s Decrypting Rita

10. Rob Liefeld’s PROPHET (that me and Simon Roy and Giannis Milonogiannis and Farel Dalrymple and Joseph Bergin III work on) 

11.Mike Kunkel’s Herobear and the Kid.

12.Aaron Diaz’s Dresden Codak

13. Joseph Fink and Jeffrey Cranor’s & voiced by Cecil Baldwin Welcome to Night Vale

14.Paul Tobin and Colleen Coover’s Bandette

15.Ron Randall’s Trekker

16. Damon Gentry and Aaron Conley’s Sabertooth Swordsman

17.  Rick Spears and Chuck BB’s Black metal.

18 Stan Sakai ’s Usagi Yōjinbō 兎用心棒

19. Jeff Smith’s Bone

20. Mike Allred’s Madman

21, My (Brandon Graham, me me me ) King city.

22.Adam Warren’s Empowered. (that I just drew a one shot issue of)

23.Kelly Sue DeConnick and Emma Ríos’s Pretty deadly.

24. Erik Larsen’s savage dragon (Malcolm dragon) 

25. E.K. Weaver’s T.J. and Amal (my favorite ongoing web comic—sooo good)

26.Corey Lewis’s Sharknife. (YOSHHHHH!!)

27. Kenichi Sonoda Gunsmith cats. (I’m sooo hyped that Sonada is gonna be at the con this year)

28.  Cullen Bunn and Brian Hurtt’s The Sixth gun. 

29. Kenichi Sonoda’s Bubble gum crisis. (this is basically an anime con from 1994 now) 

30.Greg Rucka  and Michael Lark’s Lazarus

31. David Petersen’s Mouse guard.

32. John Graham and Victor Steinbrueck’s The space needle

33. Ryan North’s Dinosaur comics

34.Richard Starkings Elephantmen.

35.  H. G. Wells invisible man 

36. Shannon Wheeler’s Too much coffee man.

37. Grant Morrison and Darick Robertson’s Happy! 

38.Rob Guillory and John Layman’s Chew, CHOG

39.Chris Sims, Chad Bowers, and Scott Kowalchuk’s Down Set Fight

40. Kurtis J. Wiebe and Roc Upchurch’s Rat Queens.

41. Eric Stephenson and Nate Bellegarde’s Nowhere men

42. Kevin Church & Grace Allison’s Wander

43. Noelle Stevenson, Grace Ellis and Brooke Allen’s Lumberjanes

44. Cat Farris’s flaccid badger

14 Mar 11:24

Surgeon Simulator to save or ruin lives on iPad tonight

by Mike Suszek
Surgeon Simulator will launch on iPad tonight, providing the game follows the common trend for UK and US iOS app releases that hit the same day as New Zealand. The game is out now for New Zealanders, and has players guiding the shaky hands of...
14 Mar 11:15

Volunteers in metadata study called gun stores, strip clubs, and more

by Cyrus Farivar

Since November 2013, researchers at Stanford University have been asking: What’s in your metadata?

Specifically, the study encouraged volunteers who also used Facebook to install an app called MetaPhone on their Android phones. The app was designed to act as a sort of slimmed-down version of the National Security Agency by attempting to gather the same metadata collected by telecom firms, and in turn, intelligence agencies. Volunteers who chose to participate allowed the researchers access to their calling and texting data, the date and time, and the duration of the call.

Since late last year, the team has been releasing interim results from the 546 people that chose to participate. On Wednesday, the team released its latest and most complete findings and was startled by what it found.

Read 17 remaining paragraphs | Comments

14 Mar 11:15

Chartspree

Chartspree:

Make charts in seconds. Use our URL to inject charts into your website. The data is supplied via the URL, no Javascript required.

13 Mar 09:00

Angry Birds' epic tease hints at upcoming mobile RPG (no, really)

by Danny Cowan
Last week's Angry Birds-related teaser video hints at an upcoming turn-based mobile role-playing game from series creator Rovio, Kotaku reports. Angry Birds Epic will feature an in-depth item-crafting component and a story-driven campaign when it...
13 Mar 07:49

Photo



13 Mar 07:49

Photo



13 Mar 07:48

Post-war, In focus













Post-war, In focus

13 Mar 07:48

Annie Proulx, The Shipping News



Annie Proulx, The Shipping News

13 Mar 07:48

"Same-sex couples getting married in England and Wales will have to wait until Saturday 29th March to..."

Same-sex couples getting married in England and Wales will have to wait until Saturday 29th March to hold their ceremony but a quirk in the law – first reported by BuzzFeed – means couples who married overseas will have their unions automatically recognised from tomorrow onwards.

This includes Celia Kitzinger and Sue Wilkinson, two university professors who married in Canada in 2003 and spent the last decade campaigning for their partnership to be recognised in Britain. Tomorrow, thanks to the government’s decision to bring forward the Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Act, that day will finally come.

“It’s like being turned into a pumpkin on the stroke of midnight,” Celia told BuzzFeed. “We’ll be sitting there in bed with a bottle of champagne and at the stroke of midnight we’ll turn into a married couple. We’re going away to a hotel, having a nice meal and the at midnight we’ll be wife and wife again!”



- Britain Will Have Its First Same-Sex Married Couples From Midnight Tonight
13 Mar 00:41

Harvard's Hiring A Wikipedian-In-Residence

Do you like Wikipedia? Are you a fan of obscenely wealthy educational institutions with unspeakable power? Then you'll love the job listing that just went up at Harvard.
13 Mar 00:41

Apple Drops iPhone Return Policy Back To 14 Days

At some point several years ago Apple decided to offer a much more generous return policy for the iPhone than it did for other products, bumping it from 14 days to 30 days. Over the last couple of years, however, the carriers have begun shifting to a 14 day return period.
13 Mar 00:39

What’s this!  Why it’s a new Hark! A Vagrant!...



What’s this!  Why it’s a new Hark! A Vagrant!  Haven’t seen one in many a moon!  

Go on and click through, for comics fun.

13 Mar 00:37

Photo



13 Mar 00:36

madhukamagica: carlwheezerofficial: what the fuck Im still...







madhukamagica:

carlwheezerofficial:

what the fuck

Im still convinced this entire movie was a mass hallucination

13 Mar 00:35

Photo



13 Mar 00:23

asosmenswear: MEET MENSWEAR DOG ASOS has a new office pet!...



asosmenswear:

MEET MENSWEAR DOG

ASOS has a new office pet! Check out the first in our mini-series with ASOS Menswear.

13 Mar 00:23

The Oregonian Sends Foodday Readers to Porn Site.

firehose

'The front page of the Foodday supplement, which is not only distributed inside every edition of the O, but also dropped on the doorstep of many Portland residents who do not subscribe to the newspaper, gives the link to that site as Curvygirls.com.

Our search of Curvygirls.com does not turn up very much information about scoliosis.

If you are not at work right now, would you mind helping us look for information about scoliosis on Curvygirls.com?

(If you are looking for information on teens with scoliosis, please go to CurvyGirlsScoliosis.com.)'

Foodday is the free piece of shit that they throw into everyone's yards

13 Mar 00:21

The bacon/Yelp correlation

by Seth Godin
firehose

via Jfiorato

What is New York's favorite way to eat oatmeal?

If you try to reverse engineer preferences from Yelp reviews, you're likely to make a common error. It turns out that bacon-as-a-topping comes up often in Yelp, which might lead you to believe that adding bacon to the menu is a surefire crowdpleaser.

In fact, what it tells you is that bacon lovers are more likely to post Yelp reviews.

There are now two crowds. There is the crowd of mass, of everyone, of what the average folks want. And there is the crowd of the loud, the interested and the connected.

If your goal is to get more reviews on Yelp, then, over-the-top and particularly edgy choices in food and service are a great idea. The thesis of We Are All Weird is that segments of the population are finding each other, challenging each other and getting weirder all the time.

You probably won't get great ratings in TripAdvisor with a perfectly pleasant hotel, or good food at a good price. This group, the group that's gaining in power, demands more from you.

By all means, then, get weird and amplify what the outliers want if your goal is to attract raving fans online. But at the same time, it's way too early to confuse acceptance by the critics with delight of the masses. Difficult to do both at the same time.

       
13 Mar 00:20

#33392

firehose

via Kara Jean
eternal autoreshare hall-of-famer

13 Mar 00:20

sammneiland: bisexual-books: slutc0ven: ryan-on-bass: Source:...

by newageamazon
firehose

via Lori













sammneiland:

bisexual-books:

slutc0ven:

ryan-on-bass:

Source: Orientation Police by Bill Roundy

This is cute as fuck and describes pretty accurately how I feel too.

This comic is included Anything that Loves edited by Zan Christensen.  

aside from this comic being really cute and honest, it also points out this really huge glaring problem in the gay community in relation to trans-men.

in my experience with a lot of gay men, they have this extremely purist view when it comes to what being a “real man” is, which is bad enough when you have different gay subcultures (bears, gymrats, etc) who have different specific definitions of what a “real man” is.

however for the most part, many gay men seem to agree upon a point of leaving trans-men not only out of their gender, but out of their sexuality as well and I have a real fucking problem with that.

i’m pretty open about things that relate to my sexuality, and i myself identify more or less as a homosexual, but i’ve found the worst part in the gay community is dealing with this bullshit. eventually i found that i at least have the luxury of telling guys to fuck off if i don’t meet their standards, but i know that’s a lot harder for folk when they seem to have the entire population of homosexuals more or less invalidating not only their gender, but their orientation as well.

with all of that said, i just ask this. if you happen to be a cisgender homosexual, like myself, don’t tell other gay men that they aren’t actually gay if they’re dating or have had relations with a trans-man because that’s a load of fucking bullshit.

more important, under any circumstance do not tell a trans-man they’re not a man or that they aren’t allowed to like other men who are homosexual, be they cis or trans.

that’s all i really wanted to say.

This comic has so many good points and comes off as a really honest and to the point, and the commentary is fucking great as well.

Also it is so incredibly adorable that I had to share it.

13 Mar 00:18

Femen’s Patriarch Exposed

by Marlow Stern
firehose

via Russian Sledges

A SXSW documentary reveals that the band of Ukrainian topless protesters is controlled by a manipulative man who confesses, 'I’m a patriarch in an organization against patriarchy.'
    
13 Mar 00:15

Tumblr | 51e.png

firehose

via Rosalind

51e.png
13 Mar 00:15

Vendor's benchmarks

by sharhalakis
firehose

via rnas

by @sdolotom

13 Mar 00:13

The Mary Sue’s In-Depth Talk With Dark Horse Comics’ Editor In Chief On Women In Comics

by Jill Pantozzi
firehose

via Mybloodyvalntne

Dark Horse Comics, the home of Buffy, Star Wars comics, and a boy from Hell, is known for characters with strong personalities and big names to back them up. This year will be no different. Editor in Chief, Scott Allie, joined us for an extensive discussion on their titles, women on the comics pages, women writing and drawing the comics themselves, and the women buying them (Hey, that’s us!). They’ve also given us a ton of exclusive cover reveals! Here’s Part 1 of our chat, Part 2 will be up tomorrow. 

The Mary Sue: Something I know I’m personally invested in from Dark Horse is Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Season 10 is about to premiere, what can you tell us about the upcoming story and creative teams? I am particularly ecstatic about this preview image (Check out our exclusive color version of the cover in our gallery below, the result of a Twitter poll for who was who in this Odd Couple homage, and the result was #FelixIsXander!), and of course, Nicholas Brendon.

Scott Allie: Since you ask about Nicky—yeah, Season 10 will see Xander much more front and center. In Season 9, we made the choice to keep him on the periphery a lot, with the idea of building to the reveal of his anger problem and what he did to Angel at the end of Season 8. It was not a strategy that Xander fans enjoyed, and we learned our lesson. There’s nothing cute about keeping the core four away from the core of the story. So I think we’ve done a better deal about building a story that revolves solidly around those characters.

At the end of Season 9, you saw a hint that vampires have evolved yet again. In both titles, our heroes discover that on their own, to their great displeasure. In order to do something about it, they’ll have to team up with Dracula, which is just one of the ways that Xander takes center stage. When Nicky and I talked about him coming to the writers summit, which was nearly a year ago now, we knew we wanted to have Xander play a bigger part in Season 10, but it was having him there, Nicky, that really shined a light on the great ways in which we could make Xander very central, and make the story very funny.

TMS: It’s funny you mention how the fans reacted to the Xander plotline. How important are the fan reactions to the story overall?

Allie: They’re important, but the thing is, the fans aren’t all in agreement … If pleasing the fans were a prerequisite, we would publish nothing. They’re divided, which is natural. [Mike] Mignola says that as long as a story is one person’s favorite, he knows he’s done well. With Buffy, you hope anything you do is only hated by a small group. Kind of the same thing …

Often when we’ll hear complaints from some corner of the Buffy fandom, we may understand where they’re coming from, but we know we can’t please everyone. But other times, we realize we agree. Marginalizing Xander—it worked for the Season 9 story, but we don’t want to do it again. The question is, why do we love these stories? And a big part of it is the friendship between the core four. So if they’re not together, are we really getting what we love out of the comics? So fan response has often helped us identify what we want out of the books, but we can’t spin into a panic every time the internet flares up in outrage over some detail or another.

TMS: And Angel & Faith, the unlikely but entertaining team-up, is also returning soon.

Allie: This was tough. We loved the work that Christos [Gage] and Rebekah [Isaacs] did on Season 9 of Angel & Faith so much, we were torn about how to handle Season 10. We knew that the Buffy Season 10 team was moving on to other things—Andrew [Chambliss] focusing full time on Once Upon a Time, and Georges [Jeanty] shifting over to Serenity. Rebekah and Chris had done such great work, so consistently well reviewed, and much loved by Joss [Whedon], me, the whole crew—we told them they could do whatever they wanted. Rebekah said either book, as long as she could work with Christos and Dan Jackson, the colorist. And Chris said he’d do either, as long as he could stay with Rebekah. Sometimes a team just works, makes a book ten times better than it would be with either of the creators paired with someone else. We knew these two had to stay together, and after the writers summit, Chris and I both felt like they needed to be on Buffy. That just left the challenge of finding an Angel & Faith team worthy of filling their shoes, and we found that in Victor [Gischler] and Will [Conrad]—a team that had also worked together before, as well as both working on Whedon stuff. They’re doing their best work together on this title, for sure.

TMS: When I heard Gail Simone would be writing Tomb Raider, I thought I’d just about died and gone to heaven. I know from following her on Twitter she’s a video game lover, how did Dark Horse and her team up for this huge project?

Allie: We’d been talking to her about various things. We talked to her about Buffy clear back before Season 9, but it didn’t come together. We talked to her about Conan a long time ago, I think, and it came together with the Sonja/Conan crossover. By then, though, Dave Marshall had reached out to her for Tomb Raider. He happens to edit both TR and Conan/Sonja. Dave is the leader of our video game initiative. I give Dave the credit for establishing us as the go-to place for great video game comics and video game art books. It’s something he had a lot of commitment to, quite some time ago, and had to push the company on. He’s personally done a lot to change the perception, to show that it’s worth it to put top talent on these game books—although it was another editor, Rachel Edidin, who put Faith Erin Hicks on Last of Us.

These books broke the mold—and sometimes I admit they’ve had to break the mold over my head—about what video game comics are. So as we’ve improved our efforts, so to speak, we knew Tomb Raider was a uniquely great opportunity for us, that the game would receive intense interest, and we wanted to rise to that, rather than rest on it—which is why Dave suggested Gail. I understand it took some persuading, but she was here in town the other day. My wife runs marketing for our sister company, Things from Another World, and she set up a big Tomb Raider signing with Gail. We all had lunch, and I think I can say that she’s pretty happy with her decision to do the book, and the response from the readers.

TMS: I think outside superheroes, Lara Croft is one of the most famous and popular female pop-culture characters. The head writer of the recent Tomb Raider video game, Rhianna Pratchett, has certainly spoken about what the character means to her and what working on the character has meant to her, but what have you heard from Lara fans about the comic project?

Allie: I’ve worked with Rhianna a little on another thing, a Thief comic that we did with Square Enix, and I know she loves the character of Lara. Oh, and she also wrote the custom Tomb Raider book we did for a retailer exclusive—a hardcover that you got with the game. She’s definitely a writer who comes from a different field who gets comics, and I’m lucky to have worked with a bunch of those … perhaps a bit of a career understatement, I guess.

Talking about fans of Lara is an interesting thing, because she’s a whole new woman now, you know? She was an icon that was really useful for women to own in the nineties and later, even though she was very heavily geared toward a male audience at the time. But the audience evolves, the business evolves, and she’s a new person now. Fans of the game are invested in her heroics, they appreciate that she’s not hypersexualized, that she’s more sophisticated and human. And maybe you lose some of the dudes who didn’t want that, but I believe Square Enix made that choice to make a better character.

You know, also with Buffy, things evolve. The version of feminism that’s presented through a fantasy character is different now than it was in 1998, when we first started doing the comics. There’ve been a couple things in the comics that I’ve had to steer the writers and artists away from, to which they’ve very legitimately responded, “But wasn’t that in the show?” And it was, but things change. This is the Buffy of 2014 (or whatever year it is in the comic itself, shhhh), and this is the Lara of 2014, and I’m proud of that. I like presenting these images of heroines, as opposed to some of the other ones in our industry.

TMS: You mentioned The Last of Us, that game has also been a boon for positive representations of women in video games. Hicks actually helped introduced a character who recently became pretty important in the DLC. Do you think representation started in comics has an affect on other mediums and vice versa?

Allie: Yes, and I fear that overall comics hasn’t been great in terms of its popular impact. God bless the Hernandez Brothers, because I think they helped evolve the portrayal of a lot of kinds of characters in popular arts, but to a certain extent, when people look at comics, and see how women are portrayed, what they take away doesn’t evolve the genre landscape. Buffy has meant so much to me, but she came from TV. At the time that she came from TV, comics weren’t putting out a ton of awesome female archetypes. I would love it if the world at large thought of Cliff Chiang’s portrayal when they think of Wonder Woman, but I don’t think that’s the case. But comics have the potential to build up characters who will evolve the portrayal of female characters in genre fiction, and I hope that what we do contributes to that.

TMS: You also brought up something I think about often, men being turned off from a title if things are less sexualized. In my opinion, the readers the comic medium could gain by toning down the sexualization of the female characters far outweighs the readers who would stop reading a title because the character’s chest wasn’t large enough. I know it’s not something you can give a factual answer on but do you agree?

Allie: Yeah, I totally agree. I mean, we’re pursuing that very thing. With Buffy, I’ve often had to push my most well-intentioned artists to play down the cheesecake. I remember once Georges (male) complaining to me that Jo Chen (female) had made Buffy’s breasts too large on a cover, and I had to ask her to tone it down. One of my artists recently kept putting midriff-baring shirts on female characters in scenes unsuited for that. I wrote a long, annoying screed to one of my creative teams about how we’re gonna portray women in comics. And we redesigned Ghost’s costume for the relaunch to make it less about her cleavage.

So I do agree, but I also think that even if you and I are wrong—about the market—I’m happy that we’re doing what we’re doing. Not that I want to suck all the sexiness away from comics. I love Empowered—where Adam Warren has fun with the whole thing, the whole issue of sexualization. I like Jeff Campbell. And I’m not above the genuinely low-brow stuff, that falls into the cliches Adam is lampooning. But I’m really, really happy that most of my work is on material that doesn’t talk down to, or scare off, female readers.

TMS: It’s also refreshing to hear Dark Horse has proverbially put their foot down in instances where they felt, like with Buffy, a creator was veering into territory fans might not appreciate. I wish more publishers would say “no” when they see something come across their desk that they know would turn off a potential readership.

Allie: But those are our sensibilities. We’re actually not changing anything because it might offend someone—we’re changing it because we don’t like it. I mean, we have those sensibilities. I may be wrong, but I sort of doubt that someone at DC looked at that one guy’s Catwoman cover and said, “This may offend people, but I’m gonna go for it.” I sort of imagine a lot of high fiving over that picture, followed by surprise that it got the reaction it did. I’ve been guilty of not predicting a negative response, or not expecting the particular negative response. I bet that’s a big part of it, although I can’t say. But … thank you.

TMS: You also managed to snag Kelly Sue DeConnick for Ghost, working with Chris Sebela and Ryan Sook. From what we’ve seen, DeConnick has done, and continues to do, a lot for comics as a medium and fandom through her writings, whether it be with female characters or otherwise. What has her addition meant to Dark Horse?

Allie: It has been great, and it’s meant a lot to me. She’s as outspoken and passionate on a personal level as she is online, and she’s one more person that I know who I get to sort of check myself against. So there’s that. But what she’s meant to Dark Horse is another strong voice, another unique vision. She’s actually leaving Ghost. She co-wrote Ghost #1-3 with Sebela, her cowriter on Captain Marvel, and then she wrote Ghost #4 as a solo issue, her send off. I think it’s an appropriate departure for her. Then Sebela takes the reins, with a new artist …

A lot of people have been wondering what’s gonna happen with all the great creators we have on our Star Wars books. Very happily, Jan Duursema is taking over Ghost. She was someone Joss and I looked at getting for Fray, but she was too in love with Star Wars to move off those books. So now I’m just really glad she’s staying with us, even if her little Jedi friends aren’t …

Kelly’s someone I admire, and I’m glad to know. We have some other stuff cooking. Her departure from Ghost is amicable, and because of her partnership with Chris, we count on a real smooth transition, storywise. And Jan is gonna be awesome. Jan hasn’t drawn superheroes in ages, and she’s perfect for it. And man, does she know how to draw someone in a cloak!

Take a look at the fantastic art Dark Horse has provided us (exclusives marked as such) and make sure to check back in tomorrow for Part 2 of our discussion with Allie. We talk Greg Rucka, Hellboy, turning away and drawing in new comic readers, Misfits of Avalon and more!


Enable JavaScript to check out our fancy slideshow.


  1. 1.Buffy the Vampire Slayer (Season 10) #7 Variant Buffy the Vampire Slayer (Season 10) #7 Variant Art by Rebekah Issacs with Dan Jackson
  2. 2.Buffy the Vampire Slayer (Season 10) #5 Buffy the Vampire Slayer (Season 10) #5 Art by Steve Morris
  3. 3.Buffy the Vampire Slayer (Season 10) #5 Variant Buffy the Vampire Slayer (Season 10) #5 Variant Art by Rebekah Issacs
  4. 4.Buffy the Vampire Slayer (Season 10) #6 Buffy the Vampire Slayer (Season 10) #6 Art by Steve Morris
  5. 5.Buffy the Vampire Slayer (Season 10) #6 Variant Buffy the Vampire Slayer (Season 10) #6 Variant Art by Rebekah Isaacs with Dan Jackson
  6. 6.Angel & Faith (Season 10) #3 Angel & Faith (Season 10) #3 Art by Scott Fischer
  7. 7.Angel & Faith (Season 10) #3 Variant Angel & Faith (Season 10) #3 Variant Art by Chris Samnee with Jordie Bellaire
  8. 8.Angel & Faith (Season 10) #4 Angel & Faith (Season 10) #4 Art by Scott Fischer
  9. 9.Angel & Faith (Season 10) #4 Variant Angel & Faith (Season 10) #4 Variant Art by Chris Samnee
  10. 10.Veil #4 Veil #4 Art by Toni Fejzula
  11. 11.BPRD Hell on Earth #117 BPRD Hell on Earth #117 Art by Rafael Albuquerque
  12. 12.Ghost #6 Ghost #6 Art by Jenny Frison
  13. 13.Tomb Raider #6 Tomb Raider #6 Art by Dan Scott
  14. 14.Tomb Raider Tomb Raider Art by Brian Horton

[View All on One Page]

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13 Mar 00:13

Watch Iggy Pop And New Order Play “Love Will Tear Us Apart” And “Californian Grass”

by Stereogum
firehose

via Mybloodyvalntne

Last night Carnegie Hall hosted the 24th annual benefit concert for Tibet House US, a non-profit organization geared toward preserving Tibetan culture. Patti Smith (covering Lou Reed’s “Perfect Day”), members of the National with Sufjan Stevens, Nico Muhly, and Tibetan folk singer Techung performed, and the headliner was Bernard Sumner’s latest version of New Order joined by Iggy Pop, who played the Joy Division classic “Love Will Tear Us Apart” together. Pop and New Order also gave the first ever live performance of New Order rarity “Californian Grass.” Watch video of both songs below.

Read More...








13 Mar 00:11

Blind runners in Tokyo

by mattsmith
firehose

via Elena Bulygina

Running Blind 8 650x433 Blind runners in Tokyo
Every weekend, at the Yoyogi Park in the middle of Tokyo, you can see blind people jogging around the park’s track. Amazing, emotional and inspiring, it’s a true testament on overcoming adversities.

Running Blind 7 650x433 Blind runners in Tokyo
Running Blind 1 650x433 Blind runners in Tokyo
Running Blind 6 650x433 Blind runners in Tokyo
Running Blind 2 650x433 Blind runners in Tokyo
Take a look at the entire photographic document here.


Leawo Total Media Converter - Enjoy Spring Offer up to 50% Off!
    






13 Mar 00:10

text-mode: BBS Ads Collection v1.0 by Dipswitch/DCS^BM, check...

firehose

via Jakkyn



















text-mode:

BBS Ads Collection v1.0 by Dipswitch/DCS^BM, check it here!

13 Mar 00:08

ultrafunnypictures: Woke up over the weekend with a hangover...

firehose

via KV



ultrafunnypictures:

Woke up over the weekend with a hangover and this cradled under my arm, which I apparently stole from subway. Pride of place.