Wonderful WonderCon

Hotel reservations are now open for the 2010 WonderCon in San Francisco, which is being held April 2-4. Never mind that Sergio and I are Guests of Honor. We're always Guests of Honor. The big news is that Stan and Hunter Freberg are Guests of Honor, as well as other fine folks you'd enjoy hearing and meeting. Those of you who think the convention in San Diego is too damn big may find WonderCon to be the perfect size for you: Large enough that there's always something to see or do, small enough that you can cross the hall without needing to set your watch ahead or back an hour. Your attendance is recommended.

Today's Political (sorta) Rant

Carrie Prejean, the ousted Miss California, has been making the rounds, getting a lot more airtime than any state-level beauty queen in history to complain that everyone's trying to silence her. She's one of a lot of people in the news lately who remind me of that line on the tape where now-ex-Governor Rod Blagojevich was saying, of the chance to appoint a U.S. Senator, something like "I've got this thing and I'm going to find some way to profit from it." And in a way, I have trouble faulting Ms. Prejean for what she's trying to do.

I think beauty pageants are shallow and bogus but I certainly understand why an attractive 21-year-old lady might see one as her best opportunity to make some money, attain some fame and maybe springboard to a lucrative career. And while I find her politics repugnant, I also see the sums of cash some are making by pandering to the Palin boosters and I get where she's coming from there, as well. If she'd done what a proper Miss California was supposed to do, no one would ever have heard of her. She wouldn't have a book coming out that a lot of right-wingers will buy. She wouldn't be receiving whatever offers and deals she's going to wring out of all this. Whether she winds up lecturing on the Bob Jones circuit or marketing sex tapes — not that there's a huge difference between those two options — she'll make more than if she'd just been a nice, non-controversial pageant winner appearing at boat shows.

Her appearance last night on Larry King Live was a two-way train wreck. She didn't want to answer questions and he, as usual, didn't know what to ask. Still, the spot served both their purposes. He got some tune-in. She sold some books. I don't see that there's much more happening there than that.

The one thing she said I could believe was sincere was that Sarah Palin is her role model. A former beauty contestant who's becoming rich and famous saying vapid, baseless things and firing up the rabid right? Yeah, sure. I can see where she gets it.

Recommended Reading

Daniel Larison writes about people who want to claim that Barack Obama doesn't love his country. Larison's a pretty solid Conservative but I find myself agreeing with him often and I agree with him on this. I also think that a lot of folks who profess to love America love it the way Ike Turner loved Tina.

David Lloyd, R.I.P.

The great comedy writer David Lloyd has left us. It is my loss (and the reason I can't write much here about him) that in my entire life in the TV business, I probably spent less than three minutes in the company of David Lloyd. It was in the office over at Cheers and all I really remember is that he walked in and you knew that everyone in the room loved and respected the guy. Fortunately, Ken Levine knew him well enough to write the kind of piece that should be written…so I'll just add that he was a great writer and I think he wrote even better scripts than "Chuckles Bites the Dust." That is meant only as a compliment.

More on Shel

Obit for Shel Dorf in the New York Times. I don't understand why the accompanying photo has a copyright line for DC Comics, either.

Today's Video Link

Another one of them Craig Ferguson openings. More than a few of you have written in to note that Mr. Ferguson is working with the ingenuity (and pert near the budget) of the late Soupy Sales. This is so.

And if anyone from the Late Late Show happens upon this blog, I have a suggestion for a future musical opening. Check out a copy of an old rock 'n' roll tune by Brook Benton called "Hit Record." I can already see you guys working your magic with that one.

VIDEO MISSING

From the E-Mailbag…

Gregory Johnston writes to ask…

I've read the pieces you've written about Shel Dorf. I never met Mr. Dorf but I'm grateful to him for the role he played in starting the convention that I try to attend whenever I can afford the trip. I was saddened to read that he became as you put it, estranged from the con. You said that attempts were made to get him involved or to receive a pension and I wonder if you could explain about those attempts and tell us what went wrong and what you would have liked to see happen.

I'm not going to get too deep into specifics on this because the situation was complicated and I'm not sure I know all the details well enough to chronicle them; nor is some of it really anybody's business. You'll just have to take my word — for whatever you think that may be worth — that the convention tried to rectify matters and that I wish Shel had been more amenable. He could be very obstinate. We were pals for close to forty years and during that time, we had arguments and disagreements, and we were even involved in a couple of business-type deals, unrelated to the con, that I thought he badly mishandled. Perhaps you have someone in your life you consider a friend even though you don't think they manage their lives properly. I have a number of them in mine.

Some of Shel's problems with the con flowed from the fact that Comic-Con International is a non-profit organization, a fact I probably should have mentioned in my writings about him. That means the con is governed by strict rules about how it handles its money and how it must account for every nickel. I think a lot of people presume that its operators all take home huge salaries and bonuses but that is not the case. Many are volunteers and the ones who are paid do not receive high wages. Yeah, the con takes in millions. It also costs millions to put on each year.

As a guy who does a lot of things at and with the con, I have been known to make suggestions. Some, they take. Some, they mull and decide (probably wisely) were rotten ideas. And often, someone there explains to me why my idea isn't practical or legal or — usually — why it would cost a helluva lot more money than I think it would. I have found the con staff to be knowledgeable and eager to please within the confines of what is possible. When they tell me my idea isn't, I accept that and figure they're almost certainly right. When someone told Shel an idea or demand wasn't feasible, he got angry. In a day or so here, I'll be linking to a must-read piece by his friend, R.C. Harvey, about the man. Bob Harvey knew Shel as well as anyone and also tried to breach the impasse he came to in his life with the convention. Bob and I encountered exactly the same problems.

The convention is a huge, complex beast that is somehow tamed on an annual basis. I was impressed the other night to see human beings do the impossible at Cirque du Soleil and I continue to be impressed with the Comic-Con International in much the same way. Knowing what I do about the problems and obstacles and legal complications and the egos and needs of guests and exhibitors, I am amazed they pull it off each year. (And please, don't write me with your complaints about things you don't like about the con. There are things I don't like about the con, too…and even if all our complaints are valid, it's still astounding how much goes right.)

What's more, the con is run for love far more than money. A convention committee member complained to me today that what I wrote about Shel had made it sound like he was the only one with any passion or love of the art forms in that hall. I don't think I said that…but if anyone took that away from anything I wrote, let me correct that impression. I've been dealing with various permutations of the convention committee since '70 and have yet to meet a person who didn't love comics and/or science-fiction. That's one of the reasons I think the convention works as well as it does.

Getting back to Shel and his estrangement: I think there was a role for him in the con in his later years. I do not quite understand why he didn't accept it. And that's about as much on this topic as I feel like writing tonight.

I will add a possible correction: I said Shel's last appearance at the con was 2001. That's the last time I saw him there, and I think he told me that was the last time he ventured into one. Others have since told me they saw him there, albeit briefly, in later years. Whatever, the point is that he went from being the point man and figurehead of the con to being a fellow who made cameo appearances and felt distanced from it all. That's very sad but I'm happy to see him getting recognition for what he did contribute, and I stand by what I wrote here: Those of us who care about comics are forever in his debt.

Foto File

I took this one at the World Science Fiction Convention when it rotated to Los Angeles in 1972. It's three artists from the Tarzan comics — left to right: Burne Hogarth, Mike Royer and Russ Manning. Apparently, facial hair was then required if you were going to draw Lord Greystoke.

Recommended Reading

Ruth Marcus lists some of the flat-out lies that Republicans are making against the Health Care Reform Bill.

Today's Video Link

My fave folk singing group, The Limeliters, on The Ed Sullivan Show

VIDEO MISSING

Shel

Over the next few days, I'm going to be linking to several online remembrances of the late Shel Dorf, founder of the Comic-Con International in San Diego. Here's one written for the L.A. Times by someone who considered himself a good friend of Shel's.

Second Thoughts

In light of several e-mails I've received, I re-read those lists I linked to of things the staff of a restaurant should never do. This morning, they strike me as more misguided than they did last night. A lot of 'em are, of course, simple common sense and courtesy…but some fault the staff for things (like the music policy) which the restaurant's management oughta handle. And what bothers me this A.M. is how much of the list is calculated to reduce the poor waiter or waitress to an impersonal, servile robot. Obviously, I'd like my meal delivered promptly and the way I want it…but I'd also kinda like it delivered by a human being. If that human being feels like telling me what his or her favorite dessert is or gets otherwise chatty, fine. It makes me uncomfy to be treated like I'm Genghis Khan, ready to lop off the head of any servant who folds my napkin the wrong way.

Today's Political Rant

Some Republican Senators are proposing a constitutional amendment that would put term limits on Congress — two terms (12 years) for a Senator, three terms (6 years) for a Congressperson.

I recognize that proposed constitutional amendments have about a one-in-more-than-a-thousand chance of ever going anywhere, and that they get introduced just to get attention and look like someone is doing something. That said, I've always thought term limits were a rotten, anti-democratic idea. If I'm happy with my Congressman — and I am with Henry Waxman — and he wants to serve another term, why should someone else say I can't have him? If the problem is that he amasses too much power by staying there, then change the seniority system. That's a lot easier than a constitutional amendment would be.

And if the premise is that by serving multiple terms, a rep becomes too susceptible to bribes from lobbyists…well, I don't understand that at all. It seems to me that if I got elected to Congress and I knew there was no way I could build a whole career there, I'd immediately start lining up my next job. That would mean cozying up to big companies that might hire me when I left office.

I can sorta/kinda buy the idea of limiting the president since it might not be grand to have the whole executive branch configured around one person so long. It could mean that when the next Chief Exec came around, he or she could never eliminate the influence of the previous Chief Exec. But no member of Congress shapes the legislative branch that much and when a long-term seat occupant finally departs, the replacement doesn't seem to have that much trouble taking over.

So I really don't get the argument for Term Limits. We trust the electorate to vote in the right people when there are openings. Why can't we trust them to just vote out the wrong people because they've been there too long?