Petition to Bring Back “Constantine” Reaches 50K Signatures.

The popular cult sensation Constantine was cancelled back in early summer, much to the chagrin of the show’s fans.

NBC saw fit, after a bout of poor ratings, to can the show after only one thirteen episode season. Due in part to a poorly executed pilot, an untimely exit from the actor meant to play a pivotal role in the drama, and to Neilsen not using ratings from third party streaming services like Hulu, the show never got much of a chance at life in the modern television era, but did two points better at its worst than part of the first season of now-NBC-staple, Grimm.

When the show was not renewed for syndication, many fans made their voices heard with petitions. None was more successful than one made on change.org by fan group Save Constantine. They reached their goal of 50,000 signatures, and were rewarded with the Constantine creative staff receiving a special meeting with the NBC brass and show runners, who still nixed the show.

Now, the showrunner from the CW’s Arrow, Marc Guggenheim, has brought John Constantine (Matt Ryan) back to the small screen for Arrow‘s fourth season.

The episode, Haunted (S4:E5), recieved a 99.15 composite score on comicbook.com, one of the highest scores ever recorded on the site. This led to the Save Constantine group raising a new petition. The petition, this time, appealed to the CW, USA, and various other networks, to pick the property back up. The goal for the petition was 50,000 signatures, but has now been stretched to 75,000, as the signature count was at 57,638 at the time of this writing.

The change.org petition reads:

“The dark supernatural TV series Constantine originally aired on NBC for one 13 episode season only to be cancelled. This left a very strong and avid fanbase without any network for their show to call home. Constantine needs to be saved by another network to give the fans closure. This situation would be a win for both sides. The network to pick it up will receive a boost in ratings and revenue while the fans will be able to see their beloved show live once more. On November 4th, 2015, it was proved that the Constantine fan base is still very much alive as evidenced by the reception to the character’s appearance on the 5 episode of Arrow‘s fourth season. We encourage you to sign this petition to show the various networks available to pick this show up that there is in fact interest for the show to live on.”

Matt Ryan and the show’s writers have expressed interest and have said they are ready to jump back to work on the show as soon as given the word. Matt Ryan had this to say when asked by Access Hollywood how it felt to put the trenchcoat back on:

“I was excited. He’s such an iconic, amazing character and he’s so fun to play and he’s dark and he’s funny and it was great. I was so excited. Obviously, when the show wasn’t picked up, I was disappointed and I felt that I still had unfinished business with the character, so to be able to get the trench coat on again was a great thing.”

Want to sign the petition? Check it out here!

The Little Comic Shop That Could

Mike Boze has never speculated. He has always checked and rechecked himself in his business.  As he sits on a stool behind the glass counter full of Magic: The Gathering cards at HawgHead Comics, wearing a well-worn Harley Davidson sweatshirt and an easy smile, the owner of the longest lived comic shop in Fort Smith, Arkansas opens up about the trials, tribulations, and long, metered road of his success. His many years of surviving in a town where comic shops come and go can be attributed to a keen business sense, an expansive knowledge of his niche, and an uncanny ability to shrug problems and disappointments off with a smile. His medium sized shop with it’s very specific selection of best-selling comics on the racks and a multi-table gaming area speak to his ability to foresee trends in his client base, and focus in on those. The smiling faces of customer and proprietor alike are clues as to why this business has had such a long life.

20151112_130936

Mike smiles as he arranges some new additions to the shop’s Magic: The Gathering card game stock.

This little shop located 1600 Greenwood Avenue in Fort Smith, Arkansas has been a home to nerds, geeks, and whoever else might wander into its doors since May of 1995.

20151112_140509

The medium sized store front with the bright open sign and constantly rotating array of colorful posters.

Mike had originally opened up shop in a much smaller location on Grand Avenue in the summer of 1993, but he jumped at the chance to acquire this larger building and the adjoining real estate to foster the growth of his blossoming business. In asking Mike how he got into this business, he says it has much to do with family, namely his son Patrick.

“Patrick had a lot to do with it. He had gotten interested in comics sometime, like, in ninety-two, and it rekindled my interest,” He said, “Patrick and I, really more I, decided, you know, that he and I would collect Amazing Spiderman and Captain America, because those were my two favorites. I thought we could go to conventions, it would be something he and I could do together… and it just kind of escalated.”

After doing some thinking and research, he thought it might be lucrative to turn this hobby into a business.

“I was looking through a price guide I’d picked up at, I don’t know, Books-A-Million or Hastings, and was looking through thinking, ‘I had that one. That one, and… Woah! Four thousand dollars?’ I thought, “Man alive! If I still had these , I could pay my house off!”

The interest quickly became a hobby that was finely honed by not only interest, but what was popular and profitable at the time.

“Instead of just collecting Spiderman and Captain America, I was reading the magazines that were out… in the early ninieties and saying, well, look here, they’re saying you need to be buying this, you need to be buying that. I was taking any spare cash that would come up, any bonus I would get from Whirlpool, any cash that was unexpected, and I would be investing it in the stuff that they were saying and it just gradually grew.”

So after doing some research and buying a few issues the guides anticipated would sell big, he took his collection on the road.

“I was toying with the idea of opening a store, but Paperbacks Plus was already here, and I wasn’t sure how many stores Fort Smith could handle, so I wasn’t too serious about it. There was going to be a convention in Muskogee, so I contacted them and got the table… little six foot table, a couple of short boxes…I think I did seven hundred dollars that day, and I thought, ‘If I can do this from one day at a convention just from what I have been learning on my own, I should be able to open up a store.”

So he rented a small storefront on Grand Avenue in Fort Smith, and opened the first iteration of HawgHead, just in time, it seems.

“Dan [Owner of the now defunct Comics -n- Stuff] was still in Van Buren at the time… by the time he announced he was moving to Phoenix Village Mall [in Fort Smith], I think I had already rented the little shop on Grand… so the shop, if I hadn’t opened it when I did, probably never would have happened.” He said with a chuckle.

In May of 1995, he moved into a larger storefront at 1600 Greenwood Avenue and there the shop has stood since.

20151112_140456

A sign that has survived a move and twenty-two years.

During what is often called the “Dark Age” of comics, in the late nineties, many shops in Fort Smith closed down or hit hard times, just to find themselves bought out by HawgHead and assimilated into its location. Mike attributes his longevity and ability to last through hard times to his business model.

“I think it’s the fact that I have never speculated on anything. I didn’t take chances on, the only thing I ever took a chance on, before I opened, was the Black Bag. [Superman] 75… I only order what I know I’m going to need. I never liked back issues… It was a series of fortunate events. The owner of Alpha Books approached me to buy him out… he gave me a pretty good deal in which I could pay him out… I approached Earl [of now defunct Crazy Earl’s novelties and Mystic Domain] and we decided that, instead of competing, we would split. He wanted the comics, the Warhammer, and the D&D. I wanted the comics and the Magic: The Gathering. He said that was fine… I bought out his Magic stock… and he bought my Warhammer. When Dan [of Comics -n- Stuff] heard that he contacted me… I told him, ‘Look, I’d rather work with you.” I even said, ‘The enemy I know is better than the enemy I don’t know,’ ” Mike laughed, “but, no, he just wanted me to buy him out.”

20151112_130821

The shop’s small, targeted, well thought out inventory of racked comics.

That was the nail in the coffin of his final competitor from the early days. Mike’s cyclic ordering of only what he needed and his ability to work hand-in-hand with competitors has left him in a position to be the only Fort Smith survivor of the “Dark Age of Comics”…

20151112_130838

A small, well maintained, and thought out inventory of gaming accessories.

Over the years other shops have come and gone, but, if they looked down their nose at the chance to work with Mike and HawgHead, they have went away as soon as they showed up. Mike has always extended a hand of friendship to these people, and even has a symbiotic relationship with most other local gaming and specialty shops in the region.

20151112_130810

An equally tightly managed collection of graphic novels and statues.

Mike and HawgHead are staples of Fort Smith culture. Mike knows regular customers by name, is happy to open a comic pull file for anyone, hosts many gaming events, and is always quick with a witticism and a smile to make any comic book nerd feel at ease and at home in his shop.

20151112_140531

Mike and customers converse and joke.

Through good planning, hard work, and lots of good will, HawgHead Comics has stood the test of time as Fort Smith’s longest operating comic book and gaming retailer. With succinct business practices and an eye for what the customer wants, Mike looks to have many more years of good times at his store.

“If you need to ask me anything else, you know where to find me.” He said as he waved goodbye.

Women Find Place in Comics

ComiqueCon in Deerborn, Michigan celebrates women in comics with special guests like Gail Simone and special events geared toward females.

gail-simone-batgirl-writer-coming-to-portland-comic-con-1

On November first, Comiquecon opened its doors to fans in a very unique way. They were set to celebrate a group of people that are often too under-represented in the field of comic books. Their Kickstarter, that was very quickly funded, can be quoted saying:

“Women don’t just read comics, they make (DARN GREAT) comics too! Women are creating some of the coolest comics out today, and we are thrilled to showcase the best in contemporary comics talent. Through ComiqueCon 2015, we will connect fans with amazing female creators. Our event will take place on Nov. 7, 2015 at the Arab American National Museum in Dearborn, Michigan”

Gail Simone has and runs on DC comic’s Birds of Prey, Marvel’s Deadpool, and is now working on the acclaimed new title Swords of Sorrow. She has been working in comics for almost twenty years.

Studies show that by the current year, almost half of most comics readership is female. With the popularity of titles like the new Batgirl,  – currently written by Kelly Puckett (A female.). Gotham City Sirens, the new female Thor, and Birds of Prey have found popularity in the last decade and the trend is set to continue, according to industry leaders. An article from Scott McCloud, comic book author and contributor to Time Magazine reads:

“Comic books are raising a whole new generation of readers—and a lot of them are girls. We’re seeing a momentous shift in the demographics of comics readers and comics creators, so much so that I’m guessing within about eight years we may see a majority female industry and readership.”

 

This is a decades old problem that is only propagated by misogyny and stereotypes that many fans have had toward women, and debacles like the GamerGate fiasco.

According to writer Holly Black of “The Spiderwick Chronicles” and Newberry Award winner “Doll Bones”, also known for her graphic novel work “The Good Neighbors”, in a Variety article Women Quietly Become a Force in Comic Books, from October of this year:

hb_litday

“ ‘The discrimination I’ve seen manifests mostly in being overlooked,’ Black says. ‘Whether that means getter fewer reviews, or having your work considered to be less universal or less serious, or not being asked to do panels that aren’t specifically about women — it’s largely subtle stuff that, unfortunately, adds up.’ ”

Many other women in the field have voiced opinions on this issue. Constantine: The Hellblazer writer Ming Doyle adds:

Screen Shot 2015-11-06 at 7.57.37 AM

“Gender is an issue in every aspect of life,” says “Constantine: The Hellblazer” scribe Ming Doyle. “I certainly know that women creators can have a much different experience exhibiting at conventions than men. However, I wouldn’t say that these are issues in the industry specifically so much as problems that permeate our entire culture.”

According to a quote from Diane Nelson, president & chief content officer of Warner Bros, in that same Variety article, women in the industry are finally being taken seriously:

“ ‘DC has joined forces with WB Consumer Products, Mattel and other brand partners to launch ‘DC SuperHero Girls,’ Nelson says. ‘It’s a ground-breaking new franchise that is part of our long-term strategy to harness the power and prominence of our female SuperHero characters.”