Ask PL #4

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Over at this blog, Peter is currently conducting another “Ask PL” installment, where he is answering questions about the buy out. This may currently be the best way possible for you to get your questions answered. Click the pic to go directly to the feature.

“The Creator’s Bill of Rights” (( 1988 – ))

Clipped from an article regarding this historic event from Scott McCloud ::

 Drawn group shot of the Summit participants from Reinventing Comics, Chapter Two.  Left to Right: Ken Mitchroney, Mark Martin, Michael Dooney, Steve Lavigne, Peter Laird (sitting), Kevin Eastman, Ryan Brown, Michael Zulli, Richard Pini, Me { Scott McCloud } , Larry Marder, Dave Sim, Rick Veitch, and Steve Bissette. Not pictured: Eric Talbot and Gerhard (one of whom probably took the photo, but I can't remember).
Drawn group shot of the Summit participants from Reinventing Comics.

“The Creator’s Bill of Rights was written in November 1988 for a two day “Summit” of comic book artists held in Northampton, Massachusetts. The meeting had been suggested by Cerebus creator Dave Sim and hosted by local heroes Kevin Eastman and Peter Laird, creators of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. The Summit was a follow-up to a July meeting in Toronto which produced a “Creative Manifesto.” Some of us found the Manifesto a bit scattered, so I wrote a rough draft of a proposed replacement. That replacement, “A Bill of Rights for Comics Creators” was accepted quickly at Sim’s suggestion. The rest of that day was a non-stop argument about the document’s wording.

The Bill never generated much noise in the industry and I wouldn’t want to exaggerate its influence, but it provides an interesting snapshot of our attitudes at the time, and of the climate that was fueling self-publishers, progressive business people, and artists trying to reinvent the comics industry. A few years later, several top-selling Marvel artists would break from the pack and form a new company called Image, shifting the debate from rights and principles to clout and competition, but both developments would share a common premise, still relevant today: that comics creators already have the right to control their art if they want it; all they have to do is not sign it away.
"The Creator's Bill of Rights"  (( 1988 -  ))

I was invited in large part because I knew Laird and others through an APA I’d created called The Frying Pan. At my suggestion, Beanworld creator and “Nexus of all Comic Book Realities” Larry Marder was invited too. Larry flew out from Chicago to our place in Arlington, Massachusetts shortly before the meeting. I had the rough draft of the Bill ready but not typed yet. I vividly remember hammering it out on my old manual typewriter as Larry read my notes back to me, right before we rushed out the door to catch a succession of buses and trains to Northampton.

While waiting for the bus in Springfield, we found a copy shop and photocopied my hastily typed hand-out. It was also on that trip that I showed Larry my notes for a comic book about comics that I had been working on for a few years.

After the first day of debates, everyone stumbled out of the Hotel Northhampton into the cold New England air to walk the five or so blocks to dinner. I remember Larry and I lagged behind a little. I had argued with Dave Sim about every imaginable issue that day as if my life depended on it, but walking to dinner, it all seemed pretty distant already. Larry and I talked more about my notes for the comic book about comics. I asked him if he thought those ideas would mean a lot more in the long run than anything I could accomplish in Northampton. He said yeah, they probably would.

When those notes became **Understanding Comics it was Kevin Eastman’s money that paid me to finish it – money he and Peter had earned because they refused to give away their creation the way so many artists had before them.” — ***Scott McCloud

☻ ☺

This is an important piece of Mirage Studios/ TMNT history and may prove useful to any and all those thinking of entering into comics or are already stumbling / succeeding their way through the sequential art fields. Kevin and Peter were high backers of this at the time.

~ t

“TURTLES FOREVER” – revised poster concept art by Lloyd Goldfine and 4kids TMNT Team (( 2009 )) [[ Courtesy PL ]]

"TURTLES FOREVER" - revised poster concept art by Lloyd Goldfine and 4kids TMNT Team (( 2009 )) [[ Courtesy PL ]]

–>> Not that ya haven’t BUT in case you hadn’t seen this yet.. ::

☠ ☠

“Lloyd Goldfine sent me this image a couple of days ago. It’s something he and the crew at 4Kids worked up as a possible poster for the “Turtles Forever” animated special. I think it’s pretty darn cool… and I surely wouldn’t mind one hanging on my wall.”

**PL

.. guess ya figured the reason i love it by now..

😉

~t

TMNT Treasures: Scat #1

Now I could have SWORN I put up a Treasures post about this before, but after searching the database for it…I couldn’t find it. So if I did post this before…you get to enjoy it again, cause it is kinda awesome :-P. Otherwise, this is even MORE awesome.

Today’s post on Peter’s blog about the logo of one of his earliest projects, Scat, reminded me that I happen to have a copy of the first issue.

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A breif history lesson: While on a bus, Kevin Eastman found an issue of Scat (though I don’t believe it was this issue, as Kevin claimed to me that the issue he found had a red cover). The finding of this book led him to Peter (who had been working on the magazine), and thus sparking their friendship and so on. Long story short, had Kevin not found the copy of Scat…No Mirage, No Turtles.

What makes this particular issue interesting is that it contains one of the first, non-self published works of Peter Laird (WYRM: Pages 10, 11, and 12). These books are extremely rare, as they were distributed locally to Pioneer Valley in MA as a free publication.

If you would like to read the first issue, you can find scans of the entire thing by clicking the picture above.

Extra Credit: Extremely sharp Mirage buffs will recognize the cover image as having been reprinted in the “GobbledyGook” single issue “reprint” (I quote the word reprint because the single issue GobbledyGook is not very similar at all to its double issue grail counterparts).

Previews for Tales of the TMNT #60 and #61

Tales of the TMNT #60 hits stores THIS WEDNESDAY!! Make sure you get out there and pick it up, and while you’re out there, make sure you’re down for #61! Both issues are doozeys!

Tales of the TMNT #60

Available for pre-order in Diamond Comic Distributors’ May catalog, “Previews” V19 #248

Ship Date: July 21, 2009

Format: 32 B&W pages, full color cover, standard size comic

Retail Price: $3.25

Cover art by Jim Lawson and Steve Lavigne; script by Dan Berger, art by Jim Lawson

“Nobody Does It Better” – This action-packed issue features the shocking return of Nobody, the crime-fighting vigilante thought to be slain in “TMNT” volume two #12! We discover the fate of the not-so-fallen hero while Raphael and Casey Jones encounter a new villain with super-human (and extraterrestrial) powers!

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Tales of the TMNT #61

Available for pre-order in Diamond Comic Distributors’ June catalog, “Previews” V19 #249

Ship Date: August 24, 2009

Format: 32 B&W pages, full color cover, standard size comic

Retail Price: $3.25

Cover art by Andres Ponce & Steve Lavigne; script by Tristan Jones, art by Andres Ponce

“Sometimes They Come Back” – Rising talent Andres Ponce (Firebirds, Noble Causes) and acclaimed writer Tristan Jones team together to bring you one of the most action packed comics of the year! Continuing on from the critically acclaimed “Tales of the TMNT” #56 and #59, the Turtles battle an enemy they never dreamed could create the chaos you’ll find within this book! Gangs, robots, road rage, crazy Australian mercenaries, and as if that weren’t enough… the long-awaited return of the malevolent MOUSERS! NOT. TO. BE. MISSED.

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