Dallas Comic Con Fan Days Expo w/ The Dukes of Hazzard & more (Feb 13-14th 2016)

We had quite the nerdy year in 2015. I’ve always been into comics, games & other geeky stuff but professionally after attending the Salt Lake City Comic-Con everything changed. Next thing I know, I’m being invited to cover the Star Wars Celebration in Anaheim and indoctrined into the fascinating world of Cosplay that has been around for awhile but really exploded in 2015. Suddenly, my timeline feeds are filled with all these new creative people and a calendar full of wonderful events to meet them all. So we start the year off right with this one:

Dallas ComicCon Fan Days – February 13th-14th – Irving Convention Center – Irving, TX

Held at the brand new & super impressive Irving Convention Center right outside of Dallas, Dallas Comic Con Fan Days is an event they put on twice a year that bookends their largest event of the year that’s held at the much larger Dallas Convention Center. However, this “mini-con” felt anything but that.
I think it’s popularity surprised the producers & even overwhelmed that city as the parking garage was full before the doors opened and most patrons (including us) had to park close to a mile away. So fun seeing all the fans in costumes making the trek – It felt like a total nerd pilgrimage was in full-swing ?
The first thing we see when arrive – This impressive Juraasic Park display.

Though I was hear in a professional capacity, this is also my interest & passion & as a kid there were few things I was more passionate about than the Dukes of Hazzard. It was essentially my life – It aired on Friday nights, so when I came home from school, my weekends began with Bo, Luke & Daisy.
So you can imagine my excitement that all three were gonna be here for a special Q&A panel and signing appearances.

The Dukes of Hazzard

Cast members (from L-R) Tom Wopat, Catherine Bach & John Schneider participated in a wonderful Q&A session where they gleefully talked of chemistry, fellowship and fun. You can see the entire chat in the video below:

Did you think I was gonna resist having my picture taken next to the General Lee? Of course not, I’m surprised I didn’t jump the rail & get in it.
If your wondering, no I do not support the imagery of the Confederate Flag or any symbolism for that matter that’s designed to divide us.
I love the fact that in the above Q&A the cast not only doesn’t shy away from that topic but actually embraced the chance to clarify their feelings.
And I will echo our shared sentiments here – What it meant to the Dukes (kayfabe) was simple pride along with an 8 year old child with no concept of racism or hate a recognizable image of the car of his dreams. Hell you could have painted Ronald McDonald up there and I wouldn’t have noticed.
As an adult, do I wish it was a U.S. Flag or just anything else that could bring the show and it’s joy back to syndication? Absolutely.

After the Q&A the three cast members sat up shop just outside for simultaneous (but individual) signing appearances. I got re-aquainted with John Schneider’s publicity team and had a nice talk. As I was doing so I hear this loud shriek behind me to turn around to see WWE Superstar Cody Rhodes in his Stardust persona in full character on a mission being followed by a film crew.

Now Rhodes wasn’t (publicly) scheduled or announced to be here, this was a fun surprise the producers had set up but I began to wonder what his agenda was and then it hit me. As we made our way up here to see the Dukes earlier, we got caught in this train of people we were trying to cross that stretched for what seemed like the entire expanse of the Convention Center. Finally we slid through but not before asking one of them “What was this line for?” to which they excitedly replied Stephen Amell of Arrow fame. I’d never heard the name or seen the show, but when someone said “He’s Arrow” , as a die-hard wrestling fan I remembered that he was part of a comic book-y crossover story line at Summer Slam last year…..and then I remembered it was against (Cody as) Stardust!
Oh shit! He’s here to crash Amell’s panel unannounced – Follow Cody! I shouted.

The doors to the Amell’s panel open (from behind) and the whole crowd is shocked & turns around to see Stardust make the perfect surprise entrance.
A great, great moment. Joined by his wife Brandi (WWE Ring Announcer Eden Stiles) to officially crash the party.
Watch the entire thing below –

The ENTIRE Stardust-Stephen Confrontation at Dallas Comic Con …

See what happened when Stardust – WWE Universe confronted Stephen Amell at Dallas Comic Con!

Posted by WWE on Saturday, February 13, 2016

Now speaking of surprises, I was completely unaware of Stephen Amell’s popularity, no offense I just had no idea. When I walked into signing area behind where the Dukes where to take photos of the participants ALL LINES were empty except for Amell’s.
Now did this contribute to this next adventure? You decide – Tweet us at @TrickyKid2 if you have something to add to the following:

So overzealous volunteers be damned those that are scheduled to make signing appearances most certainly want the press to take their picture. That’s what they are there for, to get paid, meet their fans, sell merchandise. I of course wanted pics for my coverage and to be clear: NEVER at the cost of a fan’s experience.
So when approaching Star Trek: The Next Generation star Brent Spiner, I first spoke with his on-site publicity team to get permission to take a few quick snaps.

Brent Spiner

His line was completely empty sans for a special needs girl & her mom who Spiner was giving extra special attention to. I was really into how nice he was being to this girl & then when they were done, I smiled, approached, smiled again & snapped off a few pics to which he gave me the stink eye in all of them.
After just a few seconds, I gave him the thumbs up (as if to say thanks, I’m done) smiled again and as I was turning away Spiner just leered at me & I could hear the cadence of his normal speaking voice he sounded like one of those mean gay kids that hand you flyers to their party in the East Village.
Help me out here, is Spiner a dick? My friends & I have referenced that sad girl from Trekkies when her sexual frustrations would reach it’s apex she would take what she referred to as a “Brent Break”.

Ok so now what would the convention be without its fans? 
Here are the Cosplayers of Fan Days 2016 –

Jennifer Brantley (left)
& Heather Worth (right)

Ellen Hudgens & Amanda Gish (left)
&  Zumi (right)

Chris (as Ghost Rider)
& Karsen Meredith Morris

Denice Reed (left)
& Megan Proska (right)

Denice made the most incredible dress I’ve ever seen & should be commended with some kind of special award.
Her dress is made up ENTIRELY of pull tab can & bottle caps that took her over a year to collect & to make. Not to mention look how freaking cute she looks in it.
Good job Denice!

Desert Rose

The Cosplay Contest Red Carpet

Who can resist a red carpet with perfect branded back-drop just sitting there unoccupied when it’s designed for taking pictures?
Later on the first day is the Cosplay Contest and this area becomes a shitshow that I usually avoid but before the storm hit I was able to capture some great cosplay & snap a few of my own ?

Katie Gilroy, Hillary Harber & Megan Pihl (left)
& Jessica Rabbit & I (right)

Jessica Rabbit (above right with me) you might recall made our Top 10 Cosplayers list last year & speaking of which, another entry on that list, Kelsey Topper KILLED both days of the con & really raised her game & in my opinion had some of the most outstanding cosplay of the entire weekend.

Kelsey Topper

Autumn Jacobs (right)

Miranda Allen (left)


Pro-Cosplayers

I typically don’t shoot Pro-Cosplayers (especially if I have shot them before, as I have these two last May) as they have alot of fans lined up & again my motto is: Never At the Expense of the Fan Experience + their getting a fair share of attention and I like to shoot the up & coming.
However these two outdid themselves and were both very generous with their time& super fun to shoot.

Silly Little Missy (left)
& Jennifer Van Damsel (right)

Oddly as I was approaching the Convention Center I kept hearing all this shouting from across the street & then I saw young patrons shouting back.
Not paying much attention, until I was forced to, I initially thought it was just some kids playing a game until I saw their were actual protesters, spending their day shouting at people from across the street. What were they protesting, fun?

So that wraps it up for Fan Days Expo, don’t miss the big one at Dallas Convention Center happening June 3-5th 2016!

Photos – 

Roy Turner
Alan Tijerina
Kathy Tran
Kabooooom

TrickyKid Top 10 Cosplayers of 2015

I was introduced to the awesome & fascinating world of Cosplay this year – Sure I had seen people dressing up at movie premiers and the occasional costume at some nerdier events I’ve attended but seeing it so mainstream, in full force as an art form, sometimes even competitively so was an unexpected turn of events that led me to attending events & photographing cosplayers on both coasts in everywhere in the middle this year.
Cosplay has influenced the advertising industry, in which cosplayers are often hired for event work previously assigned to agency models. Thus, new variant of cosplay has developed in which cosplayers attend events mainly for the purpose of modeling their characters for still photography. Some cosplayers have since transformed their hobby into profitable, professional careers thus introducing the Pro Cosplayer,.
Regardless of your an amateur, pro or just a first timer I wanted to recognize the people we met this year.
This is in no way some sort of comprehensive list or I think that I know best, just a fun list of fun people we ran into this year that we put on a ballot and voted on by our readers.

10) Kelsey Topper (Dallas, TX)

One of the friendliest people I met this year, was Kelsey Topper, we are based in the same city so I first started going to events we would keep running into each other & each time she had a more impressive cosplay. She’s part of a close-knit community of cosplayers in the DFW area and is leading the pack with her always awesome creations.

Where we met her: North Texas Comic-Con
Dallas Gaming Expo
Retropalooza III
A-Kon

Vamprilla (left)
& Lollipop Chainsaw(right)

9) Vii Love (Houston, TX)

I kept seeing Vii Love’s cosplay online & was intrigued by how egoless & just fun she seemed. I saw on social media she was going to be at Exxxotica the same time we were & was hoping to run into her. Thankfully we did, became fast friends & her & her husband joined us for a concert after-party later that night.
What makes Vii so appealing is her confidence, willingness to be playful & sexy and just have fun with it.

Where we met her: Exxxotica (Dallas)

Princess Leia (left)
& Harley Quinn (right)

8) Jessica Rabbit (Dallas, TX)

We also ran into Jessica Rabbit at Exxxotica – a cosplayer we met earlier in the year at Dallas Comic-Con. She has such a unique look, fearless attitude & love for the art form how could she not be on this list?

Where we met her:  Dallas Comic-Con
Exxxotica (Dallas)

7) Vivid Vivka (Los Angeles, CA)

I had met Vivid Vivka a few times over the years – she’s pals with my buddy Igor who has shot her several times for this site Drivenbyboredom.com and we’ve met at parties & industry events. However, it wasn’t until she came to Dallas where things weren’t so crazy we had a chance to hang & talk for a bit.
Besides her always movie-grade/character accurate smokin’ hot cosplays. Vivka provides an invaluable education and reassurance to all con-goers with her Cosplay is Not Consent panels. She also promotes body-positivity, is a writer & (based upon the recognition game we played) has great taste in music.
In other words, she rules.

Where we met her: Dallas Gaming Expo

Vamprilla (left)
& Nick Fury (right)

6) Vert Vixen (Los Angeles, CA)

Tall, awesome & philanthropic – check out Vert Vixen – a super talented cosplayer based in LA we met at the Hollywood Roosevelt at a breast cancer fund raiser we were participating in. She was impossible not to notice and if check out her website, she makes & designs practically everything herself and can seemingly cosplay anything.

Where we met her: Hollywood Hotness for Breast Cancer Charity

Bison/Cammie (left)
& Nova (right)

5) Mika Nicole (Austin, TX)

A pro cosplayer & fellow Texan, Mika Nicole dazzled everywhere we saw her this year. She’s been featured in Almost Nerdy, Project Nerd, SamazeCosplay Fanatic magazine just to name a few.

Where we met her:  Dallas Comic-Con
MAD about North Texas Con

Phoenix (left)
& Anarchy Panty (right)

4)  Raychul Moore (Los Angeles, CA)

Of all the Pro Cosplayers we met this year, Raychul Moore was the nicest & most welcoming. I had ran into a few that were unexpectedly the sheer opposite of that & had allowed whatever Twitter fame they were currently enjoying go to their heads, but like anything else when you meet someone that’s doing it for real you won’t see any of that. In 2015 Raychul became one of the most recognizable & popular cosplayers in the game & it’s no doubt thanks to how she presents herself & freaking kills at any character she’s cosplaying.

Where we met her: Star Wars Celebration Anaheim
Dallas Gaming Expo

Posion (left)
& Cammie (right)

3) Michelle Labelle (Los Angeles, CA)

Also at the aforementioned Breast Cancer Benefit at the Hollywood Roosevelt, we met Michelle Labelle, who was the total hit of the entire event.
Super witty with off-the-charts style, you’ve probably been charmed by Michelle at one the larger comic-based events in LA like Stan Lee’s Comi-Kaze or the big one in San Diego. Much more than her pretty face & enviable perfect little body, Michelle tirelessly promotes equality of gender, race & sexual orientation as a proud member of the LGBT & polyamory communities.

Where we met her: Hollywood Hotness for Breast Cancer Charity

Dominatrix Harley Quinn

2) Kitty Catorie  (New Orleans, LA)

Easily one of the coolest & most talented people we met all year in any capacity is Kitty Catorie. Profoundly talented in her approach to every character she cosplays, with an It Factor that she just had to be born with. In 2016, it’s my prediction you’ll be seeing alot more of this lovely & unique model.

Where we met her: Anime Overload (Austin, TX)

Jinx (left)
& Jinx/Cammie (right)

1) Joanie Brosas (Salt Lake City, UT)

I first met Joanie Brosas in her hometown of Salt Lake City earlier this year at the SLC Comic-Con Fan Xperience.
That con & meeting Joanie both set off a chain reaction that inspired me to attend almost a dozen more events this year that helped me really get to know the Cosplay community & develop a deep appreciation for this art form.

This girl is a true nerd who also just happens to be impossibly attractive. Her Twitter feed is a delight of socially 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.

Where we met her: Salt Lake City Fan X Experience
Star Wars Celebration Anaheim

Vampirella (left)
& MaryJane (right)

Laura Croft (left)
& Pokemon Ash (right)

Photos – 

Kelsey Topper – Roy Turner
Vii Love – Marcos Betancourt & J.R. Flood
Jessica Rabbit – Roy Turner
Vert Vixen – Green Phantom & York in a Box
Vivid Vivka – Cosplay Deviants
Mika Nicole – Caffienated Ginger & Jeramy Paxton
Raychul Moore – Rick Basaldua
Kitty Catorie – Axela
Joanie Brosas – Ngo Photography/Cosplay Corral/Chad B Faces/El MAldo

MAD Magazine North Texas Comic Book Show

MAD About Dallas II – North Texas Comic Book Show – November 14th – Doubletree Hotel Market Place – Dallas, TX

In this continuing year of all things geeky we attended our second event of the year put on by the good people of North Texas Comic Books shows.
We attended a really fun event over the Summer & was looking forward to returning.

The theme of this show was MAD Magazine as they had several writers & artists from the legendary publication. I myself had a subscription to MAD for most of the mid -to late ’80s so it was a great thrill to meet Kit Lively who was as generous with his time as he was welcoming & funny.

Personally, our main agenda was to meet & interview legendary animator Paul Coker Jr. who’s design for Rankin/Bass holiday specials & charachters you are certainly familiar with. He was joined by Rankin/Bass Historian Rick Goldschmidt whom I had been corresponding with in the previous weeks about setting up an interview on the day of the show.

Paul Coker Jr.

Rick Goldschmidt –

The setup & time frame didn’t really lend itself to an actual interview, so we’ll be bringing a phone interview on TrickyKid Radio Podcast next week as part of our special Holiday episode.

Just like at the event over the summer – they had a great cosplay contest – below are the finalists.


You can’t win with Texas weather (as the cosplay contest portion of this convention is held outdoors) as during the summer it was so brutally hot I wasn’t able to last more than 30 mins without feeling dizzy & this time it was downright cold haha.

Some more great cosplay seen at the convention:

True Justice Cosplay (left)
Autumn Rayne Cosplay (right)

The curator of North Texas Comic Shows Daniel Calhoun & his trusty sidekick –

Son of Asgard Cosplay w/ Holly Martin (left)

Local producers of Soulstice

Thanks again to North Texas Comics for having us again & we look forward to the next show scheduled for Jan 30-31st 2016!

Photos – 

Roy Turner
Rick Goldschmidt

The Gamers & Cosplay of RetroPalooza III (Sept/2015)

It’s been a very nerdy year to say the least haha – Starting with happenstance at the Salt Lake City Comic-Con at the beginning of the year, that led us to so many more including Star Wars Celebration, A-KON & much more.

RetroPalooza III – Sept 26-27th – Arlington Convention Center – Arlington, TX

Billed as an old-school gaming expo as you can see in the flyer and it’s namesake Retropalooza, this was right up my alley as the only time I was ever a hardcore (video) gamer was in the 80’s & early 90’s.

My oldest friend Chris’ son Colin is a die-hard gamer, who has shown a great interest in retro games that Chris and I played together when we were his age.
Imagine the feeling of being in Colin’s room playing the same exact games on the original console that I did with his Dad at age 12, with Colin who looks just like his father? An emotional moment to say the least. So when we got invited to this event Chris and Colin naturally were the first people I thought of to join us.

The second we arrived is was all about Joust, and how perfect we saw a guy dressed as Mario participating in a Donkey Kong tournament!

They had many other tournaments in a huge sprawling area where kids could go nuts playing and competing all day.

After many rounds of some of my old faves, Colin was excited to see what the vendor marketplace had to offer. I love these types of flea market setups because you have no idea what gems you will come across and the hunt is part of the fun.

Completely out of my demographic & wheelhouse but I’m compelled to tell you that the line stretched long to meet Matthew Patrick, known to fans as MatPat, a viral sensation to the geek crowd. He answers absurd questions on his YouTube series Game Theory. Currently at 3.2 million subscribers, twenty-three million monthly views, and consistently one of the platform’s 100 fastest-growing channels, Game Theory is MythBusters for gamers, combining hard research with polished visuals, connecting science, math, history, and gaming in a unique way that educates viewers while unearthing the shocking secrets behind some of gaming’s most enduring questions.

We saw alot of great Cosplay on the Main floor from pros & non-pros alike in anticipation of the Cosplay Contest that would be held later in the afternoon.

Heidi O’ Farrall (left)

Tsyrus Neumann

The Cosplay Contest 

As at any geek gathering these days their will (& should) be a Cosplay Contest!

A bit of a muted affair held in one of the smaller side rooms with a modest amount of participants.
Still talent and inspiration still show thru –

This awesome girl as the Joker (left)
& David Martineau as a VERY animated Ferris Beuhler

Kelsey Topper & Brianna Leahy
& friends.

….and the eventual winners were Raven Darkness & her husband Cody

This kid ??? was also a winner as he won $500 breaking a World Record of one of the retro games in the arcade.

Chris & I with his family & Jessica

See ya next year!

Photos –

Roy Turner

Anime Fest 2015 (Dallas/Sept)

Here we go again – after only attending an Anime Convention once in the capacity of DJ a few years ago to now attending my second major fest after A-Kon earlier this year.
I’ll do my best not to repeat myself here but the experience parallels A-Kon almost identically though I’m happy to report that AnimeFest, held every year on Labor Day was much more organized, I had Jess with me and maybe I’m just a little more acclimated to it?
Let’s see:

Anime Fest 2015 – September 4th-7th – Sheraton Hotel – Dallas, TX

Of course the first thing you see when you enter the hotel is that it has been COMPLETELY taken over by the convention and nothing informs you of that greater/quicker than the sea of Cosplayers everywhere.

Unlike typical Comic Cons or gatherings catering to fans of all things nerdy/geeky, AnimeFest is specific to the genres of Anime & Manga which arguable gave birth to the Cosplay phenomenon. At times this convention was also chaotic but at least the insanity was broken up so you could deal with it one floor at a time.

After checking into the modest press room, we were out to have our own adventure to explore what the convention had to offer.
The central thing it did have in common with other conventions is the marketplace that generate the income with exhibitors selling just about anything you could imagine pertaining to this demographic.

Where else in the world are you gonna see people dressed as cartoons hula-hooping in the hallway? Good times.

AnimeFest had ALOT to offer from panels on drawing & how to make cosplay outfits to arts & crafts and just about anything you could imagine.

Gaming was present in the form of group interactive video games to good ol fashion board & card games (those these weren’t exactly old fashioned).

On Sunday of course their was the central of any convention: The Cosplay Contest!

Brittany Queen

..and even if you weren’t competing, their was plenty of awesome cosplayers overtaking every inch of this hotel.

Melya Bounds (left)

 Konoha Princess – (right)

 Amanda Kee (right – in black)

Tiger Lilly (left)

(left – Artemis Quinn @TheQuinnCosplay)
(middle Alyson Road Toad @hoseokjungie)
(right – @Cheriwow

(left & above Deidre Rodriguez)

Love Liver

On Saturday night AKAI Sky, an American J-Rock band from San Francisco performed –

Late Night Rave

…and as tradition of any Anime convention (& what introduced me to the culture) is each night ends with a late night rave.

 Carlota (left)

Thanks again to the staff & volunteers of AnimeFest for having us and we look forward to seeing everyone again next year ?

Photos – 

Roy Turner
Vernon Chiever
Pete Ortega
Adriana Alva
Mugen
Nellie Anger

Guests, Exhibitors & Cosplayers of Dallas Comic Show (July 2015)

It’s been a nerd-tastic year so far! We’ve covered everything from major events such as Star Wars Celebration in Anaheim, A-Kon & the Salt Lake City Comic-Con to smaller intimate shows & everything in between. This month put on a show with some great vendors & an awesome cosplay contest.

North Texas Comic Book Show Dallas – July 18th – DoubleTree Hotel – Dallas,TX

Granted it was alot smaller than we anticipated and the layout a bit cumbersome, but I actually prefer these smaller comic shows as it’s easier to meet people & speak longer with the vendors (& their usually cheaper for the consumer as well).
We arrived at North Texas Comic Book show in Dallas just in time to catch some great cosplayers and pick up some merchandise at decent prices.
Here are some of our faves –

Courtney Malone (right)

Denae Griffith (left)
& Tapanga Gunter & friend (right)

Before we knew it, the cosplay contest was beginning and one exception we did have was that it was held outside I’m sure simply due to space constraints inside & it did make for a unique vibe, however it was scorching hot outside with temperatures soaring past 100. We were in the uncovered area for just a few minutes and Jessica & I both became soaked in sweat & feeling dizzy. A woman on the front row was holding four seats when I insisted that she give up one of them so we can be safely in the shade & I could shoot the contest without distraction. As a surprise to the participants, Gigi Edgley from Farscape came out as guest judge who was super nice & very interactive with the contestants.

Jesse Jones as the Joker


Joy Moden (left)
& Julia Pryor Bessler

Audrey McCullough (left)

Brianna LeahyKelsey Topper &  Hannah Looney

Had to get back inside before we melted! Now it was some to peruse the wears of the vendors and enjoy cosplay with the luxury of air conditioning.
This show featured Marvel artists Larry Strohman & Keith Pollard, plus Battlestar Galactica actor Richard Hatch & David Fielding among its guests.

The fine folks at In a Pickle Comics

Kevin Lewis (left)

Erica Muse (right)

Jessica P.
& Brittany Culverhouse

Courtney Michelle 
& Ammie Wheeler

Thanks so much to Daniel Calhoun & the North Texas Comic Book Show for having us, we look forward to the next one ?

Photos – 

Roy Turner
Yohan Ko
John Lee Hunter

A-Kon Anime Convention (June 2015)

I’ve always been something of a geek or at the very least  interested in nerdy things – However, this year those interests have really kicked into overdrive & really completely by chance. I attended the Sundance Film Festival for the first time earlier this year and was invited to stick around and cover the Salt Lake City Comic-Con, one of the more reputable cons in the country. I had so much fun & met so many new people that when I met the organizers of the Star Wars Celebration being held in Anaheim earlier this year, I jumped at the chance to attend.
Now back in Dallas, it was time for more.

Billed as the largest convention of it’s kind – A-Kon the annual Anime & Convention Expo is something that in spite of having little to zero interest or knowledge of anime & it’s culture, is an event I’ve always wanted to attend.
My interests began over 3 years ago when I was hired to DJ a late night rave beginning at midnight at A-Kon that year but I had just flown in and went straight to the gig and not much time to look around or any idea what I was getting myself into. I swore I’d be back and this year I made good on that promise.

Project A-KON 26 – June 5-7th – Hilton Anatole – Dallas, TX

Of course 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 and nothing informs you of that greater/quicker than the sea of Cosplayers everywhere.

Unlike typical Comic Cons or gatherings catering to fans of all things nerdy/geeky, A-KON is specific to the genres of Anime & Manga which arguable gave birth to the Cosplay phenomenon. Also unlike other conventions that are usually patronized by awkward teens, families with small children and your video game enthusiasts, this place felt more like Summer Camp with no counselers. At times, unbearably chaotic (gawd I sound old) with what seemed like the vast majority were High School kids teeming with the excitement of being out of town and left to their own devices for the first time.

After checking into at the modest press room, I was out to have my own adventure to explore what the convention had to offer.
The central thing it did have in common with other conventions is the marketplace that generate the income with exhibitors selling just about anything you could imagine pertaining to this demographic.

There was also alot of music to hear & discover which I really enjoyed, especially anything that I’ve never heard of/have been exposed to and to take advantage of seeing some of these acts, that may or not be in the States performing for the first time.
In the main performance room I caught a set from 7!! (pronounced Seven Oops) from Okinawa, Japan

Apparently Seven Oops are working for the Japanese government or something because the convention wasn’t letting any photographers take photos of them nor could if find a SINGLE LIVE PHOTO of them anywhere, so my apologies for the shitty cell phone pic (that was taken in haste after being reprimanded by some teenage volunteer reminding me of their policy).

And later that evening I checked out the Steampunk Ball with a great eclectic band keeping the even more eclectic crowd on their toes.

As you can see, dressing up/cosplaying is an essential part of A-KON where at other conventions it’s clearly optional and the minority.
Because of this, it does cast a slight air of competition (and their was an official contest) and the benefit is that the costumes where more inspired and the cosplayers much more committed to the characters. I had a blast meeting and photographing cosplayers that had come from all over the country.


Later in the evening I attended one of the many panels the convention offered, this one on podcasting. As a fellow podcaster I’m always out to learn new things to make my podcast better and pick up a few new tricks here and there. Unfortunately, this panel was a complete waste of time (for anyone) that was led by three dudes that appeared to have started a podcast simply because they like to hear themselves talk. They offered literally nothing but their own insufferable elitist cadence of speaking and didn’t know anymore about podcasting than anyone else.

I bailed early on this and made my way back over to the main performance hall again, this time for the late night rave (again that I DJ’d back in 2012) this time simply as a patron here to enjoy.

That’s what really gives A-KON it’s edge is that it doesn’t end at 6pm, it goes all night and everyone is staying at this or a neighboring hotel. With the rave starting at midnight and another party beginning at 3am it fuels (and requires) the energy of teens intoxicated with the lack of supervision ready to go all night.
Thanks again to the producers of A-KON for having me back this year and I look forward to next year.

Photos – 

Roy Turner
Bill Hitt
XPC
Jim Eppes
Rose Photography
Axela
Ben Tucker

The Cosplay of Star Wars Celebration Anaheim (April 2015)

Arriving into Burbank straight from my recent adventure in Las Vegas the first thing I did was head East out to Anaheim in anticipation of attending my first Star Wars Celebration. Over the next few entries, I will do my best to bring justice to an experience that I will never forget.
Enjoy ?

Star Wars Celebration Anaheim – April 16th-19th – Anaheim Convention Center – Anaheim,CA

You’ve heard of Comic-Con & the like but what about an entire convention dedicated just to Star Wars & the culture & mythology that surrounds it & produced by the creators of the franchise so you know your getting the real deal?

Beginning back in 1999, Star Wars Celebration started as a celebration of the return of the franchise that year with The Phantom Menace, the first of the three prequels. Not an annual event, Celebration Anaheim is the first one in two years, the first to be held in the United States in three years, only the seventh one in the US, only the tenth overall, only the second time it’s been held in California and the first time since 2007.

The Cosplay of Stars Wars Celebration Anaheim –

Of course there would be no convention without the fans and Star Wars has the most obsessive, expressive, dedicated fans on the planet.
And how they choose to express their devotion visually is through the rise of Cosplay.

​Cosplay Contest 

As the popularity of cosplay has grown, many conventions have come to feature a contest surrounding cosplay that may be the main feature of the convention. Contestants present their cosplay, and often to be judged for an award, the cosplay must be self-made.

The audience is given a chance to take photos of the cosplayers. Cosplayers may compete solo or in a group. Awards are presented, and these awards may vary greatly. Generally, a best cosplayer award, a best group award, and runner-up prizes are given. Awards may also go to the best skit and a number of cosplay skill subcategories, such as master tailor, master weapon-maker, and so forth.
And trust me, there were some very innovative fans here that were in it to win it.
Check out some of these amazing fans I had the privilege of photographing.


Ladies of the Legion

There are also many subsets & communal collectives for Cosplay – In the case of Ladies of the Legion, they use their fandom to promote anti-bullying & what they call “Geek Girl Awareness” to show that the realm of sci-fi fantasy isn’t just for the nerdy dudes. There’s a wonderful organization that shows strength & community by promoting inclusion through fundraising.
Check out this amazing example of their solidarity via cosplay

Besides the obvious, this is awesome for a myriad of reasons, one specifically being that there are not alot (yet) of female characters in the Star Wars universe for them to choose from. Gotta love the pink R2-D2.


Emperor Hef & his Cosplay Bunnies

Cosplay may be presented in a number of ways and places. A subset of cosplay culture is centered on sex appeal, with cosplayers specifically choosing characters known for their attractiveness or revealing costumes.
Check out this impressive costuming & style from some of the more well-known cosplayers in the industry including Adrianne Curry & my old pal, Geek Girl Supreme Ryan Keely as Star Wars themed Playboy Bunnies.

Jennifer Newman (the amazing Admiral Ackbarr on the left) tells it:

Lauren Bregman of Castle Corsetry was the mastermind of this group. She’s an extremely talented pattern maker and seamstress, and she personally hand drafted all of the custom corseted bunny suit patterns for each girl. With the help of her team and many of the bunnies, the costumes for this group have been in the works for a year but really came together in the last 2 months of non-stop sewing parties. Everyone involved has been a life long fan of the Star Wars franchise, and we were so happy to be able to show off Lauren’s gorgeous costumes and all of our hard work to fellow fans at Celebration!”

Because of the mass sex appeal, Cosplay has influenced the advertising industry, in which cosplayers are often hired for event work previously assigned to agency models. Thus, new variant of cosplay has developed in which cosplayers attend events mainly for the purpose of modeling their characters for still photography. Some cosplayers have since transformed their hobby into profitable, professional careers thus introducing the Pro Cosplayer,

Joanie Brosas 

In addition to the more established cosplayers, there are more on the rise.
Meet Joanie Brosas –  While discussing cosplay & especially pro cosplayers there is sometimes expressed dissent of genuinity vs. appropriation. I first met Joanie earlier this year at the Salt Lake City Comic-Con in her native state of Utah & trust me this girl is a true nerd who also just happens to be impossibly attractive. Seriously, no one is doing cosplay this legit, this hot & with such a fun, positive attitude.
Her Twitter feed is a delight of socially engaging inquiries, inspired photos & body/image positive messages that promote acceptance of all.


The appearance of cosplayers at these public events makes them a popular draw for photographers. And again because alot of the costuming is designed to maximize sex appeal, thankfully rules of etiquette have been developed to minimize awkward situations involving boundaries. While a bit bummed for their necessity, I was pleased to see banners declaring Cosplay is Not Consent all throughout the convention making the rules clear.

Is it an expression of fandom? is it based on necessity out of the lack of female characters? is it an absurd appropriation in the vein of sexy cop, nurse, firefighter on Halloween? Are non-nerd model types appropriating the entire genre as just another gig? Does anyone care? I would argue that it would be difficult to tell anyone that dressing up as any character that gives you attention that makes people happy that gives you esteem and could even be paid for it is somehow not fun and wrong.

Here are some other great Cosplayers that injected some much needed femininity into the Star Wars Universe –

The Slave Leias

And for the more free-er of spirits, who were in fact probably the majority which is a wonderful thing to see so many girls so comfortable and not feeling threatened most likely thanks to the rules in place that I mentioned earlier, was naturally the Princess Leia Slave Bikini from Return of the Jedi.
And they were everywhere

Stay tuned as the next (& final) post of Star Wars Celebration will cover other Cosplayers, May the 4th Be With You parties & much more.

Photos – 

Roy Turner
Albini Johnson
Justin Davidson
Manny Llanura
Enrico Adato
Sean Snydon

Star Wars Celebration Anaheim Days III & IV – Panels w/ Mark Hamill & Billie Dee Williams + Closing Ceremonies & more (April 2015)

Arriving into Burbank straight from my recent adventure in Las Vegas the first thing I did was head East out to Anaheim in anticipation of attending my first Star Wars Celebration. Over the next few entries, I will do my best to bring justice to an experience that I will never forget.
Enjoy ?

Star Wars Celebration Anaheim – April 16th-19th – Anaheim Convention Center – Anaheim,CA

You’ve heard of Comic-Con & the like but what about an entire convention dedicated just to Star Wars & the culture & mythology that surrounds it & produced by the creators of the franchise so you know your getting the real deal?

Beginning back in 1999, Star Wars Celebration started as a celebration of the return of the franchise that year with The Phantom Menace, the first of the three prequels. Not an annual event, Celebration Anaheim is the first one in two years, the first to be held in the United States in three years, only the seventh one in the US, only the tenth overall, only the second time it’s been held in California and the first time since 2007.


April 18th – Day 3

On the third day I had more time to walk around & check out the showroom floor & investigate some of the more social activities they had scheduled.
When you think of the sheer scope of the Star Wars legacy, you have to ask yourself – “What has been this HUGE for THIS long?” So you know that has to include celebrity fans & I spotted some that were here just as fans & some also in a professional capacity but not to promote their brand but because of their love for Star Wars. Among them were:




Darren Hayes from Savage Garden –

Hayes has been succesful with a second act of podcaster with his “The He Said She Said Show”

Weird Al Yankovich (no big surprise there) (left)
& Jeordie White aka Twiggy Ramirez from Marilyn Manson (right)

I spotted WWE/NXT’s Corey Graves who was here shooting a spot for his new web series for the WWE Network called Culture Shock


Star Wars Speed Dating

Like in Salt Lake City I’m starting to see a theme here – nerds are usually socially awkward so why not give them help with a conceptualized dating game?

Participants, all over the age of 18, were seated in front of each other, and had three minutes to make a lasting impression before moving on to the next person.
Organizers discouraged people from talking about what they did for a living or where they lived. Rather urged them to focus on their common interest – “Star Wars.”

Rancho Obi-Wan Experience

One of the highlights was Steve Sansweet’s Rancho Obi-Wan Experience, which offered visitors just a small glimpse into the variety of sheer passion that goes into the world of Star Wars collecting. Rancho Obi-Wan itself is home to the world’s largest privately-owned Star Wars collection housed in Sonoma County just outside of Petaluma, California. Visiting the mecca of Star Wars collecting museum is not an easy task for most,  but for the thousands of visitors to Star Wars Celebration Anaheim, the Rancho Obi-Wan Experience was part of your daily admission.

Throughout the space, once you’re inside, is an open floor. The treasures are on the walls, from floor to ceiling (or top of the wall actually) and focus on how Star Wars fans have made Star Wars their own through their artwork, sculptures, shrines, custom figures and more. It really is a magical menagerie and what you see here you won’t find anywhere else… at least not likely.  If you want displays of old merchandise, there’s websites and books dedicated to all of that. Here, you’ll find an endless array of inspiration made by the fans.

The highlight of the experience is a rather large oil panting titled The 20th Century Space Opera by Robert Xavier Burden. It’s a masterpiece that only those who grew up with Kenner Action Figures could truly appreciate, but it’s such a magnificent piece of art that anyone who just loves Star Wars will love it as well.

Met with the people behind Rancho Obi-Wan. Steve Sansweet, Anne Neumann were on hand to sign copies of their new book “Inspired by the Force: Star Wars Fan Artifacts & Art”. The 72 page book is just the first volume in a series, “The Treasures of Rancho Obi-Wan”. If you were unable to visit the experience, this book is the next best thing.

Star Wars Rebels Season Two Premier

I felt bad actually because as I mentioned although I’m a huge Star Wars fan, I would rank about 99,000 on the list of this six-figure crowd compared to their enthusiasm. EVERYONE was buzzing about something called Star Wars Rebels – even the press agents were warning me that I had to there early to get my wristband etc and when I did arrive their was such a buzz around it.
Here’s the deal I had no idea until I was inside the screening hall in my seat that this thing even existed let alone that this was the beginning of Season Two.

The reason I mention my guilt is because their were others outside not getting to see it that have been anticipating this for months & were heartbroken when they didn’t get in, whereas I new nothing at all & when I discovered it was a cartoon I wanted to leave immediately. I stayed because it was my job to, & what a dickhead I would be to forgo something that so many others would love to witness.

What I saw were the first two episodes of Season Two – the two-part “The Siege of Lothal”

Vader has a softer look than one might expect, without the almost robotic movements that gave weight to his limbs in the Original Trilogy, but by the end of the episode he is utterly convincing. A tense fight scene establishes Vader’s power & as he stands with his hand raised, surrounded by flames, I can believe in this Vader, and in how much he outclasses half-trained Jedi Ezra and Kanan.

The episodes drives home the fact that this is the end of the Rebel cell’s operations on Lothal, at least for the near future. Ezra has seen not one, but two homesteads destroyed, and Kanan’s efforts to disguise himself could not hide him from the Empire’s strongest enforcer.

Talking to Myself  Mark Hamill & James Arnold Taylor

One of my greatest passions in life is the art of voice acting, some of the people I admire & respect the most in my life are voice actors. I consider Mel Blanc a God & recently visited his gravesite in Hollywood. The actors that have voiced the cartoons I grew up with are some of my greatest inspirations. Sometimes I sigh with regret that I didn’t make it my chosen profession.

In this special panel Mark Hamill & James Arnold Taylor promised a celebration of both men’s careers in voice acting and in the Star Wars franchise, a promise that was certainly delivered.

After Taylor’s show he returned to interview Mark Hamill and discuss both his career in Star Wars and his career in voice acting. One of the first topics was the latest teaser for The Force Awakens. Hamill was one of the first to screen it since he had to record the voiceover and, as it turns out, J. J. Abrams used mostly the original dialogue from Return of the Jedi with the new recording as a slight reverb (something I hadn’t noticed until after hearing this story).



One of the most fun reveals of the interview was the anecdote Hamill told about finding out that George Lucas wanted him back for Episode VII. It happened in what Hamill described as a somewhat offhand request to be in the upcoming movie. While Carrie Fisher exuberantly accepted, Hamill kept his cool while his inner-self freaked out—a moment he describes as being when he knew he was a great actor because he was able to contain his excitement.

Empire Strikes Back/Return of the Jedi Double Feature

Like the two previous evenings, the night concluded with a double-feature playing the six films from both trilogies in order, this time concluding with parts V & VI & what are generally considered the best of the whole series – the Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi




I need not tell you how important & truly timeless these two films are (but I will haha) Empire is widely considered the best of the six films & with good reason.
We are introduced to Yoda, Lando Calrissian & the planet Hoth & just for the Father reveal alone puts this as one of the greatest films ever, regardless of genre.

However, I’m not a revisionist and though I’m able to look at the six films objectively as an adult & probably would consider Episode III to be the best of the films (eat it haters) none of them will ever mean as much to me as Return of the Jedi. I was 9 years old when it hit theaters & the memory of my mother taking me to see it on that unforgettable day will always live as one of my most cherished. Though technically I saw a bit of Star Wars in the theater (my sister was watching Grease for the 30th time and when we went to pick her up I remember us sneaking into see a bit of it while we waited for her) & had the figures from Empire, it wasn’t until Jedi that I was of the age to really get it & get into it and the promotional lead up to the film was the greatest shit ever. Every kid my age clearly remembers collecting the glasses from Burger King like your life depended on it.
Everything about Jedi is iconic, the introduction of the Ewoks, Leia’s Slave Bikini (wait till we get to the Cosplay portion of this series of entries as if any further proof is needed) to the great reveal at the end.

And just like the night before, the crowd in attendance was maniacle in their enthusiasm and thunderous in their delivery. I hadn’t seen either film since the Special Editions came out years ago (& yes the crowd booed LOUDLY at the end of Jedi of Hayden Christiansen’s super imposement).

April 19th – Day 4 (Final Day)

So I get to the Convention Center for the final day that was still loaded with amazing events –

Billie Dee Williams: Baron of Smooth

For his panel, Billy Dee Williams, who played Lando Calrissian in the above mentioned Empire Strikes Back & Return of the Jedi, was billed as the “Baron of Smooth.”

But as he took the stage he insisted that – notwithstanding Calrissian’s undeniable suaveness and those old Colt 45 commercials – his reputation for smoothness was overstated.

“I don’t know why everybody thinks I’m smooth,” said Williams, who turned 78 this month. “I think I’m just a pretty silly person, really.”

Fans listened respectfully throughout an hourlong conversation as Williams talked about his early roles in films such as “Brian’s Song” and “Lady Sings the Blues,” his more recent stint on “Dancing With the Stars” and his love of painting. But this was a “Star Wars” convention, and what they most wanted to hear about, of course, was Lando Calrissian.

Calrissian occupies an ambiguous place in “Star Wars” mythology, not quite an unadulterated hero but not a villain either. On the one hand, the administrator of Cloud City (and original owner of the Millennium Falcon) is a likable, charming rogue. On the other, without his betrayal, Han Solo wouldn’t have ended up frozen in carbonite. Then again, Darth Vader had him over a barrel – and he did later join the Rebel Alliance and lead the attack on the second Death Star so … it’s complicated.

Williams said he hasn’t minded being branded as a traitor by some “Star Wars” fans over the years. In fact, he’s kind of enjoyed it.

“I thought it was fun and amusing – especially when you have a 10-year-old kid threatening your life,” he said. He recalled one young fan who once confronted him with particular ferocity. “I thought, ‘God if this kid had a gun in his hand, I would have been dead.’ ”

The actor debunked longstanding rumors that he had initially auditioned for the role of Han Solo, saying he was drawn from the start to Calrissian’s complexity.

“I had ideas about him – I thought he had a lot of interesting characteristics and idiosyncrasies,” Williams said. He paused, then added dryly, “But the cape was the key.”

Calrissian and his cape continue to live on in the wider “Star Wars” universe. This summer Marvel will release a new comic book titled “Lando,” chronicling Calrissian’s adventures before he ended up in Cloud City. He will also be featured in the next season of the Disney XD series “Star Wars Rebels,” with Williams providing the voice.

Near the end of the panel, at the urging of fans, the new teaser for “Star Wars: Episode VII — The Force Awakens” was shown yet again – despite the fact that Williams does not appear in the film.

When it was done, the actor waited a beat and said, “It’s only missing one element.” The crowd broke into a chant of “Lando! Lando!”

Smooth.

_______________________________________________________________

During the closing ceremony for Star Wars Celebration, Lucasfilm head of fan relations took to the stage to announce the next Star Wars Celebration will be held in London, July 15-17 2016. Tickets for the event will go on sale tomorrow.

The closing ceremony for the weekend in Anaheim was a summary of the entire event, with the trailer for Star Wars Rebels season 2 shown, a brief video synopsis of the sights in and around the event, and ended with one more look at that sweet, sweet Star Wars: The Force Awakens teaser.

There was a fleeting moment where it almost seemed as though the air date for the first episode of Star Wars Rebels season 2 was going to be shown, but host James Arnold Taylor was able to reign it back in. We were there for the premiere of the first episode of the new season of Star Wars Rebels and can say you should probably be excited.

This was such a wonderful experience –  I can’t say enough about how well run this convention was. If you go to alot of cons, you know that isn’t always the case but here it was run as smooth as Billie Dee Williams by a Class A organization. Endless thanks to Jason Bartelstone for inviting me making sure I was taken care of throughout the festival.

There’s still more to come however, stay tuned for the Cosplay of Star Wars Celebration Anaheim coming this week!

Photos – 

Roy Turner
Mark Eades
David Yeh

Star Wars Celebration Anaheim Day II – Panels w/ Carrie Fisher & Ray Park + Revenge of the Sith in 3-D & much more (April 2015)

Arriving into Burbank straight from my recent adventure in Las Vegas the first thing I did was head East out to Anaheim in anticipation of attending my first Star Wars Celebration. Over the next few entries, I will do my best to bring justice to an experience that I will never forget.
Enjoy ?

Star Wars Celebration Anaheim – April 16th-19th – Anaheim Convention Center – Anaheim,CA

You’ve heard of Comic-Con & the like but what about an entire convention dedicated just to Star Wars & the culture & mythology that surrounds it & produced by the creators of the franchise so you know your getting the real deal?

Beginning back in 1999, Star Wars Celebration started as a celebration of the return of the franchise that year with The Phantom Menace, the first of the three prequels. Not an annual event, Celebration Anaheim is the first one in two years, the first to be held in the United States in three years, only the seventh one in the US, only the tenth overall, only the second time it’s been held in California and the first time since 2007.

April 17th – Day 2

After a crazy fun filled day yesterday to start the convention with the jaw-dropping Episode VII panel & the showing of the new trailer to uncountable great moments, I was eager to get the second day started.

Ray Park: The Man, The Sith, The Legend – 

So why not start with a panel with the man that played one of the most unforgettable characters, Darth Maul with Martial Arts legend Ray Park.


As Darth Maul in Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace, Park helped create the most well-known and popular villain in the franchise since fellow
Sith Darth Vader.
Before getting into the role, which was the first acting job for the wushu fighter, there was a lot of talk about training. Park’s prowess as a martial artist is well-known, and he stated that he had practiced the aforementioned wushu, Shaolin techniques and kickboxing before being discovered & as a dedication to his craft, ballet.

When first given the double-sided lightsaber, he realized that the construction would make it hard to do anything with it without slicing himself. So he went to
George Lucas and asked for a change.
“He was cool, though. He just said to go ahead and flip it,” said Park, referring to making the hilt longer and easier to handle. His relationship with Lucas also extended to who Darth Maul was and how he should play him.
“I asked George and he said, ‘Whatever you want him to be.’ He was really open to my interpretation,” said Park.

Park, after showing some training videos & him on set, then went into a demonstration with the host –

The death scene at the end of the film, for a while, effectively ended Darth Maul and Ray Park’s “Star Wars” relationship
Park showed one more video. It was the reworked scene, displaying how the fight should have ended with Obi-won.  In it, a charging Obi-won runs in for the battle and falls into the large pit where Darth Maul eventually met his death.

Questions included the topics of training in the desert, wushu training vs. film training and a last one asking Park to contact Disney and have them make a solo Darth Maul project. Park responded to that final question by saying that he’d not eat, get ripped and be repainted to take on the role again.

Date with a Princess: Carrie Fisher

If Carrie Fisher has anything in common with Princess Leia,  it might be her impulsive attitude.
In this panel, Fisher, 58, told racy jokes, autographed the host’s shoes, took pictures with fans and even made out with a fan in the audience (& apparently it wasn’t even close to the first time).


Not unlike when I attended her brief, last minute panel earlier this year at the Salt Lake City Comic-Con, she came out even a hotter mess, barefoot, again with her dog, again demanding Coca-Cola and again rambling like an insane person.

What she didn’t do was talk much about Star Wars: The Force Awakens, the upcoming seventh installment in the space opera.
Fisher reprises her Leia role in the new film, due out in December, but said she couldn’t “figure out what I was supposed to not tell.”
“I think they keep me away from stuff because they know that I have an inadvertently big mouth,”.

When asked about her reasons for auditioning for the role some three decades ago, Fisher said she couldn’t recall.
“You have a bad memory when you get older and if you do LSD,” she quipped.

She described a raucous night when she was staying at the London home of Monty Python actor Eric Idle during the filming of Empire Strikes Back, Idle had invited members of the Rolling Stones over, and Fisher called her castmates to join them.

“We had a really early call, but you sort of have to measure, Rolling Stones, early call, Rolling Stones, early call … so we decided on both,” she said. “They’re a partying bunch of guys. … We stayed up pretty late , then we got to the set about two hours late & when you watch the movie, it’s one of the few times that Harrison and I are smiling as we arrive in Cloud City.”
Then she added, “Doesn’t that sound like a euphemism?”

It was one of many flirty moments throughout the panel including referring to her character as “quite the space slut” and offering pecks on the cheek for fans who asked questions during the panels Q&A portion. And as I mentioned above, for one audience member who asked for a photograph she impulsively grabbed him and aggressively kissing him.


You can tell she LOVES the attention & enjoys even more the shock value cause apparently this is like a regular thing for her at this types of events.
Nothing wrong with kissing whomever you want for whatever consenting reasons, but I have to add that she just comes off so…trashy.
The way she talks is like a drunk Lucille Ball & she just seems perputually out of it, super hard to take and at time downright painful to listen to.
I hate that because hello? She’s Princess freaking Leia.

Prior to the panel their was a Princess Leia look-alike contest –

Surprisingly not a single slave-bikini in the bunch given how many I saw there (stay tuned for the Cosplay of the Celebration coming in a few days) but I think that these fans were more serious-minded & not to say that the Slave-Leias aren’t serious about their cosplay but the intentions appear to be singular. I know that ‘s a sweeping generalization that could even border being offensive but I’m simply saving it for the later post.

One Big Story: Working Within the Star Wars Canon

Lucasfilm’s quasi-reboot of the Star Wars canon was one of the most controversial decisions in the company’s four-decade history. So, a small group representing Lucasfilm and its largest publishing partners attempted to explain how they work together to tell new stories in the Star Wars universe and how that storytelling proceeds under the direction of the Lucasfilm Story Group.

The panelists were:

Michael Siglain, Director, Creative Franchise, Lucasfilm Publishing
Jennifer Heddle, Senior Editor for Fiction, LucasBooks
Leland Chee, Manager of the Holocron, Lucasfilm (Story Group member)
Pablo Hidalgo, Creative Executive, Lucasfilm (Story Group member)
Shelly Shapiro Editor-at-Large, Del Rey Books
Jordan White, Star Wars Editor, Marvel Comics
C.B. Sebulski, Senior Vice President of Creative & Creator Development, Marvel
Sadie Smith, Managing Editor, DK Publishing

I should disclaim that while not exactly a casual fan, historically I’ve only been interested in just the six (& the upcoming 7th) movies in the main sequence.
I’ve never seen any of the animated tie-ins like The Clone Wars or Rebels, never cared about or read anything in what is referred to as the Expanded Universe & until recently didn’t even know of it’s existence.
Let me make a parallel for a second – I’m also deeply invested in professional wrestling, but again I’m only interested in the main weekly product on WWE.
It was only last year that I started exploring it’s expanded universe that not only has it given me such a better understanding of wrestling but also way more product to enjoy. It was with this mindset that led me to this panel.
Primarily, like with wrestling, I wanna be part of the conversation & I’ve found myself not appreciating certain impacts without knowing the back stories.

The panel did a pretty good job of explaining how they work together that is such a daunting task I was exhausted just listening to the levels of collaboration let alone participating. A cynic could say that the whole thing was just a commercial to sell the upcoming book – The Ultimate Star Wars – that they are touting is an absolute comprehensive guide that holds the whole thing together.

They would be right to an extent but it also doesn’t mean that the book isn’t effective as demonstrated when Chee answered several of the audiences questions by hysterically looking up the answer in the book.

Revenge of the Sith (in 3-D)/Star Wars Double Feature

A major highlight for me at this convention was they were screening all six of the films in order. This is something that I’ve always wanted to do, but have never had the time to sit down or even over a few days and pull it off. At the very least I’ve always wanted to watch Revenge of the SIth, the final film of the prequels with A New Hope, the first film in the original trilogy as a double-feature to experience that quantum leap and that what was happening tonight as they had already began with the first two films the night before. And ROTS (probably my fave of them all) was gonna be in 3-D for the first time!

Before the film aired, both Dennis Muren and Ian McDiarmid took the stage to introduce this premiere screening. McDiarmid spoke shortly about George Lucas approaching him about doing the prequels and how unaware he was that he’d have to polish his lightsaber skills by the final film.
Dennis Muren, who got the 3D conversion rolling with help from Prime Focus, mentioned how the depth they added helped the opening space battle



I was more excited about this double-feature than anything else the Celebration was offering but it was also (thankfully) the only time that the staff almost failed me.
Ask anyone that’s ever been to any convention of any kind & you know that asking for information your going to get an answer from a volunteer that actually knows less than you do, or worse those that suddenly feel they’ve been deputized into an elite squadron that gives them right to treat you like shit.
I can’t say enough about how well this convention was run by it’s producers but on this day minutes before this screening I was about to have to kick some wiseguy volunteer ass. The press office had left a screening pass for me but no one could tell me where to pick it up. After calmly explaining the situation to a particular volunteer that was unwilling to help and was abusive to me, I finally just pushed past him and gave him a look that made it clear to him that he was doing the right thing for himself by not hassling me any further.

Ok, I’m in, have my 3-D glasses on, the room is packed with screaming fans and I’m ready to do this.
I love this movie so much and I think it’s probably the most important of all the different story arcs.
What made it so fun, is sure I’ve seen this movie a dozen times, but never in 3-D and certainly not with such an emotional crowd that would cheer and explode with each classic scene or revelation.


The overall conversion made it easy to really tell the layers of depth the 3D process gives a film.
The lightsabers of Mace and Yoda being held out towards the screen & Force Lightning from Emperor Palpatine really added a jolt to his electrical storm, fizzling and flashing brightly and right up in your face.
Other examples of the added effects were Vader takes his first breath under the mask and when he’s being lifted upright on the surgical table.
& most importantly from the Vader faceplate being lowered down onto his face (my fave scene in any of the six films) as it made it feel like it was being lowered on your actual face.

This was so much fun, and normally I would say that a rowdy crowd would have annoyed me but honestly they made this experience for me this time, their enthusiasm was inspiring & so palpable I would brace myself when I could feel it coming. A very special evening indeed, & holy shit, we only have 10 minutes before we start
Star Wars!


I haven’t seen Star Wars on the big screen since the updated version hit theaters in 1997, so that’s almost 20 years & I’m not sure I’ve seen it all the way through since then either. I know that sounds like blasphemy as most people in this audience watch this movie a dozen times or more a year.
However it made it new again as I’ve realized I’ve seen Revenge of the Sith way more times than the original film and for a guy my age for some that’s grounds for treason. And I couldn’t exaggerate how watching it back-to-back with ROTS helped me understand & appreciate the lineage of the story and really nourished my love of these films.

And again, the crowd hadn’t tired which each classic sequence, a tidal wave of emotion & appreciation would ensue. Has anything ever been this big for this long?



Thanks for following along, much more to come in this series with Days 3-4 + a very large piece on all the Cosplay at the convention with tons of pics.
Stay tuned!

Photos – 

Roy Turner
Celebration Staff
LucasFilm acrchives