Toycon Vegas GrossXperience (March/2020)

The last of one the greats, time to ger your Gross Out on with legends from Garbage Pail Kids!

Toycon Expo – March 13th-15th – East Side Cannery Hotel – Las Vegas, NV

So while in town filming our King’s X project, I got invited to some super fun extra cirricular activities. One of which was a very generous offer to attend the 3-day extravaganza with 311 & the gang, The other was to cover the Toycon Expo which not only boasted a HUGE lineup but the focus was my weakness & magnetic north, legendary artists from Garbage Pail Kids!

Stuff

Dallas Fan Days w/ Stars Wars’ Anthony Daniels & more (Oct/2019)

Day 2

While I would have loved to have seen Matthew Modine (most recently Stranger Things) as I’m a HUGE fan of that show, I had family commitments that only allowed me to attend the final two panels of the day.

Anthony Daniels

Few know the inner workings of the Star Wars world like Anthony Daniels. The actor behind C-3PO has been in more Star Wars stories, across various media, than literally anyone else — and the only actor to take part in all episodic entries in the franchise.
His unique brand of Q&A that he basically turns into street theater.

I saw him do this twice before & it was one of the most enjoyable & unforgettable moments at any con I’ve ever covered. He forgoes a moderator or the normal (& often boorish) line of questionaires and just takes over & bounds about with an animation & agility of someone a third his age and he picks people to ask questions & the whole thing feels very improvised & special. This time around didn’t quite hit the mark the last time he was here & it was a bit too mean-spirited at times but unforgettable just the same.

The golden protocol droid will return for Rise of Skywalker closing out a run he started in the 1977 original. And it seems to already have many parallels to A New Hope.

Cosplayers

Savannah Poison (left)

Rachel FX (right)

Again attendance was low & not much else to do, so much so that we skipped Day 3 altogether but stay tuned as they’ll be back with a better & bigger show in the Spring.

 

Pics –

Roy Turner
Dania Maxwell

Texas Frightmare Weekend 2019 w/ Cast of Evil Dead, Anthrax, Jenna Jameson & more

This now being my second time to Texas Frightmare Weekend after such a fun & successful adventure last year.
Having never been much of a horror fan but have loads of respect for the genre.
However as a fan of cons & fun I’ve been intrigued but it wasn’t until last year’s lineup was announced that sealed my participation.

Texas Frightmare Weekend 2019 – May 3rd – 5th – Hyatt Regency Hotel – Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport 

Things took an interesting twist this year to say the least – And just like last year, that held TFM the same weekend as another major event, making it even more complicated as it was like-minded con that appeals to a large percentage of the same demographic.
Last year I was covering the Dallas International Film Festival concurrently as this & now this year they decided to have it the same weekend as the biggest Dallas comic con of the year Fan Days Expo.

So initially I wasn’t even gonna bother, I’m not a horror fan the location is very impractical – However I knew that Charlie Benante & Scott Ian from Anthrax were gonna be there & that intrigued me. In the year since the last time I was here, I’m now the Writer/Director/Producer of a feature length documentary on the band King’s X. In the few weeks leading up to this event, I’d been texting with Charlie about being in the film to which he was very excited about.

PLUS – the lineup for Fan Days Expo this year was STAAACKED – so stacked that I didn’t even bother looking up the rest of the lineup for Frightmare. I figured I’d be too busy with Fan Days plus, I was gonna send a car for Charlie to come to our studio downtown Dallas which is also right where Fan Days is & that would take up my whole weekend.

Well as fate would have it, I never get sick, but with all the traveling I’ve been doing lately it was bound to happen so I ended up having to blow off the first day of Fan Expo, then on Saturday, Charlie said that Frightmare had him too busy to leave to come do the interview for the film. Saturday was also Free Comic Day (big weekend for nerds eh?) – So I just did my best to enjoy that & told Charlie I’d come up to Frightmare so that at the very least we could get some face to face time.

Day 2 –

So I head down there just to hang with Charlie for a bit again not knowing of any of the other guests. Before I leave a friend asked if I was attending “The Anthrax Panel” – well hell I didn’t know they were even gonna do a panel, so I decided last minute to look at the panels they had scheduled and I couldn’t believe my procrastination – Well holy shit, why didn’t I look up the lineup earlier?? -With last year and now this year’s INSANE lineup, you don’t have to be a horror fan to enjoy this festival and in spite of it’s impractical location & setup, it offers something super intimate and with this year’s lineup, it’s becoming my most anticipated event of it’s type. Dude, Jenna Jameson & Traci Lords! Anthrax! Meatloaf, the cast of Evil Dead! – Cmon!

Then this happened…..

Meat Loaf while leading a Q&A session tripped over some wires onstage. Footage of the incident below show him stumbling while attempting to regain his balance, before ultimately falling off the stage, behind curtains.

Meat Loaf was then taken to a local hospital, where he was treated for a broken collarbone. Was a weird scary moment & I was there next to Charlie & Scott from Anthrax (Meatloaf is Scott’s father-in-law).
Meat Loaf previously collapsed on stage in 2016 after suffering from “severe dehydration.” His last album was that year’s Braver Than We Are.

Following that was A Tale of Two Sisters  screening followed by Q&A with director Chris Roe, and another ultimate crush Traci Lords! How could I not know that both Jenna AND Traci were gonna be here? haha

Traci Lords

Day 3

So I returned the next day for it’s final day of programming to discover that Jenna Jameson was here & doing a panel. She didn’t have anything immediate to promote & the Horror/Comedy Zombie Stripper was over 10 years ago so I didn’t know if it was some 10th Anniversarry or what the deal was.
Only one way to find out – Now, I have quite a bit to say about this so let’s unpack shall we?

First of all Jenna & I are almost the exact same age & both now newly 45. If you were a 20 year old male in 1994 as I was, you knew who Jenna Jameson was even if you’d never seen any of her videos. She was just THAT popular. By 1997 after she was in Howard Stern’s Private Parts movie she had successfully (& thankfully) replaced Ron Jeremy as “that-one-porn-star-everyone-knows”.

Whereas Traci Lords (see above) became successful IN SPITE of her porn career, Jenna became famous outside of the adult industry BECAUSE of it & to this day though she has long stopped performing, everyone still knows who Jenna is.

Jenna Jameson

Appearing make-up less and a noticeable almost disturbing amount of surgical enhancements to her face she didn’t exactly look like the Jenna I remember & that’s some idealic take that I’m expecting woman not to age, she’s 45, I haven’t seen her in person in over 20 years, but this was something different. What I learned later is that she had really let herself go after her pregnancy in ??? and this was her back down over a 100 lbs that she credits to a stricy Keto diet. Enough judging her on her looks alone as what makes Jenna, Jenna is that she is irrisistable & her appearance her is one thing that has not changed, especially when she was talking about fanning out over Bruce Campbell earlier in the day.

What apparently has changed for Jenna is her political views, if that’s even what you can call them, which is to say that nothing has changed.
She has flipped back & forth so many times that it makes her opinions of the matter so instantly dismissable, not because she’s a former porn star but it’s clear Jenna is still addicted to attention & this is how she gets it. I’m no liberal, but here parting words at this panel of “I live to crush liberals on Twitter!” seemed more steeped in a newfound pleasure of smiting without giving it any real thought. If she had theirs no concernable reason to trust that a smart woman like Jenna would support a party that has done nothing but try to tear down her gender, her right & her former profession.

Scott Ian & Charlie Benante
of Anthrax

The Evil Dead

Elvira

Texas Pinball Festival 2019

Stuff

There’s no doubt that this was the biggest and most successful Texas Pinball Festival to date. The move of the tournaments into their own room released additional space in the main hall for more machines and vendors.

This extra space was needed due to the two The Munsters cars and the autograph desks which clearly themed the show around the show and Stern Pinball’s latest release.

The move of the tournaments did give them their own (somewhat limited) space in which they could keep their own hours, but the side-effect of that was to remove the competitive events from the eyes of the general public, making tournament play less inclusive than before.

The seminars schedule featured all the major players from the big manufacturers as well as a few more esoteric talks. The number of seminars felt about right – covering the latest news without being too exhausting.

With the lead time to secure special guests this was always going to be a The Munsters-themed show, and it did an exceptional job at that. But there was one elephant in the room which simultaneously felt inevitable and yet remained a little odd.

That was Stern Pinball’s announcement of their next title just hours after the Texas Pinball Festival closed on Sunday. The designer and other members of the design team were at the show, but couldn’t talk about the game everyone knew they had been working on. That said, the fact that all the The Munsters machines at the show were pre-sold and the length of the lines which formed at the VIP meet-and-greet showed there was still huge enthusiasm for the residents of 1313 Mockingbird Lane.

Excelsior! A Celebration of the Uncanny Life of Stan Lee (Jan/2019)

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Excelsior! A Celebration of the Amazing, Fantastic, Incredible & Uncanny Life of Stan Lee –
January 30th – TCL Chinese Theatre – Hollywood, CA

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Longtime friend and filmmaker Kevin Smith hosted “Excelsior! A Celebration of the Amazing, Fantastic, Incredible & Uncanny Life of Stan Lee” at the TCL Chinese Theatre in Hollywood on Wednesday night. Lee, who died on Nov. 12 at age 95, helped create some of the most iconic superheroes in history for Marvel Comics, including Spider-Man, Iron Man, Thor, Hulk, Black Panther, Dr. Strange, and the X-Men.

“I remember Stan meeting [‘Spider-Man’ star] Tom Holland for the first time,” Sean Gunn, one of the stars of “Guardians of the Galaxy” told Variety. “The thing you have to know about Stan is that he was always f—ing with people all the time. He never stopped doing it. He said, ‘Tom, everyone tells me that you’re the perfect Spider-Man, but I can’t see it.’ Tom’s face fell and Stan laughed. He looked around and winked at the people who knew he was messing around.”

Smith first met Lee while filming “Mallrats” in 1995 after writing a small role specifically for the comic legend. A short meeting about how inaccurate the character was to Lee’s actual persona soon led to a 23-year friendship.

“He never gave me any advice, which was so awesome because that’s what a friend is. He doesn’t tell you how to live your life. He just enjoys the life that you live,” Smith told Variety. “He never gave me advice, but he gave me so much more than that. That man lived the life, where I was like, ‘I’m gonna borrow that, gonna borrow that, gonna borrow that.’ He was never like, ‘Kev, be like me.’ I just chose to be like him.”

The celebration began with a police flag-raising ceremony outside the TCL Chinese Theatre and a salute by Veterans in Media & Entertainment to Lee, who served in World War II. The veterans group presented a memorial flag to his daughter, J.C. Lee.

Inside, Smith hosted several star-studded panels to remember the impact Lee had on so many people’s lives and careers. Without Lee’s early comics, “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” producers Phil Lord and Chris Miller wouldn’t have had the inspiration for their Oscar-nominated film.

“Our first encounter with him was at eight years old reading comic books. We first met him when we were 20 years old and snuck into a Comic-Con after-party and ran up to him. Any other person would’ve totally been calling security over,” Miller said. “Reading his notes to the readers in those pages was the first time we felt part of something bigger. He made ordinary people feel extraordinary. To me, that’s his legacy.”

In the final pages of many of his comics, Lee penned “Stan’s Soapbox,” letters he wrote that spoke to the reader in a humorous, honest way. Few other creators developed such a direct relationship with their legions of adoring fans.

“He had such a personality that came across the pages,” “Star Wars” star Mark Hamill said during a panel. “He put a human face on what it was like to work for a comic company. He had catchphrases, like ‘Excelsior,’ and ‘Stan’s Soapbox.’ You really felt like you knew him. He branded that company. He was the figurehead. He was the guy, Stan the Man.”

“Stan’s Soapbox” also united fans of all backgrounds and championed respect, equality, and diversity. One of the most famous letters from 1969 that condemned bigotry went viral following his death. Wu-Tang Clan member and filmmaker RZA repeated Lee’s words to a hushed audience.

“Bigotry and racism are among the deadliest social ills plaguing the world today. But unlike a team of costumed supervillains, they can’t be halted with a punch in the snoot, or a zap from a ray gun. The only way to destroy them is to expose them — to reveal them for the insidious evils they really are,” he read. “Sooner or later, if man is ever to be worthy of his destiny, we must fill out hearts with tolerance.”

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti honored him with a posthumous key to the city. The one-of-kind key was made from solid brass and wood from a fallen tree in the San Fernando Valley, where Lee spent a lot of time.

“Whether you’re lucky enough to be born here or smart enough like Stan Lee to come here, this is indeed a City of Angels. This is a place where we have heart, we have spirit — things Stan Lee was all about,” Garcetti said during the ceremony. “Whether you’re a woman, or a person of color, or LGBTQ, or a religious minor, or a senior, we start thinking of everyone as an underdog. Stan Lee did things to give us a place where we felt ourselves.”

The panels were punctuated with montages of Lee’s cameos in dozens of superhero pics, personal videos of him signing autographs while singing, and tributes from other celebrities. Seth Green remembered meeting his wife during an encounter with Lee, and Laurence Fishburne recited “The Raven,” Lee’s favorite poem. Other panelists included Felicia Day, Tom DeSanto, Avi Arad, Amy Pascal, and Joe Quesada. Video tributes from Dwayne Johnson, David Tennant, Ming-Na Wen, Mike Colter, and Doug Jones also played.

he next panel brought out the big stars who had shared the screen with Lee throughout the years, including Mark Hamill, Laurence Fishburne, Clark Gregg and Felicia Day. Hamill offered the best impression of Lee’s unique voice, as he channeled the comic creator’s response to how he remained so youthful into his nineties: “Well, Mark, I like to get up early in the morning and work very, very hard all day long.” Hamill implored the audience to accept that everyone has had a personal relationship with Lee and that, “If you saw him, you also know him. He was who he was.”

Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. actor Clark Gregg noted of Lee’s work, “I feel carried by his work. I feel inspired by it.” Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer actor Doug Jones, who portrayed the Surfer (Lee’s favorite character to write for), appeared by video clip to quote Silver Surfer No. 3 in a tear-jerking moment, “If die I must — let it be as I have lived — soaring swift and silent — striving for the right — no matter what the cost!”

Gabriel Olsen/Getty Images

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti

Perhaps the biggest moment of the night came with the appearance of Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, who detailed Lee’s love affair with L.A. before running through a catalogue of his own nerdiness, including a proclamation that no one could offer him enough money to let go of his complete collection of original copies of the Wolverine comic series. Garcetti then stated, “Stan Lee was a mensch who always fought for the underdog,” before presenting Stan’s former company, Stan Lee’s POW! Entertainment, with Garcetti’s third-ever “Key to the City,” carved from a fallen tree and engraved with Stan’s image and catchphrase, “Excelsior!”

Lee, known for his unorthodox methods of community building and progressive values, found an ally in RZA, who expressed that the Wu-Tang Clan was partially inspired by the comic creator’s work, allowing themselves to take on their own superhero names. The room was silent while he recited a famous 1968 passage from Stan’s Soapbox, a passage that Stan would sometimes insert between the pages of his comics, decrying bigotry in all its forms: “Let’s lay it right on the line. Bigotry and racism are among the deadliest social ills plaguing the world today.” Laurence Fishburne returned to punctuate this silence with a stirring live rendition of Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Raven,” a favorite of Stan Lee’s; for a moment, the whole world seemed to stop for the haunting poem.

The night was rounded out with several panels of Lee’s comics collaborators, including Joe Quesada, Marv Wolfman, George Perez, Bill Sienkiewicz, Jeph Loeb and Stephen Wacker. Each recounted their personal experiences with Lee and how he either inspired them or took personal time out of his day to make them feel special and invited to the comics community. Quesada, former editor-in-chief of Marvel Comics, emphasized how much he strived to live up to Lee’s ideals when running the company himself, suggesting that, when Marvel adheres to Stan’s fan-oriented principals, then the company is doing its best.

However, it was Wacker, who sat in Stan’s former seat as the editor of the Amazing Spider-Man comic, who addressed the elephant in the room head on: Bill Maher’s recent derogatory comments about Lee’s legacy and the value of comic art. After a night where Lee was consistently compared to Shakespeare, Wacker said that perhaps everyone understood that there were more “important” things in the world, and in art, than comics and pop culture, but that this kind of escapism and joy “is what we are fighting these fights for,” before ending the night on a resounding “Excelsior.”

Gabriel Olsen/Getty Images

Wesley Snipes

On and on the night stretched, with panel after panel sharing their stories of Lee, as if to say that, if the night never ended, we would never have to truly let the creator go. Approaching midnight, Kevin Smith assured the crowds, “Don’t worry, we only have a week’s worth of panels to go,” before launching into his final story of the night.

Smith shared a story about a time that he invited the elderly Stan to his home, spending a spirited afternoon together. Yet, just before seeing him off, Stan tripped precariously at the top of Smith’s stairs, a situation that could have seen him gravely injured. Smith’s mind went to thoughts of the headlines the next day, remarking, “I broke Stan during my time with him!”

However, at the last minute, it was his road manager, Max Anderson, who swooped in for the save, catching Stan in his arms and immediately bouncing him back to safety. Smith called Max up on stage to a round of applause, where a teary-eyed Max told the crowd, “Stan isn’t looking down on us, he’s here with us. Inside all of you.”

Moments later, the crowd was singing the Spider-Man cartoon theme song, shouting “Excelsior” and heading home, given one final task by Max Anderson: “Share your stories, that’s how Stan lives on.”

“Stan’s greatest creation was himself. We love all the superheroes that Stan was responsible for, but we don’t get to meet those superheroes unless we met the character of Stan Lee,” Smith said. “If Stan wants to live forever, this is how it begins. Sometimes I lament because I honestly think I’ve met the best f—ing human being in my life, and now he’s gone. He meant the world to everyone in this room. We’re talking about someone who didn’t have to touch personally to touch personally. This is a guy who lives in everybody’s hearts.”

Legion M, a fan-owned entertainment company, the consultancy Agents of Mayhem, and Lee’s POW! Entertainment production group helped produce the tribute. Proceeds from ticket sales benefitted the Hero Initiative, a charity that assists comic creators with health expenses.

Photos –

Roy Turner
Gabriel Olsen

Michael Buckner

North Texas Comic Book Show w/ Larry Hama, Amy Chu, Mike Zeck, Cosplayers galore & much more (Feb/2019)

In North Texas we look forward to the bi-annual Dallas Fan Days events that bookend the massive Fan Expo in the Spring.

Their are several other satelitte events that are independent and still do big business. The folks at NTXCBS put on their biggest one yet.

North Texas Comic Book Show – Feb 2nd-3rd – Irving Convention Center – Irving, TX

Besides my official invitation & interest, what got me through the door was my #1 Living Hero Larry Hama, the creator of the GI Joe Universe, whose are is tattooed on my body  was gonna back this year. This time however, I’m a new dad & though little Miles is only 6 months old, I couldn’t wait to introduce him to Larry.

Lots of other great artists were in the house & some also my personal faves or current titles that I read such as Amy Chu & Mike Zeck.

Their was also lots of great cosplay to witness and miles of vendors – Check out comicbooksdallas.com to sign up for the mailing list to be informed of their next show!

Larry Hama with my son Miles & I

Larry Hama & Amy Chu

Mike Zeck

Cosplayers

Vendors

AKON 29: Cosplay Takeover at one of the world’s largest Anime & Manga Conventions (June/2018)

Billed as one the largest convention of it’s kind Project A-Kon, the annual Anime & Convention Expo, this year being their 29th installment is something that in spite of having little to zero interest or knowledge of anime & it’s culture, is an event I’ve attended every year since 2012.
That year I was hired to DJ a late night rave beginning at midnight.

Project A-Kon 29 – June 7th-10th – Tarrant County Convention Center – Fort Worth, TX

The first thing you see when you enter the hotel (after you have battled insane parking issues) is that it has been COMPLETELY taken over by the convention. There is no formation or people directing any sort of order, it’s just complete MADNESS that gives the event it’s pulse that it’s patrons seem to thrive on.
Nothing informs you of that greater/quicker than the sea of awesome Cosplayers EVERYWHERE.

Vphi (left)

Tessa Catsabon (left)
Madi Pettit (right)

Kasa, VaeshawnStarGaze

Monica Zabiki (left)

Kaia (left)
& Heaven (right)

Fallon

Brianna Apsara (left)

Susu (middle) Devin (right)

Angelina

Dae Cosplay

Bitsy Hanas (middle) Ashcattb (right as Ninja)

Carol (right)

Losersan

Heather Morgenstern (left)
Gin (right)

Kayla & Andrea (left)
Kitty Berry (2nd pic on the right)

Mariah Vee (left)
& Missy (right)

Layla, Micchi &

Bethany Knox

Photos – 

Roy Turner
Scott Fischer
Cruz Control
Kathy Tran
Hubert Huy
The Mind of Ky
Kenshi Masaki
Christopher Grovantes
Bitsy Hanas

Con of Thrones 2018 w/ Esme Bianco, Sibel Kekilli, Hannah Murray & more

If you’ve never been to a Comic-Con (what are you waiting for?) essentially it’s a market & trade show – at it’s base, it’s just one big store. All the vendors gathered together in one convenient place. To get the fans to come shop, the convention books stars (past & present) for Q&A’s, autograph sessions & photo ops etc

Con of Thrones – May 25th-27th – Hyatt Regency Hotel – Dallas, TX

The Good & the Bad of Con of Thrones is unlike say Star Wars Celebration (which we covered in 2015 in Anaheim) where the event is created by the Star Wars organization (& to this day still the most organized & enjoyable con I’ve attended to date) & done so well.
Rather this entire event is fan generated (which I was unaware of until I arrived).

However it’s also what makes Con of Thrones so special & because of it, their are so many unique ways to stay entertained throughout the convention. If autograph sessions with Thrones cast members isn’t enough to satisfy your fandom (due to filming the current season, none of the main cast were available)  you can talk about more trivial themes, sing karaoke, duels (with foam weapons, of course), and much more. Some shoddy planning & absurd ticket prices aside this was still alot of fun.

Panels:

There were some really great panels featuring the specials guests throughout the weekend that were fan-programmed as well.

Sibel Kekilli

Hannah Murray

Esme Bianco

Cosplay

With so many characters to choose from, Game of Thrones offers a plethora of ideas and concepts for fans to embody. But at the Game of Thrones convention, the cosplayers took their outfits very seriously. It’s always the fans that make up the heart & soul of any good convention.

Dunmeri (left)
& Morgan Kaleidscopic (right)

Marla Massey & Locks Velvet (right)

Fire and Lunch featuring Darth Rachel & friends

Maddie Kay Ray (right)

 

 

Miltos Yerolemou w/ Rachel Welch

See ya next year!

Photos – 

Roy Turner
Con of Thrones Staff
David Roberts

Texas Frightmare Weekend 2018 w/ Mischa Barton, premiers, cosplay & much more (May/2018)

So this was our first time to Texas Frightmare Weekend having never been much of a horror fan but have loads of respect for the genre.
However as a fan of cons & fun I’ve been intrigued but it wasn’t until this year’s lineup was announced that sealed my participation.
First, my old buddy & WWE Hall of Famer Diamond Dallas Page but then Mischa Barton making her first appearance at a con of any kind it became something not to be missed. Whereas I was also pulling double-duty of covering Dallas International Film Festival simultaneously I did my best to make the most of it.

Texas Frightmare Weekend – May 4th-6th – Hyatt Regency Hotel – Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport

So let’s get a few of the basics out of the way first:

The Good:

It’s a unique gathering, with more of an adult flavor given that horror is adult-related content, with night time parties. It’s pretty small so it’s intimate vibe was cool but could also be problematic. The cosplay at a Horror-Con is a breed unto itself. Mischa Barton was there.

The Bad:

The location is a nightmare, as in it’s not at a hotel by the airport, it’s at a hotel that’s IN the airport across from a main terminal.
So going multiple days if you weren’t staying on site is the same as going (& leaving) the airport everyday for an entire weekend & parking was impossible which also required validation. For me it was so small that while I enjoyed it’s intimacy, after about an hour of walking around I was done. Not much to see & if having it in the basement of this in much need of a facelift hotel on purpose was designed to add to it’s trashy factor, it did it’s job in spades.

Again, for me the most exciting aspect was Mischa Barton’s participation, not only it being her first time, but I was a HUGE fan of the O.C & she’s the kind of actress that no matter the film or project, if she’s in it, I’m interested.
She was here to premiere not one but two movies – The Toybox & Ouija House which we saw back to to back on Saturday evening.

The Toybox

This was actually a really fun movie, well done, creepy, campy & Mischa is magnificent in it. Lends itself to multiple sequels with an all-around great cast with Denise Richards who was equally superb.

Mischa Barton (left)
& with Denise Richards

With Producer Jeff Denton
& Director Tom Nagel

Ouija House

Sadly the same can’t be said for Ouija House, this film is a real piece of shit. All film fatigue aside, getting through this, especially the last 30 mins was a painful chore. First it started seriously almost 40 mins behind schedule so it was after 11pm when it BEGAN.
It’s easy to get caught up in cinematic magic when your watching a film in public, that’s what makes going to the movies so fun. However if this was home video or Netflix, this turd would be easily spotted as hot garbage.

Besides Mischa, the only saving grace (pun intended) is Grace Demarco who’d I love to see in more projects & Carly Schroeder who was also in attendance.

Grace Demarco (left)
& Carly Schroeder (right)

Lots of other great guests, vendors & cosplay too –

Matt Lilliard

Diamond Dallas Paige

A staple of this convention we notice was tattoos & body modifications so we did a small piece called The Tattoos of Texas Frightmare Weekend 2018 – Enjoy!

Lady Grimoire

Ale Kat (left)
& Kitty Korvette

Rachel Lee Wright, Sara Rafter
& Kirsten Watts

Logan

Diana

Diana, the artist Alee & Logan

Photos – 

Roy Turner
IMDB

Scenes from the 2018 Fan Expo Dallas

If you’ve never been to a Comic-Con (what are you waiting for?) essentially it’s a market & trade show – at it’s base, it’s just one big store. All the vendors gathered together in one convenient place. To get the fans to come shop, the convention books stars (past & present) for Q&A’s, autograph sessions & photo ops.
But it’s the people that attend that make it so much more.

The fans of everything that make up this culture are so dedicated that they dress up in amazing cosplay some have prepared all year long to show off t’s just SO MUCH FUN.

Dallas Fan Days Expo – April 6th-8th – Dallas Convention Center – Dallas, TX

This is the big one & every year their is the lead theme & this year it was Back to the Future, that’s also to say that this has to be the most stacked lineup of talent in all the years we’ve been covering this special event.

Back to the Future

They did suffer a pretty major setback as this whole thing has been centered around a Back to the Future cast reunion which is extremely rare unto itself. It proved that as much as for the 5 main cast members that were announced including Marty McFly himself, Michael J Fox, by showtime it had dwindled down to just two: Christoper Lloyd & Tom Wilson (Doc & Biff respectively).

That’s not to say that all way lost as their contrast in personalities made for such a fun & candid conversation. You never know what some of these people are like in person, so it came as a wonderful surprise that Wilson is an animated dervish of performance art, anchored by Lloyd’s perpetually seemingly stoned low key persona. He was definitely more Taxi than BTTF here.

Afterwards ??? brought out this magnificent cake for everyone to not only behold but to taste (& it was as yummy and it was majestic).

Even the other guests were getting into the Back to the Future spirit has a revolving cast known as Twisted Toonz, made up of voice actors of some of your favorite pop culture programs come together to do a script reading in voices they are assigned on the spot improv style (just to further drive home how talented these people are). Normally this type of appropriated humor isn’t for me & I was already dealing with that I had misread it as I thought it was gonna be the actual cast members from BTTF doing the reading, meaning we were gonna see Doc Brown be Doc Brown LIVE, but I’m glad I stayed as this was very fun & at time super hilarious.

2001: A Space Odyessy 50 Year Cast Reunion 

It’s cliche to say that Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyseey is one of the greatest films ever or even THE best or your favorite but literally for me all those things are true & without sounding morbid, given how much time has passed I never gave it a thought that the two main cast members were still in con-appearance capacity. They truly are infinite.

At both 81 years young Keir Dullea & Gary Lockwood (David Bowman & Frank Poole respectively) gave several fasincating Q&A’s over the weekend, revealing so much minutia about the film & the legacy of Kubrick that your yearn for.

Including a very rare & private screening of it’s sequel 2010: The Year We Make Contact (that Dullea also appears in)

I had never seen the 1984 sequel in the theater & only had seen once before when I was in my teens so this was a real treat.
Much thanks to Keiran from Alamo Drafthouse for having us & to my girl Jocelyn for driving in a hail storm (even after her side window exploded) to make the film with me. Our love is truly infinite.

And if those heavy hitters over the weekend we saw (very different) panels from the likes of heavy hitters as Jeff Goldblum, Chuck Norris & many more.

Jeff Goldblum

Chuck Norris

If I had any exceptions it would be two things: People waited in line for hours to see Goldblum talk for exactly 12 mins whereas comparitively these things go an average of 30-45 mins.
The second would be everything surrounding Chuck Norris is still weird, indulgent with completely zero self-awareness.
His wife was insufferable as best: I forgive him reading his pre-approved statements from a sheet of paper as at his age & health & the miles he’s put in, he’s allowed. However for his attention starved trophy wife to seize the opportunity to place the spotlight on her & her cattle baron ladies-who-lunch charity culture & signature water was difficult to digest.
Not to mention this 78 year old former martial arts star, still thinks he needs military level security detail as a trigger itching handler really thought it was still 1987 (just like his wife).

Stranger Things

Next was a great delight in a few of the cast members of Stranger Things, which is a show I personally adore & have seen both seasons. of.

Note of contrast: The three cast members Blah & Blah & new last season Sadie Sink were refreshingly just kids, they are all around the 13-14 year old age & looked & acted every bit of it, again just kids being kids. Compare that to when I interviewed Millie Bobby Brown who plays Eleven in 2016 when she was at this same event in it’s smaller sister capacity of Dallas Fan Days. Since she doesn’t speak much on the show I didn’t know she was British, secondly her character (at least in the first three episodes) rarely if at all speaks. Lastly, she was only 12 years old
However, this pre-teen had more poise, grace and weapons grade wit & animated with a worldliness that I and the collective 3,000 or so in attendance will never know in our combined adult lives. How does that happen? She was funny, staggeringly smart, she rapped, had impeccable timing with humor and the perfect charm. I’m totally signing up for finishing school as I write this.

Star Wars

To add to this already stacked lineup Heavyweights Billy Dee Williams (Lando Calrissian), Anthony Daniels (C-3PO) and Joonas Suotamo (the “new” Chewbacca for these sequel movies) rounded out the guest list of this must-attend event.

Billie Dee Williams

Who is also 81 years young (& on this day was his birthday) was still smooth – Slower & much less bass in his voice, he was still cool & very funny.

Joonas Suatomao

Replacing longtime Chewbacca actor Peter Mayhew comes Joonas Suatomo who was super friendly & engaging.

Anthony Daniels

Daniels who plays C-3P0 closed the weekends festivities with his unique brand of Q&A that he basically turns into street theater.
I saw him do this once before (at the same event with Millie Bobby Brown, see above) & it was one of the most enjoyable & unforgettable moments at any con I’ve ever covered. He forgoes a moderator or the normal (& often boorish) line of questionaires and just takes over & bounds about with an animation & agility of someone a third his age and he picks people to ask questions & the whole thing feels very improvised & special. This time around didn’t quite hit the mark the last time he was here & it was a bit too mean-spirited at times but unforgettable just the same.

This year’s Artist Alley was super impressive, we visited the Rogues Apparel booth for their stunning prints from artist Chad Howell on some very comfy shirts. I’m not sure I’ve ever seen them have tattoo artist doing their thing before but their were several top talents inking fans & the whole thing had a GI Joe motif so naturally it immediately got my attention.

Rogues Apparel

Cosplayers

…and of course their would be no Fan Expo without exactly that – The Fans who most dressed up in awesome cosplay.

Cassidy (right as Kim Possible)

Kitty Hagen 

Michael Ho (left as Storm Shadow)

Ashley Mayumi (left as Little Mermaid)

Danielle Denicola (left) &
Charlotte Dolan (right)

AleKat (left)

Princess of Themyscira & Speed Race Goose

I kept running into this awesome & talented couple that slayed with something new all three days, check out their page, both very friendly & cosplay is next level business.

Cosplay Deviants

Great to see Mira Shiver & the Cosplay Deviants crew back at Fan Expo Dallas. As a longtime supporter of liberated artists with a punk rock DIY work ethic such as Suicide Girls etc I love the work CDs are doing. A fan sourced outlet doing amazing things from skateboards to coffee table books. They even have their own board game!

Ireland Reid (left)

Harley Quinn

As witnessed, the Harley Quinn character was still easily the most popular cosplay among the masses to portray & all of her many incarnations & we had the pleasure of meeting & shooting what we thought were the two best we saw all weekend.

Tarisha

Emily Herondale

Hands down one of the best cosplayers we saw all weekend was Emily Herondale positively KILLING as Jade from Mortal Kombat.
So character acurate & sold it so fiercely that if they make a new MK movie, the role should go to Emily.

Sata (right)

Amaranth (left)
& the Girls of Silver Dollar City (right)

Leya Renee (as tinkerbell)

Alan Nakin (as Batgirl, left)

Joanie Brosas

Always great to see my friend Joanie Brosas – This girl is a true nerd who also just happens to be impossibly attractive. Her social media is a delight of engaging inquiries, inspired photos & body/image positive messages that promote acceptance of all. Seriously, no one is doing cosplay this legit, this hot, with such a fun, positive attitude. Check out her appearance on our TrickyKid TV program https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U8xOeCO8CX4&t=628s

Yu Rockit

Photos –

Roy Turner