Owen Gleiberman, the longtime film critic for Entertainment Weekly, has been let go as part of ongoing layoffs at the magazine as Time Inc restructures ahead of a spinoff from Time Warner… Gleiberman’s exit follows the departure of several critics in 2013, including film critic Lisa Schwarzbaum and TV critic Ken Tucker.
That’s the three writers I most closely associated with the magazine. All gone now.
(From here.)
Erika Moen, Amy Falcone, Dylan Meconis, Steve Lieber, and I talked about the ins and outs of freelancing at Emerald City Comicon this past weekend. Here’s a recording for those of you who couldn’t make it!
Well, FINE. Lucy just goes ahead and embeds the recording of the freelance panel instead of linking to it because she’s better at Tumblr than me. Listen here, people.
Entertainment Weekly laid off some staffers Wednesday. Among the people exiting: Deputy design director David Schlow, music critic Nick Catucci, senior editor Kerrie Mitchell.
Last week, they opened up the doors to a HuffPo-style “get the peons to work for free” arrangement, this week, they lay people off. Things aren’t looking too good over there at Entertainment Weekly right now.
Freelance Like a Rockstar – ECCC 2014
Freelance Like a Rockstar – ECCC 2014
Erika Moen, Amy Falcone, Lucy Bellwood, Dylan Meconis, and Steve Lieber discuss the ins and outs of freelancing in the creative world at ECCC 2014.
Relevant to my interests because I am a freelancer, but also because all of these people are fucking fantastic (Note: I don’t actually know Amy, but I am assuming she’s fucking fantastic because of the company she’s keeping here and because of her work.)
Marvel has informed CBR exclusively that April’s “Amazing Spider-Man” #1 has passed 500,000 copies in initial retailer orders. An exact number was not made available, and may change following next week’s order cutoff.
That number would place it, based on Diamond estimates, as the highest initially ordered individual issue in the last decade. January 2009’s “Amazing Spider-Man” #583, which featured a guest appearance from freshly elected President Barack Obama, totaled for more than 500,000 copies, but that number includes combined initial orders and reorders the subsequent month. By comparison, February 2014’s reported top-selling comic of the month – DC Comics’ “Batman” #28 – had estimated sales of 114,089 copies.
If Cosmos is a show that exists in the Marvel Universe, who hosts it, and how much longer does it have to be to cover all the time travel, mutations, alternate dimensions, and extant mythological gods?
In the Marvel Universe, as in this one, Cosmos would be science-driven, focused on finding our place in the observable universe; although the nature of the universe and the tools for that observation would obviously be radically expanded in the 616.
I assume it would still be hosted by Neil deGrasse Tyson, although there’d probably also be a weirdly nationalistic and belligerent Latverian version hosted by Dr. Doom.
Neil deGrasse Tyson is a DC Comics character, sadly.
I’d want Norrin Radd to host it, and instead of the CGI spaceship, he’s actually on his surfboard.





