Posts Tagged ‘shamus’

Wizard “Where Are They Now?” Case File: Wipey Dipey Time!

Tuesday, February 1st, 2011

This guy, Jim Silver, used to work for Wizard Magazine, and now he runs something called Time to Play Magazine, which I believe is somewhat successful (?). I don’t really know much about him other than that. But if I were to wager a guess on why the magazine is successful, I would say it’s because of the videos on their site of this guy play-testing toys. They’re…odd. If you Chop & Screw the videos, though, they’re much better. It’s Wipey Dipey time, children.

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Pictured: Not Steve Brule.

Gareb Shamus, Chris Ward Have Online Easter Tryst

Monday, April 5th, 2010

Note: This is a long entry. Just man up and take the ride. There’s a contest at the very end to win a book called “What’s My Pee Telling Me?” from Chronicle Books and South Park Season 13 on Blu-Ray from Comedy Central.

First things first: My headline is probably misleading, because there are two definitions of “tryst.”

1. An agreement, as between lovers, to meet at a certain time and place.
2. A meeting or meeting place that has been agreed on.

Clearly, I would never intend to meet Gareb Shamus as a lover (though I totally might, have you seen him lately? We’ll get to that) But definition “#2″ deals with our agreed meeting place. Which, in this case, would be something called FaceBook.

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Shown: (Left to right) Photoshop fantasy of Gareb Shamus of Wizard Entertainment, Uwe Boll, and Me. Getting ready to be unstoppable street toughs.

For those who don’t know, I used to work for Wizard Entertainment. It’s where I got my start, and I met a lot of good people there. A few of whom are still there, who I haven’t talked to in a while. But most everyone else, including the guy who helped start the magazine in a big way, got fired. Even the entire message board community got fired. And I kinda, sorta got myself banned later on for some jokes I made about the company. An ex-company head told me off the record that if “the company would spend more time actually running things instead of focusing on petty shit, maybe they wouldn’t be totally fucked right now.” I’m paraphrasing a bit, but the phrases “petty shit” and “totally fucked” are actual quotes. Pretty much everyone landed on their feet at bigger, better jobs.
Pretty much.

Actually, to be totally honest, I’ve secretly always thought of Gareb as more than just friends and co-workers lowly employee writer and company CEO. My wife and I have a “Gareb” clause in our marriage, wherein, should I get the opportunity, I can have passionate relations with my ex-Boss/Owner of the entire Wizard Universe. As to not be one-sided, she has a “Rita Rudner Clause” on her end (What a body and what a talent, even after all these years!)

I may have had my problems with Wizard Entertainment in the past, and said some rash things along with other industry folks. But all that animosity ended as soon as I received a friend request from Gareb Shamus on FaceBook. My heart skipped a beat. The “Gareb Clause” was exhumed from its safety deposit box under my bed, and dusted off. I made the first move.

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I guess I got a little nervous because I became re-acquainted with Gareb Shamus at practically the same time as Tom Welling AND Rich Johnston of Bleeding and Dying in Gutters, (this is a popular UK comic-book gossip page–like, “who is Batman dating?” stuff–for all the non-comic book fans who are reading this). So, I wished Gareb a Happy Easter. I know, I know…he’s Jewish. I realize that NOW. And I’m not sure what they celebrate in the UK. All I know is that they eat “Eggy In A Basket, Chip Chip Cheerio” and all that happy horseshit. I’m an American, I don’t need to know about that.
So, overall, I choked on this one, alright? Opening comment jitters. After all, Gareb wanted to be my friend. He asked me. In spite of everything mean I said about him, too. Well that was all in the past now as far as I was concerned. I mean, Frank Miller ripped up a copy of Wizard Magazine onstage, and Miller has been a Guest of Honor at Wizard World since then. All I ever did was make jokes and help sell his magazine.
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Straight up business question. Letting him know he can just get in touch with me whenev’. I think she’s getting a Bill Finger award this go ’round, don’t want to miss it.
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Letting Brent Spiner know where to reach me….

SO THEN I get pretty excited because I see this video on Gareb’s Page, and it prompts several questions from me about In Dance We Trust coming to Wizard World, all which are almost answered in the video (watch about 20 seconds of it, if you’re able to). Just priming the pump, getting people excited about the comic book convention where the In Dance We Trust girls will be appearing.

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Pretty straightforward questions, I think you’ll agree. Important ones, too. I don’t want to toot my own hose but I’m a reporter, you know.

But then something goes horribly wrong between Gareb and I. CLICK THROUGH to find out how Gareb responds to my sexual advances which I just couldn’t contain anymore.

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Convention SUCCESS stories #1: A New Hope

Friday, November 6th, 2009

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Shown: Look at that sexy bitch! Also, look at that girl!

Time for a palate cleansing. Yesterday, I wove a tale of a shitty band connected to a recent (justified) anti-Wizard tirade, bookended by my own mud-slinging at the terrible shenanigans and cast of unfortunate characters with the Panels on Pages weekly podcast folks.

Fun as hell, but it made me exhausted from all the negativity I felt I was creating, and I remember a time when I wasn’t just some disgruntled ex-Wizard guy (which I am, to an extent…but I’m more interested in making jokes and hurling occasional poo-balloons than I am mounting any sort of real anger-campaign against Wizard. This is all fun for me, I have no real impact on anything Wizard Magazine does. Though I’d like to think, somewhere, a Shamus is bristling with anger, that’s probably not happening. Not once did the man remember who I was in all the times I met him.)

Yes…I remember a time when I was…a WIZARD FAN! Not yet a Wizard Employee—that would be years and years and years later—but a FAN! Yes, I remember a time when—after the now-defunct Wizard Universe Message Boards got particularly angry and riled up—editor and friend Brian Cunningham would step in an start a thread called “A return to our roots as comic fans” or something. Like, “I know the magazine is doing some dicky stuff, but let’s just talk comics and be civil, okay?” And he was genuine, and nice, and everybody got like Fonzie, real quick. And then they fired Brian, and everyone else, and that went right out the window. And it’s that little Brian Voice in the back of my head now, squatting beside my desk (he would squat like that) and saying “Be cool, man. Things were good once. Before the Dark Times. Before the Con Wars…”

It reminds me of my first Wizard Convention. The one I talked my parents into taking my brother and I to just prior to my Freshman year in high school, after reading about these storied conventions in the magazine year after year.

The one in Chicago, where I lost both my contacts in the pool the night before and MIRACULOUSLY FOUND ONE at the bottom. Chew on that for a bit. I found a clear contact lens at the bottom of a pool. With two bad eyes. It was fate. And I enjoyed the entire convention, half-blind, with a big stupid look on the Acne Plantation I called a face. And I didn’t have to work any booths, or clean up anything, or be there on business. And things were good.

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…This was back when I was EXCITED to see LOU FERRIGNO in person! Look how excited my dad and I are to see THE HULK! Hell yeah I’ll pay $20 for that! Long before people were like, “Lou Ferrigno is an asswipe!” Long before I saw the Hulk drinking alone at the bar at some Wizard after-party in Texas, where he could only DREAM of being more deaf so he wouldn’t have to hear the incessant come-ons of a hanger-on sorority girl!

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…back when my favorite artist in the entire world was Mike Wieringo, and I stood in line forever just to see him! Back when I kept his Wizard cover under plastic until I could finally meet the guy in person, and he was as cool as I imagined and answered all my dumb Spider-Man questions. Back before I grumbled about calling some creator for a Spider-Man quote I didn’t care about getting, for a magazine they didn’t care about being in, so we could all go back to getting blackout drunk with interns. Back before Ringo passed away, and Wizard named a room after him, which caused a shitstorm of controversy!

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…back when the line for the guy who played Spawn was so big, I had to take a picture from the sidelines! Back when I approached him and his model girlfriend outside the convention hall and got his autograph, as he acted like a total asshole about it before getting in his limo! Yes…A LIMO! FOR SPAAWWWN, DUDE! It was awesome. And I had a cool story about the guy playing Spawn being an asshole to me to tell my friends.

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…Back when the hottest girls in the world were Avatar booth babes! Back when I wore a Star Wars t-shirt—and not even a cool Star Wars t-shirt—to a convention and it felt RIGHT!

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…Back when scorned Darth Vader actor David Prowse wasn’t a DICK! Ok, he was always a dick, even back then. Just look at him, sitting there, wishing he had voiced Darth Vader. What a rube.

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Which brings me back to this picture. This was the hottest girl I’d ever met, and the closest I’d ever gotten to a hot girl. Really, any girl. When she moved, her suit bowed out and I could see her full breasts from the side, and down the front of her G-string thing. Her wrist made crumpled, creaking sounds when she twisted it, on account of all the tight rubber material and aching seams.

I snuck away from my parents and my brother, said I had to go to the bathroom or something, and jumped in with a big crowd of men with cameras surrounding her. I quickly got some guy to take a picture of us. My eyes darted back and forth. At boob. At inner-thigh. At boob. At thigh. I was freaking out. Someone was gonna catch me. Hurry up and take the goddamned picture. But I didn’t care about my sun-burnt hair. Or the big zit on my nose. Or my trap-jaw teeth. Or my turkey-neck. Or my goofy Star Wars/Calvin Klein parody shirt. At this moment, I was hellbent for pleather.

When these pictures were developed, I had to get ahold of them first to sneak this one out. I was afraid my parents would flip.

Moments after this picture, I saw a skinny, big-eared man hurriedly walking across the convention floor. I knew instantly, from the Masthead page of Wizard, it was Publisher Gareb Shamus. I ran over to introduce myself, completely starstruck, as he continued toward a door, with purpose. “Hi! The Big Cheese!” That’s all I could think of to say. I was so, so incredibly nervous. That was his nickname in the magazine. So that’s what I said. “Oh hi…hi, howareya…” he said, nervously, and disappeared into a stairwell that headed to the show announcers booth. Years later I would meet him again, for the first time, at a company picnic. “I’m an intern for you!” “Oh that’s great, great!” he would always say back. “Just great…great!”

And then later, for the first time, we’d meet at the premeire of Spider-Man 2 in New York City. “Gareb! How’s it going? We work for you! For a few years now, actually!” a friend and I said. He looked at us, awkwardly. “Oh hi guys! That’s great…great!” and he nervously disappeared in the theater. Later, by total chance, my friend overheard him telling a story of how “these two guys approached him at Spider-Man 2 and said they worked for him, but he thinks they were screwing around.”

That guy never did know who I was. And man…Those were the days.