Monday, December 31, 2007

Toy OTD: Eric So Sprite Figures: Scratch, Stereo, Twin Boy, Twin Girl (2001)

This set of vinyl toys (I'm assuming) is a promotion for Sprite. There's eight characters (Scratch, Stereo, Mono, Twin Girl, Twin Boy, Subsonic, Scream and MC) and they were the first Eric So figures that I encountered.

The designs are really cool, the sculpts and paint jobs are quite nice, and you can actually use most of the accessories (meaning they fit on, or can be held by the figures - surprisingly, that's not always true). The biggest minus is balance - as I recall, some of the have trouble standing on their own. Making removable vinyl sneakers is a cool idea, but it usually leads to balance problems.

These toys have been out for quite a while, but you can still get some of them online. There's a set of four (Scream, Scratch, Stereo and Supersonic) for $179.99 + shipping at toywiz.com. These figures generally go for $35-$40 each, so that's not too bad.

There's a variant of Scratch for sale ($49.99 + shipping), a signed Scream ($39.99 + shipping), a Scream variant (ditto), all-blue versions of Scratch, Twin Boy, and Subsonic ($60 + shipping each) at toytokyo.com. They also have keychain versions of MC, Twin Boy, Subsonic and Scream for $14.99 + shipping (each) if money is tight. I bought Scratch back in the day, and it's quite good for the price!

Toyeast.com has all-blue versions of Scream, Stereo, and Subsonic for $40 + shipping (each), as well as two sets - one with the first versions of Subsonic, Scream, Stereo and Scratch for $170 + shipping, and a set of the second-pass variants (I think - I may have the color passes reversed) of all eight characters for $180 + shipping.

So they're out there! You may have to do some digging to get the specific figure (or version of it) that you want, but considering that they're seven years old, they're pretty accessible and affordable. Good luck!

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Sunday, December 30, 2007

By Popular Demand

A couple more pictures of the Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer mall display. Enjoy!

Photos by Ken Mitchroney, at the Eastridge Mall.

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Toy OTD: Presspop Gallery Sof' Boy Vinyl Figures - 4" and 8" Versions (2002, 1999)

Presspop isn't that prolific with its vinyl toys, but they make up for it in quality - each release is worth the wait. It's certainly true of their great Sof' Boy figures, dead on-model with Archer Prewitt's design! The sculpt does most of the heavy lifting, as there isn't much paint work needed. The biggest minus is the typical one - balance. These guys are tough to stand up, and the hip articulation doesn't help matters. Be sure to get some museum putty to display these toys!

As far as I know, this character is available in three sizes - four inches, eight inches, and a giant twenty-four-inch version! The big one is sold out (the 200-piece run originally cost $130 each, so expect to pay more if you find it), and I can't find the eight-inch version for sale anywhere (keep an eye on eBay), but you can buy the four-inch figure at forbiddenplanet.co.uk for £12.99 + shipping. Personally, I like the sculpt and pose of the mini-figure the best anyhow!

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Saturday, December 29, 2007

Toy OTD: Foster's Freeze Premium: Little Foster Wind-Up

I don't have much to say about this little fellow, except that it's another example of a good, cheap toy. The design's been maintained in an appealing way, and there's only three paint passes on one color of plastic. The sculpt's a little stiff, but still cute, especially considering the mechanical nature of the toy. The biggest downside is the same of every wind-up - the winding mechanism is flimsy. Mine was broken when I bought it!

I have no idea how old this is, or how it was sold. I'm assuming it was given away at Foster's Freeze as a premium along with a specific food purchase. I picked this one up at a toy show for just a dollar or two, so if you can find one, I doubt it'll be all that expensive. There's nothing on eBay right now, so keep your eyes peeled!

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Friday, December 28, 2007

Happy Beaver Comic 3

Toy OTD: Bowen Studios' Inhumans Mini-Busts: Karnak, Quicksilver, Crystal, Triton and Gorgon


I don't know if these characters were all that popular with Marvel collectors - most of the ones I have were marked down significantly. I'm enough of a Fantastic Four geek that I scooped up as many as I could get!

As with most of the Bowen products, the posing, paint work, and sculpts are really great (Bowen is one of my favorite Marvel merchandising companies). They get a little goofy with the thematic base designs, but at least they don't plaster names or logos on any of them. The likenesses are right from the comics, adapted in a very appealing way.

You can get several of these online right now - Triton is on eBay for $29.95 + $8 shipping, ditto Karnak for $19.99 + $9.50 shipping, Gorgon is $32.00 at ccgarmory.com, Crystal is $39.95 + $9.00 shipping on eBay, and Quicksilver is $37.00 + $6.50 shipping there, too (It'll be $114.99 + $9.99 shipping at wizarduniverse.stores.yahoo.net if you want the green-costumed variant). I seem to remember buying these for even lower prices, so keep your eyes peeled at toy shows and comic conventions!

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Website OTD: lastexittonowhere.com

I thought I'd keep this site to myself (at least in terms of blogging about it), but there's an article in
The New York Times Magazine
now, so that's not happening!

If you go there, you can buy awesome T-shirts that are cryptic references to businesses, locations, and events in various movies. For example, you can get a shirt that's designed to look like you've visited Devil's Tower, Wyoming (from Close Encounters of the Third Kind), or worked at the Tyrell Corporation (who makes the replicants in Blade Runner). They're super cool!

I've emailed the owner of the site and deluged him with dozens of ideas for other shirts - I'll try to post as many of my lists as I can remember here - feel free to send ideas to me, and I'll pass them along!

Here's some to get you started:

* Dr. T's Music School - from The 5,000 Fingers Of Dr. T
* (Jack) Burton Trucking/Pork Chop Express - from Big Trouble In
Little China
* (George) Kaplan's Crop Dusting - from North By Northwest
* Antonio Bay Centennial Celebration - from The Fog
* United Planets Cruiser C-57D - from Forbidden Planet
* Egg Foo Young Scenic Tours, Chinatown, San Francisco - from Big
Trouble In Little China
* Terran Federation Mobile Infantry - from Starship Troopers
* CIVIC-TV (UHF Channel 83, Cable 12) - from Videodrome
* Save The Clock Tower shirt - from Back To The Future
* (Biff) Tannen's Detailing - from Back To The Future
* "Enchantment Under The Sea" dance shirt - from Back To The Future
* Lester's Possum Park - from A Goofy Movie
* Lake Destiny, Idaho - from A Goofy Movie
* Gonzo The Great's Plumbing - from The Muppet Movie
* El Sleezo Cafe - The Muppet Movie
* Doc Hopper's French Fried Frog Legs - from The Muppet Movie
* UBS-TV - from Network
* Interzone, Inc. - from Naked Lunch
* Clamp Enterprises - from Gremlins 2: The New Batch
* Yoyodyne Propulsion Systems "Where The Future Begins Tomorrow" -
from Buckaroo Banzai
* Hong Kong Cavaliers shirt - from Buckaroo Banzai
* American Eagles shirt - from Roger Ramjet
* Team Banzai/Blue Blazer shirt - from Buckaroo Banzai
* Slugworth Confections - from Willy Wonka and the Chocolate
Factory
* ENCOM - from Tron
* Space Paranoids shirt - from Tron
* Central Services shirt - from Brazil
* Ministry Of Information - from Brazil
* Mr. Fusion - from Back To The Future
* Faber College ("Knowledge Is Good") - from Animal House
* Curl Up And Dye Hair Salon - from The Blues Brothers
* Delos - from Westworld
* The Hippo Club - from Grosse Pointe Blank
* Waterloo Waterpark - from Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure
* (Shop Smart! Shop) S-Mart - from Army of Darkness
* WKFL Rockin' Ricky Rialto (whips out the oldies) shirt - from Gremlins
* Transamerican Airlines - from Airplane
* Shields Pictures - from The Bad and the Beautiful
* Stay-Puft Marshmallows - from Ghostbusters
* Consumer Recreation Services - from The Game
* "I Was Buried And Left For Dead And All I Got Was This Lousy T-Shirt" shirt - from The Game
* McMahon & Tate Advertising- from Bewitched
* Space Cruiser Yamoto - crew shirt
* Dinky-Di dog food - from Mad Max
* Con-Almalgamate - from Outland
* Drax Corporation - from Moonraker
* World Wide Studios - from The Muppet Movie
* Flynn's Arcade - from Tron
* The Very Big Corporation of America - from Monty Python's The Meaning of Life
* Duke & Duke Commodities - from Trading Places
* Genco Furi Olive Oil - from The Godfather
* Paper Street Soap Company - from Fight Club
* Montana Management - from Scarface
* Osato Chemicals - from You Only Live Twice
* Diva Droid International - from Red Dwarf
* Sirius Cybernetics Corporation - from The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy
* Misfit Music - from Jem
* Al's Toy Barn - from Toy Story
* Eggman Movers - from Toy Story
* Dinoco Gas - From Toy Story
* Space Rangers shirt - from Toy Story
* Sid's skull shirt - from Toy Story
* The 'Woody's Roundup' Show (retro) - from Toy Story 2
* Woody's Roundup "Honorary Deputy" shirt - from Toy Story 2
* P.T. Flea's Bug Circus - from A Bug's Life
* (Visit) Ant Island tourist shirt - from A Bug's Life
* Japanese Toy Museum shirt - from Toy Story 2
* MI shirt - from Monsters, Inc.
* Scream promotional shirt - from Monsters, Inc.
* Laughter promotional shirt - from Monsters, Inc.
* Put That Thing Back Where It Came From, Or So Help Me musical shirt - from Monsters, Inc.
* Harryhausen's restaurant - from Monsters, Inc.
* (Visit) Monstropolis tourist shirt - from Monsters, Inc.
* Sydney Opera House tourist shirt - from Finding Nemo
* Dental business ad shirt - from Finding Nemo
* EAC/East Australian Current tourist shirt - from Finding Nemo
* Insuricare - from The Incredibles
* (Visit) Nomansian Island tourist shirt - from The Incredibles

UPDATE: More ideas!:


* Twin Pines/Lone Pines Mall - from Back To The Future
*
Gower's Drugs - from It's A Wonderful Life
*
Bailey Bros. Building & Loan - from
It's A Wonderful Life
*
Nick's Bar/Martini's Bar -
from It's A Wonderful Life
*
Ma Bailey's Boarding House - from
It's A Wonderful Life
*
(Visit Scenic) Potterville tourist shirt -
from It's A Wonderful Life
*
(Visit) Bailey Park tourist shirt -
It's A Wonderful Life
* Bates Motel - from Psycho
* Y. Cornelius Mineral Recovery ("Silver, Gold Our Specialty") - from Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer
* Misfit Dentistry - H. Elf, DDS -
from Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer
*
Dasher's Flight Training ("World-Famous Reindeer Games") - from
Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer
*
Quint's Charter Fishing - from Jaws
*
U.S.S. Indianapolis crew shirt - from
Jaws
*
Orca crew shirt - from Jaws
*
Peltzer Smokeless Ashtray ("Incredible Ideas For An Incredible World") - from Gremlins
*
Medvale College - from The Strongest Man In The World; Now You See Him, Now You Don't, etc.
* Rust-eez Bumper Ointment - from Cars
* Vinyl Toupee - from Cars
* Team McQueen - from Cars
*
(Visit Scenic) Radiator Springs - from Cars
*
Leakless - from Cars
*
Hostile Takeover Bank - from Cars
*
Flo's V8 Cafe - from Cars
*
Luigi's Casa Della Tires - from Cars
*
Radiator Springs Curio Shop - from Cars
*
Ramone's House Of Body Art - from Cars
*
Nitroade - from Cars
*
No Stall - from Cars
*
Octane Gain - from Cars
*
Dinoco 500/Piston Cup shirt - from Cars

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Thursday, December 27, 2007

Post-Christmas Cheesecake, Monsters

If you're so inclined, check out Poletti's Flickr set called The Galactically Hot Women Of Star Trek TOS. Not surprisingly, there's lots of bizarre, dated hair and makeup on display!

In vivid contrast, Wired has posted a list of Trek's ten cheesiest monsters. Give your, uh, brains a chance to shift gears, then enjoy!

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The Tradition Continues

You'll find the phrase See You Next Wednesday - a title to a fictional film - planted in some John Landis movies. It was the title for the first screenplay he wrote, and began as a line in 2001: A Space Odyssey. The above still is from The Blues Brothers.

The reference is starting to spread, as you can see here in the new Hellboy 2: The Golden Army trailer! I guess Guillermo del Toro is a bigger film geek than I thought...

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Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Toy OTD: McFarlane Toys "How The Grinch Stole Christmas" Tableau: You're A Mean One, Mr. Grinch

McFarlane hasn't been doing a lot of animation toys lately (aside from the Hanna-Barbera and Simpsons lines - compare that to the scale of the Spawn, military, and sports figure collections), so it was nice to see How The Grinch Stole Christmas toys emerge this fall. They look great, having the trademark McFarlane wealth of detail. The sculpt is strong, and the paintwork is, too. A big plus is the number of different colors of plastic used to reduce the number of paint passes.

I'm not crazy about McFarlane's steadily increasing need to create mini-dioramas for their character figures. On the plus side, you can connect this room to the base of another toy in the line, and create an even bigger tableau. On the minus side, these things gobble up shelf space like there's no tomorrow, reduce the amount of work that can be done on the character itself, not to mention driving the overall price point up. Still, this one evokes Maurice Noble's layout work very well, and the whole set-up feels very appropriate to the television show - there's no silly signs, logos or banners telling us what TV special this scene is from.

Unfortunately, there's some scale and model problems - the toy sack is too small, the fireplace has no back to it (odd considering how thorough the toy generally is), and the Grinch's legs look short and stiffly posed compared to the rest of the figure. They're small but significant details.

Toysrus.com sells this item for $12.99 + shipping, which might turn out to be less than I paid at my local comics shop. Check out the rest of the line at spawn.com!

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Tuesday, December 25, 2007

Happy Holidays!

Best wishes to you and yours for a happy holiday season!
From Jeff, Anita, Figaro & Piccolo

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Monday, December 24, 2007

Toy OTD: Gemmy Industries Hocus Pocus Plush

Here's a simple beanie-plush from Gemmy's Frosty The Snowman line, I'm assuming that there's two reasons why plastic 'beans' are added to the majority of small plushes - 1) it helps them stay upright; and 2) it lumps them into the Beanie Baby category, which I'm sure helps them sell better. Maybe, anyway - I'm not sure there's any heat left to the beanie craze.

This is a pretty basic toy, but it's a good likeness of the character. The embroidered eyes help preserve some of the original 2-D design. The shapes and texture are nice and straightforward, and there's no gratuitous branding or labeling to clutter it up - a really nice job for the price point.

I can't find this toy for sale online right now, so you'll have to cast your net on eBay and see what turns up. Good luck!

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The Richter Scales Go Viral

LA TIMES: Bursting Silicon Valley's bubble through song
The Richter Scales have an online hit with a musical video parody.
By Jessica Guynn, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer - December 24, 2007

SAN FRANCISCO -- An offbeat a cappella group composed mostly of computer geeks, the Richter Scales have performed original ditties and pop parodies in relative obscurity for seven years.

That is, until three weeks ago, when they released an online video that mocks the latest Internet frenzy sweeping Silicon Valley. "Here Comes Another Bubble," an original arrangement of Billy Joel's "We Didn't Start the Fire," pokes fun at the "monster rally all around the valley." In staccato bursts of words and images, it lampoons the Web industry's silly buzzwords and business names, pizza-and-beer-fueled engineers, male-dominated launch parties, billion-dollar valuations and mass-scale ego trips.

The musical romp opens with Facebook Inc. investor and board member Peter Thiel declaring, with a straight face, "There's absolutely no bubble in technology." Its final lines, "And when we are gone/This will still go on and on and on and on and on and on and on" are interrupted by a loud popping sound.

The clever commentary on the cult of the Silicon Valley start-up was an instant hit, passed along via e-mail and blogged by venture capitalists, entrepreneurs, coders and marketers. It climbed the charts to become YouTube's top-rated video in its first week with more than 1 million views.

"It's about the gold-rush spirit of thousands of entrepreneurs who want to try their hand at being the next Larry Page or Sergey Brin," said Matt Hempey, the 33-year-old PayPal Inc. product manager who wrote the lyrics and arranged the song.

Even those lampooned got a kick out of it. Technology blogger Robert Scoble said he laughed so hard that he sprayed Diet Coke out of his nose. TechCrunch founder Michael Arrington called it an honor to have his cigar-puffing mug gracing the video's display image.

Not everyone was amused. The video was yanked from the Web after Bay Area photographer Lane Hartwell complained that one of her images was used without credit, sparking a spirited online debate about fair use of copyrighted material. The Richter Scales last week cut a version without her image and listed credits for images they used.

That didn't appease Hartwell, nor some of the other photographers whose images briefly appear in the video. But so far the new version remains on YouTube and www.richterscales.com.

Hempey, who solos on "Here Comes Another Bubble," said the half-baked business plans, copycat companies and flowing venture capital dollars inspired him to set music to the debate that has flared in the industry: Are we in another high-tech bubble?

He says he sees so many people trying to spin fortunes on broadband and a prayer that it's deja vu for Silicon Valley.

The 15 members of the Richter Scales belong to a generation shaped by the Internet bust. Seven work for start-ups, four more are at technology companies such as Apple Inc. and Google Inc.

Curtis Chen, a 34-year-old bass singer and Web applications engineer at Google, said it didn't take long for his co-workers to become fans of the video.

"They really identified with it," he said. "There are a fair number of people here who worked at start-ups that failed, myself included. They are familiar with what happened the last time around and they can see it happening again, as the video says."

It was in 2000, during the Internet crash, that the Richter Scales banded together, a group of guys looking to stretch their vocal chords and rekindle the camaraderie of collegiate a cappella. They practiced Thursday nights in the empty offices of one member's start-up, located in a seedy San Francisco neighborhood next door to a strip club whose motto was "Feel the beauty, touch the magic."

The group's experimental, self-directed vibe appealed to its members' entrepreneurial natures.

A cappella means "in the style of the church" in Italian and is sung without the accompaniment of instruments. But nothing is sacred where the Richter Scales are concerned. They send up Christmas music and Gregorian chants alike with satire and slapstick, performing every six weeks, with two main shows a year. Ranging in age from 25 to 40, the guys bond at weekend retreats, spending as much time talking about their lives as they do writing songs.

They first put their voices to video this summer with a spoof of the sub-prime lending collapse, "Fine Line: Sub-Prime Decline," which was viewed more than 39,000 times and was mentioned on a handful of blogs. But the viral success of "Here Comes Another Bubble" surprised them.

Heretofore their highlights were singing the national anthem at a San Francisco Giants game, serenading guests at mayoral fundraisers and their own weddings and belting out a few tunes on street corners or in restaurants. (Their second gig was a lively rendition of "I Left My Heart in San Francisco" in the back of a Japanese tourist bus.)

"We perform at all sorts of kooky things where people are not listening to us," said James Currier, a 40-year-old San Francisco entrepreneur who co-founded the Richter Scales.

But about 200 people recently packed a rented San Francisco church to listen to the group's annual holiday medley. The Richter Scales, wearing black shirts, blue jeans and Santa hats, joked they were thrilled to see so many "unique visitors" show up for their "user-generated content."

They performed geek-friendly songs including Brian Rosen's ode to spam "I Got Mail" ("Now I've got new hair, a new physique/I lost twelve pounds in just one week/Yeah I got mail and I got it made"), and Jason Hunter's digital ballad "E-mail Me Your Love" ("Nothing turns me on like a well-placed emoticon"). Rosen, 36, is a senior software engineer at Pixar Animation Studios and Hunter, 28, is a senior content manager at EBay Inc.

"Seeing as we are a bunch of tech guys, we write what we know," said Rosen, the Richter Scales' musical director.

Their first live performance of "Here Comes Another Bubble" brought down the house.

Still, like any bubble-era start-up worth its weight in venture capital funding, the Richter Scales lost money on the gig, as they have on every one since inception.

The much-aired bubble video hasn't exactly lined their pockets either. They offer it free online, and they've sold only eight of their "We Hate A Cappella" CDs as a result of the publicity -- about one for every 125,000 viewers. That means 3.5 million people will have to view the video before they recoup the $355 it cost to make it.But they say they were never in it for the fame or fortune.

"I've really enjoyed making the valley laugh about something I am intimately familiar with," said Hempey, who survived a start-up failure or two. "It was a great idea at the right time."

jessica.guynn@latimes.com

*************************************************************************************
Here's hoping that the Scales' online bubble isn't a fluke. Go Brian!

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Sunday, December 23, 2007

"When To Take My Name Off The Door": A Speech By Leo Burnett

I don't have a lot of respect for advertising, but this is a pretty stirring declaration of principles from Leo Burnett. Maybe this is part of why he is still considered one of the titans of the field.

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Toy OTD: Memory Lane Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer Figure: Boss Elf

Memory Lane has been making our holidays happier for the last few years by making lots of Christmas characters! The Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer line is one of their best, featuring plenty of the Rankin-Bass players.

The boss elf is one of my favorite figures, mainly because he's a secondary character that might not make the cut in other toy lines. I've never figured out why he sports a sixties-jazz goatee, but I think it's amusing.

The sculpt and paint job aren't dazzling, but they're on-model, and quite good for the price point. The hat is removable (I think it's magnetic), and he comes with a misfit toy (the train with the square-wheeled caboose), a baton to conduct the Christmas chorus, and toy-making blueprints. The biggest minuses are that his eyes look a bit glazed over, and the loose hip joints can make standing the figure tricky.

Being the holidays, you can get this figure pretty easily - it's $9.50 + shipping at cosmicclutter.com. If they're out of stock, a Google search should provide you with a ton of other options!

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Saturday, December 22, 2007

Toy OTD: Bandai Talking "Big Guy" Figure (1999)

Frank Miller and Geoff Darrow sparked off a mini-franchise when they teamed up their versions of Gigantor (Tetsujin-nijūhachi-gō 鉄人28号) and Astro Boy (鉄腕 アトム, Tetsuwan Atomu) in their comic, The Big Guy and Rusty The Boy Robot. Even though they were only featured in short, sporadic comic book appearances, the concept spawned a short-lived animated television series, and a line of merchandise.

You really couldn't ask for a better toy of the Big Guy than this! It actually is pretty big - thirteen inches tall - and speaks four phrases (his eyes glowing red) when you push his chest button. I'm assuming that they're from the show: "Candygram!", "For the luvva Mike!", "Fire in the hole!", and "This is serious business!" I've never seen the program, so I can't tell you if it's the same voice actor or not.

One arm opens to reveal a pair of cannons, while the other can fire off from his arm, Shogun Warrior-style. The former can be tricky to close back up, and the latter has a hair trigger, but they're still cool features! He also comes with accessories: a ray pistol, his human pilot (though he always came across as autonomous and sentient in the comic), and a roughly-to-scale Rusty figure. I don't remember how much this figure originally cost, but it was affordable enough that it was a good deal for the money!

There are two talking versions of this toy - the 13" size that has four phrases, and a 6" model with just two (and no accessories). This'll make buying one online a little tricky, so make sure that you're getting the version you want when bidding on eBay!

Speaking of which, I can't find this toy for sale online. You'll have to set up a favorite search - Good luck!

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Friday, December 21, 2007

"Happy Beaver" In Toronto, Part II

This shot was taken at Ludgero & Fatima's corner store on Harbord.
Thanks again to Neil LaPointe for the photo!

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Ruff And Reddy Episodes Viewable Online!

Check 'em out over at the ASIFA-Hollywood Animation Archive! They're protean H-B, to be sure, but it's neat to see. This series isn't available on DVD yet, so take a look and expand your Hanna-Barbera nerditry!

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Thursday, December 20, 2007

Happy Beaver In Toronto!

Here's a shot in Toronto's Yonge station during the morning rush. Enjoy!
Thanks to Neil LaPointe for the photo.

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Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Fantasy Nerds Everywhere Suddenly, Inexplicably Aroused

NY TIMES: Master of ‘Rings’ to Tackle ‘Hobbit’
By DAVID M. HALBFINGER - Published: December 19, 2007

LOS ANGELES — Goblins, trolls and dragons were a breeze compared with the caustic clash of egos that kept “The Hobbit” in Hollywood limbo for years. But a settlement announced on Tuesday between Peter Jackson and New Line Cinema holds the promise that peace will break out in Middle Earth and that fans could see the first of two resulting movies by December 2010.

The pact, which two people involved said was worth nearly $40 million to Mr. Jackson, ends years of litigation and acrimonious auditing over his share of the profits from the “Lord of the Rings” trilogy. Those movies grossed $2.9 billion worldwide, made Mr. Jackson’s reputation and vastly enhanced New Line’s stature among the major movie studios.

Though Sam Raimi has stated his interest, it is unclear who will direct the two Hobbit movies, but Mr. Jackson will not. Mr. Jackson and his producing and writing partners, Fran Walsh and Philippa Boyens, are committed to making “The Lovely Bones” through 2008 and then he is directing “Tintin,” based on the Belgian comic strip, for Steven Spielberg.

But Mr. Jackson and his wife, Ms. Walsh, will be executive producers of the Hobbit films, and they will share with New Line the right to approve all creative elements: director, screenwriter, script, cast, filming location, even the visual-effects company used (as if there were any doubt that his Weta Digital would be chosen). “They can assure that the films will be made with the same level of quality as if they were writing and directing,” Mr. Jackson’s manager, Ken Kamins, said.

Settlement of the litigation freed New Line, which held the rights to make a “Hobbit” movie, and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, which has distribution rights, to cut a 50-50 financing deal: New Line will make the two films and distribute them domestically, and MGM will distribute them overseas. The untitled sequel is described as bridging the 60-year gap between the end of J. R. R. Tolkien’s “Hobbit” and the beginning of the “Rings” trilogy.

Despite the treasure involved — or perhaps because of it — the Jackson-New Line marriage grew testy by 2003, when Mr. Jackson began complaining about his share of the profits. New Line paid added bonuses, but Mr. Jackson nonetheless began an audit, which was said to particularly antagonize Bob Shaye, the studio’s co-chairman with Michael Lynne.

Warfare broke into the open in February 2005, when Mr. Jackson sued New Line over his audit, saying the studio was stonewalling his accountants. After Mr. Jackson told fans in a Web posting late last year that New Line had formally dropped him from “The Hobbit,” Mr. Shaye exploded on the Web, “He thinks that we owe him something after we’ve paid him over a quarter of a billion dollars.”

A thaw began some weeks later, Mr. Kamins said, when Mr. Jackson dined at the home of Harry Sloan, the chairman of MGM. It held distribution rights to “The Hobbit” and Mr. Sloan was desperate to get the franchise moving. By May, during the Cannes Film Festival, Mr. Jackson and Mr. Shaye joined a multiparty conference call; it was the first time they had spoken in about two years, Mr. Kamins said. “That call created a tone that really lasted into the fall,” he said.

If Mr. Sloan was motivated to spur a deal — he said the “halo effect” alone from “The Hobbit” could help attract talent and financing to MGM — Messrs. Shaye and Lynne of New Line were said to be facing a deadline of their own: their contracts as studio bosses expire in 2008, and the public combat with Mr. Jackson was a cause for frequent criticism. (Mr. Jackson at one point offered his “Lovely Bones” project to every major studio except New Line.)

The studio, meanwhile, has had a run of two years with only two hits, “Rush Hour 3” and “Hairspray.” Its costly “Golden Compass” opened to a disappointing $25.8 million gross in its first weekend.

In an interview on Tuesday, Mr. Shaye admitted that he had taken some aspects of the dispute with Mr. Jackson quite personally, but he and Mr. Lynne insisted they had faced no pressure from above to cut a deal.

Mr. Lynne said, “No one told us we had to resolve it one way or another.”

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VARIETY: 'Hobbit' back on track as twin bill
New Line settles dispute with Jackson
By MICHAEL FLEMING
Posted: Tue., Dec. 18, 2007, 9:23am PT

"The Hobbit" is finally happening.

After settling a lawsuit with Peter Jackson on "The Lord of the Rings," New Line co-chairmen/co-CEOs Bob Shaye and Michael Lynne announced jointly with MGM chairman Harry Sloan that the way is clear to turn J.R.R. Tolkien's "Hobbit" into two live-action films.

The resolution clears the way for "Spider-Man" helmer Sam Raimi to direct. While Shaye said no creative alignments have yet been made, Raimi has long been interested -- as long as Jackson was involved or gave his blessing.

The studios hope to start production in 2009, shooting two films simultaneously and releasing them in December 2010 and December 2011. New Line will run production and distribute domestically, while MGM will release internationally. The studios will co-finance the films.

Jackson's Kiwi stages, post-production and visual effects facilities -- which he built to accommodate "LOTR" -- likely will be used to mount "The Hobbit." And New Zealand once again will be used as the visual backdrop for Middle-earth, this time to tell the story of how Frodo's uncle, Bilbo Baggins, ventured from the Shire and wound up taking the Ring of Power from Gollum.

The key to moving forward was settling all litigation between Jackson and New Line over funds owed the filmmaker for "LOTR."

Jackson and partner Fran Walsh filed suit in Los Angeles Federal Court in 2005, charging they were shortchanged in profit participation on "The Fellowship of the Ring." A bitter war of words set Jackson and Walsh in one corner, Shaye and Lynne in the other.

Jackson's next two directing gigs are both for DreamWorks. He optioned Alice Sebold novel "The Lovely Bones" and wrote the script with his "LOTR" partners Walsh and Philippa Boyens. He'll also team with Steven Spielberg to co-direct "Tintin."

While those commitments will keep Jackson from directing "The Hobbit," the settlement deal is helpful not only for Shaye and Lynne but also for MGM's Sloan, who helped put the parties together.

The contracts of Shaye and Lynne expire next fall. The studio has weathered several tough post-"LOTR" years, and its latest attempt at a fantasy trilogy, "The Golden Compass," has proved tepid. Pic has so far grossed just north of $40 million domestic, while drawing $90 million in offshore ticket sales. Though Hossein Amini has scripted sequel "The Subtle Knife," it's unclear whether the second installment of Philip Pullman's "His Dark Materials" trilogy will go into production.

At MGM, Sloan planned to revive the studio with franchises. Dealt a setback when "Terminator Salvation: The Future Begins" went to Warner Bros. (MGM is suing financier Halcyon, claiming that its negotiation rights were violated), Sloan now has two plum titles to use as building blocks. Though Columbia distributes the James Bond film about to begin production, MGM gets the 007 franchise back after that, and Sloan said Daniel Craig is signed to a multipicture dseal.

"I give a lot of credit to Peter, Bob and Michael for putting their differences aside for a tremendous property that has an enormous fan base," Sloan said. "Between 'The Hobbit' and Bond, we're involved in two of the best-known franchises in the world."

Shaye and Lynne said while they have not yet gotten to shake hands with Jackson and Walsh, they consider the legal matter to be history.

"This is a complete resolution of all the disputes between us," Lynne said. "Obviously, there is extensive auditing on pictures that are successful. In our business, you can have differences of an accounting and legal nature that polarize people and get in the way of personal and professional relationships."

Shaye, whose barbed public comments toward Jackson once widened the gulf between them, said he was also relieved.

"Nobody likes contention," Shaye told Daily Variety. "None of us, not me, Michael, Peter or Fran, were happy that a dispute was destroying a fruitful and prosperous enterprise.

"All these lawyers were going crazy not letting the principals communicate directly, when we might have been able to solve this years ago. Movies are difficult enough to make without having a war going on," Shaye continued. "The settlement was done with the idea that the good spirit that nurtured the first three films can continue. I hope we can revive what was once a wonderful relationship."

Jackson was unavailable to comment beyond a statement and there was no comment about the size of his "LOTR" settlement.

"I'm very pleased that we've been able to put our differences behind us, so that we may begin a new chapter with our old friends at New Line," Jackson said in the statement. "The Lord of the Rings" is a "legacy we proudly share with Bob and Michael, and together, we share that legacy with millions of loyal fans all over the world. We are delighted to continue our journey through Middle-earth."

(Janet Shprintz in Hollywood contributed to this report.)

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"Mr. Lynne said, 'No one told us we had to resolve it one way or another.'"

Nothing except the oceans of money and piles of awards the "Rings" series has amassed! I figured something would get worked out eventually. Initially, I was worried about two "Hobbit" movies, but this is encouraging:

"The untitled sequel is described as bridging the 60-year gap between the end of J. R. R. Tolkien’s 'Hobbit' and the beginning of the 'Rings' trilogy."

That's fine with me! I was only concerned with padding (what I think is)
Tolkien’s most succinct and self-contained book in order to stretch it over two films.

Cool! Well, we'll see...

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Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Happy Beaver Comic 2

David Gonzales: Beyond The Homies

LA TIMES: 'Homies' are where his art is
The barrio figurines left their creator rich but unfulfilled. Then he cast his brother as a model of mutual redemption.
By Hector Becerra, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer - December 18, 2007

HERCULES, CALIF. -- Ten years ago, David Gonzales created a hit with "The Homies," 2-inch plastic figurines depicting characters from the barrio, complete with bandannas and baggy pants. Inspired by the homeboys he grew up with, they were sold, quarter by quarter, in gum ball machines in mostly Latino neighborhoods.

Gonzales was lambasted by police and prosecutors, who said the impish images exploited gang life for profit. Naturally, they then sold better than ever: more than 120 million to date.

The 47-year-old Gonzales, now a father of three children in college, lives in an elegant two-story Spanish-style house overlooking San Francisco Bay, just down the road from the flinty central Richmond neighborhood where he grew up.

"I call this house 'the house that the Homies built,' " he said.

Gonzales has been featured in national magazines, including Rolling Stone, and rubbed shoulders with celebrities. His characters have adorned back-to-school folders, lunchboxes, breath mints and beach towels. The Pasadena Museum of California Art is hosting an exhibit on his Homies, and Nintendo will soon release a Homies video game.

Yet there has been a gnawing feeling of unfulfilled goals and unmet expectations. He wanted to hit the big time with an animated TV show -- something that would really leave his imprint. Oil paintings by Gonzales, often with religious themes, hang on the walls of his home -- a reminder that the artist created the toy maker, not the other way around.

He felt harried by a sense that time was slipping away, sounding curiously like someone stuck in his own plastic bubble. Sometimes, he bared his soul to a priest.

But not just any priest.

Gonzales, one of five boys in a family scraping by in a tough neighborhood, grew up intense, artistic and studious. He asked his parents to take him out of a Roman Catholic school and enroll him in a public school because the latter had an art program.

"I knew David was going to be an artist," said his mother, Agnes.

His brother Robert, younger by a year, hung out with a rougher crowd. He got into fights, burglarized homes with his friends and landed in jail. He dropped out of high school.

The brothers were close, but their paths kept diverging. David enrolled at California College of the Arts in Oakland. He drew a comic strip for Lowrider magazine with characters familiar -- for better or worse -- to just about anyone growing up in Mexican American barrios. Robert moved to Nevada to work in the Job Corps.

One day in 1980, David got an urgent call from a hospital in Reno.

Robert and some friends had scuffled with a group of young men on the side of a desert road. Someone had hopped into a car and gunned it in Robert's direction, pinning him between two cars. His right leg had to be amputated below the knee.

When David and their mother reached the hospital, a priest told her that Robert must have been pulled from the grave by a guardian angel. The priest also remarked that Robert was highly spiritual, a comment that surprised his family.

David went back to college and Robert returned to his parents in Richmond. But even in a wheelchair he was rebellious, blowing insurance money on a lowrider and partying harder than ever. He moved out but soon felt lonely, isolated and miserable. He drank a lot.

One day, Robert returned to Richmond and found David in their parents' garage. If anyone could understand him, Robert figured, it would be David.

Robert wept. He told his brother he wanted to come back home. But he felt ashamed. What Robert really seemed to crave, David thought, was forgiveness -- penance.

"The prodigal son spends his riches and comes home. He rejects his parents' love and direction," David said, recalling what he learned in church and Catholic school. "A lot of people screw up in their lives and leave, and their parents slam the door in their face when they come back."

But David knew that would not happen to Robert, even if his brother had doubts. "Just speak to Mom and Dad," he told him. "They'll understand."

So Robert spoke to them.And they welcomed him back.

In the ensuing years, David made money designing T-shirts and selling them at flea markets and liquor stores. One of his first bestsellers featured Barturo, a barrio version of Bart Simpson who asked: "¿Qué pasa, dude?" Another successful shirt featured the Virgin of Guadalupe.

He took a job as an artist with the Postal Service in Oakland to support his wife and children. He painted a huge mural titled "Journey of a Letter" in a post office lobby in Fremont but eventually quit so he could pursue the T-shirt business full time, refining his barrio creations.

Then a manufacturer called him about making plastic figurines of his comic strip characters.

Meanwhile, after his garage chat with David, Robert patched up things with his parents, enrolled in vocational school, graduated with honors and took a job at a savings and loan. But, as David would feel years later, Robert sensed something was missing in his life. There had to be, he decided, a reason he survived the attack. One day, he called his parents into the living room and announced that, at age 24, he wanted to become a priest.

"He was the last person I expected to be a priest," his mother said. "When you think of a priest, you think quiet and studious. Robert was so rebellious."

In 1989, the year the Homies figurines made their debut, Robert took his religious vows and a new name, Masseo, after one of St. Francis' followers. When Robert was ordained as a Franciscan priest seven years later, David read a speech.

"Knowing Father Masseo . . . I'm sure he'll be dealing with a lot of problems facing young people, such as drugs, gangs and teen pregnancy," David said. "He'll be an important part of a lot of baptisms, first communions and confirmations. Those will be his children."

Soon enough, David would need Masseo for his own talk-in-the garage moment.

He was making lots of money. By most accounts, Homies were the best-selling character brand in vending-machine history. But police and prosecutor complaints were wearing on him. Many stores stopped selling Homies, and lots of people thought he was glorifying gangbangers and profiting from it.

The Homies, with names such as Chuco, Joker and Poco Loco, were just his humorous tribute to a subculture of Latino life, he said. "I'm not going to stop gangs, and I didn't create them," David said, sounding slightly exasperated. "They exist. Just like they exist in the regular Hispanic community, they exist in the Homie world."

David fired off a frustrated e-mail to his brother, saying that he was thinking of going back to the Postal Service. He found it hard, David said, to accept that "God blessed me with all this . . . artistic talent for that job in life."

"God didn't give you this talent for nothing," his brother replied.

The priest also reminded him that even a toy maker had a larger responsibility. Not every Homie had to be vato, a dude in the barrio.

So David kept at it. He created El Paletero (the ice cream vendor), who works to bring his grandchildren from Mexico. And Officer Placa, a rotund, doughnut-loving cop who "worked the barrio for about 20 years and knows all the Homies by name."

Robert suggested he create a figurine of a homeboy in a wheelchair -- a common sight in gang-afflicted neighborhoods. Willy G. became the most popular Homie ever. Soon, David got calls from the Special Olympics and from people who coached youngsters with disabilities.

He also created a homeless man, a young student and an activist. But no character would have a life of its own, and bind the two brothers, so much as El Padrecito ("the little father") -- a Franciscan priest with robes, sandals and stylish sunglasses who "acts like a second father to many of the Homies" and looks a bit like Robert.

The Padrecito turned out to be more than just a figurine. Masseo adopted him as his personal logo and found that the Homie helped him reach young people in need. Robert created El Padrecito's Online Church, where he fields questions, offers upbeat advice, counsels the troubled and sometimes delivers a religious message in rap.

"My life would probably be a lot more boring without the Homies," the priest said.

Robert talks optimistically about his dream of opening a monastery in the town of Guadalupe and reaching ever more people through the cyber-church.

To help Robert along, David sold him the rights to El Padrecito for $1 and gave him permission to use all of the Homies in his religious efforts. And last year David created Santos, a line of figurines of saints and religious figures, such as Pope John Paul II. David also donated $20,000 to his brother's growing cyber-church.

Last year, a young woman from Houston e-mailed El Padrecito to say she was about to earn her college degree. She wanted to thank the father for helping her cope with the execution of a family member on death row years before.

"Crazy as it sounds," she wrote, "if I hadn't written to you so long ago, my life may have turned out differently and I could have been just another statistic, just another face on the welfare line."

Could the priest have reached out to the young woman without El Padrecito? Probably, but the Homies certainly made it easier, Robert said. And the priest brought the artist a measure of redemption as well. "He helped the Homie family stay on the right path," David said. "It was reaffirming for me, and it let me know that I had not gone too bad."

And who would have ever expected that from the creator of Chuco, Joker and Poco Loco?

hector.becerra@latimes.com

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Monday, December 17, 2007

All This, And Maggie Gyllenhaal Too

The new trailer for The Dark Knight is up, and it looks great. Looks like Bruce has a strong new love interest, too. Can't wait, can't wait!!

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Sunday, December 16, 2007

And So It Goes

VARIETY: Singleton hunts for 'A-Team' team
Fox in early talks with director on remake
By TATIANA SIEGEL - Posted: Sun., Dec. 16, 2007, 8:00pm PT

Director John Singleton is gearing up to direct a bigscreen version of 1980s TV series "The A-Team" and talking about the casting possibilities all over town.

Twentieth Century Fox is in early talks with the helmer to resuscitate the gang, but the studio said no deal is in place, and the project is not envisioned as a pre-SAG/DGA strike affair.

Ice Cube, who starred in Singleton's debut, "Boyz N the Hood," has been rumored as a potential B.A. Baracas (played by Mr. T in the NBC series), but Fox denied that possibility.

Latest incarnation, penned by Jayson Rothwell, revolves around a group of Iraq vets wanted by the U.S. military for a crime they didn't commit. Their adventures combine helping the innocent while running from the law. Story has been given a modern twist by involving oil tycoons and laser technology.

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Nothing says 'modern' to me like lasers and oil barons.

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Toy OTD: Funko Sugar Bear Wacky Wobbler

Funko's primary lure (at least for me) has been their Hanna-Barbera and cereal character licenses. They're great at picking characters that few have merchandised, or at least haven't been for a good twenty-five or thirty years! Not surprisingly, Sugar Bear - the mascot for Super Sugar Crisp (now Post Honey Crisp, even though it's the same cereal) - is one of them.

Even though the cereal has undergone a name change, Funko still printed "Sugar Bear" on his sweater, a nice retro touch. The pose is a little symmetrical, but overall it's a good sculpt, nicely on-model. The paint work is fine, though quality can be a little inconsistent, so you may want to look at the toy in person (or peruse several if you can still find them in a store) to make sure you get a good paint job. The proportions are good for a nodder, so you probably won't have to worry about the head sagging or listing in a few months.

It's still easy to get this toy - in fact, it's been marked down, so you can get it reduced at cherrygames.com for $8.99 + shipping.

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Olympus C-3040 - R.I.P.?

My digital camera really started giving my guff this morning - I can't reload the memory card without getting error messages. I was getting infrequent ones before, but now it just won't load properly no matter how hard I try.

I've ordered a new memory card in the hopes that the card is the problem and not the camera. I think the set-up's at least six or seven years old, so maybe its time has come. Hopefully not, because I really like shooting with it - I know its quirks and how to get good pictures out of it.

I shot a few new toy photos yesterday, but until the new card arrives, that'll be it for a while. Stay tuned!

UPDATE (1/3/08): Still no memory card. I called the place in New York where I ordered the replacement (there wasn't a phone number on the website - I had to track it down through information... uh oh), and was informed that they no longer had it in stock. They'd sent me an e-mail, apparently, but I never got it.

So I found another website (memorysuppliers.com), and called before ordering to make sure that they had the card in stock. They didn't, but I was assured that the Samsung card would work just as well. Okay...so I ordered it. I doubt I'll get it before the break ends, but hopefully I'll at least get this one!

So...add Soho Electronics to your list with Toy Tokyo on it - the one of companies that you call before ordering anything, because they don't update their websites very well.

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Saturday, December 15, 2007

A Christmas Story House Open For Tours

You'll be happy to know that the house where A Christmas Story was filmed looks exactly as it did in the classic 80's holiday film. But it wasn't easy...

Apparently, after the film's release, the original owners re-modeled everything in order to keep fans away. It didn't work. Fortunately, the next owner (Brian Jones, who snapped it up from eBay in 2004) was a huge Story buff, spending almost a quarter of a million to faithfully return the house to its original look. The house sports the iconic leg lamp in the front window, and a 1937 Oldsmobile in the driveway! Across the street is a Christmas Story museum where you can pick up souvenirs.

Check out the nerdy, nerdy details at achristmasstoryhouse.com.

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Mr. Toast Is In The House!

My buddy Dan Goodsell just finished his first vinyl toy, a figure of his character Mr. Toast! He's the star of Dan's webcomic, The World of Mr. Toast.

He's super-deadpan-cute, and only costs $22.00 + shipping ($5.oo domestic, $11.00 international). He comes with a display stand (not pictured, but you can see it at Dan's blog), and a package custom-designed with Dan's artwork. Get Mr. Toast for yourself, or as a holiday gift - buy one today!

UPDATE: You can also buy him at myplasticheart.com - along with a bunch of his friends in plush form!

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Toy OTD: Trendmasters Lost In Space Robot B9 (1997)

Remember when the Lost In Space movie came out? Trendmasters made a lot of spin-off toys, but they wisely added a parallel line inspired by the original TV series. The B9 robot was the best of it all, and it's still a kick-ass toy!

It's motorized, but doesn't have a corded remote control to mess up the design, or an unnecessary radio control. The arms can be locked in the retracted position, or can be popped out at the push of a button. The sound chip features the original voice actor speaking a few nifty phrases, and the toy can be switched from standard talking mode to room guard mode if desired. It even pivots about the waist and lights up when activated! Cool. Plus, it's dead-on-model, which hasn't happened in an affordable version of the character until this point.

There's three versions of the Trendmasters B9 that I'm aware of - a two-foot-tall RC version, a smaller talking version (pictured), and a smaller-still version (I'm not sure what features - if any - that it had). I think the version I bought is a great size-to-features compromise. I can't remember how much it cost, exactly - I think it was around twenty-five dollars.

These toys are long gone from stores, but there's one for sale on eBay for $55.00 + $23.45 (!) shipping - yikes. There's cheaper auctions online, but just make sure you're getting the version that you want - I'm sure that sometimes the smaller robots are getting foisted off on unsuspecting bidders as the larger model.

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Friday, December 14, 2007

Toy OTD: Belae Scooby-Doo Soap Bottle (1999)

This isn't a Soaky soap bottle - (I think) those were made from the late fifties into the early seventies, so this is far too modern. Still, it's a terrific sculpt - better than a lot of the older bottle toys. It's great how the designer hid any trace of the cap under the head (it separates below the collar).

They get big points, too, for picking a character that you can sculpt in a pose that can form a bottle shape nicely, without resorting to props or small backgrounds. The colors of the head and body plastic are two clearly different browns (not as obvious in the picture), but it's a minor quibble considering how on-model and in character it is!

I bought this new at a Walgreens (or Target, or something like that) for less than ten dollars. I can't find one for sale online right now, so pop in a favorite search on eBay and keep your fingers crossed!

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Nice

PCs Piss Off Santa Claus

Here's a cute new stop-motion Apple spot, with characters designed by Shane Prigmore and directed by Drew Lightfoot. I love the fact that there's so many Rankin-Bass nerds out there eager to make this stuff!

I hope Apple makes dolls of these characters - especially the PC guy. Wouldn't that be the best - making money from merchandising your dig at the competition? Come to think of it, though, I guess South Park does that every week!

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Thursday, December 13, 2007

Hammer Walks Among Us

VARIETY: Hammer comes back from dead
Film to be released via MySpace
By ARCHIE THOMAS - Posted: Thurs., Dec. 13, 2007, 8:02am PT

LONDON — The recently revived Hammer Films will produce its first feature in three decades and distribute it via social networking site MySpace’s web TV arm.

Legendary Brit production company Hammer built its name on a string of genre pics released in the 1950s and 1960s under the Hammer House of Horror label.

The new pic “Beyond the Rave” will be released in 20-minute online webisodes on MySpace TV and then be made available in its entirety on DVD to buy or download.

The youth-skewed vampire story set in England’s underground rave party scene follows a hedonistic soldier in his quest to track down his missing girlfriend in the last 24 hours before he flies to Iraq.

Cast includes Sadie Frost (“Bram Stoker’s Dracula”), Jamie Dornan (“Marie-Antoinette”), Nora-Jane Noone (“The Descent”) and Tamer Hassan (“Layer Cake”).

Matthias Hoene directs. Ben Grass and Tom Grass of Pure Grass Films produce for Hammer.

“ ‘Beyond the Rave’ was inspired by Tom and my own experiences of raves: the great highs, and the demons that can lurk in the dark before dawn,” said Ben Grass.

Hammer’s latest resurrection came in May when it was bought a consortium led by Dutch producer John de Mol.

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Toy OTD: Japanese Muttley Bank

I imagine I've mentioned before that Wacky Races merchandise is still fairly common in Japan. Aside from the cars themselves, Muttley is a very popular character in any WR toy line, maybe because he was a cartoon survivor, going from Wacky Races to Dastardly and Muttley In Their Flying Machines and other Hanna-Barbera shows later on. Plus, he's a cute cuddly dog - it's not super-tough marketing math!

I picked up this vinyl bank about eight or nine years ago from eBay, when that was the easiest way to get Japanese toys. It's still one of my favorite H-B/WR pieces. It's a great sculpt, capturing the iconic pose really well. It's not marked up with any unnecessary branding or logos, and the coin slot is handily out of sight when viewed from the front. The paint work is limited and simple, but well-executed. The colors may not be perfectly on-model, but they're bright and appealing. I'm not sure who the manufacturer is - there doesn't seem to be any markings on it anywhere.

Even though I bought this quite a while ago, two eBay auctions popped right up on the first try. You can buy one for $22.00 + $7.61 shipping (or best offer) right now from SHE_WOLF DOG TOYS - enjoy!

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Monday, December 10, 2007

Something Interesting Has Happened

Mainly, that (according to my Bravenet hit counter) my blog audience seems to have increased in a big way - from about four hundred hits a day to almost fifteen hundred today! I guess the Vinyl Toy Network show triggered the jump, but I'm not exactly sure how.

I didn't give out my contact information that much, so I'm assuming that naming my toy business after my web address (and having it displayed on the VTN homepage) was a much better idea than I'd ever anticipated! It's a big reason why I bit the bullet and started the web comic - I wanted to hang onto my new readers with more original material.

Welcome, everybody! Hope you enjoy the new feature...

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My New Webcomic

We'll see how often I can do this... let me know what you think! I'll start out with spot gags, then try continuity later on.

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UPA's Take On "Frosty The Snowman"

I didn't even know this existed! There's not a lot of acting in it, but the animation is better than most of the Rankin-Bass special.

More On The Latest Version Of Blade Runner

SFFMEDIA.COM: What's new in Blade Runner: The Final Cut?
Written by John Howell - Sunday, 09 December 2007

After 25 years since its original release, a definitive version of Ridley Scott's science fiction masterwork Blade Runner, Blade Runner: The Final Cut, has arrived.

So what exactly has changed? And is it worth all the fuss?

After attending a recent screening I can report that there are significant differences, mainly improvements, between this new version and Ridley's first Director's Cut released in 1992.

First off, the unicorn dream sequence, originally introduced in the Director's Cut, has been extended. Deckard's daydream of a unicorn galloping through a forest in slow motion is a pivotal scene, clearly suggesting that Deckard, like Rachel, is a replicant. In a recent article in Wired, Ridley explained why.

“Gaff, at the end, doesn't like Deckard, and we don't really know why,” said Ridley, after being asked whether it was on paper that Deckard was a replicant. “And if you take for granted for a moment that, let's say, Deckard is Nexus 7, he probably has an unknown life span and therefore is starting to get awfully human. Gaff, just at the very end, leaves a piece of origami, which is a piece of silver paper you might find in a cigarette packet. And it's of a unicorn, right? So, the unicorn that's used in Deckard's daydream tells me that Deckard wouldn't normally talk about such a thing to anyone. If Gaff knew about that, it's Gaff's message to say, ‘I've basically read your file, mate.’”

Physically, Blade Runner has been altered to take advantage of the latest improvements in film and audio technology. The quality of the print and the audio has been significantly enhanced. A new digital print of the film was created from the original negatives, while the special effects were updated and polished. Special effects footage was scanned in at 8,000 lines per frame, which is four times the resolution used in most restorations. The dystopic Los Angeles landscape of 2019 is now more stunning than ever before. Watching flames leap skywards as a spinner flies through the darkness during the opening sequence is mesmerising.

Vangelis’ evocative soundtrack, remastered for The Final Cut in 5.1 Dolby Digital surround sound, sounds better than ever, complimenting the story perfectly, from the fast paced action sequences to the slow, haunting scenes in Deckard’s smoke filled apartment.

One of the most powerful aspects of Blade Runner is its bleak depiction of a dark decaying world lost in drizzle and shadow. The multicultural inhabitants struggle through busy city streets, but reside in almost empty skyscrapers, abandoned by the majority lucky enough to have left for better lives off world.

Rachel's hair has been recut and restyled. Extra footage and alterations enhance this compelling vision, including an extra shot of a crowded city street, a brief sequence of two exotic dancers wearing hockey masks, and a shot of Deckard meeting a policeman before he enters the Snake Pit.

There's also new footage of Zhora crashing through a display case after being pursued by Deckard. This scene was reshot. The original actress, Joanna Cassidy, performed the stunt herself, replacing original footage of an obvious stunt double.

Roy Batty’s death scene, where a dove is released into a bright blue sky, supposedly at night, now shows the dove flying into a night sky, with an appropriate bleak backdrop.

Some scenes, such as Deckard's first meeting with Gaff in the noodle bar, have been trimmed, as they ran too long after the removal of Deckard's voice over from the original theatrical release.

Various pieces of dialogue too have been inserted or altered. In an early scene, where Bryant and Deckard are looking over Nexus 6 profiles, Bryant now describes Leon’s job, and when he talks about replicants being caught in an electrical field, the dialogue has been changed from: "One of them got fried running though an electrical field" to "Two of them got fried running through an electrical field". This alteration fixes the problem of a sixth replicant unaccounted for in earlier versions.

In the scene where Batty confronts Tyrell, the line, "I want more life, fucker" has been replaced with "I want more life, father”. In the same scene, after Batty has killed Tyrell, he now says to Sebastian, "I'm sorry Sebastian. Come. Come."

Deckard’s conversation with a snake merchant has been rerecorded and reworked. In the 1992 Director’s Cut the dialogue is completely out of sync, making it very distracting.

Other additions include extra violence. All of the violent scenes in the International Cut that were deleted in the U.S. theatrical release have been reinserted, most unsettlingly when Roy Batty crushes Tyrell's head in his hands, gouging out his eyes. Pris's shocking and sad death scene, her arms and legs thrashing about wildly, also appears to be have been extended. Presumably censorship is not as restrictive as it had been when the film was originally released. Personally I think they could have left the level of gore as it was.

With so many previous versions, you could be forgiven for thinking that Blade Runner: The Final Cut is not worth much of our time. Some may argue that Ridley is merely tweaking a film that has already been tweaked well beyond its use by date. There’s some support for this given that Ridley Scott was quoted at the Venice Film Festival recently claiming that the science fiction genre is as dead as the western.

“There’s nothing original,” he said. “We’ve seen it all before. Been there. Done it”.

Perhaps that’s why, instead of creating a completely new science fiction film, he has merely retouched an old one.

He's a replicant you fool!You could of course hold an even more cynical view: this latest version is nothing more than a commercial exercise. Are Warner Bros. and Ridley Scott merely trying to squeeze the last drops out of loyal fans who should know better?

After viewing Blade Runner: The Final Cut in all its enhanced glory, I’d have to disagree. This is not just a patch up job attempting to cash in on a cult film. Like an oil painter retouching a masterpiece, or a novelist polishing prose, Ridley is trying to complete his vision. The film has been improved markedly using all the time, technology, and feedback Ridley had at his disposal. In an article for in New York Times, Ridley stated that he had “never paid quite so much attention to a movie, ever.”

That’s not to say that it’s flawless. Detectives in the future, for example, appear to lack some basic common sense: when Bryant shows Deckard profiles of the Nexus 6 replicants, it’s clear they know exactly what they all look like. So why didn’t Holden, whom we see in an early scene giving a Voight-Kamff test to Leon, already know that Leon was a replicant? Didn’t anyone give him the mug shots?

Equally, if Deckard really is a Nexus 7 created to work as an exterminator, why is he lacking the strength of the inferior Nexus 6 models he is chasing? He seems to spend a large part of the film being bashed to a pulp.

Flaws aside, Blade Runner: The Final Cut is a science fiction masterwork. There’s a reason Blade Runner has stood the test of time. Check it out in the theatre if you get the chance. It has a very limited release. The Blade Runner Ultimate Collector's Edition, which includes all previous versions of the film, is due out 18 December.

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DreamWorks, Nickelodeon Team Up For Television

LA TIMES: INDUSTRY - An animated partnership
By Martin Miller, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer December 10, 2007

ATOP the Nickelodeon studios in Burbank is a larger-than-life cavalcade of the cable network's signature animated characters. SpongeBob SquarePants is up there. So is Dora the Explorer, as well as a handful of others. Joining them soon, hope the network's executives, will be Skipper, Kowalski, Rico and Private -- the raucously comic penguins from the DreamWorks Animation film "Madagascar."

Thanks to their Viacom Inc. owners, the two entertainment powerhouses are teaming up to produce a new computer-generated animated comedy series for television that spins off the half-billion-dollar worldwide grossing success of the DreamWorks film. In the kind of synergy other corporations may wish upon a star for, the new series, whose working title is "Penguins," is slated to premiere in early 2009 -- just a few months after the sequel, "Madagascar: The Crate Escape," hits thousands of theaters nationally.

For Nickelodeon, the new series is part of a major ramp-up in production at the already humming animation studio. Next year, the 28-year-old company is poised to crank out some 225 half-hour cartoons, an increase in its animation of nearly 50% -- a total that bulks up the output of the nation's largest producer of TV animation. The expansion also represents a broader network strategy to maintain its enviable winning streak as the No. 1-rated cable company for nearly 14 years -- a feat performed in the face of increasing competition from other entertainment outlets, notably crosstown rival Disney.

Of the more than 40 original animated series the studio has launched since 1991, few have come with bigger expectations than are now being carried by the quartet of wisecracking penguins. Nickelodeon is no doubt looking for the kind of phenomenal success it has enjoyed with "SpongeBob," "Dora" and "Rugrats," which together have raked in billions of dollars in product sales.

Even though SpongeBob and Dora debuted before the millennium, both are still going strong, but like the Rugrats before them, they are not invulnerable to the shifting viewing habits of their core 2- to 11-year-old audience. In short, the studio could certainly use another franchise hit, one that a schedule can be built around -- and the wobbly little penguins just may make that kind of splash.

"These movies from Pixar and DreamWorks are very, very popular with kids and families, and Nickelodeon is very smart to capitalize on it," said Brad Adgate, an analyst at the ad firm Horizon Media in New York. "I think they're saying, 'Hey, let's just give the kids what they want.' "

But what about all those other penguins swimming around the cultural soup in recent years? Remember "March of the Penguins," "Surf's Up" and "Happy Feet"? And don't forget the trendy kids' website Club Penguin.

"We had them first," joked Jeffrey Katzenberg, head of DreamWorks Animation. "These penguins are the ones that lead the pack."

Cyma Zarghami, president of Nickelodeon, expressed confidence too: "I know, at first blush, it's like, 'Oh my God, more penguins!' But to quote Jeffrey, if everyone in the room thinks something is funny, you're on to something."

Though there will be minor adjustments here and there, the penguins will largely look, talk and act the same way they did in DreamWorks' hit movie. The challenge, of course, will be converting side characters into compelling main ones. In the movie, the penguins, who fancy themselves as a CIA-style strike force, were simply trying to bust out of Central Park Zoo and return to Antarctica -- only to be sidetracked to Madagascar.

But in the TV show, the four will effectively rule the zoo -- Julien, King of the Lemurs, and his extensive entourage will be there to muss their feathers -- and mostly stay within New York City when embarking on their top-secret missions.

"They're almost like four brothers; they're like the Marx Brothers," said Katzenberg. "They can take the littlest thing and blow it completely out of proportion, and it's just hilarious."

The seeds for the collaboration were sown in December 2005 when Viacom snatched up DreamWorks for $1.5 billion. Shortly thereafter, the two giants of children's entertainment were searching for the appropriate project on which to collaborate, Katzenberg said.

After running through a number of creative options, the spunky penguins who managed to steal some of the limelight in the star-studded movie won out.

In fact, the penguins project is the first joint animation effort between the two companies, but more are coming. They are already at work on another television spinoff from DreamWorks' upcoming "Kung Fu Panda," which is scheduled for release in June 2008. The animated movie stars Jack Black as a chunky panda who dreams of becoming a kung fu master.

Though the two companies are under the same corporate umbrella, that didn't mean one wouldn't be left out in the rain when it came to creative decisions. Initially, it seemed as if DreamWorks, which after all invented the characters, was going to call the shots, but the relationship hasn't turned out as expected.

"It's been a 180-degree reversal for us," Katzenberg said. "We originally thought that we were going to take a very hands-on approach, but we were just blown away by their creative team. We're really acting as advisors and consultants."

Likewise, Nickelodeon executives had no less praise for DreamWorks.

"It's almost a perfect marriage since we've led the surge on the TV side and they've led it on the feature-film side," said Mark Taylor, Nickelodeon's senior vice president. "I think they've been appreciative that we've taken what they've done and embraced it as opposed to trying to find a way to do it different, faster, cheaper or whatever."

A good working relationship helps Nickelodeon sharpen another potentially formidable weapon in its seemingly eternal struggle against Disney. The company with mouse ears, which has its own block of highly successful kids' animated programming, has been making particular gains against Nickelodeon in the so-called "tween" demographic (kids from the ages of 9 to 14).

In fact, until a recent NFL matchup, it was Disney's smash "High School Musical 2" that held the record for most viewers for a single program on basic cable. In August, the Friday night premiere drew 17.2 million viewers but was eclipsed by last week's New England Patriots-Baltimore Ravens game on ESPN -- also owned by Disney -- that logged 17.5 million viewers.

Nickelodeon executives believe the new penguin series will pack on competitive muscle for the network not only with its likable story lines, but also with its rich and vividly detailed CG (computer-generated) presentation.

The network plans to generate more CG content than ever next year, when the technique will account for about a quarter of its total animation production, including the shows "Tak and the Power of Juju" and "Back at the Barnyard."

In all, the company expects to deliver 29 hours of CG shows -- a figure that is the equivalent of about 19 feature films.

Just because computers help deliver a visually stunning result doesn't mean the process is easy.

"Computers don't really animate anything," said Josh Book, Nickelodeon's creative director of CG animation. "The choices the computer makes are never the ones you'd want either artistically or creatively. It still comes down to going in frame by frame and putting things where you want them.

"At the end of the day, the computer is a tool," Book added. "It's just like a pencil, but it's a very smart pencil."

Although inheriting the DreamWorks characters eases the load for Nickelodeon's CG animation team, it still takes a week to build a single character, and a single episode takes 44 weeks to complete.

"At any one time here, you can have 40 different episodes in production at varying stages," Taylor said. "It's a real logistical juggling act."

martin.miller@latimes.com

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Who's Laughing Now?

NEW YORK TIMES: Homemade YouTube Video Lands Singer in a Web Ad
By SARA IVRY - Published: December 10, 2007

If, as the song goes, video killed the radio star, then homemade YouTube heroes like Tay Zonday have put a hit out on traditional advertising.

In April, Mr. Zonday became an Internet phenomenon after he posted a no-frills video for the song “Chocolate Rain” on YouTube featuring his earnest delivery and his deep voice, which he likens to that of Paul Robeson and Barry White.

Two weeks ago, Mr. Zonday, a 25-year-old graduate student in American studies at the University of Minnesota whose real name is Adam Bahner, posted a follow-up called “Cherry Chocolate Rain.” But in this case, the flashier video was an ad. With a little help from the rapper Mista Johnson, Mr. Zonday extols the virtues of Cherry Chocolate Diet Dr Pepper, a soft drink that will be available nationally from January through April. (Since November, it has had limited marketing in four states.)

Soft drink companies have often based ad campaigns around pop singers, but they are usually mainstream acts like Michael Jackson or Britney Spears, not an online curiosity like Mr. Zonday, who does not have a record contract.

“We’re doing this to try to do something fun and different and connect with consumers who might not see more traditional media,” said Jaxie Alt, the director for marketing at Dr Pepper, which worked with True Entertainment, a production company, in August to approach Mr. Zonday about reworking “Chocolate Rain.” Neither Mr. Zonday nor Dr Pepper would disclose how much Mr. Zonday received for the "Cherry Chocolate Rain" video.

In the months since it has been up, the video for “Chocolate Rain” has had roughly 12 million hits. “I probably posted it like millions of other people upload themselves singing or doing ordinary things in their lives, and I think that’s very much part of our time, part of our culture,” said Mr. Zonday. “It’s not something one gives a whole lot of more thought to than sending an e-mail or making a phone call,” added Mr. Zonday, who has also landed a television commercial for Comedy Central.

The newer video, for “Cherry Chocolate Rain,” has more than one million hits so far. The newer song has the same melody as the original but different lyrics. The viral approach “was very, very deliberate from a marketing standpoint,” said Shari Solomon Cedar, True Entertainment’s vice president for programming. “Our task was to get something in front of a tech savvy, younger audience, to break through and bring awareness that way. That’s what we achieved.”

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We're encouraged to think that there was a fat payoff at the end of the chocolate rainbow, but I wonder. Since experienced screenwriters are struggling to get their fair share of internet revenue, I hope Mr. Zonday ran out and got an agent and/or an entertainment lawyer as soon as he got the call. I doubt I would have at his age, but I imagine one of the biggest reasons for trotting out YouTube posters is that it's a lot easier and cheaper to 'negotiate' with a grad student than a established recording artist. If the experiment works, I would imagine the gap between budget and revenue is huge.

If he did cut a good deal, more power to him! Student loans aren't getting any cheaper.

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Sunday, December 09, 2007

The Vormator Project, Continued

Happily, I got another email from Vormator about five days ago asking for my profile information. I say happily because I thought I'd missed the deadline months ago, and was pretty much resigned to not being in the book of their project, even though my artwork had been selected.

This was a pretty quiet weekend, so I finally got around to writing a bio and a summary of the process I went through to create my piece for the competition, complete with a eight-image breakdown of how it was assembled in Illustrator. Hopefully, this means I'll be in the book after all. I'll let you know when it comes out! Keep checking here and at the Vormator website for updates...

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Toy OTD: Burger King "Toy Story" Premium: The Robot

Don't worry if you don't remember this character from Toy Story - he's a pretty obscure background toy, and only has one spoken line: "Mr. Lightyear needs more tape!" He helps Buzz fix his spaceship, pals around with the toy snake in Andy's room, and that's about it. The only reason I remember him is because I did his voice.

Needless to say, I was really happy when Burger King made a toy of him as part of the Toy Story kid's meal line (or was it for Toy Story 2? I'm not positive). He's never been merchandised in any other way, and while I guess that makes sense, I've always liked Bob Pauley's design a lot, and hey, you can never have too many good robot toys. It's really nicely made for a item this inexpensive, and pretty on-model, too!

I can't imagine this toy being all that valuable, even though though this line sold out twelve years ago. You can get two of them, plus a lot of the other fast food toys, on eBay starting at $2.00 + $7.65 shipping.

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Saturday, December 08, 2007

A Perfect Holiday Gift For Pete Sohn

At least it would be, if it were available now - it's a Back To The Future flux capacitor replica! Pete's the biggest BTTF fan that I know, and I'd be great to see him open this package up. Unfortunately, it's $220 + shipping, and it's not dropping until April 2008 (that's the term for the street date these days). Sorry, Pete.

Regardless, it's a pretty cool prop!

Thanks to Geekologie and Things From Another World.

Thursday, December 06, 2007

Speed Racer Trailer



I know it's a bad idea, but...I wanna see this. Hey, at least it's swinging for the fences!

If you want to see it in HD - go here.

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Toy OTD: Critterbox, Kaz's Smoking Cat (2005)

Critterbox may be gone as a company, but their legacy for amazing quality lives on. This Smoking Cat figure (a character designed by cartoonist Kaz) is terrific! An incredible sculpt, a super-tight paint job and a subtle finish - especially the face. Check out those whiskers! Nice.

The toy comes with a cigarette (natch), a removable tail knife, and a 'cloud' of cigarette smoke shaped like a skull. You can fit that into the cat's mouth to make it look like he's puffing away!

This toy only has one flaw, and it's the tail section. If you want to pose the tail like it appears in the drawing (and get the knife to point straight up and down), the curve of it prevents the figure from standing up properly. It's a shame, because so many other details were handled so well, that this would seem like something that could've been caught and tweaked before release. Adding an appropriately shaped base would've done the trick as well.

Unfortunately, this toy is long sold out. It only cost $20-$30 originally, but brace yourself to pay a lot more these days. I can't find it online (nor on eBay), so it looks like another favorite search is in order - good luck!

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Wednesday, December 05, 2007

Toy OTD: Kurimu Panda (aka Cream Panda) Vinyl Figure

Here's another cast member from the Anpanman manga/anime series - I bought this figure when I was still living in southern California. Like many of the characters, he's based on a food or pastry. It's a really appealing, simple design - the sculpt preserves the cute proportions and the punchy color scheme makes it an eye-catcher! The paint work isn't perfect, but it is very good for such a mass-produced item. It's not an expensive toy - I'm sure this cost between ten and fifteen dollars.

I don't imagine you could find this exact figure today, but I know Apanman toys are still very cheap and plentiful. I can't find any for sale online right now, but it shouldn't be too hard to uncover a Kurimu Panda toy if you're persistent! Try checking with Super 7 - they usually have some of the characters in stock. Or drop a line to this Flickr group - I'm sure someone there can help you out. Good luck!

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The Real Lawrence Of Arabia

LIVENEWS.COM.AU: JUST RELEASED: Never before seen footage of Lawrence of Arabia
John Barrington - 5/12/2007 8:06:00 AM.

The Australia War Memorial has released never before seen footage of Lawrence of Arabia.

Shot in Palestine in March 1918, the rare film shows Lawrence of Arabia with the leader of the 1916-18 Arab Revolt, Emir Feisal and American Journalist Lowell Thomas.

The footage also features camel-mounted soldiers of Feisal's army after their successful attack on the strategic Sinai port of Akaba.

Lieutenant-Colonel T.E. Lawrence (1888-1935), often known as “Lawrence of Arabia”, was a British soldier remembered for his liaison role during the Arab Revolt.

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Monday, December 03, 2007

Expectations, Vinyl Toy Network, And Paying Dues

We're back from Pasadena, and my second foray with the Vinyl Toy Network show. It seemed like there were more tables than last year, not to mention the people waiting in the convention hall and in a long line that snaked down the block. Awesome! I knew that these folks weren't waiting for me specifically, but it looked like a lot of potential target-market customers, and Christmas was right around the corner. Except... I forgot about a couple of things. Primarily, this guy:

Apparently, Joe Ledbetter's Ringo Bear had an exclusive, only-one-hundred-made Toxic green version (through 3D Retro) available only at the VTN show. The first hundred guests got goody bags, and half of them got tickets reserving a Ringo for that guest, Willy-Wonka-style. If I remember correctly, it cost eighty dollars (a mid-range designer toy price), but it might not leave much left in terms of a collector's spending budget.

The other thing that I forgot was that the dealers' room - even though it was bigger than last year - is still pretty small. There's no other events like panel discussions or screenings, so once folks are done shopping... they're going to leave. A few designers - Frank Kozik, Joe himself, Bwana Spoons, Dan Goodsell, and Cameron Tiede - were there to sign their work and do sketches, but again, even if you got everyone's autograph, that's not going to keep you there all that long.

So. The room exploded with people at ten o'clock! Most of them came in, sat down, and feverishly dug through their bags. They lined up for the Ringo Bear and they lined up again to get it signed. After that, they browsed for about thirty minutes - an hour, tops.

And then they left. An hour or two into a seven and a half hour show, ninety percent of the crowd was gone.

I drew a lot of free sketches during the surge to keep people at the table, but we only sold five toys all day. I was as sick as a dog - I'd caught a bad cold a day or two before - and I was not a happy camper. I don't blame the show, and I don't blame Joe - he made a cool toy, and people were dying for it. I hope to be in that place myself someday! But I let my expectations run away with me, and it bit me in the butt, big time.

Ironically, the only toy that I bought was one of Joe's - it's my favorite of his work so far, the Kaiju For Grown-Ups' Gamorita from Wonderwall. Super-cool looking, and a bargain at $65.00!

Well, better luck next time...

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Photos by doc18 and VinylMadness. A special thanks to Bwana Spoons and Dan "Mr. Toast" Goodsell for their words of encouragement and support during the show!

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