Failure to Launch Crowdfund is Launching!

Crossposted with my newsletter. Sign up here.

Hi everyone. Hope you all had a good January. Lots of things coming up this month!

Firstly, as the title says Failure to Launch’s crowdfunding has gone live. Failure to Launch is a light-hearted, educational tour of (so far!) unrealized technological and societal advances promised in years past, but which never came to be. What could have been, but wasn’t. It tells the tales of planned utopias in space, wild inventions, attempts to improve society, robot pets, and predictions of armageddon! History is often written by the winners, but this time join us in spotlighting those who didn’t let failure stop their dreams. I edited it and drew a story. My story is titled Paradise Within the Reach of All Men. It’s written by Ryan North and io9 posted a sample!

Later toward the end of the month, I’m doing a live reading of Fame and Misfortune. It will be Saturday February 25th at noon PST on my twitch. Some friends will be playing different roles. Then I’ll answer some reader questions after the reading. Post any questions you got to this public patreon post.  

Also while not in February, it’s early enough in March that I wanted to mention it now. March 2nd-5th I’ll be at Emerald City Comic Con. They haven’t sent a map yet, but I’ll try to post it in March’s newsletter. 

The full moon was yesterday, so I didn’t get this out in time. But we watched Wolf Children. The next few moon is March 6/7. I’ll probably do the movie on March 7th since I’ll be driving back from ECCC on the 6th. Either way please join the discord so you don’t miss the next full moon movie night.

As always I’ll be streaming art on Twitch. My schedule is currently the following:

As for last month, what you might have missed is You are the Chosen One is back to updating on Patreon. I posted a PDF catch up for folks, because I know Patreon isn’t great for catching up on reading comics. 

Also, The City Between has a new storyline starting. It’s up early on my Patreon, but will start posting on my website this month. 

This past month I did my best to work on Meredith McClarren and I’s graphic novel Blue Moon. I’m behind on writing it because I’ve been a little buried with editorial work for Iron Circus and Seven Seas. A lot of my free time this month will go to trying to finish that one up. 

On the editorial front, I’m putting the finishing touches on Failure to Launch. I’m also getting the ball rolling on a new anthology about committing crimes. It’s called Perfect Crime Party. That will be fun to get the ball rolling on. At Seven Seas I’m editing the manga for one of my favorite recent animes, Life of an Ordinary Guy reincarnated as a Fantasy Knockout. It’s a very funny parody of fantasy books and romantic comedies. I recommend checking it out the anime or the manga once it’s out. 

Staying on top of all that and exercising every morning has been pretty rough. But it’s getting easier. I had trouble sticking with it after SDCC and ECCC being so close together last year. So doing Emerald City Comic Con will be the test on if I can stick with it. I’ve mostly been watching stuff while on the treadmill. 

Here’s stuff I watched and read this month

  • My Love Mix Up vol 6 by Wataru Hinekure and Aruko – I mentioned this in my newsletter a year ago. But My Love Mix Up is one of my favorite regular reads. It’s very cute. The bisexual main character starts the series with trying to figure out his feelings for two crushes (one guy and one girl). Now that it’s been going on awhile the series has moved on to the main character navigating dating another guy. I like it because the character conflicts are mostly about them figuring out their own feelings rather than miscommunication. I find people needing that time and space to sort out their feelings and thoughts really appealing. Like the love interest is dating the main character and hasn’t had a crush or feelings for anyone before. He sometimes comes off as detached or disinterested in they relationship. So compared to the heart on his sleeve main character, the conflict doesn’t need miscommunication. Because if someone needs time and space, that’s a conflict that can only be resolved with said space and time. 
  • The Night Eaters by Marjorie Liu and Sana Takeda –  I picked this up because I like Monstress by the same creative team. The art is beautiful just like Monstress. Currently, I think I prefer Monstress because that hit the ground running. But The Night Eaters was mostly setting things up for the series. The main characters are twins that don’t understand their immigrant mother. They have a good dynamic and I like their back and forth as they learn their family’s supernatural secrets. I’m gonna grab volume 2 and maybe now that groundwork is laid it will really knock volume 2 out of the park. 
  • Lost in the Moment and Found by Seanan McGuire – This is the newest volume of The Wayward Children Series. If you don’t know it, the series follows kids that had a portal fantasy adventure and came back. Mostly the kids are called to their respective fantasy worlds because those worlds fix the kid better. I always like this series and end up grabbing the book the day it comes out. This one follows a girl who ends up in an in-between world which is where lost things magically end up. It is better for her because her home life has gone to hell and it’s a sanctuary for her. She doesn’t realize what she is giving up to stay though. It has some good thoughts and observations about how people treat children. All the Wayward Children protagonists have rough home life, but this one starts especially rough. 
  • Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio – I loved this version of Pinocchio. I always like Del Toro’s designs and the stop motion animation was lovely. I especially liked the design for Death. 
  • Watership Down Mini Series – I also watched the Watership Down Mini Series that came out a few years ago. While the acting was good, I think it feel for the trap that happens a lot with cg animation. They rabbits look too realistic and that kinda robs them of personality. The visuals didn’t really sell the horror of the book or the old 2nd movie. 
  • First Kill – This and the next thing on this list made me think about how quickly netflix cancels stuff extremely quickly. If you aren’t familiar with it, First Kill is the teen lesbain vampire romance series they put out last summer and quickly canceled. It follows a vampire and a vampire hunter who fall for each other while their families are fighting one another. It is EXTREMELY bad and not in a fun way. The whole show is very poorly thought out and seems slapped together. While it wants you to think Romeo and Juliet with the two leads, it is established that after being bit a human becomes devoted to a vampire. So one member of those pair has their freewill compromised. It is then brushed aside. And the vampire girl doesn’t want to kill, but is told she has to. Why? Well, she just has to. We see other vampires feed from willing donors and not kill them, but it’s never established why she can’t just do that. The vampire also has to keep keep the fact that she is a vampire secret but then it turns out the whole world already knows about vampires. I could go on, but all the examples of what’s wrong can be summed up as a lack of thought being put in to anything. And at the end of the day it’s also boring. I can only imagine how frustrating it would be to think you were getting gay version of Buffy or True Blood and instead getting this. 
  • That 90s Show – I watched a lot of That 70s Show as a teen. And I’ve been watching a youtuber named Jose do retrospectives of different sitcoms. After watching the That 70s Show one, I decided to check out That 90s Show. Overall, That 90s Show is just okay. I think the new teen actors have a decent chemistry, are unique, and their jokes are funny. But they don’t really have time to explore/find their feet. Way too much time is spent on cameos for the cast of That 70s Show. The set up for the show is that Donna and Eric’s daughter Leia is spending the summer with her grandparents Red and Kitty. So Donna and Eric being in the first episode as well as Red and Kitty all fit in the show fine. But the problem comes up when it turns out the single mom next door is dating Fez and her landlord is the guy Fez had a rivalry with. So now instead of sticking with the teen main characters, we are spending all this time rehashing Fez’s joke from That 70s Show. And when Leia likes a boy with the last name Kelso, both Jackie and Micheal invade Kitty and Red’s kitchen to repeat their usual fight. Something like this happens once per episode. And it’s a shame because I think the teen characters holding their own would have better served the show. It left me wondering what season 2 would be like, but since it’s on Netflix it will most likely never get that chance. 

Watching all those sitcom retrospectives and listening to the Always Sunny Podcast (the crew of always sunny are rewatching their old episodes). It made me think about how sitcoms usually don’t find their feet until season 2. Nearly all the shows we think of as changing the landscape of television had poor ratings the first season. Sitcoms rarely have complicated premises and live or die on the chemistry of their cast. And you don’t know what does and doesn’t work until you actually make a couple of episodes. While dramas/dramadies are also in a rough place in a landscape where things either take off immediately or get canceled, seems like sitcoms are getting get the worst of this cancel happy time period we are currently in. 

That’s just something that’s been on my mind lately, especially when shows I really like such as Inside Job have ended up on the chopping block. 

Thanks everyone! Have a good month and thanks again for your support. I’m gonna start doing an art round up after each newsletter. So enjoy and have a good one. 

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