Starring Texas!
The craziest thing about Comicpalooza? Weird people watching & ghost hunterscede to serious networking
Whoo hoo! I just had a two-day blast at the George R. Brown Convention Center meeting some of the most unique, talented — and yes, sometimes weird — people on the planet.
Comicpalooza, the brainchild of Houston’s own John Simons, is more than a celebration of comic books and super heroes. It is place to experience films, fantasy, computer games and creators, steampunk stuff, costumes, art and authors.
Comicpalooza is invigorating for creative people, getting those juices flowing, and eye-popping for people watching.
It’s also a source of super cool T-shirts. (I bought one for my son, Robert, a physics lover and college student, that lists several formulas — like for Newton’s Second Law — with the punch line: “Yes, it is rocket science.”)
Comicpalooza is invigorating for creative people, getting those juices flowing, and eye-popping for people watching.
I met a wild variety of special guests, from actor Ernie Hudson (Winston Zeddemore in Ghostbusters) to 13-year-old powerhouse actress Grace Powell of Houston (watch for her!) who is in the upcoming film Jacob being marketed at Cannes. Jacob’s creator, filmmaker and actor Larry Carrell, was in Houston with his film’s stars including Michael Biehn (The Terminator, Aliens, The Abyss).
Sean Patrick Flanery (The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles, The Boondock Saints), another Houston native, was presented a specially designed cupcake from a fan in his autograph line. He was having a ball and acknowledged that this was his first cupcake award.
Who knew that ghost hunters had a meet-up down the road in Pasadena, Texas?
It was a pleasant surprise to see my friend Kyle Fu at a booth showcasing his amazing origami art. Not your run-of-the-mill origami, mind you, Fu makes zombies! I customized the paper fellow I bought, selecting different body parts from interchangeable zombie heads, torsos and legs. I have named him Pugh, after CultureMap’s esteemed editor-in-chief Clifford Pugh. (This is an honor, OK?)
While I’m on the zombie subject, I introduced another exhibitor, Jason Kristopher of Grey Gecko Press, to artist Kyle Fu. Kristopher is an author and publisher who lives in Katy and whose book The Dying of the Light is a zombie story. Hey, there’s networking at Comicpalooza!
Comic book publisher, McLaine McGuire of CCP Comics in Austin, had four booths filled with his artists drawing as fans watched and admired. McGuire was excited that he’d signed a new artist at the conference. A young man had introduced himself and asked about how to break in. He shared a comic book story he wanted to create and showed McGuire sample storyboards.
The publisher was “blown away” and signed him on the spot!
One of my favorite booths was the Pasadena Paranormal Research Team. Who knew that ghost hunters had a meet-up down the road in Pasadena, Texas? Investigator and co-founder Kristen Stout and I had a long, intriguing conversation during which the convention hall lights flickered and dimmed for a while.
A voice from above announced that Comicpalooza was closing for the evening. We had to laugh at the timing.